News, Manchester
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A tribute bench found on a beach 80 miles from where it was washed into the sea during a storm is set to be reunited with a family – who say the “heartwarming” effort of locals to track them down “restores your faith in people”.
The wooden seat made in tribute to Warrington man Bill Batcock was pulled into the Irish Sea off Anglesey in December, before travelling 80 miles (130km) and resurfacing on the Cumbrian coast.
It was stumbled upon by members of a local Facebook group who tracked down the man’s daughter, Helen Wharton, to tell her the bench had been found.
“Dad was such an adventurer, to think he’s made a break for it to go on another adventure, it just makes me smile really,” she said.
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Ms Wharton said she and her family had “no idea” the bench had gone missing during Storm Darragh in December.
She said she was shocked to receive a message on social media with an image of the bench wedged between sand dunes on Drigg beach near Seascale, Cumbria, asking: “Is this yours?”
“I couldn’t believe it, it was all so strange,” said Ms Wharton, who lives in Padgate, Warrington.
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The bench was erected on some exposed headland at Bull Bay on Anglesey to commemorate Mr Batcock, a lover of the Welsh coast and mountains, who died of leukaemia in 2018.
He asked for the bench to be placed there “as he wanted to look out across the sea, across the coast and mountains, towards home”, she said.
Words from one of his poems had been inscribed on a plaque on the bench, which read: “For me, it has to be the sea.”
Ms Wharton told Radio Manchester the message was now “quite ironic” given the remarkable journey of the bench.
She said the campaign to return the bench was “really lovely”, adding the words on the plaque had intrigued local people.
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Megan O’Gorman, who runs the local Facebook group in which a member messaged to say they had found the bench, said she was determined to track down the family.
“I thought right, who is this person, where has this bench travelled from,” she said.
Ms Wharton said: “It’s just typical if you think of my dad, nothing would tie him down.”
She and her family plan to travel to Cumbria on Friday to collect the bench and return it to its home on Anglesey.