Archive for category family history

Follow-up: Bullet Kills Woman in Moving Car

After a bit more research, I found the following article describing in great detail events that lead up to the death of Mrs. Helen Fredrickson from yesterday’s post.

Bullet Kills Woman in Moving Car
Death Unknown for 2 Hours

KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (AP) – A Minneapolis woman was killed in early morning darkness Saturday by a bullet that pierced the back seat of an automobile cruising along a lonely stretch of U.S. 97.

Mrs. Carl Frederickson, 48, asleep in the seat, died without outcry. Her death was no discovered by other in the car until they reached Bend, 148 miles north of here.

Meanwhile, police arrested a Klamath Indian, Myron Barkley, 26, on a charge of shooting another Indian, Eldon James Cress, 20, Saturday morning.

After learning of the shooting of Mrs. Frederickson, they began questioning Barkley on whether he had any knowledge of it. Sheriff Murray Britton said Barkley admitted being on U.S. 97 about the time and place of the shooting, but denied knowledge of it.

In the past, a number of drivers have complained of shots directed at their cars on or near the Klamath reservation north of here. Once a couple had to jump from their car and hide in the sagebrush all night. Scores of bullet holes later were found in the car.

Mrs. Frdrickson [sic] was in a car driven by her brother-in-law, Russell Holmes Crawford, 42, Oakland, Calif. With her in the back seat were her son, Tom Byron, 8, and two of Crawford’s children. The children were asleep and unhurt. In the front seat with Crawford were his wife and another of their children. They also were asleep and were not injured.

Crawford said he had driven about 20 minutes out of Klamath Falls when he heard three noises he described as “popping.” Police said the road there passes through the Klamath reservation.

Crawford said he though a tire might have blown out, so he stopped and looked. That was about 3 or 3:30 a.m., he said. The tires were all right. Everyone seemed to be sleeping peacefully, so he drove on to Bend, where they were to visit a sister of the two women. It was after they reached the home of the sister, Mrs. Norbert Schadler, that Mrs. Frederickson’s death was discovered. That was about 5:30 a.m.

The bullet had gone through the metal at the rear of the car, hit her high in the back and stopped just under the skin of her chest.

Sheriff Britton said Barkley told of drinking at Chiloquin until 1 a.m., of going later to Modoc Point and still later of going to Beaver Marsh with Cress. That would have required them to pass the point where Crawford said he heard the “popping” noises, Britton said.

Beaver Marsh is about 50 miles from that point. The sheriff said Barkley admitted getting into a fight with Cress and shooting him.

1958 SEP 07 – The Victoria Advocate – Bullet Kills Woman in Moving Car (Mrs. Carl Fredrickson)

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Helen Frances Fredrickson (Wokasch)

Former Becker Woman Killed
Accidental Shooting in Oregon Was Reported Earlier in Journal

Mrs. Carl Helen Frances Fredrickson, 47, Minneapolis, who was reported accidentally shot to death Friday while riding in a car with relatives near Bend Ore., was a sister of Carl Wokasch of Evergreen township, across the Otter Tail county line in Becker County.

As will be remembered she was riding back to Bend after a visit with a son at San Diego.

She had gone west to visit a son Roger, 17, stationed in San Diego, and then went north to visit two sisters. She was on her way to visit one of her sisters, when the fatal shooting occurred. A suspect, Myron Barkley of Chiloquin, Ore., admitted killing his half brother in an early morning fracas, the homicide having taken place in the same area where Mrs. Fredrickson was killed by a stray bullet. She was a daughter of the late John Wokasch, and her brother, Carl, still lives on the home farm in Becker county.

1958 SEP 11 – Former Becker Woman Killed (Mrs. Carl Frederickson)

See also: 1958 SEP 11 – Bend Bulletin – Gunshot Victims Relatives Return

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Excerpt from the “Diary of the Sweet-Wilson Expedition”

From the “Official diary of the Sweet-Wilson expedition into the frozen tundra of the far north, 1946,” located in the Alaska Historical Collection.

A few miles down the road cameras again began clicking with three gold prospectors as their subjects. These gentlemen were employed by the Yukon Gold Corporation to test sidecreeks of the Delta River in order to determine whether or not the area would be worth large-scale operations. The Yukon company expects to put in a big dragline here but will have spent $3000-4000 conducting tests such as this before any amount of gold is taken out.

The gentleman wearing long boots is Lloyd Wokasch, 37, of Helena, Mont., who commented that after all this posing he probably could get a job in Hollywood as a stand-in for Gene Autry’s horse. Lloyd formerly worked for the Caird Engineering Works in Helena, and came to Alaska last May, with his brother, Leonard, by driving up the Alcan with a truckload of mining machinery intended for the Yukon company’s Delta River project. The two had done a little mining in Montana and had always wanted to see Alaska, so they took a testing job for the summer.

Leonard, 27, still wearing his OD pants, spent four years with the 43rd Division, as a private, and fought his way from New Guinea to Tokyo. He plans to return to Montana next fall but may come back in 1947 to do some prospecting on his own. “There are thousands of acres the old-timers never touched,” he says. “They couldn’t have found all the gold in Alaska. Now we’ve got roads so we can drive farther into the bush, taking more equipment and staying in longer. Besides, at least we know now a lot of places where not to look.” Len says it costs $3-4000 to outfit and prospect for one summer in Alaska, and even if you hit some colors you’ll probably have to come back again & again to show enough to attract the interest of a mining company. The profit, of course, comes not from what you pan but from the sale or lease of land in which you can prove there is paying gold.

(Pages 107-108).
Download a copy of these pages: The official diary of the Sweet-Wilson Expedition

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