 Welcome to Spotlight. I'm Colin Louther and I'm Robin Basilen. Spotlight uses a special English method of broadcasting. It is easier for people to understand, no matter where in the world they live. In 1999, Bobby Dunbar Jr. gave his daughter Margaret a gift. It was a book of newspaper stories about her grandfather. Margaret Dunbar Cuttrite knew the Dunbar family story well. In August of 1912, her grandfather, Bobby Dunbar, disappeared. He was four years old. The Dunbars were from Louisiana in the United States. Officials searched for Bobby all over the southeast United States. And after eight months, police found a boy. They believed he was Bobby Dunbar. They found him far from where Bobby disappeared. And he was with a man named William Walters. This was the story Margaret Dunbar Cuttrite knew well. But this was not the whole story. Her book of old newspaper stories told more. Another woman named Julia Anderson claimed that the boy police found was not Bobby Dunbar. She believed the boy was her child, Bruce Anderson. William Walters also said the boy was Bruce Anderson. And Walters said he did not kidnap the boy. The claims of the Dunbars, Julia Anderson and William Walters were settled in court. Court officials decided the boy was Bobby Dunbar. However, was the court right? Did they return the boy to the correct family? Today's spotlight is on Bobby Dunbar and the families involved in this mysterious story. Bobby Dunbar died in 1966. But the mystery of his story continued for many more years. In 1999, Margaret Dunbar Cuttrite began researching her grandfather's story. Her book of newspaper stories included a lot of information about a woman she knew little about, Julia Anderson. Cuttrite learned that Anderson was a single mother from North Carolina. In February of 1912, she had sent her son Bruce on a trip with William Walters. She thought Walters would take Bruce for a short time. However, Walters never came back. When a boy was found with Walters, Anderson believed it must be Bruce. Anderson's story sounded very possible. But many people did not believe her. Anderson was an unmarried mother. Because of this, many people thought she was not a moral person. Cuttrite told her local newspaper, The Pilot. People wrote to the papers with their opinions. They did not think it mattered if the boy was Bobby or Bruce. They believed that the boy would have a better life with the Dunbars. They believed this because the Dunbars were a family. And Julia Anderson was a single mother. These reports made Margaret Cuttrite want to know even more about Julia Anderson. So Cuttrite decided to talk to Anderson's family. She found Anderson's two living children, Hollis Rawls and Jewel Tarver. She also found Anderson's granddaughter, Linda Tarver. The story they told about Julia Anderson and the missing boy was very different from the Dunbar family story. Cuttrite learned that Julia Anderson had a very difficult life. She worked hard, but she was poor. And her first husband did not treat her well. Cuttrite also learned that Anderson married again after she lost Bruce. She had more children, she became a Christian, and she cared well for her children. But she always mourned for her lost child. Anderson's son, Hollis Rawls, told This American Life, She never forgot the boy. She would talk about what the boy looked like. She would talk about what he did. If it had been possible to get the boy back without breaking the law, she would have. She loved the child. She loved Bruce. As Cuttrite researched the story, she learned many surprising things. But what shocked her most was learning what the Anderson family believed happened to Bruce. Anderson's granddaughter, Linda Tarver, told the radio program This American Life. All of us grandchildren grew up knowing the story of our uncle Bruce. We knew that our grandmother's son had been taken by the Dunbar family. We always said he had been kidnapped. We said the Dunbars kidnapped him. Margaret Dunbar Cutrite could not believe this. She could not believe her great grandparents were kidnappers. Many people in the Dunbar family wanted Cutrite to stop researching. But Cutrite continued. And she learned more about another person in the story, William Walters. Walters had spent two years in prison for kidnapping Bobby Dunbar. But he had always said he was innocent. Walters believed Julia Anderson had given him permission to travel with her boy. And the Walters family never believed William Walters was a kidnapper. The more Cutrite learned, the more she understood that this was not just the Dunbar story. It was the Anderson's and even the Walters story. Cutrite told the pilot newspaper, It is not just a Dunbar family story. There are three families who had a reason to learn the truth. These three families believed very different stories about what happened in 1912. But who was right? Margaret Cutrite decided that everyone deserved to know the truth. So she asked her father, Bobby Dunbar Jr. to take a DNA test. This genetic test would confirm whether he was related to the Dunbar family or the Anderson family. Bobby Dunbar Jr. agreed to take the test. He was sure it would prove his father was Bobby Dunbar. But Cutrite and the Dunbar family were shocked to discover the truth. The test proved that Bobby Dunbar was not Bobby Dunbar. He was Bruce Anderson. The Dunbar family did not like the news. Many people in the family were angry with Margaret Cutrite. They felt she had disrespected the family history. However, Cutrite's father was not angry with her. He had always wondered about his father's story. He did not receive the answer he wanted. But it was good to know the truth. Even if it was difficult to fully comprehend, Bobby Dunbar Jr. told the pilot newspaper. I cannot in my mind say that I am an Anderson family member. What I do know is who my father was and what a good man he was. The Anderson and Walters families welcomed the news of the DNA results. The results proved that Julia Anderson had not lied. And they proved that William Walters had not kidnapped Bobby Dunbar. But the Anderson family did not want their good news to hurt the Dunbars. Julia Anderson's daughter, Jules Tarver, made this clear. She told This American Life. I told Bobby Dunbar Jr. We are not expecting anything from you. We just want your friendship. That is all we ever wanted. The writer and producer of this program was Diana Anderson. The voices you heard were from the United States and the United Kingdom. All quotes were adapted for this program and voiced by Spotlight. You can listen to this program again and read it on the internet at www.radioenglish.net. This program is called The Story of Bobby Dunbar.