A Digital Memorial

Lost Lovers

For the letters that never reached their destination

Between 1914 and 1945, millions of letters crossed trenches, oceans, and prison walls. Some were delivered. Some were never sent. Many were lost forever. This is a place to remember them.

50 letters 37 never delivered 6 survivors

Letter of the Day

Curated from the archive

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50
Letters Saved
28
Featured Stories
37
Never Delivered
38
Battles

Featured Letters

Stories that survived the wars

A Letter Never Sent

1 min WW2

Found hidden in the walls of a Berlin apartment during renovations in 1998. Hannah wrote this letter to her husband Karl, who had been taken to the Eastern Front. She died in a bombing raid before she could mail it.

Hannah Weiss → Karl Weiss 1943-09-12
Berlin, Germany

The Night Before D-Day

1 min WW2

Written the night before loading onto transports for D-Day, this letter was found in Bobby's barracks bag after he was killed when his C-47 was hit by flak over Utah Beach.

Sergeant Robert "Bobby" Sullivan → Margaret "Maggie" Sullivan 1944-06-04
Upottery Airfield, Devon, England

Cups of Tea and Gentle Hands

1 min WW1

Edith, a VAD nurse at the vast Étaples base hospital, writes to her sister Margaret in London as the wounded from the Somme pour in like a tide. She describes the horror, the humour, and the small graces that keep her going.

Edith Baker → Margaret Baker 1916-08-15
Étaples, France

From the Ridge, with Pride

1 min WW1

Written from a captured German dugout on the heights of Vimy Ridge on the morning after the victory. Tommy's letter is a love letter to his wife and a declaration of a nation's coming of age.

Thomas "Tommy" MacKenzie → Eleanor MacKenzie 1917-04-10
Vimy Ridge, France

The Moon Over Changsha

1 min WW2

Found in the lining of a sergeant's cap after he fell defending the bridge approach at Changsha. He wrote this by moonlight on scrap paper, knowing he would not see the morning.

Sergeant Liang Weiguo → Lin Mei 1942-01-04
Changsha, Hunan Province, China

If I Should Fall

1 min WW1

A French soldier's letter to his sweetheart, written before the Second Battle of Ypres. Jean-Luc was a poet before the war.

Jean-Luc Moreau → Claire Dubois 1915-04-22
Ypres, Belgium

Through the Blackout

1 min WW2

Written by candlelight in a basement during the Blitz, this letter was never sent — Evelyn didn't know Harry's POW address. It was found 53 years later, tucked inside a copy of Mrs. Dalloway.

Evelyn Pearce → Captain Henry 'Harry' Pearce 1940-10-15
London, England

My Darling Zen

1 min WW1

Frederick Key wrote 42 letters and 15 postcards to his beloved Zen Hall. This was his last — written on Valentine's Day 1916. He died on the first day of the Somme. She wrote in her diary: 'Letter came saying my darling killed... went to Lichfield.'

Frederick Key → Zen Hall 1916-02-14
Guillemont, France

My Dearest Margaret

1 min WW1

Written on the eve of the Battle of the Somme, this letter was found in William's tunic pocket after he fell on the first day of battle.

William Clarke → Margaret Clarke 1916-07-14
Somme, France

A City of Ashes and Song

1 min WW2

Smuggled out of burning Warsaw by a Home Army courier, this letter was written by a young medic to her brother, a POW in Germany. It would not reach him until after the war.

Krystyna Nowak → Jan Nowak 1944-08-15
Warsaw, Poland

Above the Clouds

1 min WW2

Written at dawn on Battle of Britain Day — the decisive air battle over England. Jimmy was shot down hours later. The letter was found in his locker at RAF Middle Wallop.

Flight Lieutenant James 'Jimmy' Armstrong → Rose Armstrong 1940-09-15
RAF Middle Wallop, Hampshire, England

The Australian Jungle

1 min WW2

Lieutenant Colin Simper had never held his baby son Douglas when he wrote this letter from the jungles of Borneo. He was killed eight days later, trying to save a wounded mate.

Colin Simper → Irene Simper 1945-06-01
Tarakan, Borneo, Indonesia

Across the World

Letters mapped to their places of origin