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:
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.