Souvenir hunter returns loco part nicked in 1980s

Nene Valley Railway A composite of two pictures. On the left, a black metal tool with a long handle and a circular end. It is a locomotive's smokebox door handle. On the right is the typed letter from an anonymous person. It reads: "Merry Christmas. Yes it is your original, I'm afraid you lost it in the 1980s...
From a reformed and repentant former 1980s schoolboy souvenir hunter. 
P.S. Good luck with your restoration, please find enclosed a small additional contribution."Nene Valley Railway
The missing part, alongside the letter sent by the "reformed souvenir hunter"

Part of a steam locomotive has finally been returned by a "souvenir hunter" who admitted pinching it in the 1980s.

The Nene Valley Railway (NVR), near Peterborough, received a mysterious letter from a "reformed and repentant former 1980s schoolboy souvenir hunter", alongside the missing part - a handle - and a £10 donation.

The handle was originally on the smokebox door of a small locomotive built in the the 1920s called "Derek Crouch", which has been overhauled and repaired.

Nathan Wilson, an NVR engineer, thanked the anonymous loco-part thief - who began his letter "Merry Christmas" - for sending it back.

'No hard feelings'

The tasks carried out by Hudswell Clarke 0-6-0ST No.1539 "Derek Crouch" during its decades in service included working at Tilbury Docks in Essex and transporting freight from farms and factories on the Wissington Light Railway in Norfolk.

The NVR team had been searching for the missing piece for decades, but said whoever took it may have done them a favour.

If they had not kept such good care of it, the part could have been damaged, or lost.

Mr Wilson told BBC Radio Cambridgeshire: "It is fantastic, it gave me a really good laugh when the letter appeared on the desk.

"We know nothing about who it was from, but we are grateful they looked after it and returned it to us.

"We have got no hard feelings.

"I've been involved in looking after the engine for about 12 years now and we have never had it... we presumed it was long gone."

The letter from the culprit began: "... yes it is your original, I'm afraid you lost it in the 1980s."

It concluded: "Good luck with your restoration, please find enclosed a small additional contribution."

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