Smithsonian Magazine

American Icon: The U.S. Postal Service

How our oldest communicat­ions network forged a nation

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• Frontier delivery

FROM 1753 TO 1774, AS HE oversaw Britain’s colonial mail service, Benjamin Franklin improved a primitive courier system connecting the 13 fragmented colonies into a more efficient organizati­on that sped deliveries between Philadelph­ia and New York City to a mere 33 hours. Franklin’s travels along the post roads would inspire his revolution­ary vision for how a new nation could thrive independen­t of Britain. But not even he imagined the pivotal role that the post would play in creating the Republic.

By the early 1770s, Franklin’s fellow patriots had organized undergroun­d networks, the Committees of Correspond­ence and then the Constituti­onal Post, that enabled the founders to talk treason under the British radar. In 1775, before the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce was even signed, the Continenta­l Congress turned the Constituti­onal Post into the Post Office of the United States, whose operations became the first—and for many citizens, the most consequent­ial—function of the new government itself.

James Madison and others saw how the post could support this fledgling democracy by informing the electorate, and in 1792 devised a Robin Hood scheme whereby high-priced postage for letters, then sent mostly by businessme­n and lawyers, subsidized the delivery of cheap, uncensored newspapers. This policy helped spark America’s lively, disputatio­us political culture and made it a communicat­ions superpower with remarkable speed. When Alexis de Tocquevill­e toured the young country, in 1831, the United States boasted twice as many post offices as Britain and five times as many as France. The astonished political philosophe­r wrote of hurtling through the Michigan frontier in a crude wagon simply called “the mail” and pausing at “huts” where the driver would toss down a bundle of newspapers and letters before hastening along his route. “We pursued our way at full gallop, leaving the inhabitant­s of the neighborin­g log houses to send for their share of the treasure.”

By nd the 1840s, though, the post faced a crisis. Average citizens, fed up with high prices—sending a letter more than 150 miles cost around 20 cents, or roughly $6 today—were turning to cheaper private carriers, almost putting the Post Office out of business. In response, Congress converted the post into a public service that no longer had to break even, and in 1845 slashed letter

THE POST OFFICE ALMOST ALONE SUPPORTED THE AVIATION INDUSTRY UNTIL THE LATE

1920S.

postage to 5 to 10 cents, depending on distance.

The post continued to subsidize the nation’s transporta­tion infrastruc­ture. In the East, railroads replaced mounted couriers and stagecoach­es. To connect the coasts, the department first financed steamships to carry the mail through the Isthmus of Panama. Then it invested in stagecoach­es, which sped the mail from Missouri and Tennessee, where the railroads stopped, to California, enabling vital communicat­ions during the gold rush. In 1869, the great transconti­nental railroad was completed. The mail was a lifeline connecting Western settlers with loved ones back home.

When the Civil War split America, Montgomery Blair, President Lincoln’s postmaster general, used the savings from suspending service in the Confederac­y to upgrade the Union’s mail system. He expanded the Railway Mail Service, authorized the first money orders and began deliveries to urban residences, nd while the post became the first major institutio­n to employ large numbers of women and African Americans.

The innovation­s that followed included Rural Free Delivery (1896) and Parcel Post (1913), which brought rural residents into the mainstream. At a time when banks largely ignored the needs of average citizens, the Postal Savings System (1911) provided basic financial services. As World War I engulfed Europe, the Post Office recognized the value of air transport and almost alone supported the aviation industry until the late 1920s.

The boom after World War II doubled the volume of mail even as the cash-starved department racked up big deficits and faced a fiscal crisis recalling that of the 1840s. Alarmed, Congress in 1970 remade the department into the United States Postal Service, a government-business hybrid that has received no tax dollars since 1982 but nonetheles­s remains subject to congressio­nal oversight. By the end of 2006, the Postal Accountabi­lity and Enhancemen­t Act had saddled the service with tens of billions of dollars of debt by requiring that it prefund its retirees’ health benefits.

While the post is once again the subject of controvers­y, it’s still the federal service that Americans rate most highly, according to a 2019 Gallup poll. Apparently unaware that much of the USPS’s business is now parcel delivery, which boosted revenue by $1.3 billion from 2018 to 2019, Jerry Seinfeld recently joked that he couldn’t fathom how a “system based on licking, walking and a random number of pennies” is struggling. Yet in 2020, with Americans isolated by Covid-19, countless folks depend on a system that supplies every address with critical materials, including stimulus checks, ballots and, perhaps soon, medical tests.

 ??  ?? “The Postal Service is one of the oldest federal agencies,” says Daniel Piazza of the Smithsonia­n National Postal Museum. “Maybe for that reason, we tend to take it for granted.”
“The Postal Service is one of the oldest federal agencies,” says Daniel Piazza of the Smithsonia­n National Postal Museum. “Maybe for that reason, we tend to take it for granted.”
 ??  ?? An early instance (circa 1910) of a Rural
Free Delivery carrier using an
automobile.
An early instance (circa 1910) of a Rural Free Delivery carrier using an automobile.
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