The Post Office and Its Story. Edward Bennett
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Edward Bennett
The Post Office and Its Story
An interesting account of the activities of a great government department
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066135492
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I POSTBOYS AND MAIL COACHES
CHAPTER III LOMBARD STREET AND ST. MARTIN'S LE GRAND
CHAPTER IV KING EDWARD'S BUILDING
CHAPTER V THE TRAVELLING POST OFFICE
CHAPTER VIII THE UNDELIVERED POSTAL PACKET
CHAPTER IX MONEY ORDERS AND POSTAL ORDERS
CHAPTER X THE POST OFFICE SAVINGS BANK
CHAPTER XII THE TELEGRAPH (continued)
CHAPTER XIV ENGINEERS, STORES AND FACTORIES
CHAPTER XVII CONCERNING FOREIGN POST OFFICES
CHAPTER XVIII THE POST OFFICES OF THE EMPIRE
CHAPTER XIX THE POSTMASTER-GENERAL AND THE PERMANENT STAFF
CHAPTER XX THE HEAD POSTMASTER
CHAPTER XXI THE VILLAGE POST OFFICE
CHAPTER XXIII THE POST OFFICE GUIDE
CHAPTER XXIV OLD AGE PENSIONS AND OTHER ACTIVITIES OF THE POST OFFICE
CHAPTER I
POSTBOYS AND MAIL COACHES
A schoolboy who was given the task of writing an essay on the Post Office used these words: “The Post Office contains the whole world's circumstances, or welfare, day after day, as a mother shuts all her chickens under her wings. A man would not reveal his very secreate words to his wife or to any one, but he trusts them to a weak envelope in the Post Office.” This boy was perhaps wiser than he knew. For there is no institution existing in the country which comes so near to the hearts and homes of the British people as the General Post Office. Created primarily for the despatch and delivery of letters, it has developed into a vast organisation which is at once the carrier of the people's correspondence and parcels, the people's bank, and the agency by which all communications by telegraph and telephone are conducted. To tell the story of that organisation, how from the smallest beginnings in the Middle Ages it developed into the Post Office of the present day, would be a delightful task, but my intention is rather to relate its modern triumphs and to deal with its history so far as it helps us to understand the position of things to-day.
It is usual, in telling the story of the Post Office, to go as far back as Greek, Roman, and Jewish times. In almost every book and article on the subject we are reminded that Ahasuerus sent letters into all provinces concerning his wife Vashti, and that Queen Jezebel has at least one urbane action to her credit in that she despatched the first recorded circular letter. Then we are reminded that Cicero and Pliny were accomplished correspondents, and that St. Paul wrote letters which have had a wide circulation. But these instances usually belong to the history of letter-writing and have little relation to our subject. It is obvious that so soon as letters began to be written in any nation they must have been despatched by some means or other to the persons for whom the communications were intended. Ancient history has many instances of posts specially created for the delivery of perhaps only one letter. The story of the Post Office can only properly begin at the time when the first efforts were made to systematise what was already a prevailing habit of the people.
The history of the British Post Office as a system can be divided into three periods. There was the age of the post-horses and postboys, extending from the time of the Tudors far into the eighteenth century. There was the age of the mail coaches, the romantic age of the General Post Office, full of stirring deeds and adventures. Indeed the title “His Majesty's Mails” would have accurately described the whole of the business transacted by the British Post Office during these centuries. Lastly there is the age in which we are living, the age of the mail train, which has produced a wide extension of the duties of the Department, and the despatch and delivery of letters is now only one of its activities. There is possibly another age in the near future of which we can already distinguish the dawn, that of the airship and aeroplane, but we are dealing in these pages with only accomplished facts.
There is little doubt that the first posts organised in this country were simply for the transmission of public despatches, and though from time to time attempts were made by private individuals to organise posts of their own, these efforts met with but little success, and in 1637 it was ordered by proclamation that no other messengers or foot posts were to carry letters except those employed by the King's Postmaster-General, unless to places untouched by the King's posts. This order marked the beginning of the monopoly which ever since has been in the hands of the Government.
The word “post” comes to us from the French; in early English records the carrier of