Current:Home > MarketsFamily receives letter that was originally sent to relatives in 1943 -WealthPro Academy
Family receives letter that was originally sent to relatives in 1943
View
Date:2025-04-12 07:57:42
A letter mailed over 80 years ago has finally been delivered to its rightful family in Illinois, and it all happened by chance.
The letter resurfaced at the DeKalb Post Office, about 70 miles west of Chicago, reported television station WIFR.
It was mailed in June 1943 and addressed to the late Louis and Lavena George. The address was listed with a Dekalb street name, but no house number.
The family patriarch's first cousin mailed the letter, waiting to send comforting words to the couple after losing their daughter, Evelyn, to Cystic Fibrosis, WIFR reported.
A post office employee began searching for the family and eventually, delivered it to Grace Salazar, one of their daughters. Her sister, Jeannette, also read the letter.
According to WIFR, Jeannette and Grace are the only two surviving children of Louis and Lavena George. The couple married on April 14, 1932 and had eight children altogether, an online obituary shows.
Louis died at 74 years old on Sept. 16, 1986. His wife, Lavena, lived to be 98 and died on March 13, 2012.
Daughter of late couple moved by recovered letter
When their daughter Jeannette found out about the newly recovered letter, she called it “incredible” and said it moved her.
“I mean, losing a child is always horrific,” she told the outlet. “It just sort of put me in touch with my parents’ grief and the losses my family went through before I was even born.”
According to WIFR, the post office employee who found the letter said it likely got lost because there was no house number in the mailing address.
How did a letter get delivered 80 years late?
In a statement to USA TODAY, the U.S. Postal Service said most cases do not involve mail that was lost. Instead, old letters and postcards are sometimes purchased at flea markets, antique shops and online, then re-entered into the USPS system.
“The end result is what we do best – as long as there is a deliverable address and postage, the card or letter gets delivered,” wrote Tim Norman of USPS Strategic Communications.
He said the USPS processes 160 billion pieces of mail each year, averaging more than 5 million pieces per business day.
“Based on that figure we can estimate that since 1943 there (have) been trillions of pieces of mail processed and ultimately delivered,” he wrote.
Jeannette, the couple’s daughter who read the letter, told WIFR the experience has made her even more grateful for her family, especially her nieces and nephews.
“I just have more of a sense of continuity of life, of families,” Jeannette told the television station.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Tropical rains flood homes in an inland Georgia neighborhood for the second time since 2016
- Long Island serial killings: A timeline of the investigation
- Yoga in a basement helps people in a Ukrainian front-line city cope with Russia’s constant shelling
- NASCAR playoffs: Where the Cup Series drivers stand entering the second round
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- North Korean state media says Kim Jong Un discussed arms cooperation with Russian defense minister
- Sha’Carri Richardson finishes fourth in the 100m at The Prefontaine Classic
- Another nightmare for Tennessee at Florida as The Swamp remains its house of horrors
- Breaking debut in Olympics raises question: Are breakers artists or athletes?
- Climate activists spray Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate with orange paint
Ranking
- Jay Kanter, veteran Hollywood producer and Marlon Brando agent, dies at 97: Reports
- Special counsel asks judge to limit Trump's inflammatory statements targeting individuals, institutions in 2020 election case
- Rural hospitals are closing maternity wards. People are seeking options to give birth closer to home
- Untangling Elon Musk's Fiery Dating History—and the 11 Kids it Produced
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Oregon launches legal psilocybin, known as magic mushrooms access to the public
- Man shot by police dies following car chase in Rhode Island, teen daughter wounded
- What is UAW? What to know about the union at the heart of industry-wide auto workers strike
Recommendation
Matt Damon remembers pal Robin Williams: 'He was a very deep, deep river'
Aaron Rodgers says doubters will fuel his recovery from Achilles tear: 'Watch what I do'
Drew Barrymore Reverses Decision to Bring Back Talk Show Amid Strikes
Police: 1 child is dead and 3 others were sickened after exposure to opioids at a New York day care
Audit: California risked millions in homelessness funds due to poor anti-fraud protections
Prescott has 2 TDs, Wilson 3 picks in 1st start after Rodgers injury as Cowboys beat Jets 30-10
Minnesota man acquitted of killing 3 people, wounding 2 others in case that turned alibi defense
2 pilots killed after their planes collided upon landing at air races in Reno, Nevada