Messages in a bottle written by two Australian soldiers in 1916 have been found more than a century later on the country’s south-western coast.
The cheerful notes were penned just a few days into their voyage to join the battlefields of France during World War One.
One of the soldiers, Pte Malcolm Neville, told his mother that the food on board was “real good” and that they were “as happy as Larry”. Months later, he was killed in action at the age of 28. The other soldier, 37-year-old Pte William Harley, survived the war and returned home.
The bottle was found earlier this month on the remote Wharton Beach, near Esperance in Western Australia, by local resident Deb Brown and her family.



I think the BBC has made the wrong assumption when cribbing from ABC or another news source.
I guess she, born in 1924, had heard a lot of stories from her parents or other families about him.