The Missing Beaumont Children- Part 1: Glenelg Beach


Investigating the Mysterious Disappearance of the Beaumont Children at Glenelg Beach: Unraveling a Cold Case of Abduction and Murder. The case of the missing Beaumont siblings, Jane, Arnna, and Grant, has perplexed investigators since their disappearance on Australia Day in 1966. Despite extensive searches and investigations, their whereabouts remain unknown, leaving behind a chilling mystery that continues to haunt the community. The Beaumont Children case is one of Australia’s most infamous unsolved mysteries, and the search for answers at Glenelg Beach continues to this day.

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39 Comments to “The Missing Beaumont Children- Part 1: Glenelg Beach”

  • @sidneyvictor7887

    I have commented before but can you please look into the recent case of Samantha Murphy in Australia. This case is taking weird turns and i would love to hear what you think is happening. Thank you for anyone reading this message.

  • @CovidConQuitTheCensorship

    January is our summer here in Australia. Our Christmas and New Year are always hot and Jan/Feb even hotter. Currently here in Perth Western Australia, we have been in a heatwave. This Sunday they have forecast 43°C (109.4°F) and we have had many days over 40, one of the longest hot spells I recall here but anyway, yes it was our summer when these children went missing

  • @toni4729

    The Beaumont parents lived long, and very guilty lives for something they had no part in. They had to live with it far too long.

  • @toni4729

    Yes it was a different time. I had just arrived from London at the ripe old age of thirteen and had no fear of roaming around that city alone even at the age of seven when I went off to the swimming pool every night after school and came home in the dark. So imagine my horror when a few months after moving to Adelaide, this happened. Barely a city, nothing happening and yet, babies were disappearing.

  • @toni4729

    Someone certainly took the Beaumont Children, and got away with it. That bastard is probably dead now from old age and has not even left a note to state the fact that he did the dirty deed. Or his family know about it and won't come forward either. We'll never know about those poor kids or the girls that disappeared from Adelaide Oval in 1973.

  • @carolynv1205

    Nope. Summer is summer. The opposite side of the world has opposite seasons 🤦‍♀️

  • @petespistenbroke976

    got me fkd how americans are reporting on australian crimes..its like me reporting on the menstral cycle of a mongoose

  • @Jbsutt

    Its not that letting your children go to the beach alone was ever really "safe". That type of criminality just wasnt as identified and understood back then as it is today. It wouldve been considered barbarism to even bring it up. So it was going to take society everywhere a while to realize it CAN be dangerous to let your children go freely. Doesnt mean it necessarily is. Because even now, if people let their kids go around alone all the time, i doubt youd have kids going missing every week. Its just perception. If you go to the statistics, and you look at percentages, society is a much, MUCH safer thing today than its ever been. God only knows how many "missing" children actually fell prey to child predators in the "good ol' days". So im not saying that they were at fault for letting their children go around alone. Im just saying that these crimes have been committed for a long, long, long time. Sick people didnt just bust onto the scene in the 1960s. Its just that "stranger danger" type crime was just starting to be better understood and identified.

  • @vivaisabella

    Lmao bless you Stephanie. I'm Australian, so let me break it down: in the southern hemisphere summer is Dec/Jan/Feb, autumn (fall) is Mar/Apr/May, winter is Jun/Jul/Aug, and spring is Sep/Oct/Nov. And yes, Christmas is still December 25th. Also a surfie is often a surfer, not always, but often. They're really into living at the beach, and ocean sports subculture stuff.

  • @Sarah-2277

    I literally just saw this story on TikTok and came straight to your Chanel to see if you had ever covered it x

  • @early.autumn.summer

    1:30:41 it’s crazy to me how people get sad about a kangaroo’s skin being used to make a pencil case but not a cow’s skin (like the leather we’re familiar with in the US). Cows and kangaroos aren’t any different. Both of them have complex brain structures, logical functioning and emotional reasoning. Both want to live. Anyone who was put off by the suggestion of kangaroo leather pls seriously consider what societal conditioning has led you to believe it’s ok to kill cows but not kangaroos. That might sound stupid to a lot of people but to an animal it’s literally their entire life.

  • @artsyhoodies

    The Beaumont parents sound like amazing people. Even in the face of tragedy, they managed to be so kind to everyone they met.

  • @fandomtreasury5398

    Hi i really like your style of making videos ^^

  • @mariannewm26

    58:32 I think he could have been asking about people around their clothes, claiming something was stolen, to gauge whether or not there was an adult looking for the children while he was in the changing room. I hope teachers, family friends, or neighbors that the kids may have known were looked into.

  • @melanied917

    What precious kids. So sad 🙁

  • @witchypoo2600

    Your a gifted true story teller❤

  • @KarenSmith-co5gm

    It's summer in November December till April from April it's autumn then winter

  • @piayoung5811

    Steph talking about my hometown!

  • @ethereal384

    Thank you Stephanie. Your attention to the details is important and superb. Pasties are pronounced 'parsties' BTW 🙂 Place names, times, weather, geography, they matter. So sad. I'm an Australian. Our suburban innocence faltered that year. I went missing in summer 1973 but kind men re-united me with my family thank goodness.

  • @susanlippy1009

    Guess I'm old as I remember when American children were free range as well. Media convinced American families that it wasn't safe. Stranger danger! Lol. Kids used to take buses all the time, go shopping, go all over. Before the 80's life was different here as well. We went to the park and the pool all by ourselves. Older siblings watched over younger siblings. Not one but if this story is odd to your older audience.

  • @Lunaveir

    God I wish you’d put a time stamp for when your ads are over and put something on the screen that differentiates when you’re disclosing an ad bc they’re way too damn long everrrry time and it’s hard to tell when the ad ends most of the time bc you’re just talk talk talking

  • @LauXstamp

    well maybe the stranger put the shorts on bc of the lost money? The weirdo surfy dude asked the witness about it right? They payed with paper money not coins. Maybe Jane lost the money she got from her mom, responsible Jane could not understand how it happened. (maybe surfy dude stole it. Staged the whole thing) and he touched the shorts to confirm and 'help'? Maybe she fell responsible and understood by surfy about the issue. He fixed it with paying for them. This is how they kinda bait them I think.

    I also just don't understand why shy Jane would be comfortable with a stranger but if she was in distress of the lost money it would make some sense. She would feel so responsible for it.

  • @bridgetteknowles8937

    I would love a deep dive of the basil thorn case.

  • @amyhartley2041

    Oh Nancy 💔 as a mother my heart breaks for her loss.

  • @jerimiller5651

    Past-ies.Pronounced like past. Are a big deal here in Michigan in the Upper Peninsula. I know about the pronunciation bc living in the lower all my life, would drive my young children the 4 hours for vacations. 25 years ago in a souvineer shop, getting ready to pay for over 100 dollars in souvenirs, the shop owner repeatedly berated me for pronouncing it wrong. Right in front of my Children. I had asked where the best ones were. I'm not easy to rattle. She just kept it up. So I told my kids we weren't buying these. We would go to one of the hundreds other stores. Lol.

  • @funeralforahorse

    What on EARTH? Why would anyone be confused about the seasons? It’s literally just the opposite of the northern hemisphere, you said this yourself??? Why would anyone in the r Southern Hemisphere call January “winter with summer weather”? This is bizzare

  • @misssuestar5

    In the 50’s in INDIANA, all of us kids were free-range. We went everywhere alone, exploring and having fun and learning to be self-sufficient. It was a better and safer time in America. Even in the 1970’s/80’s, my own children had a lot of freedom. So this does not surprise me. Not at all.

  • @annabelleleeartist

    Can confirm we aussies celebrate Christmas in the hot weather. No dorky sweaters for us!

  • @mistyharris1951

    I wonder if the police went undercover and checked out the beaches if they might have found the man. He was described as a tanned surfy. It seems like he would have been spending a lot of time on the beaches.

  • @karencooper3428

    I'm from the UK, literally the other side of the world from oz, even I know summer down under is December January February

  • @haileyranson8255

    Pasties are pronounced past-ees not paste-ees. They were invented so men could carry their hot meat lunch wrapped in the pastry to keep it hot and clean. Sometimes they would be half and half – one side savory and one sweet. They are incredibly common in the Northern area of the UK because of all of the mines and miners in the area. Pasties are a very common British snack!

  • @donnamorrison8108

    PS you may want to look into The Family murders, Von Einem is just one, the only one, convicted. Names are still suppressed of those believed to be involved. Debi Marshall 'Frozen Lies' has tried to lift this veil of secrecy.

  • @donnamorrison8108

    Hi from Adelaide aka the sun / city of heatwaves 😂 To answer your question, We have a mix of those who celebrate being a planned city however it's impossible to ignore the ongoing human rights abuses perpetrated against our First Nations peoples. Adelaide is the imposed name but the original name is Tarntanyangga, a Kaurna (pronounced Garna) word meaning Red kangaroo dreaming. Adelaideans are mostly lovely people who have no idea how to drive – not joking – they teach each other and so this is passed down to each generation 😂😞 it is not unusual for them to drive into houses and businesses, 2 just last week 😂

  • @wedin1051919

    BANANAS B A NA NA S

  • @celestemichon1038

    Things were so different back then than what they are now. At least the knowledge of what was going on then was cloaked and appeared safe.

  • @celestemichon1038

    In 1966 I lived in Canada and we always after dinner would go out with our bikes alone and always have to be home before dark

  • @cajmartinez

    I am an American and born the 3rd child of 6. My elder sister and brother were 10 and 8, when I came along in 1953. By the time I was 11yrs old, my older sister was out of the house with a baby of her own, and my brother was in the Navy. I was the Big sister and took care of my younger siblings, 9, 6 and , 4yrs old and responsible for watching them when playing outside, babysitting if both parent went out or a PTA meeting, and would walk with them to Library once a week which was about 7 blocks away, and would take them to the movie theatre on our busy Main St., every weekend, by myself. It was a different time back then, an age of innocence, so I understand about the children allowed to go by themselves. I cannot imagine how those poor parents made it through their lives after such a heart rendering, horrible, unfathomable thing like this happened. I'm sure no matter how normal and usual,it was for children to go off on their own, the what if's and guilt followed them through their lives.

  • @garrythorp8770

    When a young girl falls for a young man and she has authority over younger siblings she will throw caution to the wind and they will follow but no longer than a day or so. The main suspect lived in Melbourne and that is where the children probably ended up.

  • @viviennejohnston2669

    I live in Australia in the countryside. Kangaroos are regularly shot by farmers. Considered a pest. 🙀😿

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