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In London, there was a white-haired woman who would come to the subway station every day and sit on a bench on the platform just to hear the voice her husband had left behind in 1950. Her name was Margaret McColler

author:Fast wind

In London, there was a white-haired woman who would come to the subway station every day and sit on a bench on the platform just to hear the voice her husband had left behind in 1950.

Her name was Margaret McCollum, and her husband, Oswald Lawrence, was a former actress who recorded the warning phrase "Watch out for the crevices under your feet" for the subway station that year. Lawrence's death in 2007 left a huge void in Margaret's mind, so she found a way to get closest to him.

She said: "He was never very far in my heart, I sat on the platform and sometimes missed a few trains just to hear him speak. “

Later, the actor's recorded voice was replaced by an electronic recording, and Margaret wrote to the subway company hoping to record the cassette tape so that her husband's voice could continue to be heard at home.

However, knowing the existence of this true human feeling, the subway company decided to keep the recording at the station near where she lived. To this day, all passengers can still hear Lawrence's voice and feel that eternal love really exists.

In London, there was a white-haired woman who would come to the subway station every day and sit on a bench on the platform just to hear the voice her husband had left behind in 1950. Her name was Margaret McColler
In London, there was a white-haired woman who would come to the subway station every day and sit on a bench on the platform just to hear the voice her husband had left behind in 1950. Her name was Margaret McColler
In London, there was a white-haired woman who would come to the subway station every day and sit on a bench on the platform just to hear the voice her husband had left behind in 1950. Her name was Margaret McColler

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