infinityluxe
02-06-2022, 02:30 PM
This is one of those cases that today might be quite easy to solve. With the help of AncestryDNA and other sites she would atleast have a lot more to work with. This is always made me sad because she had so much forgiveness and understanding in her heart and really wanted to meet her mother. My initial thoughts was she probably was delivered at home to a scared young mother whose lover wanted nothing to do with the baby and or was married. The fact she was wrapped in a blanket and had a full bottle stuffed inside also made me sad. The fact she had the baby in the suitcase though is very alarming. I wonder was the mother going through post-partum.
For those who may not remember...
Details: From childhood, Long Island, New York resident Jeanne Martin knew she was adopted. However, for years her adopted family would not tell her about her biological family members and what happened to them. After pressing her family for years, in July 1992, her adopted mother finally told her that she had been abandoned on a subway as an infant. After overcoming the initial shock, she began searching for details about her abandonment. She went to the library and eventually found several 1955 newspaper articles about her abandonment. She also found a picture of herself shortly after she had been found (shown to the right) and named "Miss Subways."
Jeanne learned that on December 11, 1955, the day of her abandonment, a young lonely woman entered a subway on Coney Island. She was wearing a short red jacked over a red dress. She walked slowly, carried a battered suitcase, and sat by herself in the lead car. Several passengers remembered that she opened the suitcase and, shielding its contents from view, removed an object, exiting the subway at the fourth stop, the Van Siclan Street Station. Seconds later, passengers heard crying and found five-day-old Jeanne wrapped in a blanket with a bottle of milk tucked inside.
Passengers gave police a vague description of the woman, no one knowing who she was or understanding why she had abandoned Jeanne. The story of "Miss Subways" made news around the city, although her mother was never located. Decades later, she believes her mother genuinely wanted the best for her, leaving her in a place where she could easily be found and taken in by authorities. She hopes that someone will remember a young woman having and then losing a child around the time of her abandonment. Her mother would now be in her mid-seventies.
Extra Notes: This case first aired on the December 15, 1995 episode.
Results: Unsolved. A woman read saw a Newsweek story about Jeanne and identified the police officer in the photograph as her uncle, who had since passed away. Jeanne was happy to find out what had happened to him. However, she has been unable to locate her birth mother or any other relatives.
https://unsolvedmysteries.fandom.com/wiki/The_Family_of_Jeanne_Martin
For those who may not remember...
Details: From childhood, Long Island, New York resident Jeanne Martin knew she was adopted. However, for years her adopted family would not tell her about her biological family members and what happened to them. After pressing her family for years, in July 1992, her adopted mother finally told her that she had been abandoned on a subway as an infant. After overcoming the initial shock, she began searching for details about her abandonment. She went to the library and eventually found several 1955 newspaper articles about her abandonment. She also found a picture of herself shortly after she had been found (shown to the right) and named "Miss Subways."
Jeanne learned that on December 11, 1955, the day of her abandonment, a young lonely woman entered a subway on Coney Island. She was wearing a short red jacked over a red dress. She walked slowly, carried a battered suitcase, and sat by herself in the lead car. Several passengers remembered that she opened the suitcase and, shielding its contents from view, removed an object, exiting the subway at the fourth stop, the Van Siclan Street Station. Seconds later, passengers heard crying and found five-day-old Jeanne wrapped in a blanket with a bottle of milk tucked inside.
Passengers gave police a vague description of the woman, no one knowing who she was or understanding why she had abandoned Jeanne. The story of "Miss Subways" made news around the city, although her mother was never located. Decades later, she believes her mother genuinely wanted the best for her, leaving her in a place where she could easily be found and taken in by authorities. She hopes that someone will remember a young woman having and then losing a child around the time of her abandonment. Her mother would now be in her mid-seventies.
Extra Notes: This case first aired on the December 15, 1995 episode.
Results: Unsolved. A woman read saw a Newsweek story about Jeanne and identified the police officer in the photograph as her uncle, who had since passed away. Jeanne was happy to find out what had happened to him. However, she has been unable to locate her birth mother or any other relatives.
https://unsolvedmysteries.fandom.com/wiki/The_Family_of_Jeanne_Martin