Despite the short distance, the letter took 138 years to arrive at its destination.
It was finally delivered a few days ago to Thérèse Pailla, the
great-granddaughter of the addressee, who was as surprised as the
postman.
“The postman brought it to me. He and his colleagues were surprised. Me
too,” Pailla, who is in her eighties, said.
In the letter, the sender refers to an order of yarn from a spinning mill that once owned by Pailla’s great-grandfather, who died in 1897. It is as yet unclear whether the belated arrival was due to a postal error or if the letter was recently found and re-posted. France’s postal service La Poste has said it will investigate.
In a statement, the regional post service described the late delivery as a “very exceptional” case, pointing out that it wasn’t necessarily the same postal service as today. “It can sometimes happen that a letter gets lost when a locker is dusted, tidied or moved. A letter can fall accidentally and is found years later. But, generally, it’s quite rare.”
In the letter, the sender refers to an order of yarn from a spinning mill that once owned by Pailla’s great-grandfather, who died in 1897. It is as yet unclear whether the belated arrival was due to a postal error or if the letter was recently found and re-posted. France’s postal service La Poste has said it will investigate.
In a statement, the regional post service described the late delivery as a “very exceptional” case, pointing out that it wasn’t necessarily the same postal service as today. “It can sometimes happen that a letter gets lost when a locker is dusted, tidied or moved. A letter can fall accidentally and is found years later. But, generally, it’s quite rare.”
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