"There's pictures of a wedding, it looks like they went to Stonehenge, you know, all kinds of party pictures," Joan said.There were hundreds of photos on the camera, and as Joan put it, "if you take that many pictures that means you care about your family." So, the Florida woman made it her mission to return the camera to its rightful owner. [rsnippet id="3"] A local news station ran a story about Joan's find, which caught the eye of the digital content producer Gary Detman at one of the affiliate stations, KOMO, in Seattle. He turned to a detective who was able to locate the father of the bride, Robert Dagget, through acquaintances shown in the pictures.
"We lost a part of history there," he said. "But we got it back so I'm forever indebted."RELATED: Missing wedding rings are returned to an elderly couple 50 years later Joan had been motivated to return the camera because it was the right thing to do. But she soon learned there was an even bigger reason these pictures needed to be returned.
"You don't realize how big of a deal a photo is until it becomes all you have left."[rsnippet id="2"]