Title: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: Lee on April 15, 2008, 16:50:25 Grandfather-of-two Mr Napier, 67, forgot to take the 17th-century instrument off the luggage rack when he left the service from London at Bedwyn on his way home to Marlborough, Wiltshire. The Italian-made violin has been in his family for almost 100 years and a ^10,000 reward has been offered for its safe return (link below.)
http://thisissomerset.co.uk/displayNode.jsp?nodeId=147472&command=displayContent&sourceNode=242195&contentPK=20397622&folderPk=113662&pNodeId=251478 Mr Napier, a retired shipping consultant, said he realised his mistake as the train was pulling out of the station. Quote from: Mr Napier "It was a terrible moment when I realised as the train was steaming off that I had left it on the train," he said. "I put it on the luggage rack above my seat and when I got to Bedwyn, got off the train and I simply left it. "I've relived the moment. I think when I put it on the luggage rack I thought I couldn't possibly forget it, and I didn't want to appear different. I was trying to behave normally." "It was an absolutely awful moment when I realised I'd left it. "I wouldn't say I was a particularly forgetful person by nature. I just got off the train as I would normally with my briefcase and coat, but left the case on the rack. "My mother left it to me and my brothers and sisters when she stopped playing. "She died 18 months ago and the instrument obviously gained a degree of sentimental value. "She bought it in 1945 and we all grew up with it. "It can be compared to one of the old masters works of art, as it's unique and there would be no doubt about its identity if it was found. "My brothers and sisters have been very understanding but that doesn't hide the disappointment. "We are just praying it turns up." He was returning home on January 29 after visiting a London dealer, who had valued it at ^180,000, and placed the instrument on an overhead shelf alongside his briefcase. Mr Napier got off the train, travelling from London Paddington towards Taunton, at Bedwyn. He contacted railway staff who searched the train at its destination but they could not find the violin. The missing violin, a Goffriller, together with a bow stamped R Sartory, were in a rectangular case with a brown cover. Insurance company Allianz has offered a reward of "up to ^10,000" for the safe return of the instrument. Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: Phil on April 15, 2008, 18:55:02 This question might make me look particularly stupid, but where did the train go after leaving Bedwyn?
I heard this guy interviewed on the radio the other day, and he was explaining how he remembered he'd left the violin behind just as he exited Bedwyn station, by which time the train "was already continuing on its journey into Wiltshire". It struck me then that stopping trains don't generally go beyond Bedwyn as far as I know - there's no service on to Pewsey - trains from Reading hang there around for a while and then trundle back up the line to the next station along, which happens to be Hungerford. Why, having realised his mistake, couldn't he phone a friend, or even the taxi rank outside the station, to meet the train when it got back to Hungerford? I dunno, something just doesn't ring quite true about all this. Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: devon_metro on April 15, 2008, 18:59:53 It would be either:
1C84 1218 PAD-TAU 1C91 1706 PAD-WSB 1U94 1806 PAD-FRO And considering it mentions that the train was searched on arrival at Taunton it was option 1 ;) Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: Phil on April 15, 2008, 19:06:04 Really? I thought all those only stopped at Hungerford and Pewsey.
Obviously things have changed since I last used that line - Bedwyn (which lies between Hungerford and Pewsey) could only be reached on a stopping train, the express services from Paddington never stopped there. It's got fairly short platforms as well. Anyway, I'm sure you're right - thanks for setting me straight, Mr Metro sir! Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: devon_metro on April 15, 2008, 19:09:28 Well they are hardly express :D
The 1218 replaces a Turbo basically just with more slack. Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: Mookiemoo on April 15, 2008, 19:24:51 This question might make me look particularly stupid, but where did the train go after leaving Bedwyn? I heard this guy interviewed on the radio the other day, and he was explaining how he remembered he'd left the violin behind just as he exited Bedwyn station, by which time the train "was already continuing on its journey into Wiltshire". It struck me then that stopping trains don't generally go beyond Bedwyn as far as I know - there's no service on to Pewsey - trains from Reading hang there around for a while and then trundle back up the line to the next station along, which happens to be Hungerford. Why, having realised his mistake, couldn't he phone a friend, or even the taxi rank outside the station, to meet the train when it got back to Hungerford? I dunno, something just doesn't ring quite true about all this. Who on earth leaves a 180K item in the luggage rack anyway! It would be sitting on the seat next to me - I'd be on the aisle it would have the window seat Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: smithy on April 15, 2008, 19:35:51 This question might make me look particularly stupid, but where did the train go after leaving Bedwyn? I heard this guy interviewed on the radio the other day, and he was explaining how he remembered he'd left the violin behind just as he exited Bedwyn station, by which time the train "was already continuing on its journey into Wiltshire". It struck me then that stopping trains don't generally go beyond Bedwyn as far as I know - there's no service on to Pewsey - trains from Reading hang there around for a while and then trundle back up the line to the next station along, which happens to be Hungerford. Why, having realised his mistake, couldn't he phone a friend, or even the taxi rank outside the station, to meet the train when it got back to Hungerford? I dunno, something just doesn't ring quite true about all this. Who on earth leaves a 180K item in the luggage rack anyway! It would be sitting on the seat next to me - I'd be on the aisle it would have the window seat exactly. if i had a violin that had been valued at 180k that DAY then i am 100% sure it would not slip my mind that the said violin was in fact sitting on the luggage rack. sounds terrible but i seriously doubt he will get it back after going in the press telling everyone how much it is worth. Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: Chris from Nailsea on April 15, 2008, 20:54:54 Well, there's not much point in us all checking the overhead luggage racks now, on the off-chance - this happened on 29 January!
I do sympathise with anyone who gets off a train and then watches it depart - while it gradually dawns on them that they've probably just made the worst mistake of their life. However, some questions have been raised: Is this really a fiddle? Is he just stringing us along? :P ::) ;D Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: Phil on April 16, 2008, 08:37:51 Chris, that was truly dreadful!
Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: Btline on April 16, 2008, 23:46:32 Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: smokey on April 17, 2008, 20:59:20 Forgetting something Worth ^180k seems unbelivable, but then how can passengers forget such Items as False Leg, Wheelchairs, Oxygen Bottle with breathing mask, even a very young child ended up lost and alone at Penzance after Father left the train on Route.
Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: Chris from Nailsea on April 17, 2008, 21:15:39 Fair comment, smokey!
About a month ago, I was waiting for the 1822 at BTM, which duly arrived: people got off, and other people started to get on. Suddenly, I and several others were shoved aside by a young man who bounded back on to the train, to retrieve something he'd apparently forgotten when he first alighted - the biggest bluddy suitcase you've ever seen!?! How could he possibly have forgotten that he had been lugging that around through the previous stages of his journey??? ::) Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: smithy on April 19, 2008, 16:20:44 Fair comment, smokey! About a month ago, I was waiting for the 1822 at BTM, which duly arrived: people got off, and other people started to get on. Suddenly, I and several others were shoved aside by a young man who bounded back on to the train, to retrieve something he'd apparently forgotten when he first alighted - the biggest bluddy suitcase you've ever seen!?! How could he possibly have forgotten that he had been lugging that around through the previous stages of his journey??? ::) cycles being left on the train amazes me,how can someone ride a bike to the station put it on the train and then get off without the bike? Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: John R on April 19, 2008, 16:57:36 I do sympathise with anyone who gets off a train and then watches it depart - while it gradually dawns on them that they've probably just made the worst mistake of their life. For the first time ever I recently left a rather nice jumper (in a bag) that my wife had recently bought me (and therefore particularly liked) on the 1A09 Exeter Paddington service. I realised my mistake just after the train pulled out of Bristol, and went straight to lost property. They were very helpful and phoned through to Bath who I'm told checked the seat when it stopped there. But despite having a precise description of where I was sat, and where it was (I was in the coach next to the buffet and in one of the seats in the first row - I'm not normally that sad to note my seat number) they didn't find anything. Nor did lost property at Paddington have anything. It really annoyed me that I could be so stupid, but then again, it's only a jumper, not ^180 grand's worth of violin. These things do happen, but I'm not even sure I would take something so valuable on a train, and I'm slightly surprised that the insurers would permit an item of such value to be carried in such a fashion and still be covered. Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: Graz on May 15, 2008, 10:21:30 I found a set of keys (car and house) beside a seat yesterday after I got on a train at Oldfield Park on the way to Bristol TM. I took them straight to the BristoL TM lost property office!
Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: Chris from Nailsea on October 12, 2010, 20:09:34 Sorry to resurrect this rather ancient topic, but I did get a sense of deja vu when I read this story, in the Oxford Mail (http://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/news/8445465.A_quick_snooze_costs___110_000/):
Quote A quick snooze costs ^110,000 Antique violin bows worth ^110,000 were stolen after an Oxford musician nodded off on a train. Peter Oxley, from Headington, is now offering a ^5,000 reward for their safe return. The 49-year-old bow-maker and restorer was travelling with 11 bows on a train between London^s Liverpool Street and Ipswich last week. The bows ^ which are insured ^ belonged to collectors who had given them to Mr Oxley to restore and look for buyers. Mr Oxley said: ^It^s fair to say that I am gutted and devastated. Most of the bows are incredibly rare. Some are documented with the best accredited certificates. I have no doubt that they were stolen, probably by an opportunistic thief who saw I was asleep and thought they were easy pickings.^ The most valuable piece was a rare Pierre Simon bow made in France in 1870 and worth ^35,000. Mr Oxley only realised they had gone after he got off in Ipswich. He said: ^It had been a rather long day and I dozed off around Colchester. All of a sudden I woke up when the train was already on the platform at Ipswich. I was in a bit of a panic, because I knew I had to get a connecting train to Bury St Edmunds just three minutes later. I just grabbed my briefcase and travel bag and jumped off. It was only when I settled on my other train and it moved off that I came to my senses properly and realised I did not have my bow case.^ Mr Oxley contacted railways staff at Norwich, the final destination of the train he had caught from London who searched the train once it arrived, but there was no sign of the bows. He said: ^On reflection, I think the case had already been stolen when the train arrived at Ipswich.^ The bows were in a brown case. Mr Oxley said: ^The thief probably thought it was a case containing billiard cues or perhaps a gun. My worst fear is that he will just destroy the bows by throwing them in a ditch.^ Dc Alan Reed, of British Transport Police, who is investigating what happened, said: ^While these are extremely valuable items, it would be extremely difficult to sell them on to a third party. Anyone who works in the antiques trade or musical instrument business is asked to contact us if they are approached by anyone selling items that match the bows^ description.^ Dc Reed can be contacted on 0800 405040. Title: Re: Reward For Return Of Violin Left On Train At Bedwyn Post by: Chris from Nailsea on October 21, 2010, 14:23:36 An update, from the Oxford Mail (http://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/news/8464937.Top_dog_Angel_finds_Oxford_man_s_stolen_bows/):
Quote Top dog Angel finds Oxford man's stolen bows An inquizitive dog has been hailed a hero after sniffing out antique violin bows worth ^110,000 stolen from an Oxford man as he slept on a train. Nine-year-old former racing greyhound Angel earned her owner Chris Laflin a reward of ^5,000 by sniffing out the case containing the 11 bows. Father-of-three Mr Laflin, 40, at first thought they were worthless items which had been dumped in the undergrowth in Bourne Park, Ipswich. Friends told him later a local newspaper had reported that the historic bows had earlier been stolen from Oxford musician Peter Oxley, 49, as he dozed on a train. Mr Laflin, a handyman at a steel fabrication business has now handed the violin bows to British Transport Police so they can be returned to Mr Oxley later this week. Angel stumbled across the brown violin bow case stuffed inside a black bin liner on her daily walk as dusk fell last Wednesday. Mr Laflin has likened his pet to mongrel dog Pickles who found the stolen Jules Rimet trophy in a garden in Norwood, south London, before the 1966 World Cup. He said: ^Angel is inquisitive like any other dog and is always sniffing around when we go out for a walk. She looked across at this case which was just lying in the undergrowth and my attention was drawn to it just as it was getting dark. I didn^t take much notice at first, but as we passed it for a second time on our way home, I thought I would pick it up even though it looked like rubbish. When I opened it up at home, I saw all these really old violin bows. There was no paperwork to say where they had come from. I assumed they were virtually worthless and stuck the case in my shed. My wife Toni told me they just looked tatty. ^I was planning to make enquiries to find out if anyone had lost them, but I did not round to it because I was having a hectic week. It was only when I mentioned to workmates on Monday that they told me about the newspaper and story and I realised just how valuable they were. I^m still shaking because I can^t believe I found something worth so much. It is just like when the missing World Cup was found by a dog." Mr Laflin now plans to spend his reward money on a family holiday next year and some special treats for Angel. Mr Oxley, 49, who is one of Britain^s leading bow makers and restorers was travelling with the bows from London^s Liverpool Street Station to Ipswich when they disappeared on October 4. He believes an opportunistic thief saw he was asleep and stole the case from an overhead luggage rack before jumping off the train. Most of the French and English bows which dated back to 1820 were owned by collectors who had left them in his care for restoration or to see if he could find a buyer for them. The most valuable was a rare Pierre Simon bow made in 1870 and worth ^35,000. Mr Oxley said: ^It is fantastic news that they have been found and I am delighted that I will be getting them back soon. I will certainly be paying the reward to this gentleman once I get the bows back this week and the police confirm that he was the genuine finder. I hope that he buys a nice big bone for his dog.^ This page is printed from the "Coffee Shop" forum at http://gwr.passenger.chat which is provided by a customer of Great Western Railway. Views expressed are those of the individual posters concerned. Visit www.gwr.com for the official Great Western Railway website. Please contact the administrators of this site if you feel that content provided contravenes our posting rules ( see http://railcustomer.info/1761 ). The forum is hosted by Well House Consultants - http://www.wellho.net |