Blue Peter time capsule accidentally unearthed is going on tour
The Millennium Time Capsule was found 33 years earlier than planned in 2017.
A Blue Peter time capsule which has been under lock and key since it was accidentally dug up by construction workers is going on tour.
The Millennium Time Capsule has been kept in a secret location after it was unearthed 33 years earlier than planned.
It will now travel around the UK, as part of the famous children’s TV show’s 60th birthday year.
The capsule will then be sealed and stored in The National Archives until it will be seen by a new generation in 2050.
It was meant to be excavated in 2050 but was accidentally dug up in February last year.
The capsule and its contents – apart from a missing Spice Girls CD – was returned to Blue Peter and has remained in a secret location.
Items for the capsule were decided by viewers of the BBC show in 1998 and include a set of British coins, Teletubby dolls, a photograph of Diana, Princess of Wales, letters from viewers about life at the time, an insulin pen and asthma inhaler.
Blue Peter editor Ewan Vinnicombe said: “I can remember the 1998 Millennium Time Capsule getting buried when I was in my first year working at BBC Children’s.
“Although unexpected, it is brilliant that we can let families across the UK see the contents of the 1998 time capsule earlier than planned before it is sealed away until 2050 at The National Archives.”
The Blue Peter Time Capsule tour starts on May 25 in Birmingham and will visit Hull, Newcastle, Leicester, Glasgow, Norwich, Brighton and Salford as well as the Royal Welsh, Cornwall County, and Great Yorkshire shows.
Viewers are also being asked to submit ideas for the next time capsule, the Diamond Time Capsule, which will be stored in The National Archives in October to mark the show’s 60th birthday.
Blue Peter said it had no idea what happened to the Spice Girls CD and why it was not with the other items in the capsule when it was returned to the show after being accidentally dug up.
Asked about its whereabouts, Mr Vinnicombe said: “Sadly we can’t tell you what you want, what you really, really want … because we don’t know!”