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Sophie Bailey

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The Disappeared: The Secret History of Missing People
What happened when someone vanished before police forces, forensic science, national databases, newspapers with mass circulation, and organised search operations existed?For most of human history, a missing person could disappear into silence. There were no detectives to call, no photographs to distribute, no fingerprints to compare, and no coordinated system designed to find the lost. Families waited.
Communities searched when they could. Rumours spread. Records failed. The world moved on. In The Disappeared, Sophie Bailey explores the forgotten history of missing people across centuries of European, Atlantic, and British history. Moving from medieval villages and crowded Georgian streets to dangerous sea routes and isolated Atlantic islands, this book examines how disappearance was understood in a world where identity itself was fragile and where many lives left only the faintest trace in surviving records.
Through famous cases such as the Lost Colony of Roanoke, the Mary Celeste, Benjamin Bathurst, and the vanished keepers of the Flannan Isles, alongside the experiences of servants, sailors, labourers, travellers, children, and ordinary people who slipped from the historical record, this book reveals a world in which absence often remained unexplained forever. Drawing on historical records, social history, maritime history, legal history, and contemporary scholarship, The Disappeared is not simply a collection of mysteries.
It is an exploration of how societies searched, remembered, forgot, and recorded the missing long before modern policing transformed disappearance into a matter of public investigation. This is the history of people who left home and never returned. The history of names that faded from the record. The history of those who disappeared.
Communities searched when they could. Rumours spread. Records failed. The world moved on. In The Disappeared, Sophie Bailey explores the forgotten history of missing people across centuries of European, Atlantic, and British history. Moving from medieval villages and crowded Georgian streets to dangerous sea routes and isolated Atlantic islands, this book examines how disappearance was understood in a world where identity itself was fragile and where many lives left only the faintest trace in surviving records.
Through famous cases such as the Lost Colony of Roanoke, the Mary Celeste, Benjamin Bathurst, and the vanished keepers of the Flannan Isles, alongside the experiences of servants, sailors, labourers, travellers, children, and ordinary people who slipped from the historical record, this book reveals a world in which absence often remained unexplained forever. Drawing on historical records, social history, maritime history, legal history, and contemporary scholarship, The Disappeared is not simply a collection of mysteries.
It is an exploration of how societies searched, remembered, forgot, and recorded the missing long before modern policing transformed disappearance into a matter of public investigation. This is the history of people who left home and never returned. The history of names that faded from the record. The history of those who disappeared.
What happened when someone vanished before police forces, forensic science, national databases, newspapers with mass circulation, and organised search operations existed?For most of human history, a missing person could disappear into silence. There were no detectives to call, no photographs to distribute, no fingerprints to compare, and no coordinated system designed to find the lost. Families waited.
Communities searched when they could. Rumours spread. Records failed. The world moved on. In The Disappeared, Sophie Bailey explores the forgotten history of missing people across centuries of European, Atlantic, and British history. Moving from medieval villages and crowded Georgian streets to dangerous sea routes and isolated Atlantic islands, this book examines how disappearance was understood in a world where identity itself was fragile and where many lives left only the faintest trace in surviving records.
Through famous cases such as the Lost Colony of Roanoke, the Mary Celeste, Benjamin Bathurst, and the vanished keepers of the Flannan Isles, alongside the experiences of servants, sailors, labourers, travellers, children, and ordinary people who slipped from the historical record, this book reveals a world in which absence often remained unexplained forever. Drawing on historical records, social history, maritime history, legal history, and contemporary scholarship, The Disappeared is not simply a collection of mysteries.
It is an exploration of how societies searched, remembered, forgot, and recorded the missing long before modern policing transformed disappearance into a matter of public investigation. This is the history of people who left home and never returned. The history of names that faded from the record. The history of those who disappeared.
Communities searched when they could. Rumours spread. Records failed. The world moved on. In The Disappeared, Sophie Bailey explores the forgotten history of missing people across centuries of European, Atlantic, and British history. Moving from medieval villages and crowded Georgian streets to dangerous sea routes and isolated Atlantic islands, this book examines how disappearance was understood in a world where identity itself was fragile and where many lives left only the faintest trace in surviving records.
Through famous cases such as the Lost Colony of Roanoke, the Mary Celeste, Benjamin Bathurst, and the vanished keepers of the Flannan Isles, alongside the experiences of servants, sailors, labourers, travellers, children, and ordinary people who slipped from the historical record, this book reveals a world in which absence often remained unexplained forever. Drawing on historical records, social history, maritime history, legal history, and contemporary scholarship, The Disappeared is not simply a collection of mysteries.
It is an exploration of how societies searched, remembered, forgot, and recorded the missing long before modern policing transformed disappearance into a matter of public investigation. This is the history of people who left home and never returned. The history of names that faded from the record. The history of those who disappeared.
