Mother, 24, is stunned after Royal Mail delivered a postcard 112 years after it was sent to the previous owner of her house.
A silly story of the type that appears in local and national newspapers from time to time). And in some versions of the article Royal Mail gets the blame - as if it had been hanging on to the card for so long. It's worth next to nothing, like a number of other used postcards that are a century or more old, and some people might think it harmless fun to put it through the letter-box.
And just as I was about to "Submit Reply" I noted this comment to the Daily Mail article:
"Can I just say, I originally asked our local Plymouth newspaper to post this story - for free to see if I could find any of her family and give them the post card. I didnt contact the daily mail or have they contacted me I haven't been paid anything. I got the postcard delivered, thought it was incredible and wanted to reunite it with family. "
Obviously a very contrived story!
PC delivered 112 years late! Humbug!
Moderator: MichaelDay
Re: PC delivered 112 years late! Humbug!
You think so? What makes you think it's contrived?kevinramsdale wrote: ↑Fri Jun 07, 2019 3:06 pm When I used to easily get around in these lightweight wheelchairs and send out cards on approval I occasionally had the unwanted ones returned in inadequate packaging, which would come open disgorging some or all of the contents into the postal system. This is certainly one way that these "late deliveries" could come about.
Last edited by Nallis on Sat Dec 02, 2023 6:59 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- kevinramsdale
- Posts: 156
- Joined: Mon May 22, 2006 7:09 pm
- Location: Lincoln
Re: PC delivered 112 years late! Humbug!
When I used to send out cards on approval I occasionally had the unwanted ones returned in inadequate packaging, which would come open disgorging some or all of the contents into the postal system. This is certainly one way that these "late deliveries" could come about.
Kevin
-
- Posts: 36
- Joined: Sun Apr 26, 2015 11:11 am
Re: PC delivered 112 years late! Humbug!
Indeed - this is a more likely story... it has happened to me tookevinramsdale wrote: ↑Fri Jun 07, 2019 3:06 pm When I used to send out cards on approval I occasionally had the unwanted ones returned in inadequate packaging, which would come open disgorging some or all of the contents into the postal system. This is certainly one way that these "late deliveries" could come about.