Just after midnight on Christmas Eve in 1945, Jennie Sodder awoke to the smell of smoke. She quickly discovered that the Fayetteville, West Virginia, home she shared with her husband, George, and nine ...
ON Christmas Eve in 1945, a fire ripped through the home George Sodder lived in with his wife Jennie and nine of their ten children. George, Jennie and four of their kids managed to make it out alive.
Nine of the prominent West Virginia family’s 10 children were at home for the celebration, and eldest sister Marion, 17, had just surprised her three younger sisters with toys she’d brought home for ...
When a blaze broke out in the Sodder household in the early hours of Christmas 1945, there was nothing George and Jennie Sodder could do but watch their home collapse into a smoldering heap with five ...
Fayette County's most persistent mystery has long been a thread in the fabric of local lore, rumors and stories. A billboard seeking information about George and Jennie Sodder five missing children ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. On December 24th, 1945, the Sodder family home caught on fire with ten members of the Sodder family inside. Jennie Sodder woke in ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Just after midnight on Christmas Eve in 1945, Jennie Sodder awoke to the smell of smoke. She quickly discovered that the ...
Nine of the prominent West Virginia family’s 10 children were at home for the celebration, and eldest sister Marion, 17, had just surprised her three younger sisters with toys she’d brought home for ...
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