May 04, 2010
Dec 02, 2021
Beverly
Sharpman
93
16
60 inches
66 inches
100 lbs
180 lbs
White / Caucasian
Female
In the late summer of 1947, a sense of unease surrounded sixteen-year-old Beverly Sharpman in the days leading up to her mystifying disappearance from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. On September 10th, the young woman, known to her family as "Babe," approached her mother, Nettie, seemingly wanting to confide something that was troubling her. Before she could articulate her thoughts, however, she reconsidered and went to bed, leaving her secret unspoken. The following day, September 11, Beverly completed the seemingly routine task of registering for her senior year at Overbrook High School. Later that day, she was seen at the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Station at 24th and Chestnut Streets, carrying a suitcase. This sighting would be the last confirmed time anyone saw the teenage girl. That evening, her concerned parents received a startling telegram which read, "Got married. Leaving town. Will not be back. Don't worry. Babe." The subsequent investigation into Beverly's disappearance uncovered a series of deliberate actions she took prior to leaving. Authorities learned that she had withdrawn $173 from her savings account, a significant sum at the time. She had also resigned from her clerking job the day before she vanished, telling her coworkers that she was planning to move to Chicago. Despite these clues pointing towards a planned departure, the message in the telegram puzzled everyone who knew her. Beverly's family and friends insisted that she was not seriously dating anyone and they knew of no potential person she could have suddenly married. An extensive search by police, which included checking marriage license bureaus in every state, yielded no record of Beverly Sharpman having gotten married. Although the Sharpmans had relatives in Chicago, they reported that they had not seen or heard from Beverly. Over the years, the silence from Beverly was absolute. Her heartbroken parents placed ads in newspapers, pleading for any word from their daughter, but she never made contact. There were reported sightings of her in various cities across the United States, but none could ever be confirmed. Theories about her disappearance have circulated, including the possibility that she ran away due to an unplanned pregnancy, which would have carried a heavy social stigma in that era, though no evidence supports this idea. The case remains a painful mystery, officially classified as an endangered runaway, but the circumstances are unusual for a teenager who seemingly vanished without a trace after planning her departure. Both of Beverly's parents and her older brother passed away without ever learning what became of her after she walked into the train station in September 1947, leaving a lifetime of unanswered questions.
Sep 11, 1947
Philadelphia
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia County
No
27082
Philadelphia Police Department
Philadelphia
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia County
19125
Viviana Reyes
Detective
300 East Hunting Park Avenue, Pennsylvania
2156863093
Local
Law Enforcement
2010-16-028710
Philadelphia Police Department
Brown
Brown
Brown
05/23/2026