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u.s._postal_service

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U.S. Postal Service

First Post Office Was In A Bar

The first post office in colonial America was created in 1639 in the Boston house of a man called Richard Fairbanks, which was also a tavern that sold “stronge water”.1)

Newspaper Owe To Post Office

Newspapers were allowed to be mailed at exceptionally low rates as part of the Post Office Act of 1792, which the Founding Fathers saw as crucial for sustaining an informed population through sharing knowledge. As a result, by the early nineteenth century, newspapers constituted the majority of US mail. In 1840, 91 percent of white American adults could read, and the broad availability of newspapers contributed to this excellent literacy rate.2)

Death Penalty For Mail Thieves!

Because the United States Postal Service was the only official means to transfer money, the severity of the punishment was less a reflection of the government's brutality and more an evidence of the necessity of secure postal delivery. Congress quickly changed its mind, and mail theft for first-time offenders was made punished by a public flogging and a jail sentence of up to ten years in 1799. Second offenders, on the other hand, faced the death penalty, which remained in effect until 1872.3)

Postmaster General Semi-Celebrity

The post was deemed so important to a fledgling nation that John McLean, Postmaster General from 1823 to 1829, reported directly to President James Monroe and later to President John Quincy Adams. Following his tenure as Postmaster General, he will be appointed to the United States Supreme Court. Later in his career, he was considered a serious presidential candidate.4)

In Cabinet

The Postmaster General used to sit in the Cabinet, elevating the position to that of the Secretaries of War, Treasury, and State—and placing the PG in competition to be Commander in Chief. True, the Postmaster General was last in line, but he or she was still a heartbeat, if not a dozen, away. In 1971, the Postmaster General was ultimately removed from the Cabinet and from the succession.5)

Recipients Had To Pay For Delivery

Until the mid-nineteenth century, recipients—rather than senders—had to pay for postage on letters they received. As a result, many letters were refused in order to avoid paying for them, causing the post office to spend an unusual amount of time returning mail to senders. Prepaid postage stamps were introduced in America in 1847, which solved this difficulty.6)

Trolling

Trolls were first made possible by the United States Postal Service. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, offensive “vinegar” or “poison” valentines were fashionable in America (and England, btw). These cards depicted a man or female parody of a popular stereotype, such as a miser or a spinster, and were accompanied by snide lyrics.7)

u.s._postal_service.1667453959.txt.gz · Last modified: 2022/11/03 00:39 by eziothekilla34