Tragedy in Bluffton
Posted by: Loren Coleman on March 3rd, 2007
Sometimes the news does touch deeply, merging worlds of sorrow, cryptozoology, and baseball. My thoughts go out to the parents, the players, and the many people in Bluffton – a wonderful little village that hosted me, cryptozoologically, and was kind to me 30 years ago this spring.
My heart truly is with Bluffton. Times are hard. To the baseball families, the survivors, and the hurt bodies and souls from that town in Ohio, how can we really understand what they are going through? I empathize with how close baseball families can get. I’ve always worked with my sons and coaches, as a baseball dad, volunteer booster, active president for their teams’ parents. This tragedy hits close to home on many fronts – including the cryptozoological one, strangely enough.
28 April [1977] – Maria Henderson was the first person to see the cat. In her statement to the Bluffton Police, she said she was going to work by way of Bentley Road, near the County Line in the road. When she got closer, she saw it was a cat…a big cat, black and gray in color, and approximately one and a half feet tall. The Bluffton Police checked and found Henderson to be a “good, substantial, solid citizen.” – Loren Coleman, Creatures of the Other Edge
Cryptozoology has taken me to many places, including to Bluffton (population about 3800), a village right on the border of Allen and Hancock counties, Ohio. I visited there, and the nearby town of Lafayette (population: 400), to investigate reports of black panthers and other mystery cats in the midst of a major cat flap.
My time in the Bluffton area included my searching for clues with Dog Warden Bill Reeder and being hosted by Elmer Nesbaum and his wife, both Reformed Mennonites, who had experienced the loss of most of their sheep to the mystery marauder. Those cryptid happenings occurred in that creepy “Year of the Creature – 1977,” thirty years ago. The Nesbaums wept openly when I talked to them about their animals being killed. Kind people had been hit hard by the deaths around them.
Now the crying and sorrow again visits this village. My sadness is with the families and friends of the four baseball players who died in the bus accident and, indeed, the whole community of Bluffton. Let us focus on these young men. Here are remembrances of those four players’ lives:
Sophomore David Betts
David Betts, 20, of Bryan, was a great-grandson of former Bluffton University President Lloyd Ramseyer. He was part of a family enthusiastically involved in both the church and athletics, said the Rev. Ronald Guengerich of Zion Mennonite in Archbold. Betts’ two older sisters graduated from Bluffton, and he had a younger brother.
“He was one of those kids who gave everything he had,” said Connie Tipton, a friend helping take calls for the family while they traveled to Atlanta. At Bryan High School, he also was on the cross-country and basketball teams and played trombone, said Tipton, who knew Betts since he was in preschool. Betts’ father and grandfather had been flying to Florida for the games when they got the news and rerouted to Atlanta, where the rest of the family was flying to join them, Tipton said.
Sophomore Tyler Williams
Those who knew outfielder Tyler Williams of Lima described him as an outgoing student who was always smiling and laughing. “It’s a real tragedy to lose such an outstanding man as he was,” said his high school coach, Jim Hay. Williams selected Bluffton for college because he could play baseball as well as get a good education, said Jim Offenbaker, athletic director at Lima Senior High School. Williams earned three varsity letters during his time at the high school before graduating in 2005, he said. Williams was funny and a little hyper, said Matt Rau, a Bluffton volunteer assistant baseball coach. “He’s the kind of kid you need on your team,” he said.
Freshman Scott Harmon
Scott Harmon “was always the guy that put the team before himself,” said his high school baseball coach, Mark Thompson. Once, Thompson recalled, Harmon injured his nose during a collision at third base during a district tournament. Despite being bloody and lightheaded, Harmon couldn’t wait to get back in the game — and ended up hitting a home run to help the team win, Thompson said.
“He’s a competitor,” Thompson said. “He’s going to do what he can to help his team out.” Harmon, who graduated in 2006, also played football at Elida High School and was a member of the National Honor Society, Thompson said. He believes Bluffton’s “close-knit, family-type atmosphere” played into Harmon’s decision to enroll there. Matt Rau, a Bluffton volunteer assistant baseball coach, said Harmon had a great work ethic. Just a freshman, Harmon had been so excited to have made the team’s bus trip, Thompson said.
Freshman Cody Holp
They had only known each other a few months, but Cody Holp’s teammate Brett Hunt already considered him a good friend. “He was one of the guys, like the class clown, who liked to make people laugh,” said Hunt, who met Holp at Bluffton. “We’d hang out, watch movies, go to eat together.” Holp, a pitcher from Arcanum, graduated from Lewisburg Tri-County North High School.
Hunt said he had some classes with Holp, who was a good student, but what he’ll remember most is “his sense of humor, how he could make anybody laugh.”
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Meanwhile, my continued thanks for the effort noted here. I’m not out-of-the-woods yet, but I did want to mention the above, out of respect to this Bluffton news, which has touched me deeply.
About Loren Coleman
Loren Coleman is one of the world’s leading cryptozoologists, some say “the” leading living cryptozoologist. Certainly, he is acknowledged as the current living American researcher and writer who has most popularized cryptozoology in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
Starting his fieldwork and investigations in 1960, after traveling and trekking extensively in pursuit of cryptozoological mysteries, Coleman began writing to share his experiences in 1969. An honorary member of Ivan T. Sanderson’s Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained in the 1970s, Coleman has been bestowed with similar honorary memberships of the North Idaho College Cryptozoology Club in 1983, and in subsequent years, that of the British Columbia Scientific Cryptozoology Club, CryptoSafari International, and other international organizations. He was also a Life Member and Benefactor of the International Society of Cryptozoology (now-defunct).
Loren Coleman’s daily blog, as a member of the Cryptomundo Team, served as an ongoing avenue of communication for the ever-growing body of cryptozoo news from 2005 through 2013. He returned as an infrequent contributor beginning Halloween week of 2015.
Coleman is the founder in 2003, and current director of the International Cryptozoology Museum in Portland, Maine.
Both of my sons played ball in school as well. I can only imagine the horror and grief they are going through. My thoughts and prayers are with them.
Just when you think that cryptids are more important than the self-focused arrogant destructive species that’s ruining life on earth for everything else.
We’re animals like the rest, and like them we have offspring and try to raise them to do the best they can and try to live up to our highest ideals of what this species of ours ought to be.
And it takes something like this to remind us.
As a dad, I’m so sorry. I hope my kids make it to adulthood – then I realize even that won’t be enough, because they’ll always be my kids.
My deepest condolences to the families and friends of these folks. For all the words I know, there aren’t any to ease the hurt.
I live not far from where the crash happened, so there’s been lots of media coverage.
I couldn’t help but think about this on a lot of different levels as I sat today at the Little League game watching my son play — and I hugged him a little tighter than usual after the game.
My condolences to the families.
Thank you Loren for writing this it was needed.
Sometimes news Stories are just a headline and a paragraph and a crash scene video. It takes a closer look at the individual lives that were taken to really hit home and make us all hold our loved ones a little closer. Thanks for taking the time, Loren, to bring this tragedy
‘home’. A couple of my kids are in highly dangerous professions in service to their country and communities, so I naturally have the jitters at times for their safety but this shows in terrible detail how even those in a ‘passtime’ can be lost in a heartbeat out of the blue.
Cherish what you have and show it.