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Police probe Irish link to mystery man found dead on the moors near Manchester

Greater Manchester Police suspect the unidentified, elderly man may be connected to a 1949 plane crash.

Remains found on Saddleworth Moor Saddleworth Moor PA ARCHIVE IMAGES PA ARCHIVE IMAGES

ONE DAY LAST month, an elderly man took a train from London to the northwest of England, trekked up an isolated hillside, and died.

The man’s identity and cause of death are a mystery that has stumped police and intrigued the UK, as detectives probe whether his final journey is linked to a deadly plane crash more than 60 years ago, and a possible connection to Ireland.

Greater Manchester Police say the body of a neatly dressed man of about 70 was found on 12 December, on a path leading to a rocky outcrop called Indian’s Head on Saddleworth Moor.

In his pockets were return train tickets and £130 pounds (€170) — but no ID. There were no signs of violence and an autopsy was inconclusive.

The day before he was found dead, the man had taken a train 200 miles from London, then travelled to the village of Greenfield, where he stopped at a pub and asked how to get to the top of Indian’s Head.

Then he set off on foot, never to return.

GM Police / YouTube

Inquiries in the London neighborhood where the man started his journey have yielded no results.

Police are scouring missing person reports going back decades and have asked for DNA from relatives of Hugh Toner, a Northern Ireland man who disappeared more than 20 years ago.

hughtoner Hugh Toner PSNI PSNI

Toner, who would now be 78, went missing from a hospital in Craigavon, Co Armagh in February 1994.

Detective Sgt. John Coleman, who is leading the investigation, said today that detectives “are keeping a completely open mind.”

One line of inquiry is whether there is a link between the man and the 1949 crash near the same spot of a British European Airways DC-3 in which 24 people died.

The plane crashed in the same area of Saddleworth Moor where the unidentified man was found dead in December, after taking off from Belfast on the morning on 19 August, 1949.

1949crash The front page of the Irish Press newspaper, 20 August 1949 Irish News Archive Irish News Archive

Eight people survived, including a 5-year-old boy named Stephen Evans, and police had thought Evans might be the dead man.

But yesterday, Evans contacted police to say that he was alive and well. Police still believe it is possible that the dead man is a relative of someone involved in the plane crash.

Due to the connection to Belfast, Coleman told the Guardian police were extending their search to Ireland.

He could be related to someone who lived or lost their life that August morning. We are keeping all our options open.
The unidentified man could possibly have been making a pilgrimage to the plane crash site to remember a relative or friend.

Contains reporting by the Associated Press.

Read: Police appeal for answers – 40 years after the mysterious death of a boy found under a bridge>

Read: A devastating mystery – ‘Here I am, a man in my 70s, wondering what became of my brother’>

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7 Comments
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    Mute Sea Graham
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    Oct 14th 2019, 7:48 AM

    And here was me cursing at the rain this morning before I left the house.

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    Mute Doire
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    Oct 14th 2019, 8:09 AM

    I dont know the facts but when says rugby world cup was forced to cancel several games you have to doubt everything else is valid. Can these news agencies not just report the facts. The story is already bad enough without adding to it. (3 games were cancelled)

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    Mute Paraic
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    Oct 14th 2019, 9:43 AM

    @Doire: Not meaning to be pedantic. But does “several” not mean more than 2 but not many? Considering that the article is not specifically about the rugby world cup state of play, it’s not an unreasonable statement in an article about a typhoon.

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    Mute Doire
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    Oct 14th 2019, 10:24 AM

    @Paraic: a few i take to mean 3-6, several too mean 7+. My way of thinking is that its the biggest thing happening in the area the typhoon is hitting could we at not at least expect to get basic facts correct.

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    Mute Reuben Gray
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    Oct 14th 2019, 10:55 AM

    @Doire: Then your understanding of the word is factually incorrect.
    It means “being more than two but fewer than many in number or kind”.

    The article did get the basic facts correct.
    Another one is at 35, more than “several” people have been killed which is far more important than a lack of understanding of a single word.

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    Mute Martin Kennedy
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    Oct 15th 2019, 4:04 AM

    @Reuben Gray: and far more important than the cancellation of several games of rugby. Thinking of the Japanese people affected and wishing them a speedy recovery.

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    Mute Alan Redmond
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    Oct 16th 2019, 8:08 AM

    @Doire: Clearly your understanding of the English language is limited, as there are several grammatical errors in your comment.

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