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Deputies and divers will be working carefully Thursday to recover the Ford station wagon to preserve any potential evidence in the decades-long mystery.
A crane resumed dredging on the Columbia River on Friday as it tired to clear a way to pull out a station wagon that is believed to have belonged to an Oregon family of five who disappeared nearly 70 years ago while they were out searching for Christmas greenery.
Investigators in Hood River County, Oregon, believe the Ford station wagon the vehicle which belonged to Ken and Barbara Martin, who disappeared along with their children in 1958
The Martin family, who lived in Portland, disappeared after driving to the Columbia River Gorge that December, in search of Christmas greenery to decorate their home, reported The Oregonian.
A spokesperson for the Hood River County Sheriff’s Office tells KATU a frame and tires have been pulled from the water.
The north end parking lot at 1422 River Drive, located just off Huger Street near downtown Columbia, will be closed from March 17 through May 5 while the city rebuilds a ramp on the canal headgates. During the closure, the park will only be accessible from the south entry point, located at 312 Laurel Street.
The Hood River County Sheriff’s Office has seized a station wagon believed to be connected to the Martin Family, who disappeared in 1958, and will now undergo a thorough investigation with
The Hood River County Sheriff's Office believes they've found a vehicle connected to the 1958 case of the Martin Family.
The agreement, currently under renegotiation, co-ordinates hydroelectric power production and flood control along the Columbia River flowing from B.C. through the U.S. Pacific Northwest
Tariffs and job cuts at federal agencies are making life more complicated for the Columbia River Bar pilots who play a critical role in connecting Pacific Northwest agriculture with buyers in the rest of the world.
The station wagon presumed to be connected to the Martin Family was pulled out Friday afternoon — more than 65 years after their sudden disappearance in 1958. Read online: