Discovered WWI soldiers' sick letters...Deliver it to your family
Oct 29, 2025
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According to ABC and other Australian media, Debra Brown and her daughter found a letter dried in a glass bottle while cleaning beach trash in Worton Beach, a famous southwest coast of Australia. The bottle was a product of the Australian soda brand 'Shwebs' and contained handwritten letters from two soldiers.
The first letter was sent to his mother by South Australian soldier Malcolm Alexander Neville, and was written on August 15, 1916, while sailing on the Ballarat ship. "It's cruising somewhere in the sea."He joked, "The food is really great, but one meal was so terrible that I threw it into the sea." He was killed at the age of 28 at the Battle of France in April the following year.
The second letter was written by soldier William Kirk Hallie, who wrote, "'We are somewhere on the coast.'"If you find this disease, please send it to the address below." It is estimated that the exact location of both letters is not small according to military secrets.
Harley is said to have returned home after finishing the war safely.
Brown checked the contents after drying the letter, and later contacted Neville's nephew and Harley's granddaughters online. She plans to mail the letter to her family, saying that she is `so happy to find a bottle containing the letters.'
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This article was translated by Naver AI translator.











