Recently, a financial institution in Swansea, Wales, received a surprising postcard in the mail. The postcard featured a ...
where the branch of Swansea Building Society now stands, the postcard was dated August 3, 1903 and had been sent with a King Edward VII stamp. Henry Darby, a spokesman for the building society ...
Alun Williams, CEO of Swansea Building Society, (left) with David Blyth, Board Member, Swansea RFC, (right) outside St ...
The card, printed with a scenic view of a stag standing in front of snowy mountains, is believed to date back to 1903 but was only recently received by staff at Swansea Building Society in Cradock ...
The postcard arrived at an address in Swansea earlier this month, now the home of Swansea Building Society. Helen Roberts still lives in the area, not far from her grandfather's childhood home.
An undelivered postcard has finally reached its intended destination - about 121 years after it was first popped off in the ...
Henry Darby, left, a spokesperson for the Swansea Building Society, meets with the descendants of siblings Lydia Davies and Ewart Davies. From left to right: Helen Roberts, Lydia’s greatniece ...
The Swansea Building Society received the postcard in the mail, addressed to a woman, containing an obscure message with winter images on the front decorated with a King Edward VII stamp.
Staff at Swansea Building Society’s Craddock Street branch were ‘astonished’ by the mysterious vintage card among their regular mail on August 16. The postcard, dated 3 August 1903 ...
A piece of mail finally made it to the intended location — almost 121 years to the day after someone put a stamp on it and sent it off. The Swansea Building Society, a mortgage loan business in ...