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In search for a hero’s family, a lesson in integrity

When Amanda Kehler, who runs the Prairie Pickers Cafe and Antique Store in Steinbach, Manitoba(about 90 miles northwest of Warroad), was out antiquing a week or so ago, she thought the stack of old newspapers and documents she bought for a dollar was a pretty good deal.

It might have been a priceless one because this letter from Earl Sorel was in it.

https://www.facebook.com/prairiepickerscafe/photos/a.1923557511251173/2238798253060429/?type=3&theater

Sorel's letter to the sister of the man who saved his life described the heroism of Gordon Rochford in the three-day battle at Vimy Ridge in France in World War I. Rochford paid with his.

"The barrage was like a thunderstorm and we were trotting at a good pace. We had gone about 1200 yards," he writes." "'Bang'. I felt a sharp burn in my back and left arm. The next thing I remember was Gordon pulling me in a shell hole and he said 'stay there'."

Kehler knew what she had to do; she had to find the family of both Sorel and Rochford.

Sorel, she found out, died in 1969 and had no children. A nephew had a son, but he's dead too, she tells the BBC.

In about a week's time, with media and the Internet pitching in, she found four relatives on both sides, all of whom said the letter should be put in a museum.

She rejected all offers to sell the letter, even though that's the whole idea of antiquing. Find something, buy it, sell it for more.

https://www.facebook.com/prairiepickerscafe/photos/a.1886434401630151/2243083249298596/?type=3&theater

"It was never about the money my friends," she writes on Facebook. "Calvin and I are parents. We have sons that look to us to teach them. In the past week, they got a lesson on integrity."