Saturday, August
17, 2002
Does old story hold answer to possibility of
time travel?
Researcher traces origins of popular mystery
By Paula
Schleis
Knight Ridder Newspapers
AKRON, Ohio — Is time travel possible?
Could
evidence for it be found in the story of a man who appeared
suddenly on the
streets of New York City in 1950, bearing the property and
identity of a man
who had vanished in 1876?
Chris Aubeck loves a
good mystery, so the Londoner who lives in Madrid,
Spain, decided to get to
the root of a tale that has received a lot of press
in
Europe.
This month, the Spanish magazine
Enigmas will publish the yearlong
odyssey of Aubeck, who doggedly traced a
piece of paranormal folklore through
six countries and back six decades to
its source — in Akron.
Aubeck, 31, who
researches modern and ancient mysteries as a hobby,
said fellow researchers
in Europe often use the case of Rudolph Fentz as
proof of time
travel.
"They had been using the story for
years in articles and books and many
of them accepted the Fentz story at
face value," Aubeck said in an e-mail
interview. "When I asked them if it
had been solved, I was told it had been
tried but never
successfully."
To Aubeck, that sounded like a challenge he
couldn't pass up.
In a world of believers and
skeptics, Aubeck is a skeptic searching for
something to believe
in.
"I don't need any further confirmation
that odd things do happen, but
the amount of disinformation and error is
such that much of my time is spent
reinvestigating old cases to weed out the
nonsense," he said.
Most phenomena are
explainable in scientific terms, but a small
percentage defy explanation, he
said. He's looking for that "needle in the
haystack" that will stand up to
scrutiny.
Last year, he turned his critical
focus on the Fentz case.
Few people in the
United States have heard of Fentz, but in Europe, the
story has been
repeated in at least six books, a couple of dozen magazines
and several
Internet sites.
The details change slightly in
each retelling, but here's the gist:
It was
11:15 p.m. on a warm June night in 1950, and the area of Times
Square was
buzzing with people leaving theaters.
Suddenly, in the midst of traffic appeared an odd-looking man, about 30
years old. He wore mutton-chop whiskers and quaint clothing that had gone
out
of style decades before.
The man
gawked at his surroundings, and then tried to dash away from
the cars. He
was struck by a cab and killed.
Police found
on the dead man antique currency, business cards in the
name of Rudolph
Fentz, and a letter addressed to Fentz postmarked in
1876.
Assuming the man was Fentz, police
sought the next of kin. But Fentz
wasn't listed in the telephone directory,
and no one at the address on the
business card and letter knew
him.
Capt. Hubert V. Rihm eventually turned up
a 1939 phone book listing a
Rudolph Fentz Jr. When Rihm located the junior's
widow, she told him her
father-in-law had vanished in 1876 after going out
for a smoke.
That knowledge in hand, Rihm dug
into old police files and found the
missing-person report from 1876. The
address given was the same as that on
the dead man's business
cards.
Interest in the Fentz case was
rekindled recently when a Spanish
magazine published the tale in 2000. Soon
afterward, Aubeck launched his
probe.
He
started with obvious records such as the Social Security database
and old
telephone directories.
He tried several name
variations and found a Rudolf Fenz in Chicago,
but Fenz died in 1976, not
1950. He uncovered a Herman Rihm living in
Cincinnati until 1993, but he was
a linotype operator, not a policeman.
Aubeck
closed other doors one at a time and soon found there was no
document,
police report or burial plot to prove either man ever
existed.
And that's when the paper chase
really began.
Aubeck decided to trace the myth
back to the first person who told it.
At this
point, Aubeck had in hand only three Spanish publications, and
none credited
its sources. It took another six months of research before
Aubeck found the
story in a 1975 French book.
The French book
had cited a 1974 Italian magazine.
The Italian
magazine referred to a 1973 Norwegian article.
The Norwegians had lifted it from a Swedish periodical.
The Swedes were quoting from a journal published by the California-based
Borderland Sciences Research Foundation, a group investigating UFO sightings
and paranormal events.
When Aubeck
received a copy of the 1972 Borderland publication, he
found it credited a
1953 booklet called "A Voice from the
Gallery."
The booklet was written by Ralph M.
Holland.
With so much time invested in tracking Holland down, Aubeck
wanted to know
more about the man whose tale of time travel had been
teleported across the
Atlantic and into European
imaginations.
Did Holland mean for his story
to be taken as fact, or was he simply
trying to
entertain?
Holland died in 1962. His sister,
Dora, died in 1995. They had no other
relatives.
But Aubeck has uncovered a
couple of revealing documents.
In an obituary,
Dora Holland provided background on her brother. Ralph
Merridette Holland
was born in Youngstown on Aug. 29, 1899, and lived there
until moving to
Akron with his family in 1914. He worked "in the plant" at
the Akron Beacon
Journal for a time, received an engineering degree and went
to work at B.F.
Goodrich.
He spent the last 40 years of his
life in Cuyahoga Falls, and had been
employed by Vaughn Machinery Co.
there.
Dora Holland spoke of her brother's
interest in paranormal phenomena
and his membership in the Borderland
research group. "He was interested in
our own life beyond our earthly one,"
and he was constantly "sorting fact
from fake before he would pass the
information on."
But Holland also loved
science fiction. He published his own fanzine,
The Science-Fiction Review,
and had published a book featuring a fantasy
character called
"Ghu."
Holland was keenly aware that his
science fiction enterprises would
cast a shadow on anything he tried to
present as fact.
So he adopted an
alter-ego.
Aubeck learned that Holland was
Rolf Telano, the author of "A
Spacewoman Speaks," a book about a "real"
extraterrestrial with whom he was
in
contact.
When a Swedish publisher sought
permission to translate the book in
1964, Dora Holland gave it on the
condition that her late brother's identity
be kept
confidential.
In a letter to the publisher,
Dora Holland noted her brother had been
president of the National Fantasy
Fan Federation, and "this is the connection
he did not deem advisable to use
in connection with his book or other similar
interests lest his work in that
connection be discredited."
Dora Holland may
have believed her brother could be true to both sides
of his personality —
the science fiction fan and the science fact
investigator.
But Aubeck isn't buying
it.
When he learned that the author of the
Fentz story was a member of the
Borderland research group, it all
clicked.
At the time, Borderland was trying to
promote the idea of a "fourth
dimension" — an alleged hole in the fabric
of reality that is often used to
explain the Bermuda Triangle. Aubeck is
confident that Holland simply created
a story to try to justify that
theory.
"I doubt that for Holland this was
ever much more than a game," Aubeck
said.