Watch CBS News

​Surprising discovery jogs woman's fading memory

Rose Hill's memory has been fading for reasons that aren't entirely clear
As woman's memory fades, a discovery brings comfort 02:47

HILLSBORO, Ore. -- One of the residents of this apartment building in Hillsboro, Oregon is being robbed - slowly robbed of her memories.

"It seems like a lot of my life is gone and I can't find it," said Rose Hill.

hartmanotrmemory-letters0130frame1060.jpg
Rose Hill CBS News

The 64-year-old first noticed this about a year ago.

"I was rooting for them to find brain lesions or a brain tumor," Hill told me. "I wanted to know what was causing this because if you know what's causing it maybe you can fix it - or make it better - or make it not hurt so bad."

Doctors still don't know if it's dementia or what. And while they've been searching for a cause, Hill has been praying to get back at least some of the pieces of her past. And that's why it felt like a miracle when some of those memories did resurface at a Goodwill outlet, of all places.

"I knew they didn't belong here and I knew I had to find the owner of them and return them," said Sara Redlich.

hartmanotrmemory-letters0130frame2809.jpg
The love letters addressed to Rose Hill were found in a Goodwill CBS News

Redlich was going through the bins here when she saw something that stood out more than her pink hair even. Beneath all these tired books and blank slates - she found a truly fascinating read. Love letters all addressed to one Rosie Hill. Hill has no idea how the letters ended up at Goodwill.

"I didn't even know we had those," said Hill.

hartmanotrmemory-letters0130frame2959.jpg
Rose Hill reading love letters her ex-husband wrote to her during the Vietnam War. CBS News
husband.jpg
Rose Hill's ex-husband ROSE HILL

They were written in 1973 by her now ex-husband when he was in the Vietnam War. But the fact that they're divorced in no way diminishes the value these letters now hold for her.

"I remember!" Hill exclaimed. "You smell the smells. You hear the sounds. You feel like you are back in time and place."

Most of the letters are just about ordinary life. But Rose says when you suffer from memory loss - any recollection feels like total joy.

These letters may be 40 years old, but they couldn't have come at a better time which is why Rose is so grateful for Sara. I wouldn't say she loves her like a daughter, but she did mark her height on the kitchen wall. And they do plan to stay in touch, which could make for some very fun, new memories.

hartmanotrmemory-letters0130frame3898.jpg
Rose Hill marks Sara Redlich's height in her kitchen CBS News

To contact On the Road, or to send us a story idea, e-mail us.

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.