A Michigan woman got quite a surprise when she went to her mailbox this week—amid her regular bills and junk mail was a postcard that had been mailed almost 100 years ago.
“I thought it was very peculiar that I was receiving a postcard because nobody sends postcards anymore nowadays,” Keech said. “I went ‘Okay, this is different.’”
Later, she noticed that the card was postmarked on Oct. 29, 1920. It had her Belding, Michigan, address but was written to someone named Roy McQueen in faded cursive writing.
The card read:
“Dear Cousins, Hope this will find you all well. We are quite well but mother has awful lame knees. It is awful cold here. I just finished my history lesson and am going to bed pretty soon. My father is shaving and my mother is telling me your address. I will have to close for a night. Hope grandma and grandpa are well. Don’t forget to write us - Roy get his pants fixed yet.”
It was signed by someone named Flossie Burgess. The card has a Halloween theme that includes a black cat holding a broom, a bat, a goose, and an owl, along with a woman with a cane and a jack-o'-lantern in a witch’s hat.
Additionally, there’s a George Washington one-cent stamp on the back, and the smudged postmark says Jamestown, but the state appears to be covered by some kind of sticker.
Keech, 30, said she has no idea what delayed the card, which was mailed decades before she was born.
Several people have posted old documents in the comments section that might help solve the mystery.
Keech wants to return the card to a family member and said they’ve got a lead on one possible relative.