POSTED A LETTER RECENTLY? By Ann Evans
William Faulkner |
These
days most of our correspondence comes via email, but it's still nice
to receive a letter in the post - unless it's a bill! But we do
take the good old Royal Mail for granted but that's not surprising
seeing as it has been around for 500 years.
It
was back in 1516 that King Henry VII established a 'Master of the
Posts' which was a position that evolved into the office of the
Postmaster General. It was another 19 years however before the postal
service was available to the general public. And then the cost of
postage was paid by the recipient. I somehow don't think that would
work these days with all the junk mail we receive.
The
policy of having the receiver pay for the letter ended in 1840 when
Sir Rowland Hill introduced the Penny Black stamp. However, MPs were
able to send mail for free so long as they stamped their 'frank' or
mark on the letter.
Uniformed
postmen first appeared on the streets in 1792 but it was almost
another 60 years before post boxes were common place.
Anthony Trollop |
A
little research has just thrown up a few famous names who were
postmen for a time. They include novelist Anthony Trollop who worked
as a Surveyor's Clerk for the Post Office in the 1850s but it wasn't
a job he enjoyed. He was however involved with setting up the early
post boxes in the Channel Isles.
William
Faulkner, novelist and playwright who received the 1949 Nobel Prize
in Literature was a mail man in the United States. Again, not a very
good one as it seems that he liked to read magazines before
delivering them and throwing away people's mail that he considered
'insignificant'!
Even
Walt Disney was a mail man – or mail boy, as he used to collect and
deliver mail when he was a youngster of 16.
Then
there's been books and films written with a link to postmen, such as
the 1934 crime novel The Postman
Always Rings Twice by James M Cain later adapted for film. Oddly enough there's no mention of a postman at all in the
book and the title has a very different meaning.
There
have been songs to do with the mail. Who could forget Please Mr
Postman, first recorded by The Marvelettes in 1961 then later by The
Beatles. And one of my favourites – being an Elvis fan, Return to
Sender.
But
probably the most famous postman, who we all love is Postman Pat –
and his black and white cat, Jess.
And actually this has a place in the Royal Mail history too as back in the 19th
Century, postal carriers used cloth sacks to deliver mail which mice
were quite partial to. The little creatures would chew holes in the sacks.
To overcome this problem, in 1868 the Royal Mail hired
three cats to work at their headquarters and paid each cat a shilling
per week. The last cat to work there, Blackie, died in 1984
and the RMG have since switched to plastic bags which don’t have the
same mouse-attracting problem. Postman Pat is clearly not taking any chances!
So
next time you pop a letter in the post box you might like to think of
all its inspired over the years.
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Comments
The Postal service most certainly has an interesting and fascinating history, but in its present state I love it not, and avoid using it whenever possible.