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  • April 1, 1876
  • Page 33
  • CURIOSITIES OF THE POST OFFICE.
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The Masonic Magazine, April 1, 1876: Page 33

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    Article CURIOSITIES OF THE POST OFFICE. ← Page 2 of 2
Page 33

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Curiosities Of The Post Office.

found open in the Chief Office in London containing cheques for £ 200 , and bank notes for more than £ 500 . But more extraordinary still , a registered letter Avas misdirected , and upon inquiry being made for the packet it was found that Turkish

Bonds which it contained to the value of . £ 4 , 000 had been mistaken for foreign lottery tickets of no value , and had been put aside for the children of the family to p lay with !! There were last year received into the

Returned Letter Office 4 , 400 , 000 letters , of these upwards of 20 , 000 Avere posted Avithout any address ! All the letters that it is found difficult to deliver in consequence of the imperfect address are taken to the Dead Letter Office , where sit certain clerks

cunning in guessing any puzzling address the public may favour them Avith . Some of these addresses are perfectly astounding in their simplicity . For instance , ivhat does the reader think of the following ?—" Mr . Smith

" At the Back of the Church " England . " Or here is another still more enigmatical : "My dear Father in Yorkshire at the White Cottage with the White Pailings " Again Ave have the following : " This is for her that ' maks' dresses for young ladies that ' livs ' at tother side of the road to

" James Brooklip " Edensorer " Chesterfield . " Or more comical still : " This is for the young girl that wears spectacleswho minds ' two babies '

, " 30 Sheriff Street "Off Prince Edwin Street " Liverpool . " These , Ave beg to say , are all genuine addresses .

The " blind man " at the Post Office is quite up to deciphering such queer jmzzles as we have quoted , and the vast majority of them get delivered either to the persons addressed , or to the person sending them . A large number of le

very poor peop greatl y object to receive returned letters . They think it very unlucky . All letters containing valuables are kept for two years , and if still unclaimed » re sold at Debenham and Storr ' s , and the

proceeds are carried to the credit of the Life Insurance Office in connection with the Post Office , a much better arrangement this than that carried out by the Custom House authorities at the London Docks , Avhere goods of all kinds of a

perishable nature upon which duty has not been paid are put into Avhat is termed " the Queen ' s Pipe , " and destroyed by fire , not-Avithstanding that thousands of poor people are perishing for want whilst this destruction of good food is going on .

The number of letters passing through the General Post Office is by no means a constant number ; on certain occasions the number is augmented by hundreds of thousands . When Friday falls at the end of the mouthin addition to the

news-, papers the monthly magazines are posted ; this causes a great strain to be suddenly put upon the sorters at the Post Office . But the day before St . Valentine ' s day is the great day of influx . On that occasion , upwards of four million and a half of these

tender epistles crowd the Post Office in excess of the average number . More than a hundred years ago it was proposed in Parliament that the postage

should be reduced to a halfpenny . Of course in that age the idea was scouted , but only latterly Ave have come up to the old idea in a lame fashion , in the form of post-cards , which do not ensure secrecy . May we not ask , in the name of Education ,

if it is necessary to raise a revenue out of the pence of the people collected in this manner ? In 1874 the gross revenue from the Post Office Avas £ 5 , 751 , 600 , aud the profit we derived from this source Avas £ 2 , 724 , 012 . Coiild we not afford to

sacrifice some of this income for the sake of progress ? If the stamp Avere onl y a halfpenny , how many more millions would be enabled thereby to write than can UOAV ! We know the impulse the institution of : the penny post gave to Education in 1 S 40

; can we doubt that halving that stamp would in time double the amount of letterwriting ? If so , would not that be an impulse to Education far more powerful than the establishment of the most urgent School Boards throughout the country ?

We think it Avould , and shall Avith pleasure welcome so important a boon . —We take this from our amusing and interesting contemporary the Graphic of March 4 th . 2 a

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-04-01, Page 33” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 19 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01041876/page/33/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
SONNET. Article 1
THE WILSON MANUSCRIPT CONSTITUTION. Article 2
AN HISTORICAL ACCOUNT OF MASTER AND FREE MASONS. Article 7
AIMEE. Article 11
LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF SCOTTISH FREEMASONRY. Article 11
LINES Article 14
THE ANTI-MASONIC VICAR Article 15
TO A SNOWDROP Article 17
"MILKLAT "—THE CITY OF REFUGE. Article 18
ODDS AND ENDS OF WIT AND HUMOUR. Article 19
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 24
ORATION Article 26
THE OLD FOLKS' PARTY. Article 28
BENEFIT MANKIND. Article 32
CURIOSITIES OF THE POST OFFICE. Article 32
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 34
BRO. DANIEL COXE—THE FATHER OF FREEMASONRY IN AMERICA. Article 36
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 39
HALF-WAY DOIN'S. Article 42
GODFREY HIGGINS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 43
THE SITE OF SOLOMON'S TEMPLE DISCOVERED. Article 44
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 46
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Page 33

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Curiosities Of The Post Office.

found open in the Chief Office in London containing cheques for £ 200 , and bank notes for more than £ 500 . But more extraordinary still , a registered letter Avas misdirected , and upon inquiry being made for the packet it was found that Turkish

Bonds which it contained to the value of . £ 4 , 000 had been mistaken for foreign lottery tickets of no value , and had been put aside for the children of the family to p lay with !! There were last year received into the

Returned Letter Office 4 , 400 , 000 letters , of these upwards of 20 , 000 Avere posted Avithout any address ! All the letters that it is found difficult to deliver in consequence of the imperfect address are taken to the Dead Letter Office , where sit certain clerks

cunning in guessing any puzzling address the public may favour them Avith . Some of these addresses are perfectly astounding in their simplicity . For instance , ivhat does the reader think of the following ?—" Mr . Smith

" At the Back of the Church " England . " Or here is another still more enigmatical : "My dear Father in Yorkshire at the White Cottage with the White Pailings " Again Ave have the following : " This is for her that ' maks' dresses for young ladies that ' livs ' at tother side of the road to

" James Brooklip " Edensorer " Chesterfield . " Or more comical still : " This is for the young girl that wears spectacleswho minds ' two babies '

, " 30 Sheriff Street "Off Prince Edwin Street " Liverpool . " These , Ave beg to say , are all genuine addresses .

The " blind man " at the Post Office is quite up to deciphering such queer jmzzles as we have quoted , and the vast majority of them get delivered either to the persons addressed , or to the person sending them . A large number of le

very poor peop greatl y object to receive returned letters . They think it very unlucky . All letters containing valuables are kept for two years , and if still unclaimed » re sold at Debenham and Storr ' s , and the

proceeds are carried to the credit of the Life Insurance Office in connection with the Post Office , a much better arrangement this than that carried out by the Custom House authorities at the London Docks , Avhere goods of all kinds of a

perishable nature upon which duty has not been paid are put into Avhat is termed " the Queen ' s Pipe , " and destroyed by fire , not-Avithstanding that thousands of poor people are perishing for want whilst this destruction of good food is going on .

The number of letters passing through the General Post Office is by no means a constant number ; on certain occasions the number is augmented by hundreds of thousands . When Friday falls at the end of the mouthin addition to the

news-, papers the monthly magazines are posted ; this causes a great strain to be suddenly put upon the sorters at the Post Office . But the day before St . Valentine ' s day is the great day of influx . On that occasion , upwards of four million and a half of these

tender epistles crowd the Post Office in excess of the average number . More than a hundred years ago it was proposed in Parliament that the postage

should be reduced to a halfpenny . Of course in that age the idea was scouted , but only latterly Ave have come up to the old idea in a lame fashion , in the form of post-cards , which do not ensure secrecy . May we not ask , in the name of Education ,

if it is necessary to raise a revenue out of the pence of the people collected in this manner ? In 1874 the gross revenue from the Post Office Avas £ 5 , 751 , 600 , aud the profit we derived from this source Avas £ 2 , 724 , 012 . Coiild we not afford to

sacrifice some of this income for the sake of progress ? If the stamp Avere onl y a halfpenny , how many more millions would be enabled thereby to write than can UOAV ! We know the impulse the institution of : the penny post gave to Education in 1 S 40

; can we doubt that halving that stamp would in time double the amount of letterwriting ? If so , would not that be an impulse to Education far more powerful than the establishment of the most urgent School Boards throughout the country ?

We think it Avould , and shall Avith pleasure welcome so important a boon . —We take this from our amusing and interesting contemporary the Graphic of March 4 th . 2 a

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