150-year-old Christmas letter from Charles Dickens discovered
December 20, 2019GWR superintendent J.C Kingett sent Dickens an apology letter, to which Dickens replied on Feb. 1, 1870:
“Sir, in reply to your letter I beg to say that I have no doubt my Christmas fare was destroyed by an unavoidable accident.
“I bore the loss with unbroken good humour towards the Great Western Railway company. Faithfully Yours, Charles Dickens.”
Surprisingly enough, the turkey is thought to have been partially saved, with the charred remains handed out to the people of Reading, Berks., for sixpence a portion.
The letter, which was kept by Kingett at the Paddington station, was eventually published in Great Western’s magazine in 1908, 38 years after Dickens died. It was recently discovered at the National Railway Museum in York, while doing a routine audit.
“Every now and then we are fortunate to uncover a hidden gem in our railway archive,” National Railway Museum curator Ed Bartholomew said in comments obtained by SWNS. “Dickens would be an incredibly famous man, the biggest celebrity he [Kingett] would have dealt with at the goods office.”
Tragically, the “Oliver Twist” author would never see another Christmas. He passed away on June 9, 1870, five years to the day he survived another rail crash that killed 10 people and injured 40.
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