Courtesy photo Roy Shamblen
Charles Shamblen and his wife May.

Charles Shamblen

Homicide

Charles Shamblen
50 YOA
West of Burlington Depot
Malvern, IA
Mills County
December 12, 1936

By Nancy Bowers

About 10:00 on the morning of Sunday, December 12, 1936, a Burlington Railroad freight train headed west out of Malvern through the snow-covered landscape.

Not far from the depot, the crew saw a body lying along the tracks and wired back to Malvern Station Agent William A. Caldwell, who in turn called Mills County Coroner Frank Raynor, a local funeral director.

When Raynor arrived at the scene, he found a man’s body on the tracks with the head completely severed by train wheels.


Mills County in Iowa
Malvern in Mills County
Malvern in Mills County

As Coroner, Raynor knew death by train is not uncommon near railroad tracks. Victims are killed when they fail to get out of the way, fall from moving cars, or intentionally step into the path of a train.

None of these scenarios seemed to fit.

Also, Raynor spotted something suspicious: north of the rails in the snow, he saw tracks of two men walking a few feet apart to and from the body. The prints led to car tracks where an automobile drove off the highway near the depot.

Raynor called Mills County Sheriff William S. DeMoss, who began an investigation.

The victim was identified as 50-year-old Charles Shamblen, a well-known Malvern resident who until recently operated the town’s Standard Oil Station.

Family and friends told Sheriff DeMoss that Shamblen had 90 dollars in his possession on Saturday. Only a few coins were in his pockets when his body was found.

Coroner Raynor classified the death as foul play because there was no disturbance in the snow, as there would have been if Shamblen were hit by a train.

He concluded that Shamblen was knocked unconscious, robbed, and placed on the tracks so the death looked like an accident or suicide.

Possible Suspects

Charles Shamblen, a widower, sold his service station to Lester Spencer two weeks before his death and told friends he was moving to Oregon and that two men were riding with him.

Sheriff DeMoss investigated the presence of two strangers in Malvern, one a former convict recently released from a Nebraska prison. The men were not seen after Shamblen’s body was discovered.

The Life of Charles Shamblen

Charles “Charlie” Shamblen was born September 30, 1886 at Tabor to Anna Eliza Merrill and Thomas Jefferson Shamblen. He had six brothers — Roy William Shamblen, John Frederick Shamblen, Earl Leon Shamblen, Merrill Jesse Shamblen, Harry W. Shamblen, and Lester L. Shamblen — as well as four sisters: Etta Pearl Shamblen Hummel, Nellie Jeanette Shamblen Peterson, Velma Iona Shamblen Funder, and Anna Elisa Shamblen Gailord.

In 1910, he married May E. Moss Francis, who had four children from her previous marriage to Frank D. Francis: Chester Simion Francis, Cleva G. Francis Juelke, LaVerne Francis, and Ila Francis. Charlie regarded them as his own children.

May passed away in October of 1924, and Charlie did not remarry.

After farming for a number of years in Deer Creek Township, he operated the Standard Oil Station in Malvern.

Shamblen Courtesy photo findagrave.com
Charles Shamblen is buried with his parents in the Malvern Cemetery.

On December 17, Charlie Shamblen’s funeral was conducted by Methodist minister Rev. C.A. Calkins at the Mansfield Funeral Home and he was buried in the Malvern Cemetery beside his parents.

Information Needed

Questions and information about the unsolved 1936 homicide of Charles Shamblen should be directed to the Mills County Sheriff’s Office at 712-527-4337 or Iowa Cold Cases through the Contact form.

Sources
  • “Believed Robbed And Murdered,” Oelwein Daily Register, December 14, 1936.
  • “Charles Shamblen Met Tragic Death Here Early Sunday,” Malvern Leader, December 17, 1936.
  • “Funeral Rites for Victim of Tragedy,” Malvern Leader, December 24, 1936.
  • Glenwood Opinion-Tribune, December 21, 1936.
  • Melissa Hillstrom, Personal Correspondence, July 2011.
  • Roy Shamblen, Personal Correspondence, September 2011.
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2 Responses to Charles Shamblen

  1. Roy Shamblen says:

    Thank you for publishing the article on Charlie Shamblen, he was my uncle and I was only two when he died. Even tho I was told numerous details about his death, reading it made it more of a reality. Basically your article covered the details that I was told. Did they not have the name of the convict that was supposidly with him that day? Was he ever investigated?

    Charlie was very missed by his brothers and sisters, and the entire family.
    Roy

  2. Nancy Bowers says:

    Our condolences, Roy, to you and your family on the loss of Charley. You might want to check with the Mills County Sheriff to see if they kept case notes that could answer some of your questions. You can use the link or phone number posted in Charley’s Case Summary. I am also sending you a separate email. Best, Nancy Bowers

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