Post Office Dates Back to 1660 Established Under Charles II

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The Louth-London Royal Mail, painting by Charles Cooper Henderson, 1820
The Louth-London Royal Mail by Charles Cooper Henderson, 1820

AceHistoryDesk – Under the guise of the General Post Office (GPO), it soon grew as an important organisation integral within the infrastructure of England during the seventeenth century.

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Ace Press News From Cutting Room Floor: Published: May.30: 2024: Short History Of Post Office: The History Press: Published: 1st June, 2018: TELEGRAM Ace Daily News Link https://t.me/YouMeUs2 

Just one year after it was formed, the postage date stamp was first used and the inaugural Postmaster, Henry Bishop – also the inventor of the first postmark used on mail, was appointed tasked with overseeing the GPO. 

The Louth-London Royal Mail, painting by Charles Cooper Henderson, 1820
The Louth-London Royal Mail by Charles Cooper Henderson, 1820

As both the state system provider and telecommunications carrier, the GPO expanded across the British Empire from having an initial jurisdiction across just England and Wales; then for the whole of Great Britain.

Portrait of Postmaster General Henry Bishop
Postmaster General Henry Bishop

It was over 100 years later when the next significant milestone in the life of the GPO saw uniformed post men take to the street for the first time (1793).

Illustration depicting clerks at work in a London post office circa 1808
Clerks at work in a London post office circa 1808

A key moment in terms of the developing infrastructure of the postal network came in 1829 when the first purpose-built mail facility was fully operational. Located in St Martin’s Le Grand, EC2, the building designed by Sir Robert Smirke was 400ft long by 80ft deep.

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Illustration of the headquarters of the General Post Office in St Martins-le-Grand in the City of London, late 1820s
The headquarters of the General Post Office in St Martins-le-Grand in the City of London, late 1820s

The invention of the adhesive postage stamp by Sir Rowland Hill in 1837 was a key milestone for the Post Office and just three years later the Penny Black was established. As the first stamp issued anywhere in the world for sending letters the Penny Black Stamp remains iconic to this day and led to the introduction of the Post Office pillar box in 1852.

Penny Black stamp
Penny Black stamp

The introduction of the Penny Black was responsible for the introduction of the Uniform Penny Post, a uniform postal rate that cut administrative costs and encouraged the use of the postal system and adhesive postage stamps.

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@acenewsservices Initially it was normal for the recipient of the post to pay the fee and they had the right to refuse to accept the item if they did not wish to pay. The charge was based on the distance the item had been carried and the number of sheets, so the GPO had to keep a separate account for each item. As a result, British postal rates were high and complex. To simplify matters, Hill proposed an adhesive stamp to indicate pre-payment of postage. The Penny Black allowed letters of up to ½ ounce (14 grams) to be delivered at a flat rate of one penny, between any two places in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland irrespective of distance. Royal Mail ‘

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Royal Mail ‘Post Office Regulations’ handbill giving details of the Uniform Penny Post, dated 7 January 1840
Post Office Regulations’ handbill giving details of the Uniform Penny Post, dated 7 January 1840

Less than 20 years later, in 1868, the first military links to the Post Office were formed as the 49th Middlesex Rifle Volunteers Corps, known as the Post Office Rifles came into being – made up of GPO employees.

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These initial military connections to the GPO were then to be magnified as the organisation played a pivotal role during the First World War.

By the outbreak of the conflict in 1914, the Post Office employed over 250,000 people and nearly a quarter of these were enlisted with the army. As well as the 12,000 men who fought with the Post Office Rifles regiment, some 35,000 women were employed in temporary positions during the Great War as the GPO played a pivotal role in maintaining communications throughout the conflict.

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Photograph showing three 24th Middlesex Rifle Volunteers (Post Office Rifles) in uniform in 1895
24th Middlesex Rifle Volunteers (Post Office Rifles) in 1895

1969 was another poignant year for the organisation as the GPO was dissolved to become known as the Post Office for the first time.

Photograph showing Ambulance detachment, 24th Middlesex Rifle Volunteers (Post Office Rifles) on parade, 1897
Ambulance detachment, 24th Middlesex Rifle Volunteers (Post Office Rifles), 1897

In the same year, the savings bank offering of the Post Office was transferred to the treasury and re-branded to become National Savings.

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Postal distribution efficiency was significantly increased by creation of post codes, introduced five years later in 1974. From there the previous telecommunications arm of the Post Office disappeared in 1981 when the British Telecommunications Corporation was formed.

The Post Office Ltd as it is known in its current form came into existence in 2001. Ten years later the Postal Services Act 2011 was significant in that it led to the Post Office Ltd becoming independent of the Royal Mail Group as of 1 April 2012.

As a newly formed mutual organisation, independence from Royal Mail enabled the Post Office to make independent strategic decisions. Network modernisation, including extended opening hours and a reduction of the Crown network by moving Crown post offices into shops, is laying the foundations for the Post Office Ltd to evolve further moving forward.

Illustration of the Inland Letter Office at the General Post Office in 1845
The Inland Letter Office at the General Post Office in 1845

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