A borderline case is the strange case of Rudolf Diesel’s disappearance, the inventor of the engine of the same name. He vanished from a ship on a passage from Germany to England in 1913. He most probably fell overboard and drowned in the North Sea, as a few days later, Dutch fishermen found a dead body they couldn’t recover because of bad weather, but they took some personal items which Diesel’s son later identified as belonging to his father. The big mystery is the cause of death: suicide, accident or murder? Suicide seems to be most likely, but Diesel was on a delicate mission. After he hadn’t been able sell his engine to the German navy, he was traveling to Britain for negotiations with Germany’s enemy. Relations between Britain and Germany were already very tense, so it was risky business.
A matter of semantics, I think - I wouldn’t term such deaths “mysterious”, just because the bodies were never recovered. Sure, it’s possible that Holt was a Chinese spy who was picked up by a submarine and taken to Beijing to be debriefed, or that Miller’s plane was abducted by aliens from Tralfmadore; but reasonable people understand that the prosaic explanations - Holt was caught in strong currents and drowned, and Miller died when his plane crashed - are overwhelmingly more likely.
I read an article just a couple of year ago that uncovered the account of an RAF pilot returning from France engaging and shooting down a plane headed the other way that he could barely see through the fog. I think he even said he realized it wasn’t German as it was going down. The location and time were when and where the plane Miller was on was last heard from. In other words, it was a friendly fire incident.
(And no, this isn’t the friendly fire theory involving RAF pilots dumping their bombs into the Channel. That’s been discredited. But it was widespread enough to make it impossible for me to find a reference for the more recent story. Sorry.)
That kind of fits into the same category as Don Lewis. Without any real evidence beyond their disappearance, almost everybody is certain they are dead and have little doubt that the spouse did the deed.
Not really. The Lost City of Z didn’t make much of an impact and, in any case, Lucan’s disappearance had been the subject of a much-publicised TV drama in 2013. Then there’s the fact that Lady Lucan’s interview and subsequent suicide in 2017 also got lots of attention. In Britain Lucan clearly remains the archetypal disappearance, rivalled only by Shergar. But unlike Shergar, Lucan wasn’t especially famous before he disappeared.
Judge Crater’s disappearance popped up often enough in the 70s, usually as a humorous reference, that I looked it up in my handy World Book Encyclopedia at some point back then.
Raoul Wallenberg born 4 August 1912 – disappeared 17 January 1945. Probably died in a Soviet prison, maybe in 1947, but may have been sighted in prison in the 60s, 70s and 80s.
If the person can be recently dead, then I should put in a vote for Jesus’s body disappearing from his tomb. And recognising that he was more of a locally noted trouble-maker of Middle Eastern appearance than a widely known religious figure at the time.
The pilot of the MH370 is a famous person. but only because he went missing.
Ah well of course this list should have been missing people who were famous before they went missing.
Yeah, but there is little real doubt about Holt. Dangerous waters, sea jellies, sharks, etc.
I hadn’t heard about Lucan but he would be about 90 now.
Not in the USA, maybe, I am over 40, never heard of him, but I have heard of Col Fawcett.
The name is Dan, not D.B. He was totally unprepared for the jump, and whatever happened to him, he never spend any significant % of his loot, we know that for sure.