The British village that keeps finding cash
Newspapers suggest the village could be the most honest place in Britain as the locals who find the cash always hand it over to the police.
Photo from County Durham police depicting a man holding a bundle of cash found in the village of Blackhall Colliery. Image: County Durham Police
Blackhall Colliery has one claim to fame – its beach featured in the climax of the Michael Caine film Get Carter. Apart from that, it is like many struggling former mining villages in northeast England.
But the village on the County Durham coast is now at the centre of a mystery – as bundles of cash keep turning up in the street.
Durham Police said a total of £26,000 ($33,500) had been found over the past five years – 13 packages of £2,000 in £20 notes.
“These bundles are always left in plain sight such as on pavements and discovered by random members of the public who have handed them in,” said Detective Constable John Forster.
The latest discovery on Monday was the fourth this year, he added, speculating that a Good Samaritan could be dropping off the cash parcels.
Forster, who said inquiries had so far drawn a blank, praised the “incredible community spirit” of the locals who had handed in the cash – with newspapers suggesting the village could be the most honest place in Britain.
Villagers speculated to The Guardian that the mysterious benefactor could be “one of these secret millionaires” or even a “Blackhall Santa”.
“It’s not a run-down area but nothing ever that good really happens around here,” one resident was quoted as telling the newspaper.
“It might be someone trying to help – a Santa’s little elf. I hope it’s that.”
Like many other former pit villages, Blackhall Colliery has struggled since its mine closed in the 1980s.
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