This Map of Missing Persons in Tennesse Is Wildly Disturbing
There’s something terribly horrendous about the thought of a “missing” person. Someone who vanished, gone. Away from you, away from me. Gone in a swinging door, a morning away, the blink of an eye. We recently discovered a map of missing persons, hosted by Google and fed by sites such as DoeNetwork.Org and Charley Project.Org, both seeking to find those lost in cases gone cold long ago.

Men in blue, women in pink. Clicking on the little arrows shows you precisely who they are, with all the necessary information.

These are unidentified folk, with links to their descriptions in hopes that someone, someday, will recognize the jumble of details and figure a face.
Advertisement

If you look at everyone together - identified, unidentified, all missing - you can hardly see the United States.
Advertisement

We'd encourage you to look. To click around, take a look at your neighborhood and see what loved one vanished from your streets. This isn't a joke - it's a problem. That you can fix.
You can be the change in Tennessee. Share with your friends and family in support of those good Tennesseans, waiting to be found.
OnlyInYourState may earn compensation through affiliate links in this article. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.