| Identifying the girls and tying them to
the murder-suicide case in Blair County involved a massive investigation that stretched across the
country. The investigation by the
Pennsylvania State Police concluded that Noakes, whose wife had died two years previously, left
Roseville, Calif., on Nov. 11 with the children and Pierce in a car he had bought for $46.
Police theorized that Noakes, penniless and without
prospects of employment, killed the girls on Nov. 21 rather than let them starve. Autopsies determined
that the children had not eaten for 18 hours before their deaths.
After leaving the girls' bodies on blankets in the
woods, Noakes and Pierce drove west, abandoned their car between McVeytown and Altoona and hitchhiked
to Blair County. On Nov. 23, Pierce sold her coat, the couple's last possession except for the clothes
they were wearing. With the $2.55 she received, Noakes bought a rusty .22-caliber rifle from a
second-hand store and used it to kill Pierce and take his own life on Nov. 24.
Several hundred Cumberland County residents attended
the sisters' funeral at Ewing Funeral Home in Carlisle on Dec. 1, and the girls were buried in
Westminster Cemetery. Noakes and Pierce were buried in the same cemetery, about 100 feet from the
children.
(Currently on exhibit at PSP-HEMC)
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