Tim Skelly was refinishing an old dresser he’d acquired at an auction when he discovered a series of old messages left by its previous owners. After connecting with one of them, Skelly has decided to keep the conversation going.
Latest message from 1982 expressed hope ‘somebody in 40 years would read his note’
Celeste Decaire · CBC News
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Tim Skelly has been refurbishing furniture since 1995, a hobby that began when he bought his first house in Ottawa.
He’s refinished and flipped dressers, cabinets and a variety of other pieces over the years, and often comes across items such as papers and pens that have been left behind by previous owners.Â
Skelly recently acquired a “top hat” or gentleman’s dresser, and this time he found something different.Â
“I was pulling out the drawers of this very odd piece of furniture, I flipped it around to start sanding and saw this handwriting on the bottom,” Skelly said.
He found five handwritten notes on the underside of the smallest drawer of the dresser, the oldest dating back to 1942.Â
“It’s kind of like one of those little treasure hunts. It’s so interesting. They’re all relatively personal notes,” Skelly said.Â
The notes range from comments about the weather to details about daily family life. All but one are written in pencil and difficult to read, except for the most recent note left on June 10, 1982.Â
“In the last one in ’82, it was from an individual who was saying that he was getting married that year,” Skelly said, “He wrote on it that he hoped somebody in 40 years would read his note on this piece of furniture.”
As it turned out, Skelly discovered the message 42 years later.Â
The man who wrote the note signed it and inscribed an address in Britannia, five minutes away from where Skelly has lived for over 30 years.Â
Out of curiosity, he tried to find what looks like “Richard Lueduss” online to make the connection, but couldn’t track him down.Â
CBC News also did some digging and found that Richard’s surname was in fact Lueders. (Wood is tough to write on with a pen.)Â
Richard Lueders is now 62 and living just outside Almonte, Ont.Â
“It had been such a long time ago, I had completely forgotten about that. And I was a little pleasantly surprised, actually.” Lueders told CBC.
“The fact that I had written that I hope somebody reads this in 40 years, and that’s exactly what happened?”Â
As far as Lueders can remember, the dresser either belonged to his in-laws or he bought it at a flea market. He, too, has a knack for refinishing old furniture and was in the process of fixing up the dresser when he came across the notes left by its previous owners.
“When I pulled the drawer out to refinish it, I noticed that someone had written on it and so I thought, well, I’ll just add my own little note to it,” Lueders recalled.Â
Skelly has now left his own note responding to Lueders.Â
Dated April 6, 2024, he wrote: “Just over 40 years, Richard! Refinishing this dresser for my office in Lanark, Ontario. Bought from auction in Winchester, ON. May you live on beyond me.”
Skelly has decided to paint over the notes with a protective clear coat in hopes that the dresser’s next owner will keep the decades-old conversation going.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Celeste Decaire is a reporter with CBC Ottawa. She can be reached at celeste.decaire@cbc.ca and on her Twitter account @celestedecaire.