Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

German Roofer Discovers Message In A Bottle Hidden In Cathedral—And It Was Written By His Own Grandfather

German Roofer Discovers Message In A Bottle Hidden In Cathedral—And It Was Written By His Own Grandfather
Julian Stratenschulte/picture alliance via Getty Images

You know how it goes: you're at work, just doing your duties, when you stumble across an unlikely artifact that puts the entire world into perspective and also it turns out to be something your grandfather made. Just your average day!


For one German roofer, that's pretty much exactly how a recent workday shook out.

Peter Brandt, a 52-year-old roofer in Goslar, Germany, was recently doing some maintenance work on the town cathedral's roof, when he happened upon a literal message in an actual bottle that had been hidden there years before.

No, this is not the plot to a movie, even though it's going to sound like one, especially after this next sentence.

Brandt unrolled the message inside and instantly recognized the letterhead it was written on in 1930, and one of the signatures: that of his grandfather, Willi Brandt, who was an 18-year-old apprentice at the time.

Written on March 26, 1930, four roofers working on the cathedral wrote that "Difficult times of war lie behind us," describing the problems with inflation and unemployment that came in the aftermath of World War I. They closed with, "We hope for better times soon to come," before placing the scroll in a bottle and hiding it away in a hole in the roof that they patched over.

"It was an exciting find," Peter Brandt said, in perhaps the biggest understatement in German history. One line of the note in particular stood out to him: "We worked an entire week for 1 pound of butter and 1 bread."

"It's shocking when you think about the country we live in today and all the things we can afford now," Brandt said.

On social media, people were fascinated and moved by Brandt's story:







While others found valuable perspective for the way we perceive our current "troubled times":






Goslar's mayor, Oliver Junk, turned the letter over to the town's archives, and replaced it with a new one that the men hope a future generation will find, as Brandt did. Junk won't reveal what exactly he wrote, but said he doesn't hope for better times, as Brandt's grandfather did. Rather, "If there's still peace then and the people are doing just as well as they are today, that's enough."

Can't ask for better than that!

H/T Washington Post, The Local DE

More from Trending

'Doomsday' fish in Cabo San Lucas
@accuweather/X

Two 'Doomsday Fish' Just Washed Up On A Beach In Mexico—And Everyone's Saying The Same Thing

Okay, this is probably fine! Nobody panic! IT'S PROBABLY FINE. *sobs*

Two so-called "doomsday" fish, the mysterious deep-sea oarfish, beached themselves at the same time in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, last month in what has come to be regarded as a warning and bad omen for millennia.

Keep Reading Show less
screenshot of Trump voter Richard Stanley
MSNow

Broke Trump Voter Dragged After Admitting He Misses 'Uncle Joe' Biden As Gas Prices Surge

After MAGA Republican President Donald Trump decided to join Israel in attacking the sovereign nation of Iran, gas prices in the United States have jumped, with some parts of the country seeing prices over $4 or even $5 at the pumps.

MS NOW spoke to a man filling up his diesel pickup truck at a gas station in Lantana, Florida. Construction worker Richard Stanley identified himself as a Trump voter, then expressed regret over his choice.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshot of Donald Trump
@atrupar/X

Trump Accidentally Tells The Truth About His Presidency With NSFW Word Choice—And Critics Are Nodding Hard

Speaking at a retreat for House Republicans at his Doral resort in Miami, President Donald Trump accidentally told the truth about his own presidency when he claimed that "no other president could do some of this sh*t I’m doing."

The remarks came as Trump listed a series of accomplishments while addressing lawmakers at the Republican Issues Conference and highlighted what he described as Most-Favored-Nation drug pricing agreements with more than a dozen pharmaceutical companies, an effort aimed at lowering the cost of prescription drugs in the U.S.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshots of Donald Trump and Shawn McCreesh

Reporter Goes Viral For Bluntly Calling Trump Out To His Face For Suggesting Iran Bombed Girls School

New York Times reporter Shawn McCreesh has gone viral after bluntly calling out President Donald Trump for suggesting that Iran somehow got a hold of Tomahawk missiles to bomb a girls' school in its own country on the first day of the war.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was criticized last week after she rejected reports that the U.S. struck a girls' elementary school in Iran, killing 175 people, insisting in remarks to the press pool that it's just Iranian "propaganda" that they've "fallen" for.

Keep Reading Show less
Alysa Liu
Marc Piasecki/WireImage/Getty Images

Alysa Liu Reveals That We've All Been Pronouncing Her Name Wrong—And Fans Are Stunned

It's always jarring when you see someone in the spotlight for years, only to realize that the way you've pronounced their name has been wrong. Take Taylor Lautner, for example!

Now the same is true for Olympic figure skater Alysa Liu, whose name has been interpreted with a variety of pronunciations since she started skating professionally, with the most common being "ah-leash-ah" followed by "lou."

Keep Reading Show less