Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Disappearance of Michael Rockefeller (Encore)
Episode Date: September 15, 2024In 1961, Michael Rockefeller, an heir to one of the greatest fortunes in the world, disappeared on an art-collecting trip off the coast of the island of New Guinea. For decades, the family simply as...sumed that he accidentally drowned off the coast in an attempt to rescue his anthropologist colleague. However, in the decades since he disappeared, more information may have come forward about exactly what happened, and it may not have been a simple drowning. Learn more about Michael Rockefeller and the possible grizzly truth about his disappearance on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Sign up at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to get chicken breast, salmon or ground beef FREE in every order for a year plus $20 off your first order! Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Ben Long & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The following is an encore presentation of Everything Everywhere Daily.
In 1961, Michael Rockefeller, an heir to one of the greatest fortunes in the world,
disappeared on an art-collecting trip off the coast of the island of New Guinea.
For decades, the family just assumed that he accidentally drowned off the coast
in an attempt to rescue his anthropologist colleague.
However, in the decades since he disappeared,
more information may have come forward about exactly what happened,
and it may not have been a simple drowning.
Learn more about Michael Rockefeller and the part of the part of the person.
possible grisly truth about his disappearance on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong? ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time
to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed. It effectively turned day
into night. And how it shaped the world now. Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast
from NPR. Before I get into the details of what
happen to Michael Rockefeller. I should probably give a bit of background as to why anyone would care.
For those of you who are younger or perhaps live outside of the United States, you might not have
heard the name Rockefeller, or you may have just heard it referenced. The name Rockefeller is one that
since the late 19th century has been associated with extreme wealth. It began with John D. Rockefeller,
who founded the Standard Oil Company in 1870. At its peak, Standard Oil controlled 90% of the entire
petroleum industry. He was the wealthiest person on earth, and many people think that on a per capita
basis, he may have been the richest person in human history. At his peak, his net worth was the
equivalent of 3% of the entire United States gross domestic product. The wealth of the Rockefeller
family didn't disappear with the death of John D. Rockefeller in 1937 at the age of 97. His son, John
D. Rockefeller Jr. was a financier who was responsible for the creation of Rockefeller Center in New York
City. If you've ever seen a giant Christmas tree in New York next to an ice skating rink,
that's Rockefeller Center. John D. Rockefeller Jr. had a son, Nelson Rockefeller, who went on to
become the governor of the state of New York from 1959 to 1973, which at the time it was the largest
U.S. state, and he later became vice president of the United States under Gerald Ford. Nelson
Rockefeller was the father of Michael Rockefeller. So I want to establish that this was the family that Michael
Rockefeller was born into. The reason why this entire affair gained such public attention,
and the reason why I'm doing an episode on it, is because Michael Rockefeller was a member of one of the
richest families in the world, and his father was one of the most powerful politicians in America.
Michael Rockefeller was born on May 18, 1938, the youngest child of Nelson and Mary Rockefeller,
and he also had a twin sister named Mary. His early life was precisely what you would think it would be
for somebody named Rockefeller. He attended primary, and he attended primary. And, he also had a twin sister, and
primary school at the prestigious Buckley School in New York City, and after that he attended the
elite Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire. And from there, he went to, surprise, Harvard, where he graduated
cum laude in history and economics. After he graduated from Harvard in 1960, he did a very un-Rockefeller-type
thing. He served six months in the U.S. Army as a private. As seems to happen to many wealthy families
over time, each succeeding generation becomes less and less productive and more distant from the
core business. After Michael completed a stint in the army in May 1960, he didn't go into business
like his father or grandfather. He didn't pursue a career in politics. Rather, he went on an
expedition organized by Harvard's Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology to Western New Guinea.
At the time, the western portion of New Guinea was still under the control of the Dutch, and wouldn't
become a province of Indonesia until 1969. The transfer of West New Guinea from Dutch to Indonesian
control is actually a really interesting story, but, but...
but I'll leave that for another episode.
The expedition that Michael took part of was to study the Donnie people
and their system of ritualized warfare.
The expedition resulted in the documentary film Dead Birds, which was released in 1963,
and Michael served as the sound recorder for the film.
It was during this expedition that Michael developed a fascination with the people of New Guinea,
in particular, the Osmott people.
During the documentary, he took a side trip with another expedition member
to meet the Osmott people who were located in the southern part
of Western New Guinea. After the expedition was over, he went back to New Guinea to study
Asmot wood carvings and the Asmot people. His father, Nelson Rockefeller, had opened the Museum of
Primitive Art in 1954, and Michael wanted to go and find items from the Asmat people in New Guinea
to add to the collection. He sent a letter while he was conducting his research in New Guinea
back home that wrote, quote, I'm having a thoroughly exhausting but most exciting time here.
The Asmot is like a huge puzzle, with the variations in ceremony and art.
style forming the pieces. My trips are enabling me to comprehend, if only in a superficial,
rudimentary manner, the nature of this puzzle. End quote. At the time Michael Rockefeller was
visiting the Osmott, it was one of the last places on earth that was truly untouched by the modern
world. There were no wheeled vehicles. There was no real technology to speak of. No metal was used in
their tools and there wasn't even paper. On November 17, 1961, Rockefeller was in a boat off the coast with
the Dutch anthropologist named Renee Wassing and several local guides.
While they were in their boat off the coast approaching the village of Ochenep,
a sudden storm appeared which caused large waves that capsized them
about three miles or 4.8 kilometers from the shore.
Their guides quickly decided to swim to shore to get help.
Michael and Renee clung to the capsized boat and drifted further from the shore.
Eventually, Michael told Renee, I think I can make it,
and began to swim towards land.
At the time, he began to see.
swim, they weren't estimated 14 miles or 22 kilometers from the shore. Michael Rockefeller was never
seen again. The next day, help eventually arrived, and Renee Wasing was rescued, but Michael was nowhere
to be found. News of his disappearance spread quickly. The Dutch authorities in New Guinea quickly
mounted a search for Michael, and Governor Rockefeller flew to New Guinea to help with the search
efforts. After two weeks of searching by air and sea, no evidence of Michael Rockefeller was found,
and the search was called off.
Rockefeller was presumed dead by drowning, which was the verdict accepted by his family.
However, when someone from such a significant family disappears without a trace, it will tend to
raise eyebrows. And there were a host of theories about what might have happened. If he had drowned,
then there was a good chance that his body would have eventually washed up on shore. Some thought
perhaps he was attacked by sharks that infested the waters. Others thought that he might have been
killed by crocodiles that inhabited the shore. Still, some claim that Rockefeller survived and then
lived with the Azmat people completely abandoning his family in Western civilization.
However, over time, rumors began circulating with missionaries who lived in the region and spoke
the Azmat language, rumors that dealt with Michael Rockefeller.
Here, I should make perfectly clear that everything I deal with from here on out is,
to some extent, speculation. There is no hard forensic evidence. There is no body that can be
examined, and given that the events took place over 60 years ago, most of the events.
of the people who may have been involved are no longer around.
It turns out that after the search for Michael Rockefeller ended, it didn't end the disappearance
case. For years after the disappearance, there were interviews conducted, reports filed,
at witnesses who came forward to Dutch authorities in New Guinea. Most of the evidence was
never made public. Multiple journalists who went to New Guinea over the decades to investigate
the story all came back with a roughly similar tale. Michael Rockefeller had
actually survived his swim and was murdered by men of the Asmat tribe.
As the event was told by witnesses who were young men when it happened, it all started several
years earlier. The people of the Azmat region were very warlike and were in almost a
perpetual state of war with their neighbors. In particular, the village of Ochinep fought with the
nearby village of Omadisep. In 1957, people from Omadisep tricked six warriors from Ochanep into going with them
to hunt dogs. While in the way, the men from Omadisep turned on the Ochinep men,
killed five of them with one of them managing to escape. Upon hearing what had happened,
the men from Ochenep organized a party and killed 113 men from the Omatisep group that had
killed their five warriors. When the Dutch authorities had heard about this, they went to Ochenep
to put an end to the fighting. However, the Ochenep had no clue why the Dutch had shown up to interfere
in their affairs. This was none of their business.
Moreover, they had no clue what the Netherlands was or what any of the Dutch claims of authority were.
They just saw the Dutch as another tribe.
There was a violent confrontation between them and the Dutch, which resulted in several Ochanep being killed by gunfire, something that they had never seen before.
All they knew was that somebody from the white tribe had killed their warriors, and they demanded revenge.
The constant need for revenge is pretty much the reason why the area was always in a state of perpetual war.
warfare. When Michael Rockefeller arrived, he had no idea of the recent history between the
Azmat and the Dutch. He went around to various villages trading for artifacts, which most people
were happy to do. However, he also tried to acquire large elaborate ceremonial poles called
Bish Poles. Bish Poles were erected to honor ancestors who had been killed and demanded
vengeance, and they were taken very seriously by the Azmat people.
Rockefeller had acquired several of them and made offers for
many more, which deeply angered some of the Asthmat. According to what had been told by the
asmat people who claimed to have been witnesses, Michael Rockefeller actually survived his swim.
He had with him a flotation device which had kept him from drowning. When he made it to land,
he was exhausted and suffering from exposure. He was found by several tribal leaders who didn't
know what he was at first. Eventually they realized he was a member of the white tribe that had
killed their warriors several years before. Moreover, he was a member of the white tribe that had killed their warriors
several years before. Moreover, he was the same guy who had just recently come to their village
trying to take away their bish poles. And he was alone and helpless. Rockefeller, who had no
clue what was happening and thought he was being rescued, was taken to a clearing where a large
group of azmat men were assembled, and he was ritually murdered. He was decapitated, and his entire
body was then dismembered by the men present, who proceeded to cook and eat him ritually. The asmats at this time
still practiced cannibalism and headhunting.
Having no knowledge of the outside world,
the Azmatz didn't understand any distinction between Dutch and American,
any more than the Dutch were able to understand
what was happening between the villages of Omadisep and Ochanep.
After the murder, the Asmat began to regret what they had done
and tried to keep what happened a secret.
But people talked.
Missionaries heard of what had happened and passed the information on to the Dutch.
Years later, young men who witnessed the event
retold the story to National Geographic writer Carl Hoffman.
If this story is true, and there are many details that have been corroborated by several different
witnesses, including testimony that was collected immediately after Michael Rockefeller's disappearance,
then the death of Michael Rockefeller wasn't a simple accidental drowning.
The Dutch tried to insert themselves into a tribal conflict in which they had no part
and ended up killing several men from Ochinep.
Michael Rockefeller unknowingly offended the people of Ochinep by trying to take their bischpoles,
and the men of Ochinep wrongly took revenge against someone who they didn't know wasn't a part of the Dutch group that had killed their villagers several years earlier.
The disappearance of Michael Rockefeller might not have been a tragic accident, but instead one of the most epic cases of cultural misunderstanding.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiever.
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