Michigan couple welcomes 1st baby girl born into the family after 138 years of boys: 'Utter shock'

A Michigan couple is seeing pink as they welcomed a baby girl named Audrey in March, ending a 138-year streak of only boys being born into the family.

When Carolyn and Andrew Clark of Caledonia, Michigan, held their “gender reveal” party, they weren’t expecting any big surprises.

Andrew Clark had informed his wife before they married 10 years ago that they would not be having a girl — due to a long line of male-dominated births in his family.

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“I didn’t believe him because it’s a 50/50 chance of having a boy or a girl,” Carolyn Clark, 36, told Fox News Digital.

“So when he told me that, I just thought he was kidding,” she added.

Carolyn Clark said that the next time she saw her husband’s parents, she decided to get to the bottom of the family’s abundance of male births.

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“They told me, ‘Oh yeah, this is a real thing,” Carolyn Clark said. 

“My father-in-law pulled out some family tree to show me.”

Carolyn Clark said there was one name on the family tree — the person who was apparently the last girl to be born in the family. 

The family member’s birth year was 1885. 

“I said, ‘This does not seem right. I’ve never heard of this happening before,” Carolyn Clark recalled.

But there was more proof.

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“My grandpa was really big into our genealogy,” Andrew Clark, 34, told Fox News Digital. 

“So, he traced it back and found all the birth certificates and marriage certificates and death certificates.”

And when the couple had their son Cameron, 4, it seemed that history was repeating itself, Carolyn Clark said. 

“I thought, ‘It must be true. His brothers only have boys as well, so I guess this is actually real.'”

Having all boys isn’t necessarily a point of pride in the Clark family, Andrew Clark said. 

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“It was just a crazy fact that kept occurring in our lives,” he said.

Still, every time someone in the family was having a baby, there was always a glimmer of hope that the child would be a girl.

“Even when we were biting into the cookie for our gender reveal, we were just expecting it to be blue,” Carolyn Clark said. 

The Clarks invited their family over to bite into cookies to reveal whether they’d be welcoming a boy or a girl. 

Carolyn Clark said she, her husband and their loved ones were in “utter shock” when they learned the streak would be broken (SEE THE VIDEO at the top of this article).

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“My sister-in-law and I were always saying, ‘There has to be a girl at some point, whether it’s us or maybe our boys will have a daughter at some point.’ So when we bit into [the cookie], I looked at her like, ‘Is this pink?’ And she freaked out.”

Carolyn Clark said she wondered if Audrey’s birth might pave the way for future Clark girls.

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“We were happy either way,” she said. 

“We just wanted a healthy baby and it was just the icing on that cake that it was a girl. Andrew’s brother and his wife are wanting more kids,” she said — and added that she hoped it “gives my sister-in-law hope that it can be done.”

Before little Audrey was born, the Clarks had suffered a miscarriage, which is why the couple has called their brand-new daughter a “rainbow baby.”

A rainbow baby is a baby born after a loss due to miscarriage, infant death, stillbirth or neonatal death, according to the American Pregnancy Association.

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“Rainbow babies are considered ‘miracle’ babies due to the powerful impact they can have on helping parents heal after a loss,” the organization wrote on its website.

Carolyn Clark had been scheduled to be induced on March 16, but Audrey had other plans and arrived on the morning of the 17th — St. Patrick’s Day. 

“We just thought that was super special that she is our rainbow baby, and she came on the day of celebrating luck,” mom Carolyn Clark said. 

“So, she’s kind of our lucky charm.”

Sister of Colorado girl who went missing at 14 became investigator in already bungled case

On Aug. 16, 1983, teenager Beth Miller left her Idaho Springs, Colorado, home for a jog and never returned.

For weeks, there was a massive community search effort for the 14-year-old as neighbors and law enforcement came together to bring her home, but that never happened.

“I’m not young anymore, and I’d like to know what happened to Beth,” Miller’s sister, Lynn McLaughlin, told Fox News Digital. “And I want to be able to tell Mom, who’s not a spring chicken, either — I’d like to be able to tell her, ‘This is what happened to Beth, and this is where she’s buried. Let’s go get her and give her a good Christian burial.'”

McLaughlin was so determined for answers after her sister’s disappearance that she became directly involved in the case in the 1990s when she joined local law enforcement, and doing so led her down an even more complicated path toward answers.

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“That’s really why I got into law enforcement. I wanted to find my sister,” McLaughlin told Fox News Digital.

But when she began sorting through the evidence in her sister’s case, she was confronted with an unsalvageable mess.

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“When I went to the Idaho Springs Police Department, I was told that I was about a month too late — that most of the reports and everything they didn’t think was important had been destroyed,” she said. “There was very little left of this case.”

Leads that would have previously taken up a “bathroom-sized room” full of papers — pre-computers — now only took up two drawers, she said.

McLaughlin began her law enforcement career with the Idaho Springs Police Department and then went on to the Clear Creek County Sheriff’s Office (CCCSO), which told Fox News Digital it is still actively investigating the case but could not comment further on developments at this time.

“When I started working on the case, and that publicity drew a lot of new leads to us. So, we were able to take a lot of that information and those leads and investigate those leads. And through that, we found a couple of very good suspects that we dug a lot further into,” McLaughlin explained. “…It’s frustrating.”

Another girl said she saw Miller jogging on Aug. 16, 1983 and waved to her. That witness told investigators that she saw a red pickup truck drive by Miller near the same area where search dogs eventually lost her scent, according to McLaughlin.

McLaughlin named two potential suspects in Miller’s disappearance who were never charged as Edward Apodaca, a former law enforcement officer, and his former girlfriend, Viola Moya. Apodaca lived nearby and owned a red pickup truck similar to the one the witness described at the time of Miller’s vanishing.

Moya apparently gave a statement to an investigator in 1993 saying they had dismembered the 14-year-old and buried her remains.

So McLaughlin, as a CCCSO investigator, went to the alleged burial site with other investigators, began to dig and eventually found a “t-shirt similar to the one Beth was wearing at the time of her disappearance.” 

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She went to the sheriff at the time and told him what she had discovered. When she returned to the scene, a large piece of equipment had been moved over the apparent burial site, obstructing McLaughlin’s access to anything of potential importance in her sister’s case. The man operating the equipment told McLaughlin that he was taking “orders from the sheriff,” she said. 

“I can’t remember if it was a bulldozer or a backhoe or what it was, but it was covering up everything, and it completely — the trees, bushes, everything was gone where we had markers [that] the bloodhounds had alerted,” she recalled. 

When McLaughlin confronted the sheriff, she was told she “would be charged with interfering with an investigation, with trespass and a list of charges” if she “ever went back to that site again.”

“That was the end,” she said.

In 2006, a grand jury was called to investigate several witnesses over the course of 10 months. 

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Apodaca’s wife and her mother killed him in New Mexico in 1990, according to The Denver Post. Moya had grown old and was considered too incapacitated to be questioned or charged, McLaughlin said.

The grand jury concluded that there was a “clear lack of professionalism and cooperation in the investigating bodies,” including the Idaho Springs Police Department, CCCSO, the Denver Police Department, the Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and the FBI. They also found a “lack of meaningful investigation at the outset of this case.” As a result, the jury could not formally indict any suspects.

“Jurisdictional disputes were particularly at fault in slowly and eventually sabotaging the investigation. During the [then-24-year-old] investigation involving five agencies many documents and statements became hard to corroborate, and others were destroyed,” the grand jury stated.

Now, more than anything, McLaughlin says she just wants to find Miller’s remains and give her a proper burial.

“I know whoever did it — they’ll still face their best judgment time when they die,” she said.