Crimson Dynamo
24-06-2021, 04:01 PM
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/F28B/production/_119019026_204277775_4444315268924312_163551450867 6568304_n.jpg
A mother whose eight-year-old daughter posted a Father's Day letter addressed
to her dad in heaven said she was overwhelmed when it was returned to her by
a postman.
The postman, who recently lost his own father, managed to track down Sarah
Tully after a social media appeal.
He said he feared the letter, which he found in a Leicester post box on Monday,
would have been thrown away.
Ms Tully said she planned to keep the letter in a box for her daughter
The postman, who is called Simon but declined to give his surname, said he
had found the letter inside a post box in Braunstone while working overtime
on a route he does not usually cover.
He said he was "taken aback" when he read it, after losing his own father last
year.
"Obviously without a stamp or an actual address on it, if it got put in with the
rest of the stuff to be delivered it would just end up getting thrown away in
transit somewhere," he said.
"I spoke to my manager and asked if I could try to get hold of the family to
find out more about it and get it back to them."
He posted a picture of the letter on Facebook where it attracted thousands of
comments.
Within 15 minutes he had been put in touch with Ms Tully and arranged to
take the unopened letter to her.
They met on Tuesday evening and Simon gave the "lovely little girl" a father
and daughter figurine as a gift.
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/1199B/production/_119019027_dadletteredit.jpg
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leicestershire-57569184
A mother whose eight-year-old daughter posted a Father's Day letter addressed
to her dad in heaven said she was overwhelmed when it was returned to her by
a postman.
The postman, who recently lost his own father, managed to track down Sarah
Tully after a social media appeal.
He said he feared the letter, which he found in a Leicester post box on Monday,
would have been thrown away.
Ms Tully said she planned to keep the letter in a box for her daughter
The postman, who is called Simon but declined to give his surname, said he
had found the letter inside a post box in Braunstone while working overtime
on a route he does not usually cover.
He said he was "taken aback" when he read it, after losing his own father last
year.
"Obviously without a stamp or an actual address on it, if it got put in with the
rest of the stuff to be delivered it would just end up getting thrown away in
transit somewhere," he said.
"I spoke to my manager and asked if I could try to get hold of the family to
find out more about it and get it back to them."
He posted a picture of the letter on Facebook where it attracted thousands of
comments.
Within 15 minutes he had been put in touch with Ms Tully and arranged to
take the unopened letter to her.
They met on Tuesday evening and Simon gave the "lovely little girl" a father
and daughter figurine as a gift.
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/1199B/production/_119019027_dadletteredit.jpg
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leicestershire-57569184