Houston Chronicle Sunday

London’s newest attraction, Mail Rail, delivers

- By George Hobica

In 1913, the British Post Office realized that London’s congested traffic was slowing down mail delivery and something needed to be done about it. (They are turning in their graves if watching London’s traffic snarl these days.) That year, Parliament approved building the Post Office Railway, as it was officially known, and constructi­on began two years later. The Great War intervened, however, and although the tunnels were nearly completed, full operation began only in December 1927.

London now had a 6.5-mile-long tunnel and train system under its streets, wending all the way from Whitechape­l in the east to Paddington in the west, connecting the city’s various mainline rail stations with mail-sorting offices along the way. For 76 years from its completion until, in 2003, when the Post Office decided it was too expensive to operate, Mail Rail, as it was eventually called, sped mail deliveries, operating almost 24 hours a day, with miniature trains shuttling back and forth along the tracks, depositing and picking up letters and packages.

In 2003, the Post Office mothballed Mail Rail and its station platforms. But this fall, with the opening of London’s new Post Office Museum nearby, those looking for a truly unusual and memorable experience in London can hop aboard the newly refurbishe­d system.

Mail Rail’s rolling stock could be mistaken for an amusement-park ride at a Disney park. The passenger cars are small in order to fit through the narrow tunnels (some are just 7 feet in diameter), so you have to scrunch down a bit if you’re tall, and anyone suffering from claustroph­obia might think twice. Riding through these tunnels isn’t anything like traveling on London’s famed Undergroun­d.

Once on board, I listened to an audio-visual narration by former Mail Rail engineers and technician­s along with some history about the British Post Office. The ride lasts about 20 minutes with stops along the way at several stations, at a top speed of 7.5 mph, although the mail was once delivered at much higher speeds.

Later, I visited the Postal Museum itself, which chronicles the history of the world’s first post office. I learned, among many other things, that in 1512 King Henry VIII appointed the first Master of the Posts to manage royal missives, and that post boys back then, some as young as 11, traveled on horseback between staging “posts” 20 miles apart. Thus the “post” in Post Office.

Before I left, I bought some stamps from a machine and some post cards from the gift shop and mailed them to friends. In this age of email, nothing says “I wish you were here” with quite as much feeling.

 ?? George Hobica / TNS ?? The British Post Office’s undergroun­d Mail Rail once operated 24 hours a day under London.
George Hobica / TNS The British Post Office’s undergroun­d Mail Rail once operated 24 hours a day under London.

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