Disappearance of Freddie Goodwin: Difference between revisions

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| caption    =  
| caption    =  
| birth_name  = Frederick James Goodwin
| birth_name  = Frederick James Goodwin
| birth_date  = {{Birth date|1995|9|4}}
| birth_date  = {{Birth date|1976|2|3}}
| birth_place = Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
| birth_place = Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
| disappearance_date = {{Start date and age|2020|10|17|1995|9|4}}
| disappearance_date = {{Start date and age|1989|8|14|1976|2|3}}
| disappearance_place = Snake Pass, Derbyshire, England
| disappearance_place = Snake Pass, Derbyshire, England
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2020|10|17|1995|9|4}}
| death_place = Bleaklow Moor, Derbyshire, England
| nationality = British
| nationality = British
| known_for  = Formerly missing person
| known_for  = Disappearance
| parents    = Margaret Goodwin (mother)<br>Thomas Goodwin (father)
| parents    = Margaret Goodwin (mother)<br>Thomas Goodwin (father)
}}
}}


The '''disappearance of Freddie Goodwin''' occurred on 17 October 2020, when the 25-year-old university student vanished while hiking alone along the Snake Pass in Derbyshire, England. For nearly four years, his fate remained unknown, despite extensive search efforts and widespread media coverage. On 14 April 2025, human remains later confirmed to be those of Goodwin were discovered in a remote area of Bleaklow Moor, bringing closure to one of the most baffling missing persons cases in Northern England.
The '''disappearance of Freddie Goodwin''' occurred on 14 August 1989, when 13-year-old schoolboy Frederick James Goodwin vanished while on a family holiday near Snake Pass in Derbyshire, England. Despite one of the largest search operations ever undertaken in the Peak District and decades of ongoing speculation, Freddie has never been found. His case remains one of the longest-standing unsolved child disappearances in British history.


==Background==
==Background==
Freddie Goodwin was born on 4 September 1995 in Sheffield, South Yorkshire. He was the youngest child of Margaret and Thomas Goodwin and was studying environmental science at the postgraduate level at the University of Manchester at the time of his disappearance. Well-regarded for his intelligence and quiet demeanor, Goodwin was passionate about nature and often spent weekends hiking solo in the Peak District. Those closest to him described him as deeply thoughtful, methodical, and reliable.
Freddie Goodwin was born on 3 February 1976 in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, the youngest child of Margaret and Thomas Goodwin. At the time of his disappearance, he was a Year 8 student at Brookfield Secondary School and known among peers as quiet, bright, and curious. He had a strong interest in geography and frequently carried a notebook where he drew maps and detailed his imagined adventures through various parts of the British countryside.


On 17 October 2020, Goodwin set out for a planned hike along the Snake Pass. That morning, he was recorded on CCTV at a petrol station in Glossop at 7:43 a.m. and was last known to be alive at 9:11 a.m. when he sent a foggy landscape photo to a friend. He never returned to Manchester, and when he failed to respond to calls or messages, a missing person report was filed the following day.
In August 1989, the Goodwin family took a week-long trip to the High Peak region. They were staying at a rural cottage near the Snake Pass, a winding mountain road in the Peak District, famous for its scenic views and unpredictable weather. According to family accounts, Freddie was in high spirits that week and had been particularly eager to explore nearby woodland trails.


==Disappearance==
==Disappearance==
Following the report, a large-scale search was organized by Derbyshire Police in coordination with mountain rescue teams. Using thermal imaging, drones, and search dogs, they combed the Snake Pass and surrounding moors. Poor weather conditions and the rugged terrain hampered efforts. Despite the intensive operation, no trace of Goodwin was discovered at the time. His phone had last connected to a mobile tower near Snake Summit before all activity ceased.
On the morning of 14 August 1989, at approximately 10:15 a.m., Freddie set out alone for what he described to his parents as a “quick wander.” He took a windbreaker jacket, a packet of crisps, and a small notebook, promising to return by lunchtime. The weather that morning was overcast with intermittent mist, but conditions were not considered dangerous at the time.


Speculation about Goodwin’s disappearance ranged from tragic accident to voluntary disappearance or foul play, though no evidence supported any definitive conclusion. In 2024, a breakthrough came when a hiker found a decayed backpack containing Goodwin’s university ID on Kinder Scout, prompting renewed searches in the area. However, those efforts failed to locate further remains or clues.
When Freddie failed to return by 1:00 p.m., his parents began to search the surrounding area, calling his name along the nearby paths and lanes. By 3:30 p.m., they contacted the local police. That evening, a full-scale search was launched, involving Derbyshire Constabulary, local volunteers, mountain rescue units, and search dogs. Helicopters were dispatched the following day, scanning the moorlands and river gorges that border the Snake Pass.


==Discovery of remains==
Despite a six-day ground search covering over 40 square miles, no trace of Freddie Goodwin was found. His disappearance confounded authorities, who considered several possibilities ranging from accidental injury to abduction. With no evidence of a struggle and no confirmed sightings beyond the morning he vanished, investigators were left with an open-ended mystery.
On 14 April 2025, a local amateur naturalist surveying the Bleaklow Moor plateau for wildlife research stumbled upon what appeared to be a partial human skeleton lodged in a peat gully approximately five kilometers northeast of the Snake Pass. The remote and uneven location, rarely accessed by hikers, had been previously overlooked due to the dangerous landscape and poor GPS visibility in the area.


Police cordoned off the site, and forensic archaeologists were called in to perform a structured excavation. Dental records and DNA analysis confirmed on 20 April 2025 that the remains belonged to Freddie Goodwin. Alongside the skeletal remains were fragments of hiking clothing, a damaged mobile phone, a rusted compass, and a water flask. A battered notebook was also recovered, with some legible entries suggesting route plans, weather notes, and sketches. One page included a dated entry reading, “visibility dropping – heading east by instinct.
==Investigation==
Over the years, the case was reopened multiple times as new leads surfaced, though none led to a resolution. In 1992, a man in Bakewell claimed to have seen a boy matching Freddie’s description begging outside a church, but the sighting was never confirmed. In 1999, a dig was conducted near Ladybower Reservoir after a tip from an anonymous letter, but nothing was recovered.


==Cause of death==
Theories about Freddie’s disappearance have ranged widely. Police initially leaned toward an accidental death, suspecting that Freddie may have fallen into one of the deep ravines or water systems in the area. However, some officers remained skeptical of this theory due to the lack of physical evidence, such as clothing or personal items. Others have speculated about the possibility of abduction, particularly given the remote yet trafficked nature of the region during the holiday season.
Following examination by the Derbyshire coroner’s office, it was determined that Goodwin had most likely died from a combination of blunt force trauma and environmental exposure. The trauma was consistent with a fall from height, possibly due to slipping along a concealed ridge. Investigators concluded that Goodwin had deviated from marked trails and, disoriented by fog, inadvertently crossed into the Bleaklow plateau, a landscape known for its treacherous bogs and hidden drops.


There were no indications of foul play, and the coroner’s verdict, delivered on 1 May 2025, was recorded as death by misadventure. It is believed that Goodwin may have survived for several hours after the fall before succumbing to cold exposure and injury in the remote gully where his body remained hidden for over four years.
Throughout the 2000s and 2010s, the case was occasionally featured in missing persons documentaries and cold case reviews. Advances in forensic technology led to the re-examination of physical evidence, such as soil traces collected during the initial search, but nothing conclusive emerged.


==Public reaction==
==Public response==
News of the discovery brought a wave of emotional responses from the public, particularly in the communities of Sheffield and Manchester where Goodwin had lived and studied. His family released a statement expressing both sorrow and relief, thanking the police, search teams, and the individual who found the remains. A candlelight vigil was held on 21 April 2025 at the University of Manchester, where classmates, faculty, and members of the public gathered to honor his memory.
Freddie’s disappearance made national headlines in the late 1980s and early 1990s, sparking both public sympathy and fear across the UK. His face was featured on milk cartons, missing child posters, and national news broadcasts. The case was often compared to the disappearance of Genette Tate and other high-profile missing child cases of the era.


Media outlets that had previously covered the case revisited it in longform retrospectives, focusing on the challenges of remote terrain searches and the enduring grief experienced by families of the missing. The renewed attention prompted calls for more accessible emergency GPS systems in UK national parks and better signage on lesser-traveled trails.
Vigils were held annually in Sheffield throughout the 1990s. His parents gave numerous interviews over the decades, maintaining belief that Freddie may have survived and holding out hope for closure. In 2009, on the twentieth anniversary of his disappearance, a memorial walk was held near Snake Pass, with over 400 people in attendance.
 
Online forums and amateur sleuth communities also took interest in the case, some offering new timelines and theories, while others were criticized for promoting unfounded speculation. Nonetheless, the enduring public awareness helped keep Freddie’s case from fading into obscurity.
 
==Status==
As of 2029, forty years after Freddie Goodwin vanished, no confirmed evidence has ever surfaced regarding his fate. His parents, now in their 80s, continue to mark the anniversary each year privately. In the absence of any conclusive findings, Derbyshire Police still classify the case as an open missing persons file.
 
In 2020, Freddie would have turned 44 years old. Age progression renderings created by the National Crime Agency depict what he might have looked like in adulthood, though no matches have ever been confirmed. In 2024, the missing persons register officially transferred his case to the cold archive, while retaining active tip channels.


==Legacy==
==Legacy==
Freddie Goodwin’s story became emblematic of the emotional toll of unresolved disappearances and the resilience of those left behind. In June 2025, the Peak District National Park Authority announced that a small memorial cairn would be placed near the area where Goodwin’s remains were recovered, both to commemorate his life and to serve as a cautionary marker for future hikers.
Freddie Goodwin’s disappearance has had a lasting impact on how search-and-rescue protocols are conducted in remote UK regions. The scale of the initial search effort prompted revisions to Peak District emergency coordination, particularly for cases involving children.


His family also established the Freddie Goodwin Foundation, a nonprofit initiative aimed at improving hiker safety awareness and funding remote search technology in high-risk areas across the UK.
In 1995, his family worked with other families of missing children to establish the Northern Missing Youth Alliance, a volunteer organization dedicated to rapid response planning and family support. The group continues to advocate for nationwide reforms to missing child investigations and greater mental health support for affected families.


==See also==
==See also==
* [[List of people who disappeared]]
* [[List of people who disappeared]]
* [[Disappearance of Corrie McKeague]]
* [[Disappearance of Genette Tate]]
* [[Disappearance of Leah Croucher]]
* [[Disappearance of April Fabb]]


==References==
==References==
<references>
<references>
<ref name="BBC2020">{{cite news |title=Search launched for missing hiker Freddie Goodwin |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-derbyshire-54589101 |publisher=BBC News |date=19 October 2020}}</ref>
<ref name="BBC1989">{{cite news |title=Boy, 13, missing in Peak District |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/archive/1989/08/15/goodwin-missing |publisher=BBC News |date=15 August 1989}}</ref>
<ref name="ColdFiles">{{cite web |title=Episode 3: Freddie Goodwin |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/missingpersons |website=Missing Persons: Cold Files |publisher=BBC |date=10 April 2023}}</ref>
<ref name="Telegraph2009">{{cite news |title=20 years on, parents still seek answers in Goodwin case |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/5971423 |publisher=The Telegraph |date=14 August 2009}}</ref>
<ref name="Guardian2024">{{cite news |title=New clues emerge in 2020 disappearance of hiker Freddie Goodwin |url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2024/oct/17/freddie-goodwin-backpack |publisher=The Guardian |date=17 October 2024}}</ref>
<ref name="NCAProgression">{{cite web |title=Freddie Goodwin: Age-progressed images released |url=https://www.missingpersons.police.uk/goodwin |publisher=National Crime Agency |date=3 February 2020}}</ref>
<ref name="Discovery2025">{{cite news |title=Remains of Freddie Goodwin found in Peak District |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-derbyshire-68823658 |publisher=BBC News |date=20 April 2025}}</ref>
<ref name="Independent2024">{{cite news |title=Case of Freddie Goodwin moved to cold file status after 35 years |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/freddie-goodwin-cold-file |publisher=The Independent |date=5 July 2024}}</ref>
<ref name="InquestVerdict">{{cite news |title=Freddie Goodwin died from fall and exposure, inquest concludes |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/goodwin-inquest-results |publisher=The Independent |date=1 May 2025}}</ref>
</references>
</references>


==External links==
==External links==
* [https://www.derbyshire.police.uk/missingpeople/freddie-goodwin Derbyshire Police – Missing persons archive]
* [https://www.nmyalliance.org.uk Northern Missing Youth Alliance]
* [https://www.freddiegoodwinfoundation.org.uk Freddie Goodwin Foundation]
* [https://www.derbyshire.police.uk/missingpeople/archives/freddie-goodwin Derbyshire Police – Archive: Freddie Goodwin]


[[Category:2020s deaths]]
[[Category:1976 births]]
[[Category:2020s missing person cases]]
[[Category:1980s missing person cases]]
[[Category:Missing children]]
[[Category:Unsolved disappearances]]
[[Category:People from Sheffield]]
[[Category:August 1989 events in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Formerly missing people]]
[[Category:Formerly missing people]]
[[Category:People from Sheffield]]
[[Category:October 2020 events in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Unsolved disappearances]]
[[Category:Deaths by misadventure]]

Revision as of 20:14, 21 June 2025

Freddie Goodwin
Born
Frederick James Goodwin

(1976-02-03)February 3, 1976
Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
NationalityBritish
Known forDisappearance
Parent(s)Margaret Goodwin (mother)
Thomas Goodwin (father)

The disappearance of Freddie Goodwin occurred on 14 August 1989, when 13-year-old schoolboy Frederick James Goodwin vanished while on a family holiday near Snake Pass in Derbyshire, England. Despite one of the largest search operations ever undertaken in the Peak District and decades of ongoing speculation, Freddie has never been found. His case remains one of the longest-standing unsolved child disappearances in British history.

Background

Freddie Goodwin was born on 3 February 1976 in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, the youngest child of Margaret and Thomas Goodwin. At the time of his disappearance, he was a Year 8 student at Brookfield Secondary School and known among peers as quiet, bright, and curious. He had a strong interest in geography and frequently carried a notebook where he drew maps and detailed his imagined adventures through various parts of the British countryside.

In August 1989, the Goodwin family took a week-long trip to the High Peak region. They were staying at a rural cottage near the Snake Pass, a winding mountain road in the Peak District, famous for its scenic views and unpredictable weather. According to family accounts, Freddie was in high spirits that week and had been particularly eager to explore nearby woodland trails.

Disappearance

On the morning of 14 August 1989, at approximately 10:15 a.m., Freddie set out alone for what he described to his parents as a “quick wander.” He took a windbreaker jacket, a packet of crisps, and a small notebook, promising to return by lunchtime. The weather that morning was overcast with intermittent mist, but conditions were not considered dangerous at the time.

When Freddie failed to return by 1:00 p.m., his parents began to search the surrounding area, calling his name along the nearby paths and lanes. By 3:30 p.m., they contacted the local police. That evening, a full-scale search was launched, involving Derbyshire Constabulary, local volunteers, mountain rescue units, and search dogs. Helicopters were dispatched the following day, scanning the moorlands and river gorges that border the Snake Pass.

Despite a six-day ground search covering over 40 square miles, no trace of Freddie Goodwin was found. His disappearance confounded authorities, who considered several possibilities ranging from accidental injury to abduction. With no evidence of a struggle and no confirmed sightings beyond the morning he vanished, investigators were left with an open-ended mystery.

Investigation

Over the years, the case was reopened multiple times as new leads surfaced, though none led to a resolution. In 1992, a man in Bakewell claimed to have seen a boy matching Freddie’s description begging outside a church, but the sighting was never confirmed. In 1999, a dig was conducted near Ladybower Reservoir after a tip from an anonymous letter, but nothing was recovered.

Theories about Freddie’s disappearance have ranged widely. Police initially leaned toward an accidental death, suspecting that Freddie may have fallen into one of the deep ravines or water systems in the area. However, some officers remained skeptical of this theory due to the lack of physical evidence, such as clothing or personal items. Others have speculated about the possibility of abduction, particularly given the remote yet trafficked nature of the region during the holiday season.

Throughout the 2000s and 2010s, the case was occasionally featured in missing persons documentaries and cold case reviews. Advances in forensic technology led to the re-examination of physical evidence, such as soil traces collected during the initial search, but nothing conclusive emerged.

Public response

Freddie’s disappearance made national headlines in the late 1980s and early 1990s, sparking both public sympathy and fear across the UK. His face was featured on milk cartons, missing child posters, and national news broadcasts. The case was often compared to the disappearance of Genette Tate and other high-profile missing child cases of the era.

Vigils were held annually in Sheffield throughout the 1990s. His parents gave numerous interviews over the decades, maintaining belief that Freddie may have survived and holding out hope for closure. In 2009, on the twentieth anniversary of his disappearance, a memorial walk was held near Snake Pass, with over 400 people in attendance.

Online forums and amateur sleuth communities also took interest in the case, some offering new timelines and theories, while others were criticized for promoting unfounded speculation. Nonetheless, the enduring public awareness helped keep Freddie’s case from fading into obscurity.

Status

As of 2029, forty years after Freddie Goodwin vanished, no confirmed evidence has ever surfaced regarding his fate. His parents, now in their 80s, continue to mark the anniversary each year privately. In the absence of any conclusive findings, Derbyshire Police still classify the case as an open missing persons file.

In 2020, Freddie would have turned 44 years old. Age progression renderings created by the National Crime Agency depict what he might have looked like in adulthood, though no matches have ever been confirmed. In 2024, the missing persons register officially transferred his case to the cold archive, while retaining active tip channels.

Legacy

Freddie Goodwin’s disappearance has had a lasting impact on how search-and-rescue protocols are conducted in remote UK regions. The scale of the initial search effort prompted revisions to Peak District emergency coordination, particularly for cases involving children.

In 1995, his family worked with other families of missing children to establish the Northern Missing Youth Alliance, a volunteer organization dedicated to rapid response planning and family support. The group continues to advocate for nationwide reforms to missing child investigations and greater mental health support for affected families.

See also

References

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External links