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Dec 27, 2025

The Hollow Ridge children were discovered in 1968: what happened next defied nature. The children…

In late July, the state made a decision. The children would be separated and transferred to different facilities in Virginia and Kentucky. They argued that this was the only way to break their bond and give them a chance at a normal life. Margaret Dunn opposed the decision, as did several medical staff members, but the state took further action. On August 2, 1968, the children were loaded into separate vehicles and transported to different locations. That night, each facility reported the same thing: the children had stopped eating and moving. They sat in their rooms, staring at the walls, humming the same low, resonant melody. Three days later, two of the children were found dead in their beds. The cause of death could not be determined. Their bodies showed no signs of trauma, disease, or suffering. They had simply ceased to live. By the end of the week, four more had died. The state reversed its decision. The surviving children were reunited, and the deaths stopped.

 

 

 

The state of Virginia didn’t know what to do with children who died separated from their families and grew up together. There was no precedent, no protocol, and no legal framework for a situation that shouldn’t have happened. So they did what institutions always do when faced with the inexplicable: they covered it up. In September 1968, the remaining eleven Dalhart children were transferred to a private facility in the Blue Ridge Mountains. The place was called Riverside Manor, even though there was no river nearby and it was far from the mansion. It was a converted sanatorium, built in the 1920s for tuberculosis patients. Abandoned in the 1950s, it had been quietly reopened under a state contract for cases that were supposed to disappear. The children were placed in an isolated wing. There were no other patients, no visitors, only a rotating staff of well-paid nurses and caregivers who were asked not to discuss their work.

 

 

 

The official registry listed the facility as a group home for children with intellectual disabilities. The unofficial truth was that Riverside Manor was a detention center for a problem the state couldn’t solve and wouldn’t disclose. For the next seven years, the Dalhart children lived there. They are older, but not in a normal way. Medical records show their growth was erratic. Some years, they grew by several inches. Other years, they didn’t grow at all. Their physical development didn’t match their apparent age. A boy who appeared to be 19 when they were found still looked 19 in 1975. The youngest girl, who should have been 11 at the time, still looked no older than seven. Blood tests were inconclusive. Genetic tests, rudimentary in the early 1970s, revealed abnormalities that the laboratory couldn’t classify. Their DNA contained sequences that didn’t match any known human marker. A geneticist who examined the samples noted that certain segments resembled developmental remnants—traits that should have been eliminated from the human genome years ago. He was asked not to publish his findings. He agreed.

 

 

 

 

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