Follow us! >

How the U.S. Mail moved onward and upward

From 1875-1924, there were big advances in transportation and labor

By 1875, the Post Office Department was firmly ensconced both at home and abroad, having become part of the executive branch in 1872 and a founding member of the General Postal Union (now the Universal Postal Union) in 1874.

The 1880s were a time of big gains for letter carriers, who helped deliver wins for the nascent labor movement.

An illustration of a red, white and blue eagle sits above a typographic phrase spelling out “USPS 250.”

In 1884, Congress granted carriers 15 days of leave a year, and in 1888, it awarded them an eight-hour workday. The National Association of Letter Carriers union was formed in Milwaukee the next year, 1889.

Beginning in the late 1880s, a scruffy mutt named Owney became the unofficial mascot of the Railway Mail Service for several years, and his adventures became the stuff of legend.

The philatelic world was venturing forth, too. In 1893, the country’s first commemorative stamp — nearly double the size of a typical stamp — was issued in celebration of the World Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Other innovations soon followed, including the first stamps sold in booklets in 1900 and coils in 1908.

But the most dramatic forays came in the transport and delivery of mail. Pneumatic tube service was tested in Philadelphia in 1893 and an electric automobile was tried out for collection in Buffalo in 1899.

A contract for mail collection by gas-powered automobile began in Baltimore in 1906, and rural free delivery — launched in 1896 in West Virginia — proved so popular it spread to every state in the union and was made permanent in 1902.

No advance was more daring than the Post Office Department’s entrance into the world of aviation, when postal pilots took over airmail service from their Army counterparts in 1918. By 1924, regularly scheduled transcontinental airmail service with night flying was established.

But that was just the beginning: The organization blazed a trail in the field of commercial aviation in the following years.

Coming next: Link’s series on the Postal Service’s 250th anniversary will continue soon with a look at events from 1925-1974.

Sign up to receive our Daily Postal News blast

Related Articles

Tell us what you think below!

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Hot this week

Sellers in other countries struggle to maintain U.S. customers as holiday shopping season starts

But ever since the Trump administration eliminated the exemption as of Aug. 29, the cost to send yarn to U.S. customers has skyrocketed

In praise of the handwritten Christmas card

We’ve all come to dread checking the mail. And not just when property taxes are due.

Family celebrates 2nd Thanksgiving dinner with mail carrier who came to father’s aid

An Illinois family celebrated their second Thanksgiving dinner this week with a U.S. Postal Service mail carrier who came to their father's aid last year after he fell while walking the family's dog.

The Public Postal Service and Rural America

Rural communities benefit enormously from this universal service and the vast infrastructure USPS has developed over its 250-year history.

The 2025 Holiday Ethics Guide lays out the rules about giving and receiving gifts

The Postal Service has released its 2025 Holiday Ethics Guide to help employees adhere to federal regulations involving workplace gifting and get-togethers.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img
Secret Link
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x