Robert D. McCullough
Homicide

Robert McCullough
Robert D. McCullough
33 YOA
Disappeared February 23, 1947
Des Moines, IA
Polk County
Found August 14, 1947
near Hills, IA
Johnson County
By 1947, 34-year-old Robert McCullough had seen and experienced a great deal of life.
After graduating from Wapello High School in 1931, he attended the University of Arizona at Tucson. In 1932, he transferred to the State University of Iowa, where his grades were good and he graduated in 1935 with a B.A. degree in Commerce.

Johnson County in Iowa
He joined the U.S. Army in 1941, became a paratrooper, served in New Guinea and the Philippines during WWII, and was discharged in 1946 at the rank of Staff Sergent.
McCullough’s service in the Pacific Theater proved costly, however. He contracted malaria there and came home to the United States in a weakened condition.
He stayed with his parents in Wapello to become stronger and helped take care of his elderly, beloved grandmother.
For a time, he worked on the ranch of his brother-in-law Allen F. Wortman, the publisher of the Malvern Leader.
At the beginning of January 1947, McCullough moved to Des Moines to live with his sister Ruth McCullough and work at F.C. Dickinson Company.
At the Veterans Hospital in Des Moines, he received treatments for his malaria.
On February 23 — two days after a hospital checkup — he phoned his sister Ruth at her office. When told she was at lunch, he left a message that he was taking the next bus to Wapello to visit their parents.
That was the last contact McCullough had with family members.
A Son and Brother Disappears
The McCullough family was very concerned about Robert’s whereabouts, but hoped for the best and believed he would come home.
However, when the health of his adored grandmother Cornelia Carpenter Springer deteriorated in March 1947, the McCullough family made every effort to find Robert, even requesting WHO Radio to broadcast messages for him.
When Robert’s grandmother passed away, the McCulloughs still had no word of him.
The Floods of 1947
In the months that followed the last sighting of Robert McCullough, heavy rains poured down on Iowa, setting records that remained unbroken until 1993. Nearly every river in eastern Iowa overflowed its banks and flooded nearby areas.
A Grim Discovery
On Thursday, August 14, 1947, tenant farmers Leland Smith and Kenneth “Pete” Cooper were inspecting fences on adjoining properties owned by Albert Droll and I.G. “Barney” DeFrance in Johnson County.
Near Hills, Iowa, and about a quarter mile east of the Iowa River, they discovered something in the sand and river debris left from the flood.
Smith described what happened to the Iowa City Press-Citizen:
“We had walked by the place once and it looked like an old blanket or rags piled under stuff against the fence.
We must have walked within three feet of it going one direction, and then when we came back, Pete said, ‘What the devil is that, Smith?”
I walked over and looked and what I saw made my knees a little shaky. ‘My God, Pete,’ I said, ‘It’s a man!’”
Cooper thought Smith was joking until he saw “legs sticking out.”
Law Enforcement Becomes Involved
Smith and Cooper drove directly to Iowa City to inform Johnson County Sheriff Albert J. Murphy, who sent an ambulance to transport the body to Hohenschuh Mortuary in Iowa City.
Courtesy photo Iowa City Press-Citizen
- A white arrow points to the spot where Pete Cooper and Leland Smith, shown at right, found Robert McCullough’s body.
Local law enforcement and Johnson County Attorney Jack C. White examined the body and requested the assistance of the state Bureau of Criminal Investigation, which assigned the case to Agent Dwight O. Bender.
Papers Prove Identity
The man wore almost-new shoes and was heavily clothed for winter in a leather coat with the zipper pulled up and a gray overcoat on top. His wristwatch was intact and there was a clip-on pencil in his coat.
His wallet contained $17, a driver’s license, Social Security card, and photocopy of his Army discharge. In a coat pocket was a receipt for a life insurance policy, paid up through January of 1947.
All the identification showed the man was Robert McCullough. McCullough’s brother John arrived from Mount Vernon to verify the identity.
Courtesy photo IAGenWeb Penny Postcards
- Investigators examined Robert McCullough’s body at Hohenschuh Mortuary in Iowa City.
During the autopsy, Johnson County Coroner Frank L. Love found a flattened-out .32 caliber bullet on the left side of McCullough’s skull that had entered just above the right ear.
Agent Bender took the bullet to the Des Moines BCI Lab for further investigation, but it could not be determined if the bullet was fired at close range.
Love said McCullough was dead at least three months and perhaps as long as six, considering his cold-weather clothes.
Bureau of Criminal Investigation Director R.W. “Doc” Nebergall told the media McCullough’s body was “nothing but a skeleton in a bunch of clothing.”
The BCI could not state with certainty whether McCullough was murdered, committed suicide, or met with an accident, although they felt the position of the wound and the path of the bullet suggested homicide.
McCullough’s family agreed, saying they believed he was murdered about the time he disappeared on February 23.
How Did the Body Get There?
The location of the body — a quarter-of-a-mile east of the Iowa River — was four miles southeast of Hills if accessed by roads. As the crow flies, it was a straight shot a mile-and-a-half south.
Sheriff Murphy and Deputy Marold Glaspey returned to the spot. They sifted through debris left from the June flooding and traced a path from the fence row to the Iowa River.
The officers concluded the massive June floods carried McCullough’s body to the fence.
But how did it get in the Iowa River?
It’s likely McCullough got off the bus at Iowa City, where he would have had to transfer to travel on southeast to Wapello.
What happened then remains unknown.
The Life of Robert McCullough
Robert Douglas McCullough was born June 13, 1913 in Wapello to Edith C. Springer and Roy Davison McCullough. He had five siblings: Mary E. McCullough, John Springer McCullough, Jean McCullough Wortman, Frances McCullough, and Ruth McCullough.
Funeral services were held in the Dudgeon Funeral home in Wapello on August 16, 1947 with Dr. R. Clifton Keagy officiating.
Courtesy photo Stoneseeker, findagrave.com
- The grave of Robert McCullough in Wapello Cemetery.
Robert McCullough was buried in the Wapello Cemetery with military rites provided by the American Legion.
Louisa County Sheriff Robert R. Lewis, who accompanied McCullough’s body from Iowa City home to Wapello, told the Iowa City Press-Citizen that McCullough had a “pleasant disposition,” no enemies, and no reason for suicide.
Information Needed
Questions and Information about the 1947 death of Robert D. McCullough should be directed to the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office at 319-354-3729 or Iowa Cold Cases through the Contact form.
Sources
- “Body Found Near Hills; Officers Puzzled,” Iowa City Press-Citizen, August 15, 1947.
- “Bullet Wound in Head of Skeleton Found in River,” Estherville Daily News, August 15, 1947.
- “Find Body of Wapello Man in Iowa River, Burlington Hawk-Eye Gazette, August 15, 1947.
- “Find No Clues Where Body Discovered,” Iowa City Press-Citizen, August 16, 1947.
- “Identify Body of Man Found in Iowa River,” Mason City Globe-Gazette, August 14, 1947.
- “Rites At Wapello For R.D. McCullough,” Mt. Pleasant News, August 19, 1947.
A Side Note
Johnson County Deputy Marold Glaspey, who helped investigate the death of Robert McCullough, became an actor under the stage name “Richard Warren.” He appeared in the television programs “Gunsmoke,” “Bonanza,” “The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp,” “Cimarron City,” and “Bat Masterson,” among others. He also acted in movies, including The Rawhide Trail and Gun Battle at Monterey.
Recent Comments