Jan 09, 2010
Nov 20, 2022
Mary Ann
Switalski
77
16
62 inches
102 lbs
White / Caucasian
Female
In the summer of 1963, sixteen-year-old Mary Ann Switalski was a responsible and forward-thinking teenager living with her parents, Eugene and Matilda, and her younger sister on West Cornelia Avenue in Chicago, Illinois. She was known as a good student who had just finished her junior year at Notre Dame High School, where she had already put a deposit down for her senior yearbook and class ring. To earn her own money, she worked at a local neighborhood store and also took on babysitting jobs. On the evening of July 15, 1963, Mary Ann attended a carnival with friends at St. Priscilla's Catholic Church, located just over a mile from her home. She was last seen at approximately 10:15 p.m. that night, wearing a black sleeveless blouse, white shorts, and straw sandals. Mary Ann never returned home, and her family never saw her again. Two days after she was last seen, a letter from Mary Ann, postmarked from the Chicago suburb of Oak Park, arrived at her parents' home. In the letter, she assured them she was fine and wrote of "experiencing a strange but educational experience." She also mentioned that she intended to send money home to support them but did not want them to interfere with her new life, adding that she might never see them again but would try to call. Although the handwriting appeared to be Mary Ann's, her parents noted that the writing style was not hers. Despite the promise in the letter, no further contact was ever made. Her parents, bewildered by her sudden departure, were unaware of any problems in her life that would cause her to leave. In the years that followed, they tirelessly ran ads in newspapers and her mother took on a part-time job to fund a reward, all in the desperate hope of finding their daughter. Investigations into Mary Ann's disappearance uncovered a significant lead suggesting she may have joined a traveling group that sold magazines door-to-door and was heading towards California. When the couple who ran the organization were questioned, they provided conflicting accounts. The wife claimed that Mary Ann had been with the group but had left at some point, while her husband denied that she had ever left Chicago with them at all. This discrepancy created more questions than answers in a case that has grown cold over the decades. The disappearance of Mary Ann Switalski remains an unresolved mystery, leaving her family and community without answers for decades. Despite the passage of time, her case is still classified as an endangered runaway, and there has been no clear indication of her whereabouts or what became of her after that summer night in 1963.
Jul 15, 1963
Chicago
Illinois
Cook County
8096
Chicago Police Department - Area North
Chicago
Illinois
Cook County
60618
Mark Skweres
Sergeant of Detectives
2452 West Belmont Avenue, Illinois
3127448266
Local
Law Enforcement
63B200225
Chicago Police Department - Area North
Blond/Strawberry
Hazel
Hazel
05/24/2026