The Saga of Uncle Oscar or Be Careful What You Dig for…
One of the hazards of doing genealogy work (aside from
getting poison ivy at the cemetery or paper cuts at the library) is digging up
the occasional family skeleton. For me it’s not a problem. It’s those larger
than life characters that make this kind of thing interesting, but there are
those in my extended family tree who wouldn't be thrilled with my genealogical
thoroughness. That has never stopped me though.
Grandma Alice, the great family storyteller, told me a tale
about the infamous Uncle Oscar. Now, Oscar wasn't really my uncle, he was my
grandfather’s first cousin. (My grandpa’s mother’s brother’s son…clear as mud?)
So, what does that make him to me…a second cousin of some sort? I can never
remember that once/twice removed stuff and have to map it out on a genealogy
chart, but it really has nothing to do with this story, so I’ll move on.
According to Alice,
Oscar robbed the same Savings and Loan in Columbia,
Missouri three different times.
Each time, he would run around to the alleyway behind the financial
institution, discard his disguise in a garbage can and stroll nonchalantly back
to the front of the building to watch all the excitement after the police
arrived. Finally, after the third robbery, the cops realized old Uncle Oscar
was always in the crowd. Alice
said he was sentenced to 10 years in prison for his antics.
After Alice died in 1997, I was talking to yet another
distant cousin. I asked Cousin “P” about Uncle Oscar’s incarceration. Cousin
“P” was absolutely mortified, said he knew Uncle Oscar well and had never heard
such an inflammatory story about him. Umm…okay.
So, I called another distant cousin who lives in North
Dakota. He, too, had known Uncle Oscar before his death but had never heard the
prison story. However, he did tell me his mother had talked about how Uncle
Oscar went missing for a few years and then just showed up one Thanksgiving
with no explanation. He acted as though he’d never been gone. His wife, the
long-suffering Mary Alice, claimed he had amnesia and just finally “woke up”
and remembered where he lived. No one seemed to know where he was in the
interim.
Having narrowed down a time frame (the 50s) with this second
cousin, I started doing some digging. First I got a hold of my always helpful
contact at the National Archives and Record Administration (NARA) in the Midwest office. Tim helped me brainstorm the prisons
where someone committed a crime in Columbia
would end up. We decided the Missouri State Penitentiary in Jefferson City was the likeliest candidate.
Any records still around from that prison at that time are
now held by the Missouri State Archives. So my next step was to contact them.
Lo and behold, Uncle Oscar’s name was found on a roster of inmates (sadly, most
of the other records have been destroyed.)
It seems Oscar was sentenced to 10 years for armed robbery,
but only served about 3 ½ years. He was incarcerated on March 17, 1955. He was discharged on
parole on October 28, 1958
with plenty of time to get home for Thanksgiving dinner.
And then I did some more digging and found a newspaper
article that explains the “amnesia” story:
Note Tells Wife Husband Slugged
KANSAS CITY, Aug. 10 (AP)
A motor car belonging to a missing
Columbia, Mo., man was found here Thursday night shortly after his wife got a
letter in which the writer said he forced the man out of his car and “kissed
him with my .45.”
The missing man, Oscar [last name
withheld], 43, widely known salesman and ex-semipro baseball player,
disappeared June 26 when he left home on a routine business trip.
The letter, postmarked Portland,
Or., was signed “a hitchhiker with a conshun. [sic]”
Filled with misspelled words, the
typewritten letter was addressed to Mrs. O. F. [last name withheld], Hiway 73,
Columbia, Mo.
The writer said he had hitched a
ride with “your husban, [sic]” and forced him out of the car west of Boonville,
Mo., at a bridge. The writer said he hit the man with a gun and the victim “fell
down the bank into the water.”
“I want you to know I didn't kill him
unless he droned [sic] in the water,” the letter said. It stated where the
writer left the man’s car in Kansas City. The car was found there.
“Your husband begged me to write so
I am tipewriting [sic] it to you,” the letter said, “This fills my promise to
write.”
Uh huh. Right. This explains everything. I think somebody may have made this up, but that's just a cynical guess on my part.
Grandma Alice always said the reason Oscar robbed the
S&L was to keep his wife in the standard to which she had grown accustomed
before their marriage. He always felt inadequate and that he couldn't earn
enough money on his garage mechanic salary.
Oscar died in 1996. I’m sure at some point in my childhood I
probably ran into him at a family reunion, but I can’t conjure up any sort of
memory of him at all. I know him only through pictures and this one
particular tale. But it's a good one.