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The General Post Office (GPO) was the state
postal system The mail or post is a system for physically transporting postcards, letters, and parcels. A postal service can be private or public, though many governments place restrictions on private systems. Since the mid-19th century, national postal sy ...
and
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carrier of the
United Kingdom The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom (UK) or Britain, is a country in Northwestern Europe, off the coast of European mainland, the continental mainland. It comprises England, Scotlan ...
until 1969. Established in England in the 17th century, the GPO was a
state monopoly In economics, a government monopoly or public monopoly is a form of coercive monopoly in which a government agency or government corporation is the sole provider of a particular good or service and competition is prohibited by law. It is a monopoly ...
covering the dispatch of items from a specific sender to a specific receiver (which was to be of great importance when new forms of communication were invented); it was overseen by a Government minister, the Postmaster General. Over time its remit was extended to Scotland and Ireland, and across parts of the
British Empire The British Empire comprised the dominions, Crown colony, colonies, protectorates, League of Nations mandate, mandates, and other Dependent territory, territories ruled or administered by the United Kingdom and its predecessor states. It bega ...
. The GPO was abolished by the Post Office Act 1969, which transferred its assets to the Post Office, so changing it from a Department of State to a
statutory corporation A statutory corporation is a corporation, government entity created as a statutory body by statute. Their precise nature varies by jurisdiction, but they are corporations owned by a government or controlled by national or sub-national government ...
. Responsibility for telecommunications was given to Post Office Telecommunications, the successor of the GPO Telegraph and Telephones department. In 1980, the telecommunications and postal sides were split prior to British Telecommunications' conversion into a totally separate publicly owned corporation the following year as a result of the British Telecommunications Act 1981. In 1986 the Post Office Counters business was made functionally separate from Royal Mail Letters and Royal Mail Parcels (the latter being later rebranded as ' Parcelforce'). At the start of the 21st century the Post Office became a
public limited company A public limited company (legally abbreviated to PLC or plc) is a type of public company under United Kingdom company law, some Commonwealth of Nations, Commonwealth jurisdictions, and Republic of Ireland, Ireland. It is a limited liability co ...
(initially called 'Consignia plc'), which was renamed ' Royal Mail Group plc' in 2002. In 2012 the counters business (known as ' Post Office Limited' since 2002) was taken out of Royal Mail Group, prior to the latter's privatisation in 2013. The privatised holding company (Royal Mail plc) was renamed International Distributions Services plc in 2022.


Early postal services

In the medieval period,
nobles Nobility is a social class found in many societies that have an aristocracy. It is normally appointed by and ranked immediately below royalty. Nobility has often been an estate of the realm with many exclusive functions and characteristics. T ...
generally employed messengers to deliver letters and other items on their behalf. In the 12th century a permanent body of messengers had been formed within the Royal Household of King Henry I, for the conveyance of royal and official correspondence. The messengers delivered their messages in person, each travelling on his own horse and taking time as needed for rest and refreshment (including stopping overnight if the length of journey required it). Under
Edward IV Edward IV (28 April 1442 – 9 April 1483) was King of England from 4 March 1461 to 3 October 1470, then again from 11 April 1471 until his death in 1483. He was a central figure in the Wars of the Roses, a series of civil wars in England ...
, however, a more efficient system was put in place (albeit temporarily) to aid communications during his war with Scotland: a number of post houses were established at twenty-mile intervals along the Great North Road, between London and Berwick, to provide the king's messengers with fresh horses for each stage of the journey; in this way they were able to travel up to a hundred miles a day. The original meaning of the word 'post' (in the sense relevant to this article) comes from this idea of having horses placed or 'posted' (Latin ''positi'') at regular intervals along a route for the swift conveyance of letters and messengers. Under King
Henry VIII Henry VIII (28 June 149128 January 1547) was King of England from 22 April 1509 until his death in 1547. Henry is known for his Wives of Henry VIII, six marriages and his efforts to have his first marriage (to Catherine of Aragon) annulled. ...
a concerted effort was made to maintain this means of conveying royal and government despatches (in times of peace as well as in time of war). To oversee the required arrangements, the king appointed Brian Tuke to serve as 'Master of the Postes'; in 1533 Tuke reported that a regular service was now in place, both between London and Berwick, and between London and Dover.


The Elizabethan post network

Under
Elizabeth I Elizabeth I (7 September 153324 March 1603) was List of English monarchs, Queen of England and List of Irish monarchs, Ireland from 17 November 1558 until her death in 1603. She was the last and longest reigning monarch of the House of Tudo ...
the postal system gained more coherence and a greater sense of permanence. By the 1550s five post roads were in place, connecting London with: *
Dover Dover ( ) is a town and major ferry port in Kent, southeast England. It faces France across the Strait of Dover, the narrowest part of the English Channel at from Cap Gris Nez in France. It lies southeast of Canterbury and east of Maidstone. ...
*
Edinburgh Edinburgh is the capital city of Scotland and one of its 32 Council areas of Scotland, council areas. The city is located in southeast Scotland and is bounded to the north by the Firth of Forth and to the south by the Pentland Hills. Edinburgh ...
* Holyhead (via
Chester Chester is a cathedral city in Cheshire, England, on the River Dee, Wales, River Dee, close to the England–Wales border. With a built-up area population of 92,760 in 2021, it is the most populous settlement in the borough of Cheshire West an ...
) *
Milford Haven Milford Haven ( ) is a town and community (Wales), community in Pembrokeshire, Wales. It is on the north side of the Milford Haven Waterway, an estuary forming a natural harbour that has been used as a port since the Middle Ages. The town was ...
(via
Bristol Bristol () is a City status in the United Kingdom, cathedral city, unitary authority area and ceremonial county in South West England, the most populous city in the region. Built around the River Avon, Bristol, River Avon, it is bordered by t ...
) *
Plymouth Plymouth ( ) is a port city status in the United Kingdom, city and unitary authority in Devon, South West England. It is located on Devon's south coast between the rivers River Plym, Plym and River Tamar, Tamar, about southwest of Exeter and ...
(via
Exeter Exeter ( ) is a City status in the United Kingdom, cathedral city and the county town of Devon in South West England. It is situated on the River Exe, approximately northeast of Plymouth and southwest of Bristol. In Roman Britain, Exeter w ...
). At Dover merchant ships were regularly employed to convey letters to and from the continent; similarly, the ports of Holyhead, Milford Haven and Falmouth (served by a by-road from Plymouth) were used to connect the post road network to Ireland. As early as 1598 a regular packet service was running between Holyhead and Dublin. In the 17th century a sixth post road was added, from London to
Great Yarmouth Great Yarmouth ( ), often called Yarmouth, is a seaside resort, seaside town which gives its name to the wider Borough of Great Yarmouth in Norfolk, England; it straddles the River Yare and is located east of Norwich. Its fishing industry, m ...
(via
Colchester Colchester ( ) is a city in northeastern Essex, England. It is the second-largest settlement in the county, with a population of 130,245 at the 2021 United Kingdom census, 2021 Census. The demonym is ''Colcestrian''. Colchester occupies the ...
), and the Plymouth post road was extended to Falmouth (which soon became the principal port for
packet ship Packet boats were medium-sized boats designed mainly for domestic mail and freight transport in European countries and in North American rivers and canals. Eventually including basic passenger accommodation, they were used extensively during t ...
s carrying letters to and from
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and
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). Each post-house on the Elizabethan post roads was staffed by a postmaster (usually referred to as a 'deputy postmaster' by this time), whose main responsibility was to provide the horses. The postmaster would also provide a guide to accompany the messenger as far as the next post-house (and then see to the return of the horses afterwards). In practice most post-houses were established at roadside
inns Inns are generally establishments or buildings where travelers can seek lodging, and usually, food and drink. Inns are typically located in the country or along a highway. Before the advent of motorized transportation, they also provided accomm ...
and the innkeeper served as postmaster (in return for a small salary from the Crown). Private citizens could make use of the post-horse network, if they could afford it (in 1583 they had to pay twopence per mile for the horse, plus fourpence per stage for the guide), but it was primarily designed for the relaying of state and royal correspondence, or for the conveyance from one place to another of individuals engaged on official state business, who paid a reduced rate (fixed by
statute A statute is a law or formal written enactment of a legislature. Statutes typically declare, command or prohibit something. Statutes are distinguished from court law and unwritten law (also known as common law) in that they are the expressed wil ...
at a penny a mile in 1548). Private correspondence was often sent using common carriers at this time, or with others who regularly journeyed from place to place (such as travelling pedlars); towns often made use of local licensed carriers, who plied their trade using a horse and cart or waggon, while the universities, along with certain municipal and other corporations, maintained their own correspondence networks. Many letters went by foot-post rather than on horseback. Footposts or runners were employed by many towns, cities and other communities, and had been for many years. A 16th-century footpost would cover around 30 miles per day, on average. At the time of the
Spanish Armada The Spanish Armada (often known as Invincible Armada, or the Enterprise of England, ) was a Spanish fleet that sailed from Lisbon in late May 1588, commanded by Alonso de Guzmán, Duke of Medina Sidonia, an aristocrat without previous naval ...
every
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was by royal command required to provide a footpost, and every town a horse-post, to help convey news in the event of an imminent invasion. In Ireland the first horse-posts appear to have been established during the
Nine Years' War The Nine Years' War was a European great power conflict from 1688 to 1697 between Kingdom of France, France and the Grand Alliance (League of Augsburg), Grand Alliance. Although largely concentrated in Europe, fighting spread to colonial poss ...
at the close of the 16th century, for the conveying of
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. By the early 1600s there were two options for couriers using the post system: they could either ride 'through-post', carrying the correspondence the full distance; or they could use the 'post of the packet', whereby the letters were carried by the guides from one post house to the next in a cotton-lined leather bag (although this method was only available for royal, government or diplomatic correspondence). The guides at this time were provided with a post horn, which they had to sound at regular intervals or when encountering others on the road (other road users were expected to give way to the post riders).


Foreign postage

At the start of the 16th century a system for the conveyance of foreign dispatches had been set up, organised by Flemish merchants in the
City of London The City of London, also known as ''the City'', is a Ceremonial counties of England, ceremonial county and Districts of England, local government district with City status in the United Kingdom, city status in England. It is the Old town, his ...
; but in 1558, after a dispute arose between Italian, Flemish and English merchants on the matter, the Master of the King's Posts was granted oversight of it instead. In 1619, James I appointed a separate Postmaster General 'for foreign parts', granting him (and his appointees) the sole privilege of carrying foreign correspondence to and from London. (The separate Postmaster General appointments were consolidated in 1637, but the 'foreign' and 'inland' postal services remained separate in terms of administration and accounting until the mid-19th century).


The General Post

It was not until 1635 that a general or public post was properly established, for inland letters as for foreign ones. On 31 July that year, King Charles I issued a
proclamation A proclamation (Lat. ''proclamare'', to make public by announcement) is an official declaration issued by a person of authority to make certain announcements known. Proclamations are currently used within the governing framework of some nations ...
'for the settling of the Letter-office of England and Scotland', an event which 'may properly be regarded as the origin of the British post-office'. By this decree, Thomas Witherings (who had been appointed 'Postmaster of England for foreign parts' three years earlier) was empowered to provide for the carriage of private letters at fixed rates 'betwixt London and all parts of His Majesty's dominions'. To this end, the royal proclamation instructed him to establish 'a running post, to run night and day', initially between London and Edinburgh, London and Holyhead and London and Plymouth, 'for the advancement of all His Majesty's subjects in their trade and correspondence'. (A similar system, running between London and Dover, had already been established by Witherings as part of his administration of the foreign posts, and he himself had proposed its extension to the rest of the realm). Witherings was required to extend the new system to other post roads 'as soon as possibly may be' (beginning with the routes to Oxford and Bristol, and to Colchester, Norwich and Yarmouth); and provision was also made for the establishment of 'bye-posts' to run to and from places not directly served by the post road system (such as Lincoln and Hull). The new system was fully and profitably running by 1636. In order to facilitate the new arrangement, the King commanded 'all his postmasters, upon all the roads of England, to have ready in their stables one or two horses ..to carry such messengers, with their portmantles, as shall be imployed in the said service', and they were forbidden from hiring out these horses to others on days when the mail was due. Furthermore, it was enjoined that (with a few specific exceptions) 'no other messenger or messengers, footpost or footposts, shall take up, carry, receive or deliver any letter or letters whatsoever, other than the messengers appointed by the said Thomas Witherings', thus establishing a monopoly, which (under the auspices of the Royal Mail) would remain in place until 2006.


Legislation and oversight

Under the Commonwealth the Post Office was farmed to John Manley and John Thurloe, successively. In 1657 an Act of Parliament entitled ''Postage of England, Scotland and Ireland Settled'' set up a postal system for the whole of the British Isles (the nations of which had been unified under
Oliver Cromwell Oliver Cromwell (25 April 15993 September 1658) was an English statesman, politician and soldier, widely regarded as one of the most important figures in British history. He came to prominence during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, initially ...
as a result of the
Wars of the Three Kingdoms The Wars of the Three Kingdoms were a series of conflicts fought between 1639 and 1653 in the kingdoms of Kingdom of England, England, Kingdom of Scotland, Scotland and Kingdom of Ireland, Ireland, then separate entities in a personal union un ...
), stating that 'there shall be one General Post-Office, and one office stiled the Postmaster-Generall of England and Comptroller of the Post-Office'. The Act also reasserted the postal monopoly for letter delivery and for post-horses; and it set new rates both for carriage of letters and for 'riding post'. During the Commonwealth, what had been a weekly post service to and from London was increased to a thrice-weekly service: letters were despatched from the General Letter Office in London every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evening, while the inbound post arrived early in the morning on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Usually the recipient of the post paid the fee (and 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 so the Post Office had to keep a separate account for each item. An executive ordinance of 1654 granted Members of Parliament (and certain other office-holders) a ' franking privilege', meaning that their letters would be conveyed free of charge (an arrangement, much taken advantage of over the years, which would remain in place until 1840). After the Restoration, the Post Office Act 1660 ( 12 Cha. 2. c. 35) was passed (the previous Cromwellian Act being void), confirming the arrangements in place for the Post Office, and the post of Postmaster General, and emphasizing the public and economic benefits of a General Post system: To begin with the Post Office was again farmed, nominally to Henry Bishop, but the deal was bankrolled by John Wildman (a gentleman of dubious repute, who kept a tight rein on his investment). Two years later Wildman was imprisoned, implicated in a plot against the King, whereupon Bishop sold the lease on to the King's gunpowder manufacturer, Daniel O'Neill; after the latter's death, his widow the Countess of Chesterfield served out the remainder of the original seven-year term (so becoming the first female Postmaster General). Meanwhile, under the terms of a 1663 Act of Parliament, the 'rents, issues and profits' of the Post Office had been settled by the King on his brother, the Duke of York, to provide for his support and maintenance. Following the latter's accession to the throne as King James II, this income became part of the hereditary revenues of
the Crown The Crown is a political concept used in Commonwealth realms. Depending on the context used, it generally refers to the entirety of the State (polity), state (or in federal realms, the relevant level of government in that state), the executive ...
.The Post Office revenue was among the hereditary revenues surrendered to Parliament by King
George III George III (George William Frederick; 4 June 173829 January 1820) was King of Great Britain and King of Ireland, Ireland from 25 October 1760 until his death in 1820. The Acts of Union 1800 unified Kingdom of Great Britain, Great Britain and ...
under the terms of the Civil List Act 1760.
Subsequently, under the growing scrutiny of HM Treasury, the postal service came increasingly to be viewed as a source of government income (as seen in the Post Office (Revenues) Act 1710, which increased postal charges and levied tax on the income in order to finance Britain's involvement in the
War of the Spanish Succession The War of the Spanish Succession was a European great power conflict fought between 1701 and 1714. The immediate cause was the death of the childless Charles II of Spain in November 1700, which led to a struggle for control of the Spanish E ...
).


Distribution and delivery

The distribution network was centred on the General Letter Office in London (which was on Threadneedle Street prior to the
Great Fire of London The Great Fire of London was a major conflagration that swept through central London from Sunday 2 September to Wednesday 5 September 1666, gutting the medieval City of London inside the old London Wall, Roman city wall, while also extendi ...
, after which it moved first to Bishopsgate and then to Lombard Street in 1678). The incoming post arrived each week on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays; it was sorted and stamped: London letters went to the 'windows' where members of the public were able to collect them from the office in person (once they had paid the requisite fee), while 'Country letters' were dispatched along the relevant post road. The outgoing post went on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. Postage was payable by the recipient (rather than the sender) and depended on the length of the letter and the distance it had travelled;As per the 1657 Act, a single-sheet letter cost 2d up to 80 miles, 3d over 80 miles and 4d for carriage to or from Scotland. each individual charge was calculated in London and entered into a book, which went with the letters on the road, indicating the amounts due from each postmaster for the letters delivered into his care. By the 1690s the General Letter Office had opened eight additional 'receiving-houses' in and around Westminster, where senders could submit items (which were then conveyed by letter-carriers to the central office in Lombard Street for sorting and despatch); similar arrangements were also put in place in the larger provincial towns. At first the new postal network was not especially well publicised; but in his 1673 publication ''Britannia'', Richard Blome sought to remedy this by describing in some detail the geographical disposition of the new 'general ''Post-Office, which he called an 'exceeding great conveniency' for the inhabitants of the nation. At that time there were 182 ''Deputy Post-Masters'' (or 'Deputies') in England nd Wales most of whom were stationed at the 'Stages' or stops which lay along the six main post-roads;Ireland at about this time had three post roads (the Connaught road, the Munster road and the Ulster road) likewise staffed by Deputy Post-Masters (45 in number). and under them were ''sub-Post-masters'', based at market towns which were not on the main post-roads but to which the service had been extended. (The sub-Post-masters, unlike the Deputies, were not employed by the Post Office.) The expansion of the service beyond the main post-roads was in no small part due to the enterprise of the Deputy post-masters themselves, who were allowed to profit from branch services which they established and operated. In this way, the network of 'by-posts' greatly expanded in the 1670s: in 1673 Blome could write that 'there is scarce any ''Market-Town'' of note hich does not havethe benefit of the conveyance of letters to and fro'; he went on to list, County by County, both the 'Stages' on the post-roads (of which there were over 140) and the Post-towns on the branch roads (which by then numbered over 380 in total), where members of the public were able to leave letters with a Post-Master 'to be sent as directed'. Before long moves were made to incorporate the by-posts (and their income) into the national network: 'Riding Surveyors' were appointed in 1682, to travel with the post and scrutinise the Deputies' income and activity at each Stage (particularly in relation to by-letters); in later years the Surveyors served as the GPO's inspectorate, tasked with maintaining efficiency and consistency across the network (until they were finally disbanded in the 1930s). Letters addressed to destinations which lay neither on a post-road nor on a by-road were simply left at the nearest post-house; from there they might be delivered by a carrier or messenger, who would charge their own fee for doing so. It was usual for each postmaster to employ post-boys to ride with the mail bags from one post-house to the next; the postmaster at the next post-house would then record the time of arrival, before transferring the bags to a new horse, ridden by a new post-boy, for the next stage of the journey. On the outbound journey from London, the mail for each Stage (and its associated Post-towns) was left at the relevant post-house. Arrangements for its onward delivery varied somewhat from place to place. Witherings had envisaged using 'foot-posts' for this purpose (in 1620 Justices of the Peace had been ordered to arrange appointment of two to three foot-posts in every
parish A parish is a territorial entity in many Christianity, Christian denominations, constituting a division within a diocese. A parish is under the pastoral care and clerical jurisdiction of a priest#Christianity, priest, often termed a parish pries ...
for the conveyance of letters), though in practice precise details were often left to the local postmaster. On the return journey to London, bags of letters would be picked up from each post-house on the way, and taken to the General Letter Office to be sorted for despatch.


Packet boats and ship letters

With the establishment of a regular public postal service came the need for waterborne mail services (carrying letters to and from Ireland, continental Europe and other destinations) to be placed on a more regular footing. ' Packet boats', offering a regular scheduled mail service, were already in use for the passage between Holyhead and Dublin; but for letters to and from the Continent the post was entrusted to messengers, who would make their own travel arrangements. This was far from reliable, so in the 1630s Thomas Witherings set about establishing a regular Dover-Calais packet service. During the Commonwealth packet boats ran weekly between Milford Haven and
Waterford Waterford ( ) is a City status in Ireland, city in County Waterford in the South-East Region, Ireland, south-east of Ireland. It is located within the Provinces of Ireland, province of Munster. The city is situated at the head of Waterford H ...
, and Chester and Dublin.Chester was used in preference to Holyhead between 1653 and 1693. In the 1660s a packet service was put in place at Deal, to ferry letters to and from naval and merchant vessels anchored in the Downs; and in the 1690s a service was established between Donaghadee and
Portpatrick Portpatrick is a village and civil parishes in Scotland, civil parish in the historical county of Wigtownshire, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. It is located on the west coast of the Rhins of Galloway. The parish is about in length and in br ...
(served by a foot-post running out of Glasgow). By the end of the 17th century, additional packet services had been established between Harwich (off the Yarmouth post road) and
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, between Dover and
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/ Nieuport, and between Falmouth and Corunna. The packet services were generally arranged by
contract A contract is an agreement that specifies certain legally enforceable rights and obligations pertaining to two or more parties. A contract typically involves consent to transfer of goods, services, money, or promise to transfer any of thos ...
with an agent, who would commit to provide a regular mail-carrying service in exchange for a fee or subsidy. In the following century, packet services out of Falmouth began to sail to the West Indies, North America and other transatlantic destinations. Packet boats, however, were not the only means of conveying letters overseas: there had always been the option of sending them by merchant ship, and coffee houses had long been accustomed to receiving letters and packages on behalf of ships' captains, who would carry them for a fee. The trade in these 'ship letters' was acknowledged (and legitimised) in the Post Office Acts of 1657 and 1660. Attempts were made to levy Post Office fees on these letters and 'ship letter money' was offered to captains for each letter given to a postmaster on arrival in England in order for these charges to be applied; however they were under no legal obligation to comply and the majority of ship letters evaded the extra charges.


The London Penny Post

In 1680 William Dockwra and Robert Murray founded the 'Penny Post', which enabled letters and parcels to be sent cheaply to and from destinations in and around London. A flat fee of a penny was charged for sending letters or parcels up to a pound in weight within an area comprising the City of London, the
City of Westminster The City of Westminster is a London borough with City status in the United Kingdom, city status in Greater London, England. It is the site of the United Kingdom's Houses of Parliament and much of the British government. It contains a large par ...
and the Borough of Southwark; while two-pence was charged for items posted or delivered in the surrounding 'country' area (which included places such as Hackney, Newington, Lambeth and Islington). The Penny Post letter-carriers operated from seven main sorting offices around London, which were supplemented by between four and five hundred 'receiving houses' in all the principal streets in the area, where members of the public could post items. (Prior to the establishment of the Penny Post, the only location where letters could be posted in London was the General Letter Office in Lombard Street.) The receiving-houses were often found in public houses, coffee houses or other retail premises. Deliveries were made six or eight times a day in central London (and a minimum of four times a day in the outskirts). The innovation was a great success, and within two years a court ruling obliged the London Penny Post to come under the authority of the Postmaster General. Although now part of the GPO, the London Penny Post continued to operate entirely independently of the General (or 'Inland') Post until 1854 (when the two systems were combined). An attempt by Charles Povey to set up a rival halfpenny post in 1709 was halted after several months' operation; however Povey's practice of having letter-carriers ring a bell to attract custom was adopted by the Post Office and went on to be employed in major cities until the mid-19th century. In 1761 permission was given for the establishment of penny-post arrangements elsewhere in the realm, to function along the same lines as the London office, if they could be made financially viable; by the end of the century there were penny-post systems operating in Birmingham, Bristol, Dublin, Edinburgh and Manchester (to be joined by Glasgow and Newcastle-upon-Tyne in the 1830s). In 1801 the cost of posting a letter within the central London area was doubled; thenceforward the London District Post was known as the 'Two-penny Post' until its amalgamation into the General Post 53 years later.


Expansion at home and abroad

In the 1680s a post office was established in
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, which set down postal rates for deliveries both within and beyond the island. In 1691 the Lords of Trade and Plantations commissioned Thomas Neale to establish postal services in the North American colonies; he appointed Andrew Hamilton (who was already Postmaster-General of the Colony of Massachusetts) as his deputy. By 1699 there was a regular weekly post in place between
Boston Boston is the capital and most populous city in the Commonwealth (U.S. state), Commonwealth of Massachusetts in the United States. The city serves as the cultural and Financial centre, financial center of New England, a region of the Northeas ...
, New York and New Castle. A Scottish Post Office was established in 1695 (although the main post-road to Edinburgh continued to be managed from London). The Scottish terrain was notoriously challenging: in 1698, Sir Robert Sinclair, when offered the entire revenue of the Scottish posts plus several hundred pounds per annum in exchange for overseeing the office, politely declined. There were no horse posts in Scotland (beyond the road from London) in the early 18th century; instead foot posts were invariably used, providing regular services to and from Edinburgh (going as far north as Thurso and as far west as Inveraray). Post runners travelled from Edinburgh to
Glasgow Glasgow is the Cities of Scotland, most populous city in Scotland, located on the banks of the River Clyde in Strathclyde, west central Scotland. It is the List of cities in the United Kingdom, third-most-populous city in the United Kingdom ...
and back three times a week: setting off at midnight, they would arrive at their destination the following evening. It would not be until the middle of the century that horse posts were established on a regular basis between Edinburgh and Glasgow and the other principal burghs.A horse post was briefly established between Edinburgh and Inverness in 1716, but only as a temporary measure (to aid communication with General Cadogan). In 1710 the Scottish and English establishments were united by
statute A statute is a law or formal written enactment of a legislature. Statutes typically declare, command or prohibit something. Statutes are distinguished from court law and unwritten law (also known as common law) in that they are the expressed wil ...
. By virtue of the same Act of Parliament (the Post Office (Revenues) Act 1710), the functions of the 'general letter office and post office' in the City of London were set out, and the establishment of 'chief letter offices' in Edinburgh, Dublin, New York and the
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was enjoined. The Irish post at this time operated as part of the GPO under a Deputy Postmaster General based in Dublin; but in 1784 an Act was passed by the Parliament of Ireland providing for an independent Post Office in Ireland under its own Postmaster General (an arrangement that remained in place until 1831).


Ralph Allen and the cross-posts

The established post roads in Britain ran to and from London. The use of other roads required government permission (for example, it was only after much lobbying that a 'cross-post' between Bristol and Exeter was authorised, in 1698; previously mail between the two cities had to be sent via London). In 1720 Bath postmaster Ralph Allen, who had a vision for improving the situation, took over responsibility for the cross-posts (i.e. routes connecting one post road to another) and bye-posts (connecting to places off the main post roads).The term 'bye-posts' also covered "letters not going or coming from, to or through London". He greatly expanded the network of post towns served by the General Post, and at the same time did much to reform its workings. He introduced the use of post bills to track the movement of letters, which enabled him accurately to collect the revenue for the items for which he was responsible. An astute businessman, he succeeded in turning his farm of the cross-posts (which had long been loss-making for the Post Office) to a highly profitable enterprise.


Direct delivery

In 1772 the Court of the King's Bench ruled that letters ought to be delivered directly to recipients within the boundaries of each post town at no additional cost. Often a messenger with a locked
satchel A satchel is a bag with a strap, traditionally used for carrying books.Satchel
The Cambridge Dictionary. ...
would be employed by the postmaster to deliver and receive items of mail around town; he would alert people to his presence by ringing a hand bell. While postmasters were not obliged to deliver items to places outside the boundary, they could agree to do so on payment of an extra fee.


New modes of transport


Road

In the 1780s, Britain's General Post network was revolutionised by theatrical impresario John Palmer's idea of using mail coaches in place of the longstanding use of post horses. After initial resistance from the postal authorities, a trial took place in 1784, by which it was demonstrated that a mail coach departing from Bristol at 4pm would regularly arrive in London at 9 o'clock the following morning: a day and a half quicker than the post horses. As a result, the conveyance of letters by mail coach, under armed guard, was approved by Act of Parliament. Mail coaches were similar in design to the passenger-carrying stage coaches, but were smaller, lighter and more manoeuvrable (being pulled by a team of four horses, rather than six as was usual for a stage coach at that time). The long-established practice of 'riding post' was acknowledged through the provision of four seats inside the coach for passengers. The mail bags were carried in a locked box at the back, above which sat a scarlet-coated guard. While the coaches and coachmen were provided by contractors, the guards worked for the Post Office. As well as two pistols and a blunderbuss, each guard carried a secure timepiece by which departure times at each stage of the journey were strictly regulated. Mail coaches were introduced in Ireland in 1790, on the Dublin-Cork and Dublin-Belfast roads to begin with (and then likewise on the other major post roads in the early 1800s). From 1815 the coaches were provided by Charles Bianconi, initially as a speculative venture and later under contract.


Rail

In 1830 mail was carried by train for the first time, on the newly-opened Liverpool and Manchester Railway; over the next decade the railways replaced mail coaches as the principal means of conveyance (the last mail coach departed from London on 6 January 1846). The first Travelling Post Office (TPO) was introduced in 1837, and these began to be widely used enabling mail to be sorted in transit; TPO operation was greatly aided by the invention in 1852 of a trackside ' mail-bag apparatus' which enabled bags to be collected and deposited ''en route''. By the 1860s the Post Office had contracts with around thirty different rail companies. The development of a national rail network, quickly embraced by the Post Office, coincided with the ground-breaking introduction of uniform penny postage (qv below) and to a significant extent it made possible the dynamic growth of the UK postal service that followed.Campbell-Smith 2011, p. 142.


Maritime

The development of marine steam propulsion inevitably affected the packet ship services. Since the 1780s these had been run on behalf of the Post Office by private contractors, who depended on supplementary income from fee-paying passengers in order to make a profit; but in the 19th-century steamships began to lure the passengers away. At some considerable cost the Post Office resolved to build and operate its own fleet of steam vessels, but the service became increasingly inefficient. In 1823 The Admiralty took over managing the long-distance routes out of Falmouth, while services to and from Ireland and the continent were increasingly put out to commercial tender. Eventually, in 1837, the Admiralty took over control of the whole operation (and with it the remaining Post Office vessels). Subsequently, contracts for carrying mail began to be awarded to new large-scale shipping lines: the Royal Mail Steam Packet Company ran ships out of
Southampton Southampton is a port City status in the United Kingdom, city and unitary authority in Hampshire, England. It is located approximately southwest of London, west of Portsmouth, and southeast of Salisbury. Southampton had a population of 253, ...
to the West Indies and South America, the British and North American Royal Mail Steam Packet Company covered the North Atlantic route, while P&O provided services on eastward routes to the Mediterranean (and onwards to India and eventually Australia). From 1840 vessels carrying mail under Admiralty contract had the privilege of being badged and designated as Royal Mail Ships (RMS). Oversight of the sea mails and packet services reverted from the Admiralty to the Post Office in 1860.


Uniform Penny Postage

In 1840 the Uniform Penny Post was introduced, which incorporated the two key innovations of a uniform postal rate, which cut administrative costs and encouraged use of the system, and adhesive pre-paid stamp. Packets (weighing up to ) could also be sent by post, the cost of postage varying with the weight. The reforms were devised and overseen by Rowland Hill, having been initially proposed in Parliament by Robert Wallace MP. Hill's proposals, published in a 100-page pamphlet in 1837, were strongly repudiated by the Post Office under its long-standing Secretary Sir Francis Freeling and by the Postmaster General Lord Lichfield, who described them in the House of Lords as being 'of all the wild and visionary schemes ..the most extraordinary'; but among the general public, by contrast, Post Office reform became something of a '' cause célèbre'', with petitions and public meetings attracting large levels of support. With significant public backing, the Penny Postage Bill was introduced to Parliament in July 1839 and passed into law just four weeks later. The effect of the change was immediate: the number of letters sent annually increased from 76 million in 1839 to just under 169 million in 1840; by 1864 that figure had more than quadrupled to 679m. By the 1850s the postal system was described as having become 'universal all over the three kingdoms: no village, however insignificant, being without its receiving-house'. In 1855 a network of 10,498 post offices was in place across the country (made up of 920 Head Post Offices and 9,578 Sub-Post Offices and Receiving Offices). The following year postal operations within the capital began to be revised: the old London district was subdivided into ten smaller districts, each with its own district sorting office.These new London districts were named after
points of the compass The points of the compass are a set of horizontal, Radius, radially arrayed compass directions (or Azimuth#In navigation, azimuths) used in navigation and cartography. A ''compass rose'' is primarily composed of four cardinal directions—north, ...
(being notionally centred on St. Martin's Le Grand, where a new purpose-built GPO headquarters had opened in 1829).
The 1850s also saw the widespread introduction of cast-iron road-side post boxes where the public could deposit their outgoing mail; while at the same time the Post Office encouraged householders to insert letter boxes in their front doors for ease of delivery. Few other organisations, either of state or of commerce, could rival the early Victorian Post Office in the extent of its national coverage, and its counters began to be relied upon for providing other government services (e.g. the issuing of licences of various types). For many people the Post Office was, to all intents and purposes, the public face of the State. It had functioned for decades (alongside the Board of Stamps and Taxes, HM Customs and the Excise office) as a significant revenue-raising department for the Government (albeit a costly one); but increasingly in this period, the GPO came to be viewed (both by those in power and by the general public) less as a source of revenue and more as a
public service A public service or service of general (economic) interest is any service intended to address the needs of aggregate members of a community, whether provided directly by a public sector agency, via public financing available to private busin ...
. In 1848 Hill, who was an educationalist by background, had introduced a book post service. Pre-stamped postcards, costing one halfpenny (i.e. half the price of a letter) to post, first appeared in 1870, with 75 million of them being posted in that first year. In 1883 Henry Fawcett (whom Gladstone had appointed Postmaster General three years earlier) inaugurated a parcel post service by arrangement with the railway companies; as a result the term ' postman' replaced 'letter-carrier' in the GPO's official nomenclature from October of that year. Uniform Penny Postage only covered delivery to (and within) a recognised post town; by 1864 this accounted for around 95% of letters posted. Onward delivery of mail to rural addresses, however, continued to incur an additional fee until the GPO's ' Jubilee concession' of 1897, by which it undertook to guarantee delivery to every house in the kingdom at a standard rate. International postage rates had been standardised to some extent through the establishment of the General Postal Union in 1874; however, the application of additional transit charges by the GPO meant that correspondence within the British Empire subsequently cost more than the 2½d rate for sending letters within the Union. Campaigns for a 'universal penny post', or global flat rate, were spearheaded in the UK by John Henniker Heaton MP; his vision was achieved in part with the introduction of an 'imperial penny post' in 1897.


Financial services


The Money Order Office

In 1838 the
Money Order A money order is a directive to pay a pre-specified amount of money from prepaid funds, making it a more trusted method of payment than a cheque. History Systems similar to modern money orders can be traced back centuries. Paper documents known ...
Office was established, to provide a secure means of transferring money to people in different parts of the country (or world), and to discourage people from sending cash by post. The money order system had first been introduced as a private enterprise by three Post Office clerks in 1792, with the permission of the Postmaster General. Alongside money orders,
postal order A postal order or postal note is a type of money order usually intended for sending money through the mail. It is purchased at a post office and is payable to the named recipient at another post office. A fee for the service, known as poundage, ...
s were introduced in 1881 (on the initiative of Henry Fawcett and George Chetwynd), which were cheaper and easier to cash. The Money Order Office, however, declined to administer them (it was not until 1904 that the Postal Order Branch and the Money Order Department were finally united); instead, Chetwynd himself (in his role as Receiver and Accountant-General of the Post Office) took responsibility. Postal orders and money orders were vital at this time for transactions between small businesses, as well as individuals, because bank transfer facilities were only available to major businesses and for larger sums of money.


The Post Office Savings Bank

The Post Office Savings Bank (POSB) was inaugurated in 1861, when there were few banks outside major towns; George Chetwynd and Frank Ives Scudamore were its key proponents. Two years later, 2,500 post offices were offering a savings service. Henry Fawcett in the 1880s greatly expanded its operations and encouraged the use of savings stamps; by the end of the century the number of POSB branches had increased to 14,000, making it the largest banking system in the country.


Other services

Gradually more financial services were offered by post offices, including government stocks and bonds in 1880, insurance and annuities in 1888, and war savings certificates in 1916. In 1909 old age pensions were introduced, payable at post offices. In 1956 a lottery bond called the Premium Bond was introduced. In the mid-1960s the GPO was asked by the government to expand into banking services which resulted in the creation of the National Giro in 1968.


New communication systems

When new forms of communication came into existence in the 19th and early 20th centuries the GPO claimed monopoly rights on the basis that like the postal service they involved delivery from a ''sender'' and to a ''receiver''. The theory was used to expand state control of the mail service into every form of electronic communication possible on the basis that every sender used some form of distribution service. These distribution services were considered in law as forms of electronic post offices. This applied to
telegraph Telegraphy is the long-distance transmission of messages where the sender uses symbolic codes, known to the recipient, rather than a physical exchange of an object bearing the message. Thus flag semaphore is a method of telegraphy, whereas ...
and telephone switching stations.


Telegraph

In 1846, the Electric Telegraph Company, the world's first public telegraph company, was established in the UK and developed a nationwide communications network. Several other private telegraph companies soon followed. The Telegraph Act 1868 granted the Postmaster General the right to acquire inland telegraph companies in the United Kingdom and the Telegraph Act 1869 conferred on the Postmaster General a monopoly in telegraphic communication in the UK. The responsibility for the 'electric telegraphs' was officially transferred to the GPO in 1870. Overseas telegraphs did not fall within the monopoly. The private telegraph companies that already existed were bought out. The new combined telegraph service had 1,058 telegraph offices in towns and cities and 1,874 offices at railway stations. 6,830,812 telegrams were transmitted in 1869 producing revenue of £550,000. Duplex working was introduced in 1873, and quadruplex in 1878. The fledgling department was overseen by Frank Scudamore (who had devised and carried out the plan for nationalisation), but he resigned in 1875 after he was found to have diverted money from the Savings Bank and elsewhere in a vain attempt to mitigate the fast-rising costs of the expanding operation. London's Central Office in the first decade of nationalized telegraphy created two levels of service. High-status circuits catering to the state, international trade, sporting life, and imperial business. Low-status circuits directed toward the local and the provincial. These distinct telegraphic orbits were connected to different types of telegraph instruments operated by differently gendered telegraphists. By the end of the century over 90,000,000 telegrams a year were being sent over Post Office wires.


Telephone

The Post Office commenced its telephone business in 1878, however the vast majority of telephones were initially connected to independently run networks. In December 1880, the Postmaster General obtained a court judgement that telephone conversations were, technically, within the remit of the Telegraph Act. The General Post Office then licensed all existing telephone networks. The effective nationalisation of the UK telecommunications industry occurred in 1912 with the takeover of the
National Telephone Company The National Telephone Company (NTC) was a United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, British telephone company, which from 1881 to 1911 consolidated smaller local companies in the early years of telephone adoption. The British government natio ...
which left only a few municipal undertakings independent of the GPO (in particular the Hull Telephones Department (now privatised) and the telephone system of
Guernsey Guernsey ( ; Guernésiais: ''Guernési''; ) is the second-largest island in the Channel Islands, located west of the Cotentin Peninsula, Normandy. It is the largest island in the Bailiwick of Guernsey, which includes five other inhabited isl ...
). The GPO took over the company on 1 January 1912; transferring 1,565 exchanges and 9,000 employees at a cost of £12,515,264. The GPO installed several automatic telephone exchanges from several vendors in trials at Darlington on 10 October 1914 and Dudley on 9 September 1916 ( rotary system), Fleetwood (relay exchange from Sweden), Grimsby (Siemens), Hereford (Lorimer) and Leeds (Strowger). The GPO then selected the Strowger system for small and medium cities and towns. The telephone systems of
Jersey Jersey ( ; ), officially the Bailiwick of Jersey, is an autonomous and self-governing island territory of the British Islands. Although as a British Crown Dependency it is not a sovereign state, it has its own distinguishing civil and gov ...
and the
Isle of Man The Isle of Man ( , also ), or Mann ( ), is a self-governing British Crown Dependency in the Irish Sea, between Great Britain and Ireland. As head of state, Charles III holds the title Lord of Mann and is represented by a Lieutenant Govern ...
, obtained from the NTC were offered for sale to the respective governments of the islands. Both initially refused, but the
States of Jersey The States Assembly (; Jèrriais: ) is the parliament of Jersey, formed of the island's 37 deputies and the Connétable (Jersey and Guernsey), Connétable of each of the Parishes of Jersey, twelve parishes. The origins of the legislature of ...
did eventually take control of their island's telephones in 1923.


Radio

On 27 July 1896,
Guglielmo Marconi Guglielmo Giovanni Maria Marconi, 1st Marquess of Marconi ( ; ; 25 April 1874 – 20 July 1937) was an Italian electrical engineer, inventor, and politician known for his creation of a practical radio wave-based Wireless telegraphy, wireless tel ...
gave the first demonstration of
wireless telegraphy Wireless telegraphy or radiotelegraphy is the transmission of text messages by radio waves, analogous to electrical telegraphy using electrical cable, cables. Before about 1910, the term ''wireless telegraphy'' was also used for other experimenta ...
from the roof of the Telegraph Office in St. Martin's Le Grand. The development of radio links for sending telegraphs led to the Wireless Telegraphy Act 1904, which granted control of radio waves to the General Post Office, who licensed all senders and receivers. This placed the Post Office in a position of control over radio and television broadcasting as those technologies were developed.


An expanded workforce

Around fifty women were working as operators for the telegraph companies when they were acquired by the Post Office in 1869; this prompted a change of policy to enable and encourage the recruitment of women to a number of other roles in the organisation (for example, by the end of the following decade half of all counter clerks in London were women). Boys were employed as telegraph messengers from age 14: but, whereas the telegraph companies had routinely promoted boys to the adult grade of telegraph clerk in due course, the GPO merely left them to compete with others for a relatively limited number of jobs; most therefore ended up unemployed and ill-prepared for other work and the GPO was accused of benefitting from
child labour Child labour is the exploitation of children through any form of work that interferes with their ability to attend regular school, or is mentally, physically, socially and morally harmful. Such exploitation is prohibited by legislation w ...
. The messenger boys were also vulnerable to
child prostitution Child prostitution is prostitution involving a child, and it is a form of commercial sexual exploitation of children. The term normally refers to prostitution of a minor, or person under the legal age of consent. In most jurisdictions, child ...
, working alone on the streets: 'whatever dislike they had for it was entirely and easily overborne by the money which was tendered to them by their seducers', an official noted in 1877; their exploitation came to wide public attention with the uncovering of the Cleveland Street scandal in 1889. Attempts were made to instil discipline among the messenger boys through quasi-military drills and daily exercises, though this did little to protect them.This daily morning routine of quasi-military training remained in place for the telegraph boys until the early 1920s. After 1877, the establishment of 'Boy Messenger Institutes' was encouraged with a view to providing educational and other benefits. The GPO provided a number of benefits for its workers (including, from the 1850s, free medical care and a non-contributory pension scheme), however only so-called 'establishment' workers were included: around 40% of the workforce was deemed to be 'non-establishment', including the telegraph boys, most female employees and the many part-time 'auxiliaries' who filled a variety of roles; all these were paid at a reduced rate with far fewer benefits. The importance of
workers' rights Labor rights or workers' rights are both legal rights and human rights relating to labor relations between workers and employers. These rights are codified in national and international labor and employment law. In general, ...
began to be addressed by Henry Fawcett in the 1880s,Fawcett, as well as being Postmaster General, was Professor of Political Economy at Cambridge and a noted political Radical; his wife Millicent was a leading suffragist. who established a scheme for improved pay and conditions for telegraphy workers and sorting clerks. During his tenure the first permanent postal workers' union was formed (the Postal Telegraph Clerks' Association) in 1881; others followed, including the United Kingdom Postal Clerks' Association (1887), the Fawcett Association (1890) and the Postmen's Federation (1891).By the end of the First World War there were sixty-three unions or equivalent bodies representing different types of GPO worker (from the
Tube Tube or tubes may refer to: * ''Tube'' (2003 film), a 2003 Korean film * "Tubes" (Peter Dale), performer on the Soccer AM television show * Tube (band), a Japanese rock band * Tube & Berger, the alias of dance/electronica producers Arndt Rör ...
Staff Association to the London Postal Bagmen's Association).
(These aforementioned groups would all come together, in a series of mergers, to form the Union of Post Office Workers in 1919; while other associations, such as the Post Office Engineering Union, continued to maintain their independence.)


Military links


Post Office Rifles

In 1868, as part of the Volunteer Movement, John Lowther du Plat Taylor, Private Secretary to the Postmaster General, raised the 49th Middlesex Rifle Volunteers Corps (Post Office Rifles) from GPO employees, who had been either members of the 21st Middlesex Rifles Volunteer Corps (Civil Service Rifles) or special constables enrolled to combat against Fenian attacks on London in 1867/68.SC Fenwick (2014). Rifle Volunteers and Distance Writing – Why the Posties became Sappers. 128. Royal Engineers Journal The regiment was restyled 24th Middlesex Rifle Volunteers Corps (Post Office Rifles) in 1880 as part of the Cardwell Reforms. After the Haldane Reforms the regiment kept its association with the Post Office and continued to recruit postal workers into the Territorial Force under its new title '8th (City of London) Battalion, The London Regiment (Post Office Rifles)' in 1908. It served as an infantry regiment in the First World War (1914–18). Sergeant Alfred Joseph Knight was awarded the
Victoria Cross The Victoria Cross (VC) is the highest and most prestigious decoration of the Orders, decorations, and medals of the United Kingdom, British decorations system. It is awarded for valour "in the presence of the enemy" to members of the British ...
for his bravery in the Capture of Wurst Farm (20 September 1917). The regiment was disbanded in 1921.


Specialist companies

‘M' Company, 24th Middlesex Rifle Volunteers Corps, was formed by royal warrant in 1882 as the Army Post Office Corps (APOC). This newly formed Army Reservist company saw active service providing a postal service to the British military expeditions to Egypt (1882), Suakin (1885) and the Anglo Boer War (1899–1902). The APOC was eventually subsumed by the
Royal Engineers The Corps of Royal Engineers, usually called the Royal Engineers (RE), and commonly known as the ''Sappers'', is the engineering arm of the British Army. It provides military engineering and other technical support to the British Armed Forces ...
in 1913 to re-emerge as the Royal Engineers (Postal Section) Special Reserve. The Postal Section, which recruited heavily from the GPO, provided the Army Postal Service in the First and
Second World War World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
s. In 1993, what had been the Royal Engineers (Postal Section) became the Postal & Courier Service, Royal Logistic Corps. In 1883 the regiment raised 'L’ Company as a Telegraph Corps, a year later it was redesignated as the Telegraph Reserve Royal Engineers. Its role was to supplement the Regular Army telegraph units, operated by the
Royal Engineers The Corps of Royal Engineers, usually called the Royal Engineers (RE), and commonly known as the ''Sappers'', is the engineering arm of the British Army. It provides military engineering and other technical support to the British Armed Forces ...
(q.v. below).


Royal Engineers telegraph battalion

In the second week of December 1869 the War Office declared that 22nd Company Royal Engineers, commanded by Capt. Charles Edmund Webber RE, was to be seconded to the GPO on telegraph duties. The first draft took up their appointments with the GPO in June 1870; Webber as South East District divisional engineer based in New Cross, London, his subalterns as district superintendents of the divisional engineer and the NCOs and sappers as inspectors and linesmen/signallers respectively. They received training at both the School of Military Engineering and the London School of Telegraphy and were for a time billeted at St John’s Woods Barracks, London. The following year the Chatham based 34th Company RE joined 22nd at the GPO. It deployed detachments to GPO offices in Inverness, Ipswich and Bristol. The Company HQ was principally based in Ipswich, but later moved to Bristol. The two companies operated the telegraph services in their respective districts. Exploiting the ‘wayleave’ agreements, struck for the laying of rail tracks forty years earlier, they further developed the national telegraph network by laying new lines to the more remote parts of the British Isles In 1884 22nd Company and 34th Company Royal Engineers were amalgamated with 'C' (Telegraph) Troop Royal Engineers (established in 1870 to provide telegraph communications in the field) to form the Telegraph Battalion Royal Engineers (renamed the Royal Engineer Signal Service in 1912), which later became the
Royal Corps of Signals The Royal Corps of Signals (often simply known as the Royal Signals – abbreviated to R SIGNALS) is one of the combat support arms of the British Army. Signals units are among the first into action, providing the battlefield communications an ...
. In peacetime, the 1st Division of the new Battalion (formed from the former 'C' Troop) was based in
Aldershot Aldershot ( ) is a town in the Rushmoor district, Hampshire, England. It lies on heathland in the extreme north-east corner of the county, south-west of London. The town has a population of 37,131, while the Farnborough/Aldershot built-up are ...
and equipped to provide front-line support in the field, whereas the 2nd Division (formed from 22nd Company and 34th Company) was attached to the GPO in London and engaged in installing and operating parts of the national telegraph network; at time of war the two divisions were merged and the battalion as a whole was mobilised (having then the ability both to provide mobile telegraph systems and to make use of existing telegraph infrastructure within the theatre of operations).


The GPO in the twentieth century

By 1900 house-to-house mail delivery was taking place across England (and was close to being in place in Scotland and Ireland). That year there were nearly 22,000 post offices operating across the United Kingdom: 906 were classified as Head Post Offices (HPOs): these functioned as the head office for their locality and included sorting facilities as well as offering a counter service. Under the HPOs were a further 255 branch offices (which functioned as additional counters for their associated HPOs). Finally there were 4,964 town sub-post offices and 15,815 country sub-post offices; these were run by sub-postmasters and mistresses, most of whom were self-employed shopkeepers who were paid a
commission In-Commission or commissioning may refer to: Business and contracting * Commission (remuneration), a form of payment to an agent for services rendered ** Commission (art), the purchase or the creation of a piece of art most often on behalf of anot ...
for their postal work (in contrast to the counter staff of the larger 'Crown' offices, who were GPO employees).


The First World War and its aftermath

On the eve of the First World War, in 1914, the Post Office is said to have been 'the biggest economic enterprise in Britain and the largest single employer of labour in the world', employing over 250,000 people and with an annual revenue of £32 million. The GPO ran the nation's telegraph and telephone systems, as well as handling some 5.9 billion items of mail each year, while branch post offices offered an increasing number of financial, municipal and other public services alongside those relating to postage. Following the acquisition of the National Telephone Company in 1912 (which employed a significant number of women telephonists), around a quarter of the GPO's workforce was now female. During the First World War some 75,000 Post Office men enlisted. The Royal Engineer Postal Section and Signals Section both recruited largely from the GPO, as did the Post Office Rifles (which suffered heavy losses in a series of battles from 1915 onwards). Among other duties, the signals section set up and maintained a network of telephones across the Western Front, while the postal section handled the mail; regular delivery of letters and parcels was seen as vital for morale. As the war progressed, the GPO was left with hardly any able-bodied male employees between the ages of 18 and 40 (all of them having either volunteered or been called up for military service). As with other places of work, women were employed for the duration of the war to cover the shortfall; by 1918 they made up around half the workforce. At the end of the war the number of Post Office workers killed in action stood at 8,858. The government put pressure on the Post Office (and other employers) to provide jobs for returning ex-servicemen; most of the temporary staff engaged during the war (including the pioneering wartime postwomen and telegraph girls) were dismissed. In 1918 the era of the 'penny post' came to an end, as the standard letter rate was raised by one halfpennny to 1½d. (During the war the penny rate had in any case covered only the lightest letters; while rates for heavier items had fluctuated over many years.) In 1920 the basic rate was again raised, to 2d, in an attempt to cover the GPO's rising wage bill and the cost of the telegraph and telephone businesses, which were running at a deficit; but two years later it was again reduced to 1½d (at which level it remained until 1940). In the 1920s motor vehicles began to replace the (previously ubiquitous) horse and cart on short-haul postal routes; and later that decade postal counties would be introduced, to help make the sorting process for deliveries more efficient. The GPO, however, began to face mounting criticism at this time for commercial and technological torpidity (particularly, but not exclusively, in relation to telephones). There were several calls for the Post Office, in whole or in part, to be privatised so as to instil some competitive vigour (including a speech to this effect by Viscount Wolmer, the Assistant Postmaster-General, in 1924). The 1929 Tomlin Commission into the Civil Service also raised serious questions, which (when its final report was published two years later) would have to be addressed by Sir Kingsley Wood, the new Postmaster-General.


Ireland

In 1831, the office of Postmaster General of Ireland had been amalgamated with the equivalent office for Great Britain; for the next 90 years the GPO operated throughout Great Britain and Ireland. In 1916, during
World War I World War I or the First World War (28 July 1914 – 11 November 1918), also known as the Great War, was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War I, Allies (or Entente) and the Central Powers. Fighting to ...
, the General Post Office, Dublin was a focus of the
Easter Rising The Easter Rising (), also known as the Easter Rebellion, was an armed insurrection in Ireland during Easter Week in April 1916. The Rising was launched by Irish republicans against British rule in Ireland with the aim of establishing an ind ...
, during which the GPO served as the headquarters of the uprising's leaders. It was from outside this building on the 24th of April 1916, that Patrick Pearse read out the Proclamation of the Irish Republic. (The building was destroyed by fire in the course of the rebellion, save for the
granite Granite ( ) is a coarse-grained (phanerite, phaneritic) intrusive rock, intrusive igneous rock composed mostly of quartz, alkali feldspar, and plagioclase. It forms from magma with a high content of silica and alkali metal oxides that slowly coo ...
facade, and not rebuilt until 1929, by the Irish Free State government). Following the Anglo-Irish Treaty of December 1921, responsibility for posts and telegraphs in most of
Ireland Ireland (, ; ; Ulster Scots dialect, Ulster-Scots: ) is an island in the North Atlantic Ocean, in Northwestern Europe. Geopolitically, the island is divided between the Republic of Ireland (officially Names of the Irish state, named Irelan ...
(but not in
Northern Ireland Northern Ireland ( ; ) is a Countries of the United Kingdom, part of the United Kingdom in the north-east of the island of Ireland. It has been #Descriptions, variously described as a country, province or region. Northern Ireland shares Repub ...
) transferred to the new Provisional Government of the Irish Free State, Provisional Government and then, upon the formal establishment of the Irish Free State in December 1922, to the Executive Council of the Irish Free State, Free State Government. A Postmaster General was initially appointed by the Free State Government, being replaced by the office of Minister for Posts and Telegraphs in 1924. An early visible manifestation was the repainting of all post boxes in the new Free State in green instead of red. In 1984, the Department of Posts and Telegraphs ('the P. & T.') was replaced by the separate Irish state-owned companies An Post and Telecom Éireann.


Control of broadcasting

In 1922 a group of radio manufacturers formed the British Broadcasting Company (BBC), which was the sole organisation granted a broadcasting licence by the GPO. In 1927, the original BBC was dissolved and reformed by royal charter as the British Broadcasting Corporation. From the start the GPO had trouble with competitive pirate radio broadcasters who found ways to deliver electronic messages to British receivers without first obtaining a GPO licence. These competitors were well aware of the fact that the GPO would never grant them such a licence. To police these unlicensed stations the GPO evolved its own force of detectives and "TV detector van, detector vans". The radio regulation functions were transferred to the Independent Broadcasting Authority and later Ofcom. Due to its regulatory role, as well as its expertise in developing long-distance communication networks, the GPO was contracted by the BBC, and the Independent Television Authority, ITA in the 1950s and 60s, to develop and extend their television networks. A network of transmitters was built, connected at first by cable, and later by microwave radio links. The Post Office also took responsibility for the issuing of television licence fees (and radio, until 1971), and the prosecution of evaders until 1991.


20th-century telecommunications


Telegraphy

At the start of the twentieth century a range of systems were in use across the UK and international telegraph networks; the General Post Office, London#GPO West, Central Telegraph Office in London employed Morse code, Morse, Hughes telegraph, Hughes, Wheatstone system, Wheatstone, Baudot code, Baudot and Murray code, Murray operators, as around the world different networks used different telegraph codes. Across the UK, the GPO operated more than 14,000 telegraph offices (often co-located with the local post office). The inland telegraph network mostly used Telegraph sounder, Morse sounders or single-needle telegraphs (with Electrical telegraph#Wheatstone ABC telegraph, Wheatstone ABC machines, which could be operated by untrained staff, being retained in remoter rural locations). As rural telephone exchanges began to be established, however, it became more usual for the less busy offices to convey messages by telephone (at the receiving office the message would be transcribed, before being delivered by a telegram boy in the usual fashion). In large metropolitan areas messages continued to be delivered between district offices using underground networks of pneumatic tubes. In the 1920s Creed & Company, Creed teleprinters began to be installed by the GPO in its telegraph offices; having the facility of a typewriter keyboard input and typewritten output (on Ticker tape, tape or paper), these machines soon began to replace the older devices. A telex service was first introduced in 1932, which enabled direct subscriber-to-subscriber communication by teleprinter. 1909 saw the establishment of the Research Section of the Telegraph Office, which had its origins in innovative areas of work being pursued by staff in the Engineering Department. In the 1920s a dedicated research station was set up by the GPO seven miles away in Dollis Hill. Through the 1920s much technical and practical effort was put into improving the speed of transmission and delivery; over a twenty-year period, however, the number of telegrams sent annually dwindled from over 87,000,000 in 1914 to fewer than 50,000,000 in 1934. The Central Telegraph Office, through which a quarter of the nation's telegraph transmissions passed, was set alight during the London Blitz, destroying much of the interior; it reopened in 1943 but was demolished in the 1960s.In 1984 the new BT Centre, British Telecom Centre was opened on the site. In the decades after the Second World War the volume of telegraph traffic significantly declined; the telegraph network was transferred to British Telecom in 1981, and the following year the inland telegram service was decommissioned.


Telephony

The GPO wished to standardise on the Strowger switch (also called SXS or step-by step) but the basic SXS exchange was not suitable for a large city like London until the Director telephone system was developed by the Automatic Telephone Manufacturing Company in the 1920s. The first London Director exchange, HOLborn, cutover on Saturday 12 November 1927, BIShopgate and SLOane exchanges were to follow in six weeks, followed by WEStern and MONument exchanges. The London area contained 80 exchanges, and full conversion would take many years. All London customers were given seven-digit numbers, with the first three digits spelling out the (local) exchange name. In March 1966 after all London (and other Director) exchanges were automatic, all-figure dialling was introduced. The Director system enabled the London network to operate with both automatic and manual exchanges in the local network until the 1960s and it was subsequently installed in other large British cities; starting with Manchester (1930), then Birmingham (1931), Glasgow (1937), Liverpool (1941), and Edinburgh (1950). After the
Second World War World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
, there began to be an unprecedented demand for telephone services. In addition, there was the need to make comprehensive repairs, and upgrades to a network which had been severely degraded by war, and lack of investment. Waiting lists for new telephone lines quickly emerged, and persisted for several decades. To alleviate the situation, the Post Office began to provide shared service residential lines, each known as a ''party line (telephony), party line'', which could share a cable pair. Most of the line was shared between two subscribers usually splitting off to each within sight of the houses, and both lines attracted a small discount; however, this arrangement had its disadvantages. At this time, the majority of lines in rural, and regional areas (particularly in Scotland and Wales) were still manually switched. This inhibited growth, and caused bottlenecks in the network, as well as being labour and cost-intensive. The Post Office began to introduce automatic switching, and replaced all of its 6,000 exchanges. Subscriber Trunk Dialling (Subscriber Trunk Dialling, STD) was also added from 1958, which allowed subscribers to dial their own long-distance calls. Telecommunications services in the United Kingdom were reorganised as Post Office Telecommunications in October 1969; and then as British Telecom in 1980, although remaining part of the GPO until 1981.


1930s reviews and innovations

The Bridgeman Committee, chaired by William Bridgeman, 1st Viscount Bridgeman, Lord Bridgeman, was set up in 1932 to investigate criticisms of the General Post Office and reported the same year. It highlighted defects in the structure of the organisation and recommended the creation of a new Board (chaired by the Postmaster-General) to replace the Secretariat, and a new official: the Director-General, who would serve as vice-chair 'with the duty of ensuring that board decisions were made effective and that continuity and unity of policy were maintained'. The Gardiner Committee, chaired by Thomas Gardiner (civil servant), Sir Thomas Gardiner, was set up to investigate improvements in efficiency and reported in 1936. The report recommended the setting up of eight provincial regions outside London,Home Counties; Midland; Northern Ireland; North-Eastern; North-Western; Wales and Border Counties; Scotland; South-Western and the introduction of the London Postal Region and London Telecommunications Region for the capital and surrounding area. Various executive responsibilities were to be devolved from the centre to the new regions, and the district Surveyors (the provincial eyes and ears of St Martin's Le Grand) were to be abolished. The changes were implemented between 1936 and 1940. The Motor Transport branch was established in 1932; previously provision of motor vehicles had been contracted out, but henceforward the GPO would maintain its own fleet, the mainstays of which were, initially, Morris Minor (1928), Morris Minor vans (built to the Post Office's own specification) and BSA motorcycles (which were used by the older telegraph boys). A pair of Transorma machines were installed in Brighton HPO in 1935, but beyond this trial installation no practical progress would be made on mechanised mail sorting until the 1960s. In 1933 Sir Stephen Tallents was appointed to head up a new public relations department. Among other things he established the influential GPO Film Unit, while his acumen in the field of graphic design led to the Post Office becoming a leader and trend setter in its use of posters for the purposes of marketing, information and publicity.


Airmail

The first domestic scheduled airmail service was provided in 1911 to coincide with the Coronation of George V and Mary, coronation; the first international service was provided by the RAF for British troops stationed in Germany in December 1918, and the first transatlantic airmail delivery took place the following year, courtesy of Alcock and Brown. The number of airmail flights on offer had multiplied during the 1920s, with government-supported long-haul services provided initially by the RAF and then by Imperial Airways; but the GPO's role in these enterprises was minimal (beyond providing blue Airmail etiquette, air mail labels at counters, charging the requisite surcharge and directing labelled mail to Croydon Aerodrome). In 1935, however, the Postmaster-General (under pressure from the government) sanctioned an official Empire Air Mail Scheme, by which a half-ounce letter could be sent anywhere in the Empire for a flat rate of three-halfpence (1½ d);The cost was the same as for letters sent by sea, except that the sea rate allowed letters weighing up to an ounce. the scheme was rolled out in stages from 1937-38. Whilst immediately successful, it proved costly both to Imperial Airways (who had drastically underestimated the volume of cargo it would have to carry)Between 1935/6 and 1938/9, the number of letters sent annually by airmail increased from 10.8 million to 91.2 million. and the Post Office (who had agreed to subsidise the company through tonnage payments). The scheme was wound up with the outbreak of war in 1939.


The Second World War and its aftermath

During World War II the generation of engineers trained by the GPO for its telecommunications operations were to have important roles in the British development of radar and in code breaking. The Colossus computers used by Bletchley Park were designed and built by GPO engineer Tommy Flowers and his team at the Post Office Research Station in Dollis Hill. As in the previous war, GPO employees joined up in significant numbers (over 78,000 enlisted in total, equivalent to a quarter of the workforce); over the course of the war 3,800 of them were killed on active service (in addition to whom around 400 civilian GPO workers were killed as a result of enemy action). GPO infrastructure, from telephone lines to sorting offices, suffered significant damage during the Blitz: in London alone seven of the ten District Head Offices were hit (some on several occasions) and 234 individual post offices suffered damage; the Central Telegraph Office likewise suffered direct hits (on two separate occasions) as did the UK's largest telephone exchange in nearby Wood Street, London, Wood Street. Similar scenes were played out elsewhere across he UK; but contingency plans had been made since the mid-1930s, including the strategic provision of duplicate key facilities (either underground or in remote locations). Aided by the courage and determination of numerous GPO workers, the country's communication networks were remarkably well sustained. Airmail deliveries were resumed by the RAF in 1941, courtesy of the airgraph, which (as flights began to proliferate) was superseded by the pre-stamped air letter. The Army Post Office co-ordinated deliveries to and from Army and RAF personnel stationed overseas (as well as to and from Prisoners of war in World War II, prisoners of war),albeit the Japanese authorities declined to deliver any letters to the prisoners they held. while the GPO took care of deliveries to the majority of those stationed at home, as well as co-ordinating with the Admiralty to provide deliveries to and from naval vessels whenever possible. Prior to D-Day the Army Post Office was made privy to the invasion plans, so as to be able to plan for the provision of field post offices in the right locations; the first consignment of letters for British troops arrived two days later, on 8th June. After the end of the war it took some time for infrastructure to be restored and services to be returned to their peacetime footings. It took four years for telephone connections to continental Europe to be re-established, and civil airmail services were not restarted until 1948-49.


The last decade

The implementation of a national system of Postcodes in the United Kingdom, post codes began with Norwich in 1959, where a pair of automatic sorting machines were installed in 1966; the system and its associated hardware were gradually extended across the UK over the course of the next twenty years. Tony Benn arrived as Postmaster General in October 1964, and promptly abolished the traditional red coats and top hats of the Post Office Headquarters doormen. (He also began a co-ordinated, and ultimately fruitless, campaign to remove the Queen's head from UK stamps). By December he was persuaded of the need to change the status of the Post Office from government department to Government-owned corporation, public corporation (a proposition which was broadly supported by senior officials, but opposed by the unions). He also advocated splitting and diversifying the business, a position which was less widely supported within the organisation. His term of office as PMG ended in July 1966; less than a month later it was announced in Parliament that the Post Office would indeed become a statutory corporation.


Dissolution

Under the Post Office Act 1969, the assets of the GPO were transferred from a government department with a royal charter to a
statutory corporation A statutory corporation is a corporation, government entity created as a statutory body by statute. Their precise nature varies by jurisdiction, but they are corporations owned by a government or controlled by national or sub-national government ...
named Post Office Limited, the Post Office (the word 'General' being dropped from the name). Responsibility for telecommunications was given to Post Office Telecommunications, the successor of the GPO Telegraph and Telephones department, with its own separate budget and management. Jersey Post and Guernsey Post became independent in 1969, followed by Guernsey Telecom, Guernsey and Jersey Telecom in 1973. Isle of Man Post also commenced operation on 5 July 1973. In 1969, the Post Office Savings Bank was transferred to the HM Treasury, Treasury, and renamed the National Savings and Investments, National Savings Bank. The British Telecommunications Act 1981 split off the telecommunications business to form the British Telecommunications corporation, leaving the Post Office corporation with the Royal Mail, parcels, Post Office Counters and National Giro businesses. British Telecommunications was converted to BT Group, British Telecommunications plc in 1984, and was privatised. Girobank was divested to Alliance & Leicester in 1990. As part of the Postal Services Act 2000, the businesses of the Post Office were transferred in 2001 to a
public limited company A public limited company (legally abbreviated to PLC or plc) is a type of public company under United Kingdom company law, some Commonwealth of Nations, Commonwealth jurisdictions, and Republic of Ireland, Ireland. It is a limited liability co ...
, Consignia plc, which was quickly renamed Royal Mail Holdings plc. The government became the sole shareholder in Royal Mail Holdings plc and its subsidiary Post Office Ltd. Finally, on 5 April 2007, the government published
''The Dissolution of the Post Office Order 2007''
under which the old Post Office statutory corporation was formally abolished, with effect from 1 May 2007.


Post Office Headquarters

The head office of the General Post Office was firmly established in the
City of London The City of London, also known as ''the City'', is a Ceremonial counties of England, ceremonial county and Districts of England, local government district with City status in the United Kingdom, city status in England. It is the Old town, his ...
by 1653, in a sizeable building at the lower end of Threadneedle Street (by the junction with Poultry, London, Poultry, Cornhill, London, Cornhill and Lombard Street). Prior to this date there is evidence of the posts having been administered at various times either from the house of the chief postmaster or from one of the City's post houses. The office in Threadneedle Street was destroyed in the
Great Fire of London The Great Fire of London was a major conflagration that swept through central London from Sunday 2 September to Wednesday 5 September 1666, gutting the medieval City of London inside the old London Wall, Roman city wall, while also extendi ...
, after which various temporary locations were used up until 1678, when a new office was established in Lombard Street. The General Post Office remained there for the next 150 years.


St Martin's Le Grand

Having outgrown its premises in Lombard Street, the General Post Office purchased slums on the east side of St. Martin's Le Grand and cleared them to establish a new headquarters, Britain's first purpose-built mail facility. The new General Post Office East, General Post Office building, designed with Greek Revival architecture, Grecian Ionic order, ionic porticoes by Sir Robert Smirke (architect), Robert Smirke, was built between 1825 and 1829, ran long and deep, and was lit with a thousand gas burners at night. Afterwards 'St. Martin's Le Grand' began to be used as a metonym for the General Post Office (a usage which continued well into the 20th century). In the 1840s there were, in addition to the chief office at St. Martin's Le Grand, four branch offices in London: one in the City at Lombard Street (in part of the old headquarters building); two in the West End of London, West End at Charing Cross and Old Cavendish Street near Oxford Street; and one south of the Thames in Borough High Street. In 1874, a new headquarters building ('GPO West') was opened on the western side of the street, containing a suite of public rooms and offices for the Postmaster General, the senior officials and all their administrative staff. This left Smirke's building ('GPO East') to function mainly as a sorting office. The upper floors of the new building housed the GPO's newly-acquired Electrical telegraph, telegraph department; but as this fast expanded, more space was needed and in the 1890s a separate new headquarters building was opened ('GPO North'), immediately to the north of the telegraph building. This remained the headquarters of the GPO, and then of the Post Office, until 1984. In the early 20th century various different departments of the General Post Office (most of which had begun their days in St Martin's Le Grand) were provided with their own headquarters in different parts of London: the Post Office Savings Bank was in Blythe House, West Kensington; the Postal and Money Order office in Manor Gardens, off Holloway Road; the Stores Department was in Studd Street, Islington and the Telephone Department in Queen Victoria Street (in what became the Faraday Building). In 1910 the King Edward Building was opened on King Edward Street, London, King Edward Street (immediately to the west of GPO North) to serve as the new 'London Chief Office' in place of Smirke's GPO East; the latter was then demolished two years later.


Links to the intelligence services

The practice of Postal interception, intercepting letters for intelligence purposes was well-established by the Commonwealth period, and it continued after the Restoration. At the time of the Rump Parliament, Isaac Dorislaus had set up a secret room in the General Letter Office, adjacent to the Foreign Office,The establishment of the GPO's 'Foreign Office' predated that of its Foreign Office, namesake in Whitehall by more than a century. where letters were intercepted, opened and read late at night. He was assisted by Samuel Morland, who in the 1660s invented an intelligence machine which could produce facsimiles of intercepted letters. In the early 18th century the authority of Ministers of the Crown to open and read letters for reasons of public safety had been clearly established by statute, drawn up by John Somers, 1st Baron Somers, Lord Somers. Warrants were frequently applied for in the 18th-century, sometimes on trivial premises, and by the 1730s a permanent office had been established within the General Letter Office, in which a number of cryptanalysts were employed (as 'His Majesty's Post-Office decipherers'), among them the Revd Dr Edward Willes (bishop), Edward Willes. In 1844 it was revealed in the House of Commons, in response to an enquiry by Thomas Slingsby Duncombe, that the Home Office had issued a warrant for the Post Office to intercept and investigate correspondence pertaining to Giuseppe Mazzini. The Home Secretary, Sir James Graham, 2nd Baronet, Sir James Graham, admitted the interception but did not divulge the reason for it. Duncombe contended that warrants for intercepting mail were being issued at the request of foreign governments, in a way that was both unconstitutional and unlawful. The accusations prompted widespread expressions of disapproval and further questions in Parliament. In response to public disquiet, a Select committee (parliamentary system), select committee was set up 'to inquire into a department of Her Majesty's Post-Office commonly called "the secret or inner office", the duties and employment of the persons engaged therein, and the authority under which the functions of the said office were discharged'. The Mazzini affair left the Post Office wary of involvement in espionage, and legislation was put in place to prevent letters from being opened without a Warrant (law), warrant. In 1910, however, the Home Secretary (Winston Churchill) issued a 'general warrant' allowing the MI5, Secret Service Bureau to intercept letters at will; in the run-up to the First World War individuals who had been placed under surveillance routinely had their mail monitored. During the Second World War, and for some years after, a department called the GPO Special Investigations Unit was responsible for intercepting letters as part of British intelligence service operations. The unit had branches in every major sorting office in the UK and in St Martin's Le Grand GPO, near St Paul's Cathedral. Letters targeted for interception by the Special Investigations Unit were steamed open and the contents photographed, and the photographs were then sent in unmarked green vans to MI5.


Lists of senior officials

The Postmaster General was the government minister in charge of the GPO (the office was held jointly by two appointees between 1691 and 1823). The Secretary of the Post Office was the senior civil servant (equivalent to a Permanent secretary (UK), permanent secretary), who managed the operation from day to day. Evelyn Murray (civil servant), Evelyn Murray, who served as Secretary until 1934, was not replaced when he left office. Instead a Director-General was appointed, together with a Board which brought together a number of GPO heads of department.


Postmasters General


Secretaries of the Post Office


Directors General of the Post Office

Sir Ronald German was replaced by John Wall, Baron Wall, John Wall on 1 November 1966, who had been brought in from the private sector to serve as 'Deputy Chairman of the Board' in preparation for the GPO's disestablishment. He departed in September 1968, after which it was announced that the Postmaster General, John Stonehouse, would assume the role of 'Chairman and Chief Executive' in preparation for the business's re-establishment as a public corporation the following year.


See also

*GPO Film Unit *GPO telephones *Post Office Research Station *Postal, telegraph and telephone service *Postmaster General of the United Kingdom *Red telephone box * Royal Mail *Television licensing in the United Kingdom#History, Television licensing in the UK


Notes


References


Further reading

* Bruton, Elizabeth. "Something in the air: The Post Office and early wireless, 1882–1899." in ''Knowledge Management and Intellectual Property'' (Edward Elgar, 2013). * Campbell-Smith, Duncan. ''Masters of the Post: The Authorized History of the Royal Mail'' (Penguin 2012) * Clinton, Allan. ''Post Office Workers: A Trade Union and Social History'' (George Allen and Unwin, 1984) * Daunton, M. J. ''Royal Mail: The Post Office Since 1840'' (Athlone, 1985). * Hemmeon, Joseph Clarence. ''The history of the British post office'' (Harvard University Press, 1912
online
* Hochfelder, David. "A comparison of the postal telegraph movement in Great Britain and the United States, 1866–1900." ''Enterprise & Society'' 1.4 (2000): 739–761. * Lin, Chih-lung. "The British dynamic mail contract on the North Atlantic: 1860–1900." ''Business History'' 54.5 (2012): 783–797. * Morus, Iwan Rhys “‘The Nervous System Of Britain’: Space, Time, and the Electric Telegraph in the Victorian Age,” ''British Journal for the History of Science'' 33#4 (2000): 455–75
online
* Perry, C. R. ''The Victorian Post Office: The Growth of a Bureaucracy'' (Boydell Press, 1992) * Standage, Tom. ''The Victorian Internet: The remarkable story of the telegraph and the nineteenth century's online pioneers'' (Phoenix, 1998
online


External links


The British Postal Museum & Archive
* An 18th-centur
listing of expenses, shipping schedules, and regulations
for the office on Lombard Street
BT Archives

Connected Earth (History of Communications)

Bath Postal Museum

Royal Mail Group – About us

Site for former Leicestershire Telegram Messenger Boys

G.P.O. GLASGOW (c.1961)
(archive film showing functions of the telephone exchange, enquiries and repair – from the National Library of Scotland: SCOTTISH SCREEN ARCHIVE) {{Telecommunications industry in the United Kingdom, selected=companies General Post Office, 1660 establishments in England 2007 disestablishments in the United Kingdom Defunct departments of the Government of the United Kingdom Postal system of the United Kingdom Telecommunications in the United Kingdom