Daughter's incredible reunion with 'dead' dad after 26 years

A woman thought her father was dead for two decades after his then employer told her he suffered a heart attack and died.

Ronnie Rudolph split from the mother of his daughter Janie Rudolph and moved to Illinois and then to Tennessee.

Ms Rudolph would reach out and call him while he was at his job at a concrete plant. That’s when she received the news that he had died.

“They just told me that he had a heart attack and he had problems and that he was deceased,” she told WTVF.

“I believed it and I didn’t investigate it. I moved around, I was married, and I had my family, and I didn’t have money so I just felt like I couldn’t do anything much.”

Janie Rudolph thought her dad was dead for 26 years. Source: WTVF
Janie Rudolph thought her dad was dead for 26 years. Source: WTVF

Mr Rudolph’s older sister, Juanita Elliott, also admitted to losing touch.

“I was all settled and with married life and kids, we kind of just drifted apart. I lost the number to his work for one thing, and I lost contact with him,” she said.

Mr Rudolph said he believed no one wanted him and didn’t try to reach out for all those years. The loss of communication resulted in missing out on nearly 30 years together.

After the call about her father’s supposed death, Ms Rudolph informed her family that her father had died and they all accepted it as truth for 26 years — until Ms Rudolph’s mother died four months ago, and she felt the need to obtain her father’s death certificate as well.

“I started looking for a death certificate, and I could not find one on my father, so we were thinking he might be alive somewhere,” she told WTVF.

Janie and Ronnie Rudolph share an emotional embrace during the reunion. Source: WTVF
Janie and Ronnie Rudolph share an emotional embrace during the reunion. Source: WTVF

Eventually, after speaking with other family members and the concrete plant, Ms Rudolph and her daughter found out that Mr Rudolph was living with a friend in Tennessee. Ms Rudolph said the reality of her father being alive felt like “a dream”.

On November 23, Mr Rudolph finally got to see his children and sister again, along with four grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.

The 72-year-old has suffered two strokes and could not speak clearly, but he expressed happiness at finally being reunited.

“It is a good feeling to have all the family together again,” his sister said.