Published Nov 29, 2025Last updated 0 minutes ago8 minute readPatrick Paddon (back left), who was 17 years old when he went missing in 1969, is shown in an undated family photo. His family is still hoping that some clues will be found, or that someone will remember finding something, that explains what happened to him after he went into the woods of Colchester County on a hunting trip. – SUPPLIED BY NICOLE BALCOMArticle contentIt has been 56 years since Patrick (Paddy) Paddon walked into woods in Colchester County on a deer hunting trip with his father and uncle. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY.Subscribe now to access this story and more:Unlimited access to the website and appExclusive access to premium content, newsletters and podcastsFull access to the e-Edition app, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment onEnjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalistsSupport local journalists and the next generation of journalistsSUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES.Subscribe or sign in to your account to continue your reading experience.Unlimited access to the website and appExclusive access to premium content, newsletters and podcastsFull access to the e-Edition app, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment onEnjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalistsSupport local journalists and the next generation of journalistsRegister to unlock more articles.Create an account or sign in to continue your reading experience.Access additional stories every monthShare your thoughts and join the conversation in our commenting communityGet email updates from your favourite authorsSign In or Create an AccountorArticle contentNov. 29, 1969 was also the last time anyone saw Patrick, who was 17 at the time. Article contentArticle contentHe and his relatives were supposed to be out for just a few hours that morning. They went into the woods on Pembroke Road in Burnside not far from a farmhouse owned by a family friend, and they were supposed to meet at that house at noon. Patrick’s father, Bernard, and uncle, Neil, returned, but Patrick didn’t. Article contentArticle contentWhen he still wasn’t there by 1:30 p.m., they drove around the area and to Stewiacke and Truro, but there was no sign of Patrick, a Grade 11 student at the former Prince Andrew High School in Dartmouth. Article content Patrick Paddon, who was 17 years old when he went missing in 1969, is shown in an undated family photo. His family is still hoping that some clues will be found, or that someone will remember finding something, that explains what happened to him after he went into the woods of Colchester County on a hunting trip. – SUPPLIED BY NICOLE BALCOMArticle contentThe two men saw another hunter who told him he had met Patrick on a road at 2:45 p.m. and he had asked for directions back to the farmhouse.Article contentBut he didn’t show up, and RCMP were called. A search started the next morning, after more than 35 centimetres of snow had fallen. Article contentPatrick was prepared for the day in the woods. He had food, a safety flare, a compass, a pocket watch, his rifle and a knife. He had matches coated in wax to waterproof them in the butt of his rifle. He was dressed warmly and had a reversible coat that was water repellent, which would have been useful with the snow that fell. Article contentSearchers on foot, in a helicopter and on snowmobiles found no trace of Patrick or any of his belongings. Up to 80 volunteers, military members from bases in Summerside and Shearwater, and staff from the Department of Natural Resources searched an area of 72 square kilometres, with only one set of possible footprints found. On Dec. 8, the search was called off. Article contentArticle contentWhile social media has a way of keeping missing person cases alive through “on this day” memories or just general discussion, unless one knows about historical cases people are unlikely to see them come up in conversation. Article contentArticle contentBut for relatives of Patrick, his disappearance is always there. His niece, Nicole Balcom, wasn’t even born when Patrick went missing. She said the disappearance is something the family talks about regularly, but there have never been any answers. Article content“His picture is in our hallway, but there has always been the question of what happened to Uncle Paddy.” Article contentArticle contentShe said her mother — Patrick’s youngest sister — said there was no panic at first because he knew the woods. Article content“Mom was like, ‘Oh, he’ll be back,’ and then he just never was, and nothing of his was ever found.” Article contentBalcom said her grandfather and uncle believed another hunter accidentally shot Patrick and didn’t want to admit it, but police didn’t share that suspicionArticle content“Our family’s main thought was that if he was spotted on the road toward Truro, why would he have gone back into the woods if he was already on the road and already late?” Article contentShe said that even if Patrick saw the buck of his dreams from the road, he likely wouldn’t have gone deep into the woods. Article content“Did he get to Truro? Did he get on the highway? There are no answers and no closure.” Article contentFamily in Ontario remember waiting to see if Patrick was running away and heading to see them. Article content Patrick Paddon (front left), who was 17 years old when he went missing in 1969, is shown in an undated family photo. – SUPPLIED BY NICOLE BALCOMArticle contentThe woods are dense in that part of Colchester County, and they are still popular with hunters. Article contentBalcom and the family made posters about the case to put up this year in the general area and in online hunting groups, not only as a way for people to know of things to be looking for but in case they had found something years ago. Article content“We’ve all definitely had conversations about what could have happened, but it’s all theories, and unless we find any evidence we don’t know that he didn’t leave those woods,” she said. Article contentArticle content“In the dream world, we would love to know that he got to Truro and hitchhiked and went out west somewhere and lived his best life, but in reality . . . that doesn’t make logical sense.” Article contentShe said Neil and her uncle — Patrick’s brother-in-law — frequently went to the area looking for clues or signs of what happened to the teen, including by helicopter. Article content“My (great) uncle felt responsible as he was the last one to see him.” Article contentShe said the family is still hoping for closure, although generationally she thinks people approach that differently. Article content“The younger generation has heard of cases being closed (with evidence found) and we hope for that, while the older generation kind of has their (version of) closure with ‘He’s gone, he’s dead, and we’ll never know how it happened.’” Article contentArticle contentPatrick was declared dead years ago. Article content“All it would take would be to find the metal from his gun and then we would be able to close the book and say, ‘He never left the woods,’” Balcom said. Article contentShe said that because he had several items with him, they still hope someone may remember finding one over the past six decades. Article contentHe had the following: Article content.303 Lee Enfield Mark III rifle Silver Ingraham pocket watch Two Star Red flare in a metal tube with a screw top Knife with a 15-centimetre Bowie-shaped blade and a black composite handle with a silver diamond and green emblem Canadian Tire air-filled pocket compass with a ring and hinged cover, in a silver case with a brass locking lever Green-topped boots with yellow soles Reversible coat, red and water-repellent on one side, red-and-black checked on the other Signet ring with a gold shank, the letter P in silver with a chip diamond to the right, mounted on black onyx Article content“What if somebody 30 years ago, for example, found his ring and just put it in a box and haven’t thought anything of it since? If we find one item, then we’ll know he never left the woods,” Balcom said. Article contentShe and her partner walked the area when putting up posters up in the fall. Article content“There are a lot of spots you can’t walk in 10 feet from the road because it’s so dense,” she said. “In the police report they talked about a swamp, and that’s the only area you can see well.” Article contentBalcom said walking through that area felt “heavy.” Article content“This place holds a lot of memories of sad, terrible times for the older generation in our family.” Article contentShe said she just wants people to talk about the case and hopefully trip a memory. Article content Patrick Paddon (standing, centre, in checked shirt), who was 17 years old when he went missing in 1969, is shown in an undated family photo. – SUPPLIED BY NICOLE BALCOMArticle contentBalcom said that while her grandfather’s and mother’s generations believe Patrick was either shot by another hunter or moved out west, she doesn’t have any real theory of what happened. She doesn’t think that he hunkered down for the night and died from exposure because he had been on the road and was well-prepared to bed down for the night if necessary. Article contentArticle content“I don’t think he was lost for days and starved to death,” she said. “I don’t think that’s a possibility.” Article contentA couple of years ago, someone in the family asked for and received a copy of the RCMP file, so Balcom asked for a copy and did a video interview with her great uncle, Neil. Article content“His memory was not what it should be,” she said. “I was asking about what he remembered, and we didn’t get anywhere with that.” Neil died in September. Not long after, Balcom got a message from Terynn Boulton, who saw a post by Balcom from the previous year on the Halifax Regional Police Facebook page in which she mentioned Patrick’s disappearance. Article contentBoulton has had an interest in missing children cases for years, since she first heard about the disappearance of Tania Murrell in Edmonton in 1983. Murrel was six. Boulton was eight. Article content“That impacted me. I was horrified that children could go missing. . . . I guess that was a turning point in my life.” Article contentArticle contentShe checked over the years for any news of whether Tania had been found. As the internet became a tool, she would check the Missing Kids Canada website periodically for updates. She started to do more research and eventually started the We the Missing website that focuses on missing children. Article contentShe saw the post from Balcom and made contact. Article contentBoulton went through the RCMP file and the family’s recollections to create a full narrative on the website of Patrick’s disappearance and the subsequent search. She said she wants to make more people aware of the case. Article content“It’s not that people don’t care, but it’s from 1969 and people don’t really know, even if they know he’s missing, how they can help or how he’ll ever be found if he hasn’t been by now,” Boulton said. Article content“You can’t find missing people if no one knows they’re missing. If Patrick did die in the woods, hunters could have already come across something related to him and not even know,” she said. Article content“The longer it goes, the less likely it is that anything will be found, and we’re not going to find him if no one knows he’s out there. His father and mother have passed, and now his uncle.” Article contentBouton said some things seem odd to her, like Patrick being last spotted on the road after the agreed-upon meeting time but not walking back along the road, and being well-prepared to survive a night in the woods if he did get lost. Article contentIn 2007, remains were found in the general area but they were determined to belong to someone else who was missing. Article contentRCMP spokeswoman Cindy Bayer said there have been no recent tips in Patrick’s disappearance, which is still considered a missing person case with no indication of a homicide. Article contentWhile the province doesn’t have a cold case team, open files are reviewed regularly.Article content“There are still protocols where you have to look at a file within a certain number of years; we don’t just let them sit there,” she said. Article content
56 years of questions: Dartmouth teen’s disappearance in 1969 still a mystery



