Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mystery of Crawford resolved in latest book

- CELIA STOREY

Film director and author Beth Brickell will return to her native Arkansas in June with a fourth and, she says, final book about the 1957 disappeara­nce of Maud Crawford.

Sixty-five years after the prominent lawyer vanished from her stately home in Camden, her mystery is solved, Brickell said.

“We know everything now,” Brickell said Wednesday, “all of the answers to the questions, and they’re in my new book.”

“Solving the Maud Crawford Puzzle” (Luminous Films, $25) is rooted in research and interviews Brickell did in the 1980s, partly at the behest of a former English teacher who was appalled that police never arrested Crawford’s killer.

“The original police investigat­ion found zero — zero — informatio­n, and they declared the case at a dead end after two weeks, and then they abandoned the case,” Brickell said. “So, because it has been such a mystery, and people didn’t have any answers, this has been like a black cloud hanging over the town.”

In an era when it was unusual for women to practice law in Arkansas, Maud Robinson Crawford (1891-1957) was a high school valedictor­ian with one year of college who became a stenograph­er for the Gaughan, McClellan and Laney law firm in 1916, working with the future U.S. Sen. John L. McClellan.

In 1927, she passed the bar, becoming a lawyer who handled oil drilling abstracts and land titles. She was the first woman elected to the Camden city council, a founder of Arkansas Girls State and active in many civic clubs and organizati­ons.

The CALS Encycloped­ia of Arkansas entry that Brickell wrote about Crawford explains that, at the time she disappeare­d, McClellan was chairman of a Senate committee investigat­ing links between the Mafia and organized labor. Police soon eliminated a theory that

she was kidnapped to intimidate the senator, but her disappeara­nce made headlines around the world.

In 1985-86, Brickell collected evidence that Crawford was murdered. Her findings implicated a former Arkansas State Police commission­er, Henry Myar “Mike” Berg, who had died in 1975. The Arkansas Gazette published her report as a 19-part, front-page series in 1986; the series was republishe­d in book form as “The Disappeara­nce of Maud Crawford” in 2013.

But questions remained, Brickell said.

“I had such a clutter of informatio­n I didn’t see the facts for all of the speculatio­ns and, I guess, words and the repetition­s in all of those interviews,” Brickell said. “And then this past year, I’ve realized that if we just focus on the facts in those interviews, and the logic and the circumstan­tial evidence in those interviews, we know the answers to all of the questions.

“And I’ve put those answers in the new book, which is going to be my last book, because there’s nothing more to do but to excavate Maud Crawford’s remains.”

The new book answers “what happened to her, where they put her, how she was murdered, who actually killed her, why the Camden police didn’t come up with any informatio­n, why the FBI didn’t enter the case,” she said.

The seven appearance­s she plans in Arkansas in June are all free and open to the public. She will give a 20-minute presentati­on, speaking beside a projection of photograph­s, and answer questions.

Brickell’s schedule:

■ 6 p.m. June 2 in Pine Bluff at Pine Bluff Public Library, 600 S. Main St.

■ 2 p.m. June 4 in Camden at Southern Arkansas University Tech, 6286 Coleman Road.

■ 6 p.m. June 6 in Fort Smith at Bookish bookstore, 70 S. Seventh St.

■ 6 p.m. June 7 in Fayettevil­le at the Fayettevil­le Public Library, 401 W. Mountain St.

■ 6 p.m. June 8 in Conway, at the Faulkner County Public Library, 1900 Tyler St.

■ 6:30 p.m. June 9 in Little Rock at WordsWorth Books, 5920 R St.

■ 6 p.m. June 10 in Hot Springs at the Garland County Public Library, 1427 Malvern Ave.

“I’m anticipati­ng that most of these people who will be attending the talks have been interested over the years,” Brickell said.

ACTOR AND DIRECTOR

Brickell was a student at the University of Arkansas in 1957 when Crawford disappeare­d.

After a brief career in newspapers, the history and political science major studied acting in New York, starred alongside a 700-pound black bear in the TV series “Gentle Ben” and appeared in various TV shows and movies, receiving Emmy nomination­s for appearance­s on “Hawaii Five-O” and “Bonanza.”

A writer and film director today, she and her production company, Luminous Films, are in Los Angeles.

Brickell said her enduring interest in the case was “very influenced” by Sarah Yawn, who had been her eighth-grade English teacher at Camden. Yawn died in 2014 at age 103.

“She was very upset about Maud Crawford, the fact that nothing had happened, nothing had been found by the original police investigat­ion. And she would say to me, ‘Camden just wants to sweep Maud Crawford under the rug as though she never existed.’ And she wanted me to do an investigat­ion because I had a newspaper background.”

“Solving the Maud Crawford Puzzle” is available online for $29.50 (including shipping) at luminousfi­lms.net and by mail from Luminous Films, 14254 Weddington St., Sherman Oaks, CA 91401.

 ?? (Democrat-Gazette file photo) ?? Maud Crawford in the 1950s
(Democrat-Gazette file photo) Maud Crawford in the 1950s

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