WWI Soldiers' Messages Turn Up in Bottle on Beach

The bottle likely wasn't at sea this past century
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Oct 29, 2025 2:20 PM CDT
WWI Soldiers' Messages Turn Up in Bottle on Beach
This photo provided by Deb Brown shows a bottle with letters inside in Condingup, Australia, Saturday, Oct. 25, 2025.   (Deb Brown via AP)

Messages in a bottle written by two Australian soldiers a few days into their voyage to the battlefields of France during World War I have been found more than a century later on Australia's coast. The Brown family found the Schweppes-brand bottle just above the waterline at Wharton Beach near Esperance in Western Australia state on Oct. 9, Deb Brown said on Tuesday. Her husband Peter and daughter Felicity made the find during one of the family's regular quad bike expeditions to clear the beach of trash, reports the AP.

"We do a lot of cleaning up on our beaches and so would never go past a piece of rubbish. So this little bottle was lying there waiting to be picked up," Deb Brown said, per the AP. Inside the clear, thick glass were cheerful letters written in pencil by Privates Malcolm Neville, 27, and William Harley, 37, dated Aug. 15, 1916. Their troop ship HMAT A70 Ballarat had left the South Australia state capital Adelaide to the east on Aug. 12 of that year on the long journey to the other side of the world where its soldiers would reinforce the 48th Australian Infantry Battalion on Europe's Western Front.

Neville was killed in action a year later. Harley was wounded twice but survived the war, dying in Adelaide in 1934 of a cancer his family say was caused by him being gassed by the Germans in the trenches. Neville requested the bottle's finder deliver his letter to his mother Robertina Neville at Wilkawatt, now a virtual ghost town in South Australia. Harley, whose mother was dead by 1916, was happy for the finder to keep his note. Harley wrote "may the finder be as well as we are at present." Neville wrote to his mother he was "having a real good time, food is real good so far, with the exception of one meal which we buried at sea." The ship was "heaving and rolling, but we are as happy as Larry," Neville wrote, using an Australian colloquialism meaning very happy.

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Deb Brown suspects the bottle didn't travel far. It likely spent more than a century ashore buried in the sand dunes. Extensive erosion of the dunes caused by huge swells along Wharton Beach in recent months probably dislodged it. The paper was wet, but the writing remained legible. "I believe that if it had been at sea or if it had been exposed for that long, the paper would've disintegrated from the sun. We wouldn't have been able to read it," she said. Harley's granddaughter Ann Turner said her family was "absolutely stunned" by the find. "We just can't believe it. It really does feel like a miracle and we do very much feel like our grandfather has reached out for us from the grave," Turner told Australian Broadcasting Corp.

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