An Archive of Colorado Mysteries & Frontier Lore

Vol. VI · No. 2 Ransom Notes Desk Archive Continuity Edition

Ransom Notes

Unclaimed Demands & Unresolved Correspondence

The desk holds what could not be printed in full at the time. Notes delivered by hand, left beneath doors, pinned to posts, pressed into tin. Each represents a demand that was met, ignored, or answered in ways that left no satisfactory record. Filed here as received. Most remain open.

Livestock · Baca County 1887

Merritt Hale's Prized Bull

A Shorthorn bull valued beyond any reasonable sum disappeared from Broken Spur Ranch the winter of 1887. The note left behind named a landmark that did not exist within twenty miles of Springfield.

Abduction · Germantown, Pa. 1874

The Ross Correspondence

Twenty-three letters arrived at a Germantown merchant's home over the course of five months. His son Charles was four years old when he was taken. He was never returned. The case was the first of its kind in the nation.

Extortion · Fremont County 1889

The Cañon City Payroll Note

A tin left at the mouth of a silver working above Grape Creek contained a demand for four thousand two hundred dollars in coin. The money was left at the appointed place. It was collected before morning. No man was ever identified.

Abduction · Rio Grande County 1884

The Schoolteacher of Del Norte

Miss Adeline Fry was found absent from her boarding house on a Tuesday morning in October. A note pinned to the schoolhouse door asked for eight hundred dollars and offered no proof of her condition. She returned on Friday. She never explained what happened.

Intimidation · Las Animas County 1878

The Trinchera Letter

The letter arrived before the horses went missing. When they did, a second note followed. No ransom was demanded. No money changed hands. The land was sold that summer. The sender was never named.