Envelope posted from America finally arrives in Britain 80 years later
March 12, 2023Envelope posted from America finally arrives in Britain… 80 years later and without the letter inside
- The envelope, dated October 5, 1942, was delivered to a Lancashire care home
- Its sender was training for the British Flying Training School and fought in WW2
- Read more: Our entire street has been left without post for almost six months
An envelope that was sent from America has finally arrived in the UK 80 years after it was posted – but the letter inside of it is missing.
The envelope, which is dated October 5, 1942, was discovered by manager Kevin Beattie, 39, when it arrived at The Sands Meadows care home in Hest Bank, Lancashire.
He said he immediately realised that ‘it wasn’t your average letter’ and launched an appeal on social media to try and find out who the envelope belonged to.
Kevin then discovered it was from Phillip Tattersall, who was living in Florida at the time while training for the British Flying Training School, but he sadly died in 1996.
It is believed Phillip tried to send the letter from Florida to his parents Cornelius and Ethel Tattersall, who lived at the property which is now the care home.
The envelope is dated October 5, 1942, and has only just been delivered – 80 years later
Phillip Tattersall, pictured with his daughter Phillipa in 1988, had sent the letter in 1942 to his parents
Although the actual letter was missing, Kevin said when he opened it and ‘saw the age of the envelope’, he realised it was something he has ‘never seen’ before.
He said: ‘If letters have come damaged to the home, then its come in a clear plastic bag and just mentioned that if there’s anything of value, to contact Royal Mail.
‘But once we opened it and saw the age of the envelope and the stamp, it dawned on us that it wasn’t your average letter that we would have got.
‘We’ve never seen anything like this locally but I’ve seen something before how someone received a letter from over a hundreds years ago.
‘But we’d never seen one before.’
After seeing Kevin’s appeal, Phillip’s daughter Phillipa and granddaughter Tessa reached out to him to provide more information about the envelope.
They revealed that when he returned from Florida, Phillip became a RAF Flight Lieutenant and later served in northern Germany in WW2 and flew a fighter bomber.
Phillip went on to marry his wife Ruth and live in Morecambe, Lancshire, before emigrating to Canada and having four children.
Their daughter Phillipa, who lives in an island near Vancouver, Canada, said: ‘I have been thinking about the power of social media and how quickly information gets passed to all of us.
‘Certainly much quicker than that envelope delivered to The Sands Meadow.
‘I recognised my father’s handwriting as soon as I saw the envelope.’
She added: ‘The envelope probably contained a letter to update his parents on his life during training in Florida.
‘He always stayed in close contact with them throughout their lives and would visit them.
‘My father, Philip was a great story teller and would be thrilled that this information be shared.’
Although the actual letter was missing, Kevin said when he opened it and ‘saw the age of the envelope’, he realised it was something he has ‘never seen’ before
It is believed Phillip tried to send the letter from Florida to his parents Cornelius (pictured here when he was younger) and Ethel Tattersall, who lived at the property which is now the care home
Kevin has contacted Royal Mail to find out why the envelope has only been delivered now but said he thinks it has ‘fallen through the gaps.’
He said: ‘They were unaware of where it had actually been so whether it has been found behind a desk while cleaning or whether it has just been on a shelf somewhere.
‘It has just fallen through the gaps really.
‘They couldn’t tell us which depot it had come from either unfortunately.
‘But you can by the age of the envelope as well that it looks like it’s been somewhere where the sun had been on the envelope.
‘It wasn’t white paper, there was some yellowing in the paper so it looked aged.’
Source: Read Full Article