Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Young mother starts Facebook search to find man who passed her note praising her parenting skills

Sammie Welch was travelling on a First Great Western train from Birmingham to Plymouth on Thursday with her son Rylan

Ian Johnston
Monday 26 January 2015 00:41 GMT
Comments
Sammie Welch with her three-year-old son Rylan Harms as she received a handwritten letter from a stranger when she was travelling with Rylan on a busy First Great Western train from Birmingham to Plymouth
Sammie Welch with her three-year-old son Rylan Harms as she received a handwritten letter from a stranger when she was travelling with Rylan on a busy First Great Western train from Birmingham to Plymouth (PA)

A young mother is trying to get in touch with a stranger who passed her a note praising her parenting skills and £5 so she could “have a drink on me”.

Sammie Welch, 23, of Plymouth, said she wanted to thank the man personally, adding that his generosity had made her want to cry, the Daily Mirror reported.

She was travelling on a First Great Western train from Birmingham to Plymouth on Thursday with her son Rylan, three.

The man handed her the note and money saying she had dropped them as he got off the train in Bristol between 7pm and 8pm that day.

It said: “Have a drink on me, you're a credit to your generation, polite and teaching the little boy good manners.

“PS I have a daughter your age, someone did the same for her once. Hope when she has children she is as good a mother as you.”

It was signed simply “man on train at table with glasses and hat”.

Ms Welch said: “When he handed it to me he said it had fallen out of my bag, so I just said thank you and took it from him. When I looked at it and saw what was written I was so shocked. I feel really overwhelmed by it all, it was just so lovely to get it.

“I've put the money in a savings account for Rylan now, I thought that was the best place for it. I wish I could remember him but I just can't. I really want to thank him personally.”

She is appealed on Facebook for help to find the man.

“He shows there are still good people out there and I want him to know I am truly grateful,” Ms Welch said.

She said during the train journey her son was “just being a happy, laughing little boy”.

“We were playing together and I was trying to keep him occupied. He normally gets quite rowdy and bored on long trains so I was doing my best to entertain him as much as I could,” she said.

“He was eating his dinner, I had made him a packed lunch, and we were laughing at the fact he kept calling his grapes strawberries.”

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in