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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bristol Royal Mail, by R. C. Tombs
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Bristol Royal Mail
+ Post, Telegraph, and Telephone
+
+Author: R. C. Tombs
+
+Release Date: November 2, 2010 [EBook #34197]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRISTOL ROYAL MAIL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Adrian Mastronardi, Henry Gardiner, The
+Philatelic Digital Library Project at http://www.tpdlp.net
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+No copyright date is indicated in the source material, but the last date
+mentioned is November, 1899.
+
+Found at the end of the text is a list of corrections of discovered
+publisher's typographic errors.
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ BRISTOL ROYAL MAIL.
+
+
+[Illustration: THE POSTMASTER'S OFFICE, BRISTOL.
+
+_From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine St., Bristol._]
+
+
+
+ _All rights reserved._
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ BRISTOL ROYAL MAIL.
+
+ POST, TELEGRAPH, AND
+ TELEPHONE.
+
+ BY
+
+ R. C. TOMBS,
+
+ _Postmaster of Bristol,
+ Ex-Controller of the London Postal Service._
+
+ BRISTOL:
+ J. W. ARROWSMITH, 11 QUAY STREET.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I. _Page_
+ DEVELOPMENT OF THE MAIL SERVICES. RALPH ALLEN.
+ 1532-1764 1
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+ MAIL COACH ERA. JOHN PALMER. 1770-1818 17
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+ 1818 ONWARDS. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE. OLD MAIL
+ GUARDS 35
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ VICTORIAN ERA, 1837-1899. MAIL TRANSPORT BY
+ RAILWAY. TRAVELLING POST OFFICES 49
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+ BRISTOL POSTMASTERS. 1678-1899 68
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ NOTABLE POST OFFICE SERVANTS OF BRISTOL ORIGIN 82
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ POST OFFICE BUILDINGS 89
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ THE LOCAL POST OFFICE IN EARLY DAYS. SIR ROWLAND
+ HILL. RECENT PROGRESS 121
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ BRISTOL AS A MAIL PORT 141
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+ POSTAL SERVICE. STAFF: ITS COMPOSITION, DUTIES,
+ RESPONSIBILITIES. VOLUME OF WORK 160
+
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ CHRISTMAS AND ST. VALENTINE SEASONS 175
+
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ PUBLIC OFFICE: ITS BUSINESS. THE SAVINGS BANK.
+ PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS 186
+
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ TELEGRAPHS. TELEPHONES. EXPRESS DELIVERY 198
+
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ TELEGRAPH MESSENGERS 222
+
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ LETTER DELIVERY SYSTEM. POSTMEN: THEIR DUTIES
+ AND RECREATIONS 234
+
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ POST LETTER BOXES: POSITION, VIOLATION, PECULIAR
+ USES 253
+
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ RURAL DISTRICT SUB-POSTMASTERS. RURAL POSTMEN.
+ INCIDENTS 257
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ GENERAL FREE DELIVERY OF LETTERS 287
+
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ RETURNED LETTER OFFICE 292
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+
+ THE POSTMASTER'S OFFICE, BRISTOL Preface iv
+
+ RALPH ALLEN OF CROSS POST FAME _Page_ 8
+
+ " HIS RESIDENCE AT PRIOR PARK, BATH 10
+
+ " HIS TOWN HOUSE IN BATH 12
+
+ " HIS TOMB AT CLAVERTON 16
+
+ JOHN PALMER, INTRODUCER OF MAIL COACHES 20
+
+ OLD ENGLISH "FLYING" MAIL COACH 22
+
+ MAIL COACH. PLATE DEDICATED TO PALMER 34
+
+ THE WEST COUNTRY MAIL COACHES ABOUT TO LEAVE
+ PICCADILLY 36
+
+ THE LAST OF THE MAIL GUARDS 44
+
+ ARRIVAL OF THE BATH AND BRISTOL MAIL COACH AT
+ ROADSIDE INN 48
+
+ START OF MAIL COACHES FROM BUSH INN, BRISTOL 52
+
+ THE OLD PASSAGE, AUST 56
+
+ JOHN GARDINER 70
+
+ THOMAS TODD WALTON, SENIOR 72
+
+ THOMAS TODD WALTON, JUNIOR 74
+
+ EDWARD CHADDOCK SAMPSON 80
+
+ SIR FRANCIS FREELING, BART 82
+
+ THE BRISTOL HEAD POST OFFICE IN 1899 118
+
+ THE "GREAT WESTERN" 152
+
+ R.M.S. "MONTEREY" 158
+
+ THE PUBLIC HALL OF THE BRISTOL POST OFFICE 186
+
+ THE TELEGRAPH INSTRUMENT ROOM, BRISTOL 204
+
+ CRIBBS CAUSEWAY POST OFFICE 261
+
+ MR. EDWARD BIDDLE 263
+
+ LETTER BOX AT WINTERBOURNE 269
+
+ HANNAH BREWER, THE BITTON POSTWOMAN 276
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+In these days when books on every conceivable subject are written in
+their thousands annually; when monthly journals are produced by scores,
+and daily newspapers in hundreds, to supply the public with a record of
+the world's doings; and when readers are found for them all, it may not
+be thought unfitting that each large mail centre in the United Kingdom
+which contributes by its postal and telegraph organisation to the
+dissemination of much of this literature, should in its turn have some
+record of its own doings. This present compilation has, therefore, been
+undertaken with that object in view, as regards the Bristol Post Office,
+and in the hope that the facts, figures, and incidents contained in it
+relating to past doings and present days and present ways may prove of
+interest to the inhabitants of the County and City, and its surrounding
+districts, and in an unpretentious way commence, or add to, local
+Post Office history, and demonstrate that though Bristol is not,
+unfortunately, the leading provincial seaport, as of yore, she has not
+lagged one step behind her competitors in respect of postal progress.
+
+The profit which may accrue from the publication of _The Bristol Royal
+Mail_ will be devoted exclusively to the Rowland Hill Memorial and
+Benevolent Fund, the chief patron of which is Her Most Gracious Majesty
+the Queen-Empress, who is about to show her great interest in works of
+the kind by visiting our ancient city to open the new Convalescent Home.
+The object of the fund is the relief of all Post Office servants
+throughout the United Kingdom, who, through no fault of their own, have
+fallen into necessitous circumstances. It also affords assistance to
+their widows and orphans, for whom no provision is made under the
+Superannuation Acts. The fund is managed by a body of trustees, who are
+assisted by a committee of recommendation composed of officers of the
+Post Office. The trustees are well-known gentlemen of high standing and
+repute in the city of London, to whose benevolent efforts on behalf of
+the department the fund owes its origin. The Superannuation Acts afford
+pensions to those who have been in the Post Office not less than ten
+years. Sometimes a deserving and distressed Post Office servant has not
+served long enough to qualify for a pension, and sometimes help is
+needed by persons whose time has been partly spent in the postal
+service, but who, because they have been permitted to carry on some
+other occupation, are not entitled by law to any pension at all. A
+pension, even if it should prove to be sufficient for the pensioner's
+own support, ceases at death, and the widow and orphans are often left
+destitute. There are more than eighty-one thousand, and, counting those
+employed only a portion of their time, nearly one hundred and fifty
+thousand servants in the Post Office; and in comparison with the number
+of persons amongst whom cases needing relief may arise, the assured
+income at the disposal of the trustees of the fund is still inadequate.
+In the period since 1893 the trustees have granted to necessitous cases
+in the Bristol district £120, so that any proceeds from the sale of this
+book will be bestowed where such bestowal is certainly due.
+
+It is right to state that some of the information in these pages has
+been derived from _The History of the Post Office_, by the late Mr.
+Herbert Joyce, C.B.; _Forty Years at the Post Office_, by Mr. F. E.
+Baines, C.B.; _The Royal Mail_, by Mr. J. Wilson Hyde; and from _St.
+Martin's-le-Grand Magazine_, also Latimer's _Annals of Bristol_. Thanks
+are due also to Mr. Norris Mathews, the Bristol City Librarian, for his
+courtesy in permitting and facilitating access to old records in the
+Public Library; to Mr. H. J. Spear, Secretary to the Chamber of
+Commerce; to the proprietors of the _Times and Mirror_, for allowing
+inspection of their old files; and for illustrations to Mr. A. F.
+Walbrook, of the _Bath Chronicle_; to the proprietor, _Black and White_,
+and many others whose kindness is hereby acknowledged.
+
+
+
+
+The Bristol Royal Mail.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+1532-1764.
+
+DEVELOPMENT OF THE MAIL SERVICES.
+
+RALPH ALLEN.
+
+
+It appears that before Post Offices were established special messengers
+were employed to carry letters. It is recorded that such a special
+messenger was paid the sum of one penny for carrying a letter from
+Bristol to London in the year 1532, but the record affords no further
+particulars as to the service, and the assumption is that the special
+messenger was, in his own person, a rough-and-ready "post." Later on, a
+post would be suddenly established for a particular purpose, and as soon
+abandoned when no longer specially required. Thus in the year 1621 a
+post to Ireland--Irish firms being then considered to require "oftener
+despatches and more expedition"--was set up by way of Bristol, only to
+be discontinued in a few years.
+
+There was in 1660 a direct but irregular post between London and some of
+the larger provincial towns, but there were no cross posts between two
+towns not being on the same post road. Letters could only circulate from
+one post road to another through London, and such circulation through
+London involved additional rates of postage. Bristol and Exeter are less
+than eighty miles apart, but, not being on the same post road, letters
+from one place to the other passed through London, and were charged, if
+single, 6d., thus:--one rate of 3d. from Exeter to London, and another
+rate of 3d. from London to Bristol. This was in conformity with a system
+established in the reign of Charles II. That system went on until 1696
+when a post was established between Bristol and Exeter, that being the
+first cross post in the kingdom authorised by the Monarch's own personal
+assent. From Bristol the posts went on Mondays and Fridays, starting at
+10.0 in the morning. The posts left Exeter on Wednesdays and Saturdays
+at 4.0 in the afternoon, and arrived at Bristol at the same hour on the
+following days. Under this cross post plan, the two towns being less
+than eighty miles apart, the charge was reduced to 2d. for a single
+letter. In three or four years the new post produced a profit of £250 a
+year. In 1678 Provost Campbell established a coach to run from Glasgow
+to Edinburgh, "drawn by sax able horses, to leave Edinboro' ilk Monday
+morning, and return again (God willing) ilk Saturday night." In 1700 the
+service between Bristol and London became fixed, and on alternate days
+at irregular hours, depending upon the state of the weather and the
+roads, the extent of the journey and the caprices of the postboys and
+the sorry nags that carried them, the mail arrived in Bristol. There
+were, however, only a mere handful of letters and newspapers. At the end
+of the same year, the Post Office authorities in London, after being
+earnestly petitioned by local merchants, counselled the Government to
+establish a "cross post" from this city to Chester. Up to that time the
+Bristol letters to Chester, Shrewsbury, Worcester, and Gloucester had
+been carried round by London under the system already described,
+involving double postage and great delay. The effect of this system, as
+on the Bristol and Exeter road, had been to throw nearly all the letters
+into the hands of public carriers, by whose wagons they were conveyed
+more quickly than by the postboys through London, and at a cheaper rate.
+Moved by the success of the new cross posts from Bristol to Exeter, the
+Treasury consented to the starting of the Chester service. The Post
+Office reported to the Treasury in March, 1702, that the profit for the
+first eighteen months of the Chester service had been about £156. The
+accounts of Henry Pyne, the Bristol postmaster, appended to the report
+in the State papers, show that so far as this part of the service was
+concerned, he had received £168 for letters by this post, whilst his
+expenses had been £60.
+
+The people of Cirencester and Exeter, hearing of the Chester concession,
+hastened to complain of shortcomings affecting themselves. The
+Devon clothiers had a considerable trade with the wool dealers of
+the district of Cirencester, which town was served by the postboys
+riding between Gloucester and London, with a branch postboy mail to
+Wotton-under-Edge. By there being no direct postal service of any kind
+between Bristol and Wotton-under-Edge, correspondence between Exeter and
+Cirencester had to be sent _viā_ London, and a fortnight elapsed between
+the despatch of a letter and the receipt of an answer, the result being
+that not one letter in twenty was sent through the post. All that was
+needed to shorten the transit from fourteen days to four was to put
+Bristol in direct communication with Wotton, the expense being estimated
+at only £30 a year. The Government declined to comply with this
+reasonable request, and nothing was done!
+
+[Illustration: RALPH ALLEN.
+
+_By permission of the Proprietor of "The Bath and County Graphic."_]
+
+Soon after this time a Post Office reformer arose in our immediate
+district in the person of Ralph Allen. He, unlike later reformers,
+passed all his working days in the Post Office service. Born at the
+"Duke William Inn," at St. Blazey Highway, in Cornwall in about 1693, he
+went as a boy to help his grandmother, who was postmistress at St.
+Columb. In 1710 he was transferred as a clerk to Bath, and on the 26th
+March, 1712, he became postmaster of that city, in succession to one
+Mary Collins, and in that year appears to have taken over the management
+of the Bristol and Exeter Cross Road Post, previously farmed by Joseph
+Quash, postmaster of Exeter. In 1720 Ralph Allen contracted to farm the
+cross-country posts throughout the country generally, and to carry the
+mails by what were subsequently known as "Allen's Postboys," who were
+supposed to travel on horseback at a pace averaging five miles an hour.
+A robbery from these postboys carrying the mails between London and
+Bristol was a common occurrence. Two men were executed in April, 1720,
+for having twice committed that crime, yet the letter bags were again
+stolen seven times during the following twelve months. The _London
+Journal_ of August 27th remarked: "It is computed that the traders of
+Bristol have received £60,000 damages by the late robberies of the
+mail." In 1722 the postboys were robbed twice in a single week, and for
+the crimes three men were executed in London. Another incident of the
+kind worthy of mentioning occurred in September, 1738. The bag then
+carried off by three highwaymen contained a reprieve for a man lying
+under sentence of death in Newgate, and a second reprieve despatched
+after the robbery became known would have arrived too late to save the
+man's life, had not the magistrates postponed the execution for a day
+or two in order that it might not clash with the festivities of a new
+Mayor's inauguration.
+
+[Illustration: PRIOR PARK, BATH.
+
+(_Formerly residence of Ralph Allen._)
+
+_By permission of the Proprietor of "The Bath and County Graphic."_]
+
+About 1732 the Bristol riding boys were deprived of their perquisite of
+1d. a letter for "dropping of letters" at the towns and villages through
+which they passed. This was done because the postboys not only carried
+letters which they picked up on the road and did not account for at the
+next post office of call, but even went to the length of taking out
+letters from the mail bags when those bags were, as was the case
+sometimes, not properly chained and sealed. In connection with Ralph
+Allen's "By-Posts," in the year 1735 arrangements were made so that the
+mails sent from Manchester, Liverpool, or any other place in Lancashire,
+to Worcestershire, Gloucestershire, Somerset, Devon, etc., might be
+answered four days sooner than they could possibly have been answered
+before. In 1740 a new branch by-post was established from Bristol and
+Bath to Salisbury, through Bradford, Trowbridge, Devizes, Lavington,
+Tinhead, Westbury, Warminster, Heytesbury, and Wilton. In 1741 the
+growth of trade and population encouraged the Bristol citizens to
+appeal to the Ministry for an improvement in the postal communication
+with London, which was still limited to three days per week. Yielding to
+this pressure, Allen converted the tri-weekly posts into six-day posts
+in June, 1741. The post began to run every day of the week, except
+Sunday, between London and Bristol, and all intervening towns
+participated in the benefit. In 1746 a further extension took place,
+whereby letters were conveyed six days in every week, instead of three
+days, at Mr. Allen's expense, between London and Wells, Bridgwater,
+Taunton, Wellington, Tiverton, and Exeter, through Bristol. The mail
+service is not in further evidence in local history until 1753, when the
+Bristol merchants again showed themselves tenacious of their rights, and
+waged a bitter war against the Postmasters-General in respect of the
+imposition of a double rate of postage on letters which, although under
+an ounce in weight, contained patterns of silk or cotton or samples of
+grain. There was a lawsuit, and the Bristol merchants won it.
+
+A Government notification in the local newspapers of the 4th September,
+1752, announced an acceleration of the mails between the Southern
+Counties and Bristol. In future a postboy was to leave Salisbury on
+Mondays at six o'clock in the morning, to arrive at Bath (a distance of
+about thirty-nine miles) at eight or nine at night, and to leave Bath
+for Bristol at six next morning. On Wednesdays and Fridays the departure
+from Salisbury was in the evening, the journey occupying about nineteen
+hours. By this arrangement letters from Portsmouth were received in this
+city two days earlier than before.
+
+[Illustration: RALPH ALLEN'S TOWN HOUSE IN BATH.
+
+_By kind permission of the Proprietor of the "Bath and County
+Graphic."_]
+
+Ralph Allen's improvements had great influence in the Post Office
+services in this western city. The profits on the contracts enabled
+Allen to take up his residence at Prior Park, Bath, one of the finest
+Italian houses in England, in addition to having a grand house in the
+City. It is said that the profits which accrued to him from his long
+contracts amounted to about half a million of money.
+
+Mansions so lordly are not for the hardest and best workers in the Post
+Office field of present times, for the nation does not reward its great
+men so liberally as then. Nowadays an introducer of the inland parcel
+post service, the foreign parcel post service, an improver of the
+telegraph service, and leader in bringing about vastly accelerated mail
+services throughout the country,--works of great moment, even if not
+comparable with Ralph Allen, John Palmer, or Rowland Hill's great
+achievements,--has, after forty years at the Post Office, to be
+contented on retirement with no more than the modest pension due to him,
+which will not even be continued to his nearest and dearest relative.
+
+Allen benefited the Bristol postal district in another way than by his
+improved Post Office services when he built the bridge over the Avon at
+Newton-St.-Loe at a cost of £4,000. He was buried in Claverton
+Churchyard, near Bath. The inscription on his tomb runs thus:--"Beneath
+this Monument lieth entombed the Body of Ralph Allen, Esqr., of Prior
+Park, who departed this life y^e 29th day of June, 1764, in the 71st
+year of his Age. In full hope of everlasting happiness in another state
+thro' the infinite merit and mediation of our blessed Redeemer, Jesus
+Christ."
+
+Ralph Allen did not hoard up his money or spend it on riotous living,
+but bestowed a considerable portion of his income in works of charity,
+especially in supporting needy men of letters. He was a great friend and
+benefactor of Fielding, and in _Tom Jones_ the novelist has gratefully
+drawn Mr. Allen's character in the person of Squire Alworthy. He enjoyed
+the friendship of Chatham and Pitt; and Pope, Warburton, and other men
+of literary distinction were his familiar companions. Pope has
+celebrated one of his principal virtues--unassuming benevolence--in the
+well-known lines:
+
+ "Let humble Allen, with an awkward shame,
+ Do good by stealth, and blush to find it fame."
+
+Derrick has thus described Allen's personal appearance shortly before
+his death: "He is a very grave, well-looking man, plain in his dress,
+resembling that of a Quaker, and courteous in his behaviour. I suppose
+he cannot be much under seventy. His wife is low, with grey hair, and of
+a very pleasing address." Kilvert says that he was rather above the
+middle size and stoutly built, and that he was not altogether averse to
+a little state, as he often used to drive into Bath in a coach and four.
+His handwriting was very curious; he evidently wrote quickly and
+fluently, but it was so overloaded with curls and flourishes as to be
+sometimes scarcely legible.
+
+The lack of all show about his garb seems to have somewhat annoyed
+Philip Thicknesse, the well-known author of one of the Bath Guides, for
+he speaks of Allen's "plain linen shirt-sleeves, with only a chitterling
+up the slit."
+
+Allen's son Philip became Comptroller of the "By-Letter" Department in
+the London Post Office.
+
+[Illustration: RALPH ALLEN'S TOMB IN CLAVERTON CHURCHYARD, NEAR BATH.
+
+_By kind permission of the Proprietor of the "Bath and County
+Graphic."_]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+1770-1818.
+
+MAIL COACH ERA.--JOHN PALMER.
+
+
+Notwithstanding Ralph Allen's innovations, the conveyance of letters
+between the principal towns was carried on in a more or less desultory
+fashion. Speaking of the want of improvement in 1770, and the haphazard
+system under which Post Office business was conducted, a local newspaper
+gave this instance of unpunctuality: "The London Mail did not arrive so
+soon by several hours as usual on Monday, owing to the mailman getting a
+little intoxicated on his way between Newbury and Marlborough, and
+falling from his horse into a hedge, where he was found asleep, by means
+of his dog." Mr. Weeks, who entered upon "The Bush," Bristol, in 1772,
+after ineffectually urging the proprietors to quicken their speed,
+started a one day coach to Birmingham himself, and carried it on against
+a bitter opposition, charging the passengers only 10s. 6d. and 8s. 6d.
+for inside and outside seats respectively, and giving each one of them a
+dinner and a pint of wine at Gloucester into the bargain. After two
+years' struggle his opponents gave in, and one day journeys to
+Birmingham became the established rule.
+
+The mail service was carried on chiefly by means of postboys (generally
+wizened old men), who continued to travel on worn-out horses not able to
+get along at a speed of more than four miles an hour on the bad roads.
+On the London and Bristol route, indeed, it had been found necessary to
+provide the postboys with light carts, but that method of conveyance of
+the mail bags brought about no acceleration in time of transit,--from
+thirty to forty hours, according to the state of the roads. A letter
+despatched from Bristol or Bath on Monday was not delivered in London
+until Wednesday morning. On the other hand a letter confided to the
+stage coach of Monday reached its destination on Tuesday morning, and
+the consequence was that Bristol traders and others sent letters of
+value or urgency by the stage coach, although the proprietors charged
+2s. for each missive.
+
+At this period John Palmer, of Bath, came on the scene. He had learnt
+from the merchants of Bristol what a boon it would be if they could get
+their letters conveyed to London in fourteen or fifteen hours, instead
+of three days. It is said, however, that it was the sight of Ralph
+Allen's grand place at Prior Park, and the knowledge of how Allen's
+money had been made, which first suggested to Palmer the attempt to
+bring a scheme for a mail coach system to the notice of the postal
+authorities. John Palmer was lessee and manager of the Bath and Bristol
+theatres, and went about beating up actors, actresses and companies in
+postchaises, and he thought letters should be carried at the same pace
+at which it was possible to travel in a chaise. He devised a scheme, and
+Pitt, the Prime Minister of the day, who warmly approved the idea,
+decided that the plan should have a trial and that the first mail coach
+should run between London and Bristol. On Saturday, the 31st July, 1784,
+an agreement was signed in connection with Palmer's scheme under which,
+in consideration of payment of 3d. a mile, five inn-holders--one
+belonging to London, one to Thatcham, one to Marlborough, and two to
+Bath--undertook to provide the horses, and on Monday, the 2nd August,
+1784, the first "mail coach" started. On its first journey it ran from
+Bristol,--not from London as generally supposed,--and Palmer was present
+to see it off. A well-armed mail guard in uniform was in charge of the
+vehicle, which was timed to perform the journey from Bristol to London
+in sixteen hours. Only four passengers were at first carried by each
+"machine," and the fare was £1 8s. The immediate effect was to
+accelerate the delivery of letters by a day. The coaches were small,
+light vehicles, drawn by a pair of horses only, but leaders were
+subsequently added, and four-horse coaches soon became the order of the
+day, and more passengers were carried. An old painting represents the
+Bath and Bristol mail trotting along close to a wall, the guard
+receiving one bag and handing another to the postmaster without the
+coachman pulling up. One coach left Bristol at 4.0 in the afternoon,
+reached Bath a couple of hours later, and arrived at the General Post
+Office, London, before 8.0 the next morning. The down coach started from
+London at 8.0 in the evening, was at the "Three Tuns," Bath, at a few
+minutes before 10.0 the next morning, and pulled up at the "Rummer
+Tavern," Bristol, at noon. Palmer gave up his theatrical enterprises and
+entered the service of the Post Office as Comptroller at a salary of
+£1,500 a year, and certain emoluments, which, after a year or two,
+brought him in an annual sum of more than £3,000. Before Palmer's mail
+coaches were at work the post left London at all hours of the night, but
+it was part of his scheme that the mails should all leave at the same
+time, 8.0; and as the number of mails increased so there was more and
+more bustle in the vicinity of the General Post Office at that hour. In
+London the arrival of all the mails was awaited before any one of them
+was delivered; and this led to the delivery sometimes not taking place
+until 3.0 or 4.0 in the afternoon, or even later. Palmer, with his
+regard for the Bristol coach, occasionally had the Bristol mails
+distributed immediately on reaching St. Martin's-le-Grand, but all other
+mails if behind were kept waiting as before.
+
+[Illustration: JOHN PALMER.
+
+THE FOUNDER OF THE MAIL COACH SYSTEM.
+
+_By kind permission of the Proprietor of the "Bath and County
+Graphic."_]
+
+Upon the beginning of Palmer's system on the Bristol road a marvellous
+superstructure was raised. Coaches were at once applied for by the
+municipalities of the largest towns, Liverpool being the first to aim
+at equality with Bristol, and York claiming what was due to the great
+highway to the North. Palmer's plan made rapid progress and was attended
+with complete success. A splendid mail service was eventually set up all
+over the country. One result was that the "expresses" to Bristol, which
+before had been as many as two hundred in the year, ceased altogether.
+In July, 1787, the mails from Bristol to Birmingham and the North,
+previously three per week, were ordered to be run daily. The London to
+Bristol coach was stopped by other means than those employed by
+highwaymen, the service having at one time in 1790 been suspended for
+several days by Palmer, in defiance of the Postmaster-General.
+
+In Bonner and Middleton's (weekly) _Journal_ for the 11th February,
+1792, is an announcement to the effect that the Irish mails arrived in
+Bristol on the 6th instant instead of on the first of the month. The
+bare fact was stated, and the assumption is, therefore, that it was not
+an unusual circumstance. Five days' delay would be thought intolerable
+now, as, indeed, is the present length of time occupied by the Irish
+night mails on their journey to Bristol. After being conveyed by fast
+boat to Holyhead and express train to Birmingham, they come on from that
+city by a "crawler" and do not reach Bristol until nearly the mid-day
+hour.
+
+[Illustration: OLD ENGLISH "FLYING" MAIL COACH.]
+
+In the same year (1792) sixteen mail coaches worked in and out of London
+every day. There were fifteen cross-country mail coaches, as, for
+instance, the coach between Bristol and Oxford, or, as it was commonly
+called, Mr. Pickwick's coach. During winter, in frosty weather, at this
+period, some of the mail coaches did not run at all, but were laid up
+for the season, like ships during Arctic frosts.
+
+There is a model of an old mail coach at the General Post Office, St.
+Martin's-le-Grand, London, popularly supposed to be the model of the
+first mail coach which was built, but such is not the case, for, as
+already stated, the first mail coach ran between Bristol and London, and
+the model has upon it the inscription "Royal Mail from London to
+Liverpool."
+
+The expense of horsing a four-horsed coach running at the speed of from
+nine to ten miles an hour was reckoned at £3 a double mile. Mails were
+exempt from turnpike tolls.
+
+With the introduction of the mail coaches with well-armed, resolute
+guards, there was a cessation of mail robberies on the main roads.
+Pilfering, however, was occasionally carried on; for instance, in the
+early winter of 1794 one Thomas Thomas travelled day after day up and
+down on the London and Bristol coach. At last his opportunity came when
+the guard temporarily left his coach with the mailbox unlocked, and then
+Thomas Thomas looted the mails. On the cross roads the saddle horse and
+cart posts were frequently stopped and robbed (1796). One of the worst
+roads in this respect was that between Bristol and Portsmouth. Proposals
+for the postboys to be furnished with pistols, cutlasses, and caps lined
+with metal, like hunting caps, for the defence of the head, fell through
+on account of the expense which their supply would have entailed.
+
+There exists a popular belief that the mail coaches were driven up and
+down the steep Queen Street in Bristol now known as Christmas Steps. The
+belief is erroneous, for an inscription over the recessed seats at the
+top of the passage tells us that--
+
+ "This STREETE WAS STEPPERED DONE
+ & Finished, September, 1669.
+ The Right Worpfl Thomas Stevens,
+ Esqr. Mayor.
+
+ Named QVEENE STREETE."
+
+Probably, however, the postboys who carried the mails in earlier days
+rode up the steep incline.
+
+A gentleman now writing in the _Bristol Times and Mirror_ under the
+_nom-de-plume_ of "Old File," delving in the historical garden of _Felix
+Farley's Journal_, has unearthed the following very interesting
+announcements and advertisements, which throw light on the mail services
+of the time:--
+
+ "MILFORD AND BRECKNOCK MAIL COACH.
+
+"A coach sets out from the 'White Hart,' Broad Street, Bristol, over the
+Old Passage (Aust), every Sunday, Wednesday, and Friday, at noon, and
+joins the above coach at Ragland the same day; and a corresponding coach
+returns from Milford on certain days." The chief point in the
+advertisement was in the paragraph: "N.B.--This road is nineteen miles
+nearer to Carmarthen and Milford than the lower one," that is, by the
+New Passage.
+
+This was replied to by another advertisement, as follows:
+
+"A CAUTION.--The public will please to observe that no other mail coach
+whatever does now, or ever has, run from Bristol to Milford Haven,
+excepting the Royal London, Bath, Bristol, and Milford Haven mail coach,
+which sets out from the 'Bush Inn and Tavern,' Corn Street, every
+Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, and the mail coach to Swansea
+every day from the same inn, notwithstanding the flaming advertisement
+of a certain set of men to deceive and mislead the public, by their
+asserting that the road over the Old Passage is nineteen miles nearer
+than that over the New Passage, which is so far from being a fact that
+the road of the New Passage is seven and three-quarters nearer, as was
+proved by admeasurement by orders of the office, making a difference of
+twenty-six miles and three-quarters nearer the lower (that is, the New
+Passage) than the upper road."
+
+On August 4th the proprietors of the New Passage coach came out with a
+larger announcement, and produced figures to prove their assertion--
+
+"N.B.--This road is nineteen miles nearer to Milford than the lower one,
+viz:--
+
+ UPPER ROAD. | LOWER ROAD.
+ Miles. | Miles.
+ Old Passage 11 | New Passage 10
+ Across the Water 1 | Across the Water 3
+ Ragland 14 | Newport 15
+ Abergavenny 9 | Cardiff 12
+ Brecknock 19 | Cowbridge 12
+ Trecastle 10 | Pill 12
+ Llandovery 9 | Neath 13
+ Llandilo 12 | Ponterdilas 10
+ Carmarthen 15 | Kidwelly 14
+ St. Clare's 9 | Carmarthen 9
+ Narberth 13 | St. Clare's 9
+ Haverford-West 10 | Narberth 13
+ Milford 10 | Haverford-West 10
+ | Milford 10
+ --- | ---
+ Total 142 | Total 161
+
+In favour of the Upper Road, 19 miles."
+
+
+ "BRISTOL, _4th January, 1799_.
+
+"Lost, on Monday morning, small letter-bag, marked on it 'Worcester and
+Bristol.' Whoever has found the same shall, on delivering it at the Post
+Office, receive five guineas reward; and whoever detains it after this
+notice will be prosecuted."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "GENERAL POST OFFICE,
+ _Friday, 15th February, 1799_.
+
+"George Evans, of Steep Street, St. Michael's, in the City of Bristol,
+Grocer, having been committed to the Gaol of Newgate, in the said City,
+charged with feloniously negotiating two Bills of Exchange contained in
+the bag of letters from Worcester for Bristol of the 30th December last,
+which was lost or stolen, and there being great reason to believe that
+one or more person or persons is or are privy to or concerned with him
+in the said felony: Whoever will give information at the Council Chamber
+in Bristol within one month from the date hereof, so that the said
+George Evans may be convicted of the offence with which he is charged,
+shall be entitled to a reward of fifty pounds. And if an accomplice
+shall make discovery he will also receive His Majesty's most gracious
+pardon.
+
+ "By command of the Postmaster-General.
+ "FRANCIS FREELING, Secretary."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _June 29th, 1799._
+
+"We understand that a bill for £50, drawn by the Worcester Bank on
+Messrs. Harfords, Davis and Co., of this City, and which was one of the
+bills contained in the Worcester bag lost on the 31st December last, has
+been presented within these few days for payment--a circumstance which
+may probably lead to the discovery of the party who found the said bag."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _August 10th._
+
+"Last week George Evans, who was tried at the Old Bailey in June last on
+a charge of forging endorsements on two bills (which, with many others,
+were contained in the Worcester bag destined for this City that was lost
+on the 21st December last, and of which intelligence has since been
+obtained), but who was acquitted for want of sufficient evidence, was
+again apprehended, and was committed to gaol on a charge of having
+stolen a promissory note, drawn by Messrs. Harfords, Davis and Co., of
+this City, value fifty pounds, which note was likewise sent by the same
+conveyance from Worcester, and being attempted to be negotiated, was
+stopped and traced back into the hands of the said Evans, against whom a
+detainer was lodged on account of a similar charge for another bill of
+the same value, and precisely under all the circumstances attending the
+former."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "GENERAL POST OFFICE,
+ "_October 11th, 1798_.
+
+"The postboy carrying the mail from Bristol to Salisbury on the 9th
+instant was stopped between the hours of eleven and twelve o'clock at
+night by two men on foot within six miles of Salisbury, who robbed him
+of seven shillings in money, but did not offer to take the mail. Whoever
+shall apprehend the convict, or cause to be apprehended and convicted
+both or either of the persons who committed this robbery, will be
+entitled to a reward of fifty pounds over and above the reward given by
+Act of Parliament for apprehending highwaymen. If either party will
+surrender himself and discover his accomplice he will be admitted as
+evidence for the Crown, receive His Majesty's most gracious pardon, and
+be entitled to the said reward.
+
+ "By command of the Postmaster-General.
+ "FRANCIS FREELING, Secretary."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There is no record that anyone claimed the reward.
+
+This, so far, is the end of "Old File's" researches.
+
+As the Bristol mail coach was going through Reading on the night of
+Thursday, the 18th January, 1799, the coachman was shook off the box,
+and, through his hands having been so benumbed by the cold, was unable
+to save himself. The guard jumped down and endeavoured to stop the
+horses, but without effect. They ran as far as Hare Hatch (four miles),
+where the coach changed horses, and then stopped, having met with no
+accident whatever, though they passed two wagons. The passengers in the
+coach did not know anything of it at the time.
+
+According to the _Bristol Directory_ for 1811, the "Bush Tavern" office
+in Corn Street, conducted by John Townsend, played an important part in
+the mail coach system of the country. Its announcement ran thus: "Royal
+mail coach to London at 4.0 every afternoon; comes in at half-past 11
+every morning. 'Loyal Volunteer' to London at 12.0 every day. Royal mail
+coach to Newport, Cardiff, Cowbridge, Neath, Swansea, and Carmarthen
+every day on the arrival of the London mail. Royal mail coach through
+Newport, Cardiff, Cowbridge, Swansea, Carmarthen, to Haverford-west and
+Milford Haven every Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday on the
+arrival of the London mail. The 'Cambrian,' a light post coach, the same
+route as the mail, to Swansea every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday
+morning at 6 o'clock; returns every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday
+evenings.
+
+"Royal mail coach to Birmingham through Gloster, Tewkesbury, Worcester
+and Bromsgrove every evening at 7.0; comes in every morning at 6.0. A
+post coach to Birmingham every day. Royal mail coach through Bath to
+Tetbury, Cirencester, and Oxford, every morning at quarter-past 7, comes
+in at 6.0 every evening. Royal mail coach through Bath, Warminster, and
+Salisbury to Southampton and Portsmouth at 3.0 every day; comes in at
+10.0 in the morning. Coach to Salisbury, Romsey, Southampton, and
+Gosport every day at 5.0 (Saturdays excepted), comes in at half-past
+10.0 at night. Exeter, _Original_ 'Duke of York' coach, through
+Bridgwater, Taunton, Wellington, and Cullompton every Tuesday,
+Thursday."
+
+In 1813 the London to Bristol mail coach was robbed of the Bankers'
+parcel, value £2,000 or upwards. This was made known in the form of a
+warning to the mail guards who travelled in charge of the Post Office
+bags. When in 1813-14 the great frost occurred, the Bristol mail coaches
+were obstructed by the heavy snowdrifts on the roads, and they came in
+day after day drawn by six horses each when they could struggle into the
+City.
+
+The literature of the period yields nothing of interest again for some
+time.
+
+The "Bristol Guide" in 1815 stated that--"Bristow is the richest city of
+almost all the cities of this country, receiving merchandize from
+neighbouring and foreign places with the ships under sail." And again,
+"Bristow is full of ships from Ireland, Norway and every part of Europe,
+which brought hither great commerce and large foreign wealth." There was
+no mention of their carrying mails.
+
+The year 1818 is memorable in postal annals as that in which John Palmer
+died. His decease took place at Brighton, but not before he had lived
+long enough to see mail coaches splendidly turned out. Palmer, on the
+conclusion of his connection with the Post Office, was awarded a pension
+of £3,000 a year, equal to his full salary, which sum he declared did
+not represent the amount of his salary and emoluments. Further
+difficulties ensued, and his son, Colonel Palmer, fought his father's
+battles right manfully in the House, and eventually, in 1813, the
+Government gave John Palmer a sum of £50,000.
+
+In recognition of Palmer's great invention, the Chamber of Commerce of
+Glasgow not only made him an honorary member, but voted him fifty
+guineas for a piece of plate. The fifty guineas was spent on a silver
+cup, which bore the following inscription:--
+
+ TO
+ JOHN PALMER, ESQ.,
+ SURVEYOR AND COMPTROLLER-GENERAL
+ OF THE POSTS OF GREAT BRITAIN,
+ FROM
+ THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
+ AND MANUFACTURERS
+ IN THE CITY OF GLASGOW,
+ AS AN ACKNOWLEDGMENT
+ OF THE BENEFITS
+ RESULTING FROM HIS PLAN
+ TO THE
+ TRADE AND COMMERCE
+ OF THIS KINGDOM,
+ 1789.
+
+[Illustration: TO JOHN PALMER, ESQ., SURVEYOR AND COMPTROLLER-GENERAL OF
+THE POST OFFICE THIS PLATE OF THE MAIL COACH IS RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED
+BY HIS OBEDIENT HUMBLE SERVANT, JAMES FITTLER.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+1819 ONWARDS.
+
+CHAMBER OF COMMERCE INTERVENES IN MAIL AFFAIRS. OLD MAIL GUARDS.
+
+
+A new coach, from "The Bush Hotel" to Exeter, was put on the road on the
+6th of April, 1819, the time allowed for the journey--74-3/4
+miles--being fourteen hours--less than 5-1/2 miles an hour. In June,
+1820 a new coach started for Manchester, performing the journey in two
+days, the intervening night being spent at Birmingham. To accomplish the
+first half of the task, the vehicle left Bristol at half-past 8 in the
+morning and reached Birmingham--85-1/2 miles--in thirteen hours. An
+advertisement, published in December, 1821, headed "Speed Increased,"
+informed the public that the "Regulator" coach left London daily at 5
+a.m. and arrived at the "White Hart," Bristol, at five minutes before 9
+at night, the speed being barely seven miles an hour.
+
+No fewer than twenty-two coaches were by this time utilised daily
+between this city and London. The start of the West Country mail coaches
+from Piccadilly at this period was an interesting sight. The continued
+wretched condition of the highways was not conducive to quick
+travelling; but in about 1825 matters were improved in that respect in
+our district by Mr. John Loudon MacAdam, who studied and practised
+road-making. Mr. MacAdam was general surveyor of Bristol turnpike roads,
+and although he found the trustees' funds only one remove from
+bankruptcy and their roads almost impassable, he succeeded so well that
+the finances flourished, and his highways became an object lesson to the
+world. Mr. Latimer, the Bristol historian, mentions that although
+MacAdam was shabbily treated by members of the old unreformed
+Corporation, and had many opponents, Bristol deserves the credit of
+being the first to appreciate the value of his labours, which were
+recognised later by a Parliamentary grant. He left Bristol for London,
+and died in 1836; but his son became surveyor of the Bristol roads, and
+continued to hold the appointment till his death in 1857.
+
+[Illustration: THE WEST COUNTRY MAIL COACHES ABOUT TO LEAVE PICCADILLY
+WITH "GO CART," BRINGING UP LATE MAILS FROM THE G.P.O.]
+
+The _Gentlemen's Magazine_, November, 1827, announced: "A Steam Coach
+Company are now making arrangements for stopping places on the line of
+road, between London, Bath and Bristol, which will occur every six or
+seven miles, where fresh fuel and water are to be supplied. There are
+fifteen coaches built." The Turnpike Trustees, who imposed extraordinary
+tolls on steam carriages, frustrated this scheme; but the threatened
+competition stirred up the coach proprietors, who increased the speed of
+their vehicles from the jog-trot of six or seven miles an hour, although
+not to such an extent as desired by the Bristol Chamber of Commerce,
+which in this year made a suggestion to the Post Office for bringing the
+London mail to the city in twelve hours. The Postmaster-General was also
+memorialised to accelerate the arrival of the West mail, so as to effect
+its delivery before the departure of the London mail,--a convenience of
+no little moment to the West India trade of the port, since it was
+thought that it would save one day in the conduct of business with the
+metropolis. At a general meeting in January, 1828, it was announced that
+the president had a conference on the subject with the leading officer
+of the Post Office Department, with the result that the latter proposed
+alterations which were carried out, and were held to be proofs of the
+Postmaster-General's disposition to consult the accommodation of the
+Bristol public. The former proposal was not adopted at the time, for at
+the Accession of his late Majesty King William IV. (1830) the London
+mail coach took 13 hours 37 minutes on its journey _viā_ Reading. It
+departed at 8 p.m., reached Bath 8.11 a.m., and arrived in Bristol at
+9.37 a.m., leaving again at 5.50 p.m. for the G.P.O. The Bristol and
+Brighton coach (138 miles) was bound to a speed of 10.4 miles per hour.
+
+In January, 1830, there were further Post Office matters on the agenda
+of the Chamber of Commerce, for it was resolved--"That this meeting
+recommends to the Board the instituting an enquiry into the exact
+distance between the Post Office of London and Bristol, with a view to
+ascertain whether the rate of postage at present demanded is correct."
+The enquiry was prosecuted with vigour, for at the January annual
+meeting in the following year reference was made to the Turnpike
+Commissioners for the several districts on the line of road between
+London and Bristol having supplied a statement of the precise extent of
+ground over which the mail coach travelled, comprised in their
+respective trusts. In several instances measurements were expressly
+made. In the result it appeared that the route exceeded in distance 120
+miles, and the Post Office Department was therefore entitled legally to
+obtain the rate of 10d. per letter as the amount fixed by the provisions
+of the Act of Parliament. It was thought by taking the route from
+Chippenham through Marshfield instead of Bath the distance would be
+considerably shorter, and consequently bring about a reduced rate of
+postage. It was reported in the next year (January, 1832) that the
+requisition for changing the route had been pursued, and the president
+held a conference with Sir F. Freeling on the subject; but though every
+due consideration was promised, the alteration had not yet been acceded
+to. There was the significant addition that the application would
+nevertheless be renewed. A new royal mail direct from Bristol to
+Liverpool was established in 1831, leaving the "White Lion," Broad
+Street, Bristol, at 5.0 p.m., reaching Liverpool at twenty minutes past
+12 a.m. The new service was notified to Mr. Samuel Harford, the
+President of the Commerce Chamber, by Sir Francis Freeling, in the
+following terms:--
+
+ "G.P.O., _27th August, 1831_.
+
+"SIR,--Having brought under consideration the memorial from the Board of
+Directors of the Chamber of Commerce of Bristol, and from the bankers,
+merchants, and other inhabitants of Liverpool, transmitted in your
+letter of the 2nd May last, I have the satisfaction to acquaint you that
+His Grace the Postmaster General (Duke of Richmond) has consented to try
+the experiment of a mail coach between those towns, through Chepstow,
+Hereford, and Monmouth, and I flatter myself that it may commence about
+the middle of next month.
+
+ "I have the honour to be, Sir,
+ Your most obedient Servant,
+ F. FREELING, Secretary.
+
+ "Samuel Harford, Esq."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the next year the Chamber learnt with satisfaction that the direct
+Liverpool mail through Chepstow, Monmouth, Hereford, Shrewsbury and
+Chester, which was started as an experiment, had been continued, to the
+decided advantage of the public, particularly to all connected with the
+line of country through which it passed. As compared with the former
+route, the saving of time was equal to one day; the rate of postage was
+likewise reduced. The starting and arriving were at the most convenient
+hours the distance and circumstances, with reference to the passage of
+the two rivers, Severn and Medway, would permit. The coach had to run
+over the flat parts of the ground at a great pace, to make up for time
+lost at the hills. The contract time was 9 miles 2 furlongs in the hour.
+
+One of the chief mail coaches in the kingdom in 1837 was the Bristol,
+Carmarthen and Milford (150 miles _viā_ Passage, one hour allowed for
+ferry), Cardiff and Swansea. Its down journey occupied 19 hours 38
+minutes, and its up journey 20 hours.
+
+The Liverpool and Milford mails were conveyed across the Severn at Aust
+Passage, where the ferry had been located since the Lord Protector's
+time. A moderate expenditure on the piers at Aust Passage, though little
+regarded by the citizens at the time the work was in progress, with the
+introduction there of a steam vessel, was one of the principal means of
+bringing about the establishment of the additional communication with
+the districts over the Severn, the uncertainty and inconvenience of
+crossing its estuary being then to a large extent removed.
+
+Mr. Oliver Norris, now nearly 80 years of age, and who has lived in the
+district adjoining the Severn Tunnel from his boyhood, can call to mind
+the time when the Liverpool and Milford coaches were running. They had
+to make their way from Pilning through Northwick, up to the Old Passage
+at Aust, and in rough weather the passengers must have had a cold ride
+on the bleak river banks over which they had to journey. When the
+Bristol and South Wales Railway was opened in 1863, the Aust Passage was
+abandoned, and the ferry steamers commenced to cross from the revived
+New (or Pilning) Passage, to connect with the new train services at
+Portskewet. When the penny post was introduced, Mr. Morris says that as
+the coaches passed through the villages the inhabitants in his district
+adopted a primitive way of posting their letters, which was to place
+the letter and penny in a cleft stick, and so hand up to the mail guard
+as the coach was driven by, and who, if the penny was not forthcoming,
+promptly threw the letter to the ground.
+
+The mail coach system was attended with many adventures. Mr. Moses James
+Nobbs, the last of the mail coach guards, recounted in the history of
+his career how, in the winter of 1836, when guard of the Bristol to
+Portsmouth coach, there were terrible snow-storms towards Christmas
+time, and many parts of the country were completely blocked. After
+leaving Bristol one night at 7 p.m. all went well until the coach was
+nearing Salisbury, at about midnight. Snow had been falling gently for
+some time before, but after leaving Salisbury it came down so thick and
+lay so deep that the coach had to be brought to a standstill, and could
+proceed no further. Consequently Nobbs had to leave the coach and go on
+horseback to the next changing place, where he took a fresh horse and
+started for Southampton. There he procured a chaise and pair, and
+continued his journey to Portsmouth, arriving there about 6 p.m. the
+next day. He was then ordered to go back to Bristol. On reaching
+Southampton on his return journey the snow had got much deeper, and at
+Salisbury he found that the London mails had arrived, but could not go
+any further, the snow being so very deep. Not to be beaten, he took a
+horse out of the stable, slung the mail bags over his back, and pushed
+on for Bristol, where he arrived next day, after much wandering through
+fields, up and down lanes, and across country--all one dreary expanse of
+snow. By this time he was about ready for a rest. But there was no rest
+for him in Bristol, for he was ordered by the mail inspector to take the
+mails on to Birmingham, as there was no other mail guard available. At
+last he arrived at Birmingham, having been on duty for two nights and
+days continuously without taking his clothes off. For his exertions and
+perseverance in getting the mails through Mr. Nobbs received a special
+commendation from the Postmaster-General.
+
+[Illustration: MOSES NOBBS.
+
+THE LAST OF THE MAIL GUARDS.]
+
+Mr. Nobbs tells that one night when the Bristol coach was between Bath
+and Warminster, two men jumped out of the hedge; one caught hold of the
+leaders, and the other the wheelers, and tried to stop the coach. The
+coachman, immediately whipped up the horses, and called out, "Look out!
+we are going to be robbed!" Mr. Nobbs took the blunderbuss out of the
+arms case (which was a box just in front of the guard's seat); but, just
+as he did so, he saw the fellows making towards the hedge, and then lost
+sight of them altogether. To let them know that he was prepared, he
+fired off into the hedge. He didn't know whether he hit anything, but he
+heard no cries or groans. The recoil of the blunderbuss, however, nearly
+knocked him off his seat. The blunderbuss, he said, kicked like a mule.
+It had no doubt been loaded to the muzzle, as was usual with those
+weapons. In the memorable storm of Christmas, 1836, alluded to by Mr.
+Nobbs, the Bath and Bristol mail coach, due in London on Tuesday
+morning, was abandoned eighty miles from the metropolis, and the mails
+taken up in a post-chaise and four by the two guards, who reached St.
+Martin's-le-Grand at 6.0 on the Wednesday morning. For seventeen miles
+of the distance the guards had from time to time to go across the fields
+to get past the deep snowdrifts.
+
+In the annual procession of mail coaches round London, at the head
+thereof was "the oldest established mail,"--the Bristol mail, probably
+with Guard Nobbs in charge. Some twenty-seven to thirty coaches took
+part in the procession thus headed. The old mail guards had a literature
+of their own. As an example, one report on a guard's way-bill ran as
+follows (it was a note to account for loss of time on North Road):--"As
+we wos comin' over Brumsgroove Lickey won of the leaders fell, and wen
+we com to him he was ded."
+
+One old fellow used to laugh, as the men said, down in his boots, or
+like a pump losing its water. Another used facetiously to say that he
+had better than a dozen children. "Oh, Mr. ----," said a barmaid to him
+one day, "what can you do with so many?" "Well, my dear," he replied,
+"you see I've got but two, and they be, you must confess, a good deal
+better than a dozen."
+
+It is said that, with the exception of a single instance, no guard was
+ever convicted of a breach of trust while performing his duties.
+
+In the year of Her Majesty's accession (1837) there were no fewer than
+twenty-seven coaches running daily between Bristol and London, and
+twenty-seven others passed between this city and Bath every twenty-four
+hours. The times of the London coach were as follow: London depart 8.0
+p.m., Bath 7.21 a.m., Bristol arrive 8.43 a.m., depart 6.15 p.m., arrive
+G.P.O. 6.58 a.m.,--a slight acceleration over 1830.
+
+Where now is the fashionable roadside "Ostrich Inn" on Durdham Down of a
+century ago, approached by a rough and winding track from Black Boy
+Hill? At this inn the coaches called on their way to the Passage. Where
+now are the old four-horsed coaches rattling up to "The Bush," "White
+Hart," and "White Lion" hostelries, and the old jolly dozen-caped
+coachmen and scarlet-liveried mail guards, with blunderbuss and horn?
+Where now the Bath and Bristol mail pulling up at the roadside "King's
+Head Inn"? The inns are gone, the coaches gone, the jolly guards all
+gone too. What happiness their smiling faces brought to many who watched
+for their arrival by the mail coach from the West of England, and how
+gladdening the sight of their colonial mail bags to the merchants of the
+city and to the sailors' wives looking out anxiously for the monthly
+mail of those days! Though single-sheet letters cost 2s. 1d. each, what
+of that? Did they not contain accounts of sugar and rum cargoes, and of
+good news from absent ones. Letters were letters in those days, and not
+the notes and cards and "flimsies" of to-day.
+
+[Illustration: ARRIVAL OF THE BATH AND BRISTOL MAIL COACH AT A ROADSIDE
+INN.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+VICTORIAN ERA, 1837-1899.
+
+MAIL TRANSPORT BY RAILWAY.--TRAVELLING POST OFFICES.
+
+
+Although the world's railway system was inaugurated by the opening of
+the Stockton and Darlington Railway in 1825, it was not until 1838 that
+any attempt was made by a great railway to open up the traffic to the
+West from the Metropolis. It was in that year that the Great Western
+Company made a line between Paddington and Maidenhead, and mails were
+sent by it. The section from Bristol to Bath was opened in the same
+year. _Woolmer's Gazette_ of January, 1840, speaks of the 9.0 a.m.
+"Exquisite" coach for Bristol, Cheltenham, Birmingham, Manchester, and
+Liverpool, with part of the service by rail. Intermediate sections of
+the railway were completed from time to time, and, finally, on the 30th
+January, 1841, the Western line was opened throughout, and the coaches
+which had formed so striking a feature both of town and country life
+generally disappeared. One coach, however, obstinately held its ground
+in spite of the railway, and continued to carry passengers from and to
+London and Bristol at the rate of 1d. per mile until October, 1843.
+
+In consequence of the completion of the Great Western Railway to
+Bristol, extensive mail alterations had to be made, and they were
+commenced on the 30th July, 1841, affecting the whole district right
+through Somersetshire and Devonshire into Cornwall. Some towns were made
+post towns and others were reduced from the rank of post towns to that
+of sub-post offices. To meet the altered circumstances, revised sacking
+of bags had to be resorted to. The instructions given by the President
+to the staff in St. Martin's-le-Grand ended thus:
+
+".... Any bags in addition to the ordinary number must be reported to
+the road officers by the clerks of the divisions, that they may be
+entered under the head of 'extra,' also any agents or portmanteaus for
+Falmouth; and they must instruct the men carrying out the sacks and bags
+first to report them to the check clerk, and then take them through the
+letter carriers' office to the Devonport or Gloucester omnibus, as the
+case may be, as the guards will not for the future come into the
+office."
+
+It was at this time that the villages of Hallatrow, High Littleton,
+Paulton, Harptree (East and West), Farrington Gurney, Temple Cloud,
+Cameley, and Hinton Blewett were transferred from the postal control of
+Bath to that of Bristol, under which they still remain.
+
+For several years the only trains carrying third-class passengers from
+Bristol started at 4.0 o'clock in the morning and 9.0 o'clock at night,
+offering the travellers, who were wholly unprotected from the weather,
+an alternative of miseries, and at first travellers were not much better
+off in point of speed when travelling by railway, as third-class
+passengers were 9-1/2 hours on the railway between Bristol and London.
+The coach at the time of its being taken off performed the journey under
+12 hours.
+
+The "Bush" coach office was closed in March, 1844.
+
+The Bristol and Gloucester Railway was opened to the public on the 8th
+July, 1844. Of the seven coaches which had been running between the two
+cities six were immediately withdrawn, and on the 22nd July the
+time-honoured "North Mail" left Bristol for the last time, the horses'
+heads surmounted with funereal plumes and the coachman and guard in
+equally lugubrious array.
+
+As late as 1845 Her Majesty's mails were conveyed between Bristol and
+Southampton in a closed covered cart, "proper for the purpose," as set
+forth in an advertisement inviting tenders for a new contract. The whole
+journey had to be performed at the rate of eight miles within the hour,
+stoppages included. The hours of despatch were: From Bristol at about
+6.0 p.m., and from Southampton about 9.0 p.m.
+
+[Illustration: "THE OLD BUSH HOTEL," CORN STREET, BRISTOL.
+
+_From a picture in the possession of E. G. Clarke, Esq._]
+
+In 1849 a great mail robbery took place, which was committed with very
+much daring. The robbers, who booked from Starcross station on the 1st
+January, left a compartment of the up night mail train (which left
+Bridgwater at 10.30 p.m. and reached Bristol at midnight); they crept
+along the ledge, only 1-1/2 inch wide, to the mail-brake at the rear of
+the post office sorting carriage, and effected an entrance, having
+previously possessed themselves of a key of the lock. After having
+rifled the mail bags they crept back to their compartment, and
+alighted from the train at the Bristol station, giving up their tickets
+to the Great Western Railway policeman. Not contented with robbing the
+up mail, they got into the night mail train from London to the West,
+which left Bristol at 1.15 a.m., and actually had the daring to pursue
+the same tactics with regard to the mail bags in the locked brake. This
+further audacity brought about their capture, for the news of the
+robbery of the up mail reached the ears of the officers at Bristol who
+were in the down mail, and so they were on the alert. On arrival,
+therefore, at Bridgwater the second robbery was at once detected, all
+exit from the station was stopped, and the train searched. Two men were
+discovered in a first-class compartment near the travelling post office,
+and registered letters and money letters were found upon them. In
+addition to the letters, masks, and false moustache found, a
+woolstapler's hook, which it is supposed was used by the thieves to hang
+on to the tender when leaving the first-class carriage, was also
+discovered. One of the registered letters stolen, it was stated,
+contained £4,000, and the loss, as far as it was known, unquestionably
+amounted to _fifty times_ that sum. The robbers turned out to be Henry
+Poole, a discharged Great Western guard, and Edward Nightingale, a
+London horse dealer. The case excited a great deal of interest in the
+West of England, and when the trial took place at Exeter the court was
+crowded to excess, and the avenues and approaches thereto were very
+inconveniently crowded. Mr. Rogers, Q.C., and Mr. Poulden appeared for
+the prosecution, and Mr. Slade, Mr. Cockburn, Q.C., and Mr. Stone
+defended.
+
+Evidence was given by clerks in the Lombard Street Post Office,
+messengers and letter-carriers in the G.P.O., "register" clerks, clerk
+at Charing Cross Post Office, the clerk of the Devonport Road, guard of
+the mail from St. Martin's-le-Grand to Paddington, and by letter-sorters
+in the travelling Post Office. Jane Crabbe, barmaid at the "Talbot Inn,"
+Bath Street, Bristol, recollected the two men entering the bar and
+calling for two small glasses of brandy-and-water. They were shown to an
+adjoining room, where they remained until 1 o'clock, and then went to
+the bar to pay. They appeared impatient, and looked at the clock. It was
+suspected that all the property which, had been abstracted from the up
+mail was secreted somewhere in Bristol, and a most rigid search was
+instituted, but without success. Mr. Cockburn's speech to the jury for
+the defence occupied over two hours. Lord Justice Denman, the Judge of
+the Spring Assize, sentenced the culprits to fifteen years'
+transportation.
+
+A Select Committee was appointed in 1854 to inquire into the causes of
+irregularity in the conveyance of mails by railways, and to consider the
+best means of securing speed and punctuality; also to consider the best
+mode of fixing the remuneration of the various Railway Companies for
+their services. The local witnesses, Mr. James Creswell Wall and Mr. J.
+B. Badham, Secretary and Superintendent respectively of the late Bristol
+and Exeter Railway Company, and Bristol residents, gave evidence before
+the Committee, composed of Mr. Wilson Patten (chairman), Mr. James
+MacGregor, Mr. H. G. Liddell, Mr. H. Herbert, Mr. C. Fortescue, Mr.
+Cowan, Mr. Thompson, Mr. Philipps, and Mr. Milner.
+
+Replying to questions, witnesses considered two hours forty minutes, as
+fixed by the Post Office Department, insufficient time for the down
+night mail to travel from Bristol to Exeter, including six stoppages.
+The delivery of mail bags at certain stations by apparatus without
+stopping the train was suggested, but witnesses considered the plan
+dangerous and that it could not with safety be adopted.
+
+The Secretary of the South Wales Railway Company, Mr. F. G. Saunders,
+gave evidence as to the frequent loss of time sustained by the South
+Wales night mail through the late receipt of the Bristol and West of
+England mails at Chepstow. At that time the bags for South Wales were
+still conveyed from Bristol to the Aust Passage, thence by ferry to the
+opposite bank of the Severn and on to Chepstow. The conveyance of mails
+for South Wales _viā_ Gloucester was subsequently adopted.
+
+All the witnesses complained of the reduction of railway parcel traffic
+through the then recent establishment of book postage and consequent
+falling off of receipts, also that the remuneration awarded for the
+carriage of mails was insufficient, although decided by
+mutually-appointed umpires.
+
+[Illustration: THE OLD PASSAGE, AUST.]
+
+For many years the night mails were conveyed between Paddington and
+Bristol by a special train, which did not carry passengers. It was the
+only train of its kind in the kingdom, but so useful was it held to
+be in securing a regular delivery of letters that the Government
+introduced a clause in a Postal Bill in 1857 rendering it compulsory for
+all railways to provide similar trains. On the 1st June, 1869, the Post
+Office special Great Western train commenced to be a mail train limited
+to carry a certain number of passengers, so that opinion had by that
+time become altered as regards the value in relation to cost of a train
+exclusively for Post Office purposes.
+
+The travelling Post Office service assists greatly in the speedy
+distribution of letters, and by its agency remote places are put on an
+equality with the country generally in respect of deliveries and
+despatches. Two of the most important travelling Post Office systems in
+the kingdom are conducted through, or to, Bristol--the gate to the
+Western country--viz.: The Great Western Railway, with a travelling Post
+Office annual mileage of 500,000; and the Midland and North-Eastern
+lines from Newcastle, with a mileage of 220,000. Travelling Post
+Offices, with a combined coach length of from 48 feet on the day mails
+to 158 feet on the night mails, are attached to the Great Western down
+trains which arrive at Bristol at 12.13 a.m. and 8.48 a.m.; to the up
+trains, at 12.45 a.m. and 3.0 p.m.; to the trains leaving Bristol for
+the West at 6.15 a.m. and 12.9 p.m., and for the North at 7.40 p.m. The
+Midland travelling Post Office carriages are attached to the 5.40 a.m.
+inward train and to the 7.0 p.m. outward train.
+
+There is living at Midford, about fifteen miles distant from Bristol, a
+gentleman (Mr. Coulcher) who--now pensioned from the Post Office--was
+the clerk in charge of the Midland Travelling Post Office on its first
+run from Bristol to Derby in 1857. He well recollects the night, and
+what impressed it upon his memory more than anything else was the fact
+that on reaching Bristol, after he and his two subordinate clerks and
+his mail-guard (Samuel Bennett) had made almost superhuman efforts to
+get the work completed, he had to send 13,000 letters unsorted into the
+Bristol Post Office, there to await despatch by day mails to towns in
+the West of England, instead of going at once in direct travelling Post
+Office bags by the connecting early morning train.
+
+Samuel Bennett, the old mail guard mentioned, and contemporary of Moses
+Nobbs, was frequently injured on road and rail. In 1847 he was much
+shaken when a Birmingham-to-Bath train by which he was travelling ran
+off the line. A few years later he nearly came to an untimely end,
+having been regarded as dead after being much knocked about when two
+trains between Bristol and Birmingham collided. On that occasion, after
+he recovered consciousness, he got together some of his mail bags and
+carried them on to Bristol.
+
+The _Gloucester Journal_ said of the occurrence:--"Samuel Bennett, the
+guard of the mail bags, appeared dead when found, and was dreadfully
+cut; but on recovering, he manifested great anxiety for the bags. When
+the special train arrived in which the wounded passengers were conveyed
+onward, Bennett, with great courage, determined to take the bags by this
+train, which was done."
+
+And the _Bristol Mercury_ wrote of him as follows:--"The mail guard,
+Samuel Bennett, was very much cut over the face and head, and bled
+profusely. Happily, he was not rendered long unconscious or disabled,
+and with a conscientious and self-denying attention to duty not often
+met with, he refused any attention to his hurts until he had gathered up
+the mutilated letter bags and their contents, and made provision for
+bringing them on to this city."
+
+In the Bristol district there is a railway Post Office apparatus station
+at Fishponds, on the Midland Railway, bags being deposited thereat by
+the train due at Bristol at 5.40 a.m., and taken up by the train ex
+Bristol at 7.0 p.m. On the Great Western Railway, the apparatus
+arrangement is in operation at Flax Bourton, Nailsea, Yatton, and
+Hewish, chiefly in connection with the 6.15 a.m. train ex Bristol. It
+rarely happens that any failures occur at Fishponds or Hewish, but
+vagaries of the apparatus are more frequent at Yatton. About once a year
+something or other goes wrong, the pouch usually being dropped and
+carried along by the train, with mutilation of the mail bags and a
+general scattering of the letters. On the last occasion, after the line
+had been searched up and down, the embankment closely looked over, and
+the ground on the other side of the hedge on the down side closely
+scrutinized, all unavailingly, some two or three days after the
+accident a bundle of letters was picked up which, such was the force of
+the impact, had been "skied" into a field over two hedges of an
+intervening lane.
+
+On another similar mishap, a Post Office remittance letter containing
+£20 in gold was burst open and the coins scattered over the line. After
+diligent search in every direction, £18 10s. was recovered. One half
+sovereign, bent in an extraordinary manner, was found between the metals
+three-quarters of a mile from the apparatus standard. The apparatus has
+to be adjusted with mathematical nicety, and if not so arranged failures
+are liable to occur. It is well that the public should bear in mind that
+packets sent by mails which are exchanged by apparatus are in more or
+less danger, and any article of a fragile or costly nature should, if
+possible, be forwarded by mails carried by stopping-trains. The places
+so affected in this neighbourhood are:--Alveston, Bitton, Blagdon,
+Burrington, Clevedon, Congresbury, Downend, Fishponds, Flax Bourton,
+Frampton Cotterell, Frenchay, Glastonbury, Hambrook, Hewish, Iron Acton,
+Langford, Mangotsfield, Nailsea, Oldlands Common, Portishead,
+Pucklechurch, Rudgeway, Sandford, Staple Hill, Thornbury, Tockington,
+Warmley, West Town, Willsbridge, Winterbourne, Wrington, and Yatton.
+
+Until lately mails for Bristol were forwarded by the midnight train from
+Euston (L. & N. W. R.) and reached this city by way of Birmingham in
+time for the North mail delivery. It was on that railway that in 1890 a
+sad occurrence happened at Watford, when a young man whilst in the
+discharge of his duties as fireman lost his life. The deceased was
+leaning over the side of his engine, which was stationary, watching for
+the signals to be turned, when the day mail train from London dashed by.
+The travelling Post Office apparatus net which had picked up a pouch at
+a point a few score yards away was still extended and it struck the
+unfortunate young man on the head, completely severing it from the body.
+The poor fellow's cap was torn from his head by the apparatus net and
+fell into the travelling Post Office carriages with the mail pouches
+much to the consternation of the travelling sorters, who found evidence
+of the mutilation on the apparatus framework. The net was only down for
+the short space of ten seconds. The travelling officials first heard
+full details of the accident on their arrival at Tring, where the train
+next stopped.
+
+"Once upon a time," writes Mr. A. W. Blake in the _St. Martin's-le-Grand
+Magazine_, "the London afternoon mail was made up at a provincial office
+down West (Chippenham), and despatched to be taken off by apparatus. All
+proceeded as usual up to the actual point of transfer, when a strange
+thing happened. Instead of falling soberly into the net, the man in
+charge was astonished to see the pouch leap high into the air and
+descend he knew not whither. Search was carefully made along the track
+of the departed train, but not a vestige of the missing pouch could be
+seen, and a local inspector who was travelling up the line promised to
+keep a look-out for it. Just at this time an 'S.G.' was received from
+the officer in charge of the sorting tender notifying the non-receipt of
+the pouch. As the mystery seemed to deepen, word was received that a
+signalman at a level crossing two miles away had noticed the missing
+article on the top of the train. Quoth the worthy apparatus man: 'If
+it'll ride two miles, it'll ride two hundred'; and accordingly a wire
+was sent to the sorting-tender people asking them to search the top of
+the train, and soon came the reply that the pouch had been found on the
+roof of the guard's van at Didcot. The train had stopped the regulation
+time at that hub of the Great Way Round, Swindon, and proceeded on its
+way without the extraordinary position of Her Majesty's mails being
+discovered."
+
+The occurrence was attributed to the swaying of the carriage, and to the
+apparatus-net not working quite steadily in consequence.
+
+At a later period than the mishap narrated by Mr. Blake, the bags for
+Oxford and Abingdon, due to be picked up at Wantage by the up night mail
+travelling Post Office apparatus, and to have been delivered by the same
+process at Steventon, were not found when the net was drawn in, and it
+was thought they had been missed; but at Didcot it was discovered they
+had been thrown over the end of the net and were hanging outside it.
+
+Since the opening of the Severn Tunnel in 1883 it has not often been
+found an absolute necessity to make use of it for the conveyance of
+mails diverted from the route from South Wales through Gloucester to
+London; but such was the case in February of the present year (1899),
+when a tidal wave of forty feet was experienced in the Bristol Channel,
+which caused serious damage by displacing the railway line between
+Lydney and Wollaston. The effects of the high tide were disastrous. A
+wave dashed on to the Great Western Railway with huge force, and so
+disintegrated the ballasting of the permanent way that the lines were
+twisted into all manner of shapes. The mails to and from Paddington to
+South Wales were circulated _viā_ Bristol and the Tunnel for some time.
+
+Bristol is at a disadvantage as compared with London in respect of its
+Continental correspondence, but is far better situated than many other
+provincial towns. The letters from the Continent by night mails reach
+Bristol by the train leaving London at 9.0 a.m. and, arriving at Temple
+Meads at 11.57 a.m., are on delivery in the private box renters' office
+at about 12.30 p.m. The postmen start out with the letters at 1.10 p.m.
+As the hour of posting for the outward Continental night mails is 2.10
+p.m., it is only the private box renters who have time, brief though it
+be, to reply to their correspondence on the day of receiving it.
+
+An appeal to the Hon. Member for Bristol East was made by the writer at
+a Chamber of Commerce dinner to exercise his influence as a director of
+the Great Western Railway in the direction of obtaining the use of a
+goods train for the conveyance to Bristol of a midnight mail from
+London. In the end the Railway Company afforded the Post Office the
+means of bringing down a midnight mail, not by goods train as was
+originally contemplated, but by new and fast passenger train, with the
+result that half a million letters a year now fall into the first
+delivery throughout the town, instead of into the second delivery as
+heretofore. The letters posted in London up to 9.0 p.m. reach the head
+office in Small Street in time to be delivered throughout the city and
+suburbs by the postmen on their first round. Under the old system, when
+"routed" _viā_ Birmingham, the arrival was often so late and irregular
+that the letters missed even the second delivery. The letters for the
+rural districts having no day mail deliveries had to lie at Bristol for
+twenty-four hours, while now they are delivered on the morning of
+receipt from London. The advantages o£ the new system apply to parcels
+as well as letters, and the acceleration in delivery is particularly
+serviceable as regards parcels containing perishable articles.
+
+The Railway Company recently gave the Department another opportunity of
+improving the mail services by establishing a merchandise train from
+Cornwall and the West to London, reaching the Metropolis in time for the
+letters sent by it to be delivered some three or four hours earlier than
+when conveyed by the first passenger train in the morning. Strangely
+enough, the establishment of this new mail service was the means of
+enabling the hon. baronet (Sir W. H. Wills), the Member for Bristol
+East, to take his seat in the House of Commons on the day of his last
+election, for the writ and return were sent by that mail to London in
+time to reach the Crown Office for all formalities to be gone through in
+connection with the seat being taken at once.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+1678-1899.
+
+BRISTOL POSTMASTERS.
+
+
+Official records at St. Martin's-le-Grand show that postmasters of
+Bristol were appointed as follows; viz., Thomas Gale, 1678; Wm.
+Dickinson, 1690; Daniel Parker, 1693; Henry Pine, September, 1694;
+Thomas Pine, senior, 1740; Thomas Pine, junior, 16th January, 1760;
+William Fenn, 1778; Mrs. Fenn, 1788; Mr. Fry managed the office for Mrs.
+Penn from 1797 to December, 1805, when he died, and Mrs. Fenn retired on
+an allowance in 1806; Mr. Cole, March, 1806, died whilst holding office;
+John Gardiner, 9th June, 1825; Thomas Todd Walton, senior, 21st
+February, 1832; Thomas Todd Walton, junior, 23rd May, 1842, succeeded
+his father; Edward Chaddock Sampson, 21st June, 1871; Robert Charles
+Tombs, 19th April, 1892, after having been invalided from Controllership
+of the London postal service.
+
+In his history of the Post Office, Mr. Joyce tells us that in 1686 the
+Postmaster-General himself settled applications for salary. Thus when
+Thomas Gale, postmaster of Bristol, applies for an increase of salary,
+Frowde the governor satisfies the Earl of Rochester, the
+Postmaster-General, that the increase will be proper. Forthwith issues a
+document, of which the operative part is as follows:--
+
+"You are therefore of opinion that the said salary (£50) is very small
+considering the expense the petitioner is att, and his extraordinary
+trouble, Bristoll being a greate Citty, but you say that you doe not
+think all the things he setts downe in the aforesaid accompt ought to be
+allowed him, the example being of very ill consequence, for (as you
+informe me) you doe not allow either candles, pack-thread, wax, ink,
+penns or paper to any of the postmasters, nor office-rent, nor returns
+of mony, you are therefore of opinion that tenn ponnds per annum to his
+former salary of £50 will be a reasonable allowance, and the petitioner
+will be therewith satisfied, these are therefore to pray and require you
+'to raise his salary from £50 to £60 accordingly.'
+
+ "ROCHESTER.
+ Whitehall Treasury Chambers,
+ _December 13th, 1686_."
+
+The office of postmaster was in the hands of the Pine family,
+grandfather, father, and son, from 1694 till 1778. In an old manuscript
+in the public library it is stated that there was a portrait in the
+possession of a descendant of the family, then residing on Kingsdown,
+representing the older Pine in the midst of his official duties, a
+bracket supporting a bust of Mercury, and in his hand a letter thus
+addressed:--"On His Majesty's Service. To Mr. Pine, Postmaster of
+Bristol," and in the corner, "P. Express. T. Strickland." Endeavours to
+trace the descendants and the portrait have proved fruitless.
+
+[Illustration: MR. JOHN GARDINER.
+
+_Postmaster of Bristol, 1827-1832._]
+
+There is little history obtainable of the postmasters until the time of
+Mr. John Gardiner, of whom it is related that, born October 15th, 1777,
+he held the office of postmaster of Bristol from 1825 till his death in
+1832. It is believed that he obtained his appointment in a great measure
+through friendship with Mr. Francis Freeling. Mr. Gardiner had to bear
+the brunt of the Bristol Riots (1831), in so far as they affected the
+Post Office administration of the city. In order to save the mails and
+belongings which were portable, such as the books, post dating stamps,
+etc., he set off with them in a coach and four for Bath Post Office. He
+got safely through the mob and reached Bath, where the Bristol Post
+Office business was carried on until the riots had been quelled. Mr.
+Gardiner, in addition to being postmaster, was also an exporter of
+woollen and Manchester goods, chiefly to the West Indies until the slave
+trade was abolished. He then traded with Newfoundland. He was High
+Sheriff of the city in the year 1820, residing at that time in Berkeley
+Square. Later, however, he was enabled to live quietly at the Old Manor
+House, Easton-in-Gordano. He was buried at St. Peter's Church, Bristol.
+
+[Illustration: MR. THOMAS TODD WALTON.
+
+_Postmaster of Bristol, 1832-1842._]
+
+Mr. Anthony Todd, the Secretary to the Post Office, 1762-65 and 1768-98,
+seems to have been attracted to Todd Walton, of Cheshunt, Herts, either
+by relationship or from his name, and took him in hand. Born in 1772,
+Mr. Todd Walton entered the Post Office in 1786 (fourteen years old). He
+had the long spell of service of forty-six years in the foreign Post
+Office and ten years as postmaster of Bristol. He was five times
+selected for foreign missions, which compelled his residence in Holland,
+Sweden, Spain, and Portugal during the most disturbed state of those
+countries. Mr. Walton is described as having been a fine old English
+gentleman, one of the olden time, who wore hair powder, blue coat with
+gilt buttons, and shoes and gaiters; one who used to express his meaning
+distinctly, and mean what he said too. This description is borne out by
+his appearance in his portrait. He used to visit the Bristol Post Office
+after his retirement, especially to have a morning glass of water from
+the old well on the premises. He died in July, 1857, at his residence,
+King's Parade, Clifton, in his eighty-fifth year, and was buried in the
+adjacent church of St. John's. On his tombstone is this inscription:
+"Here rests the body of Thomas Todd Walton, late of Cheshunt, Herts, and
+of the foreign post, London, Esquire. A quarter of a century an
+inhabitant of this parish, and for some years head postmaster of the
+Bristol district. Deceased 13th July, 1857. Aged 85. Also of Catherine
+Elizabeth, his wife, elder daughter of Thomas Todd, of Durham, Esquire.
+She died April 11th, 1860, aged 77 years."
+
+On Mr. Walton's retirement, in 1842, in view of his services, Lord
+Viscount Lowther, the Postmaster-General of the day, conferred the
+appointment of postmaster of Bristol on his son, Thomas Todd Walton, who
+had been employed as chief clerk in the Bristol Post Office for ten
+years. Mr. Todd Walton, it seems, was properly initiated into the
+mysteries of the Post Office art by his father, who decreed that he
+should commence at the bottom of the ladder and work his way up thence,
+so that young Todd Walton was in his day to be found at mail-bag
+opening, letter sorting and other routine work of the kind, which will
+account for the thorough knowledge of his business which he is said to
+have possessed when called upon to take the reins of office handed over
+to him by his popular parent.
+
+[Illustration: MR. THOMAS TODD WALTON (JUNIOR).
+
+_Postmaster of Bristol, 1842-1871._]
+
+In connection with the recent selection of the port of Bristol as a mail
+station, alluded to in later pages, it may be mentioned that Mrs. Todd
+Walton well remembers how, when the _Great Western_ steamship, which
+carried the American mails between Bristol and New York for several
+years, was first due (1838) to reach this port, her husband organised
+his small staff for a night encounter with the pressure of work which
+the heavy mail would inevitably occasion, and obtained auxiliary aid.
+The little staff was at "attention" for two or three days, and when the
+news came by means of the runner from Pill that the ship was coming up
+the Avon, Mr. Walton turned out at 2 a.m., rallied his little band, and
+went manfully to the work, which lasted for many hours before the
+letters were fully sorted and sent off to their respective destinations
+or delivered through the streets and lanes of the old city. In the
+autumn of 1841 the _Great Western_ happened to arrive on the same day
+that a large ship mail from Australia by the _Ruby_ was received, and
+the whole staff available--then only ten men for all duties--had to work
+night and day continuously to get off the letters by the mails to other
+towns. As many as 20,000 letters and newspapers were brought by these
+two vessels on that occasion. It is recorded that every available space
+in the premises was filled with letters piled as high as they could be
+got to stand, and great was the joy of the sorters when the flood of
+letters subsided.
+
+Mr. Todd Walton had many other night reminders of the mail services
+besides those respecting the arrival of direct mails from America, as
+the rattling of the horses' hoofs, the clang of the pole-chains and the
+twang of the mail guard's horn as the coaches dashed past his house on
+their way to the passages must have frequently reminded him of his
+responsibilities as "mail master" of Bristol. He would have blessed
+Bristol's very able General Manager of the Tramways Company had he been
+to the fore in those days to procure the benefit of freedom from the
+noise of traffic by the use of wood paving in our principal
+thoroughfares.
+
+Mr. Todd Walton had the interests of the staff of the Post Office at
+heart, and, as an exemplification of his sympathy with them, it may be
+mentioned that when a promising officer in the heyday of youth met with
+an accident which eventually necessitated the amputation of his right
+leg, Mr. Walton did not allow the misfortune to stand in the way of the
+young man's continuing in remunerative employment in the Post Office,
+but found for him a suitable sedentary duty which he performed for
+fourteen years.
+
+Mr. Todd Walton the second counted amongst his contemporaries and
+personal friends those Post Office literary stars, Anthony Trollope and
+Edmund Yates.
+
+Mr. Walton retired from the Post Office in 1871. His death occurred at
+the Clifton Down Hotel on the morning of Christmas day, 1885. He was in
+the act of dressing to attend the early morning service at All Saints'
+Church, when he fell into a fit of apoplexy, from which he did not
+rally. The _Times and Mirror_ of January 2nd, 1886, gives the following
+memoir of him:--"The death of this estimable gentleman calls for more
+particular notice than the necessarily brief one given in last
+Saturday's impression; for although Mr. Walton had for some time past
+ceased to be a citizen of Bristol, he continued to feel an interest in
+the old city and its surroundings, and was remembered by many
+Bristolians as one who had obtained, as he deserved, their affectionate
+esteem. Succeeding his father--a gentleman of the 'old school'--as
+postmaster of Bristol, Mr. Todd Walton, through the long series of years
+in which he occupied that public position, evinced unwearied industry,
+keen intelligence, and singular courtesy in discharging the
+multifarious duties connected with it, and when on his retirement
+(carrying with him into private life the respect of his fellow-citizens)
+he was called upon to fulfil the duties of High Sheriff of Bristol,
+those duties were discharged by him for two years successively in a
+manner distinguished by great public spirit and generous hospitality. He
+was a man of considerable culture and taste, an extensive reader, and a
+reader who, happily, remembered what he had read. He possessed also a
+sense of humour and a ready wit which made him an agreeable and
+intelligent companion; whilst to those who enjoyed his friendship he was
+ever a friend, courteous and kind. Blessed with abundant means, he
+helped without ostentation the poor and needy, many of whom in our own
+city will share in the general regret his loss has occasioned."
+
+In the centre of the church garden at All Saints', Clifton, stands a
+cross, which Mrs. Walton erected in 1888 to the memory of her husband.
+It was designed by Mr. J. L. Pearson, R.A. It is of granite, and stands
+on three steps. In the centre of the shaft is a figure of the Good
+Shepherd, and at the top are four sculptures, beautifully executed, of
+the Annunciation, the Crucifixion, the Resurrection, and the Ascension.
+Over these rises a crocketed finial, and the whole is surmounted by a
+cross. At the base are inscribed the words: "In loving memory of Thomas
+Todd Walton, sometime churchwarden of the Church of All Saints, and a
+most generous benefactor to that church."
+
+By the death of Edward Chadwick Sampson, the next postmaster, which
+occurred at Clevedon, December 7th, 1895, the Post Office lost one of
+its most gentlemanly and genial pensioners.
+
+For many years postmaster of Bristol, Mr. Sampson was well known
+throughout the city, and held in high esteem by all with whom he was
+brought into contact. He had a long service in the postal department,
+dating, as it did, from 1837 to the last day of 1891. In 1837 he began
+his connection with the Bristol Post Office. He went to Manchester as
+chief clerk in 1865, but was away only six years, and returned in 1871
+to assume the postmastership of his native city. It is interesting, as
+showing the enormous increase in the postal traffic, to recall the fact
+that when Mr. Sampson joined the Corn Street office in 1837 the
+premises were only twenty feet square, there were only fifteen clerks
+and postmen all told, and no one was allowed to have his letters from
+the boxes whilst a mail was being sorted.
+
+For his wide experience, his ability, and high integrity his work was
+greatly valued by leading officials in the postal service; whilst his
+sincerity and kindliness of disposition endeared him to employés of
+every grade over whom he had control.
+
+As the postman came to Mr. Sampson's door one morning, it was seen that
+the man was too ill to discharge his duties. Mr. Sampson thereupon
+begged the man to come into his house and rest, and he himself, with the
+aid of his son, delivered every one of the letters at its destination,
+afterwards seeing the poor man safely home. That kind act was indicative
+of Mr. Sampson's general consideration for those over whom he ruled.
+
+[Illustration: EDWARD CHADDOCK SAMPSON.
+
+_Postmaster of Bristol, 1871-1891._
+
+_From a photograph by Mr. Abel Lewis, Bristol._]
+
+On the resignation of Mr. Sampson, it was generally felt that he should
+not be allowed to retire into private life without taking with him
+tangible evidence of the goodwill and respect of those with whom he
+had been associated. This feeling found expression in a gratifying
+manner, and the services he had rendered the commercial community during
+his postmastership were gracefully recognised by the Chamber of Commerce
+presenting him with an address illuminated and engrossed on vellum.
+
+Exactly at midnight on the last night of 1891 he was invited, as his
+last official act, to seal what is known to Post Office employés as the
+"London and Exeter T.P.O., going west"--that is, the mail bag of the
+travelling Post Office bound for Exeter. Mr. Sampson discharged the
+slight duty devolving upon him, and received the new year greetings of
+his former colleagues, "Auld Lang Syne" being afterwards sung.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+NOTABLE POST OFFICE SERVANTS OF BRISTOL ORIGIN.
+
+
+Probably the most illustrious man of the Post Office service who had
+Bristol for a birthplace was Sir Francis Freeling. Sir Francis was born
+in Redcliffe parish, Bristol, in 1764, and was educated partly at
+Colston School and in part by the Master of Queen Elizabeth's Grammar
+School. In an ancient city record it is stated that he commenced his
+official career as "an apprentice" at the Bristol Post Office, where the
+combined results of his education, probity, and talents were soon
+discovered. On the establishment of the new system of mail coaches in
+1784, he was appointed to aid the inventor, Palmer, in carrying his
+improvements into effect. Two years later he was transferred to the
+General Post Office, London, where, in course of time, he successively
+filled the offices of Surveyor, Principal and Resident Surveyor,
+Joint-Secretary, and Secretary from 1798-1836. In a debate in the
+House of Lords, in 1836, the Duke of Wellington stated that the English
+Post Office under Freeling's management had been better administered
+than any Post Office in Europe, or in any other part of the world. He
+possessed "a clear and vigorous understanding ... and the power of
+expressing his thoughts and opinions, both verbally and in writing, with
+force and precision." For his public services a baronetcy was conferred
+upon him on March 11th, 1828, a meet reward for his long, arduous, and
+valuable services. He was a warm supporter of Pitt, but he suffered no
+political partisanship to affect his administration of the Post Office.
+Freeling's leisure was devoted to the formation of a curious and
+valuable library. He was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries
+in 1801, and was one of the original members of the Roxburgh Club,
+founded in 1812. He died while still at his post on the business of the
+country which he had so faithfully served, and was buried in the church
+of St. Mary Redcliffe, Bristol.
+
+[Illustration: SIR FRANCIS FREELING, BART.
+
+_Secretary to the G.P.O., 1798-1836._]
+
+The inscription on the memorial tablet runs thus: "To the memory of Sir
+Francis Freeling, Baronet, who was born in this parish the 25th August,
+1764, and who died in Bryanston Square, in the county of Middlesex, the
+10th July, 1836. For more than half a century his life was devoted to
+the public service in the General Post Office, in which for thirty-eight
+years he discharged the arduous duties of Secretary. By unwearied
+industry in the employment of great talents, and by unblemished
+integrity, grounded upon Christian principles, he acquired and retained
+the favour of three successive Sovereigns, and the approbation of the
+public. He has left a name which will be remembered with honour in his
+birthplace, and which is cherished with affection and veneration by his
+children, who have raised this monument."
+
+Sir Francis Freeling was thrice married. By his first wife, Jane,
+daughter of John Christian Kurstadt, he had two sons. He was succeeded
+in the baronetcy by the elder, Sir George Henry Freeling, born in 1789,
+who matriculated at New College, Oxford, 17th March, 1807, and was for
+some time Assistant-Secretary at the Post Office, and subsequently
+Commissioner of Customs (1836-1841). There is a descendant of Sir
+Francis in the service, and the name may again be read of in Post
+Office history.
+
+The editor of _Felix Farley's Journal_ (Mr. J. M. Gutch), of 15 Small
+Street, Bristol, wrote many letters on "the impediments which obstruct
+the trade and commerce of the city and port of Bristol," under the
+signature of "Cosmo," in the years 1822-3. The letters were afterwards
+published in book form, and the dedication was--"To Francis Freeling,
+Esq., Secretary to the General Post Office, F.A.S., etc., a native of
+Bristol, than whom, whenever opportunity has occurred, no citizen has
+exerted himself more in the promotion of the public and private welfare
+of this city, the following letters are dedicated, and this humble
+opportunity gladly embraced of testifying the obligations and sincere
+respect of his obedient servant, THE AUTHOR."
+
+A Postmaster-General has not emanated from our western city, but Mr.
+Arnold Morley, late General-in-Chief, is the son of one who worthily
+represented Bristol in Parliament for many years, the late
+highly-respected Mr. Samuel Morley, the legend on whose statue near
+Bristol Bridge tells us--"Samuel Morley, Member of Parliament for this
+city from 1868 to 1885. To preserve for their children the memory of the
+face and form of one who was an example of justice, generosity, and
+public spirit, this statue was given by more than 5,000 citizens of
+Bristol."--"I believe that the power of England is to be reckoned not by
+her wealth or armies, but by the purity and virtue of the great men of
+her population."--S. MORLEY.
+
+Although Sir Francis stands out pre-eminently, there is a long list of
+Bristol officers who have gone forth and gained Post Office laurels.
+First on that honourable roll may be mentioned J. D. Rich, who, over
+half a century ago, first hung up his hat in the Bristol Post Office, a
+"furry" hat of the old stovepipe kind, as he tells the story. Mr. Rich
+showed so much ability in meeting the requirements of the times at
+Bristol that he rose to the position of president clerk. In 1848, on the
+recommendation of the Surveyor General, he was removed to Bath, as
+peculiarly fitted to assist Mr. Musgrave, who from his advanced age was
+unequal to the duties, and the result was apparent in a great
+improvement of the local service. That Mr. Rich won golden opinions was
+proved by a memorial for his appointment to succeed Mr. Musgrave,
+addressed to the Postmaster-General, and signed in a short time by more
+than a thousand citizens. The memorial was, however, unavailing. Mr.
+Rich, after performing various services under five other provincial
+postmasters, found himself at last in the enviable position of lord of
+postal matters in Liverpool, and Surveyor of the Isle of Man. On
+retiring from the Service recently, he was made a Justice of the Peace
+in recognition of his distinguished services to the city. Mr. Kerry,
+telegraph superintendent, became postmaster of Warrington, Mr. Harwood
+of Southport, Mr. Carter (chief clerk) of Southampton, Mr. Brown
+(telegraph assistant-superintendent) of King's Lynn, Mr. Rogers (postal
+assistant-superintendent) of Newton Abbot, Mr. Walton of Teignmouth, Mr.
+Righton of Penzance, and Mr. Barnett (chief clerk for twenty years) of
+Swansea.
+
+Several officers of the Bristol Post Office have entered telegraph
+services abroad. Mr. J. Wilcox is in the service of the Western
+Australian Government at Perth, and Mr. W. A. Devine in that of the
+British South Africa Chartered Company at Fort Salisbury. Mr. C.
+Harrison is employed at Pretoria, and was carrying on his vocation of
+telegraph operator at that town at the time of the Jameson raid. Mr.
+Keyte has become assistant storekeeper under the British Government in
+Chinde, on the East Coast of Africa.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+POST OFFICE BUILDINGS.
+
+
+There is record of a Post Office having been established in Bristol by
+the Convention Parliament in 1670, but the site is unknown, and probably
+the postmaster had post horses--not letters--to attend to. In the year
+1700 Mr. Henry Pine, the postmaster of the day, was one of the parties
+to an agreement for leasing a piece of land "with liberty to build upon
+the same for the conveniency of a Post Office." The wording of the said
+agreement shows that the old-fashioned form of building was not in every
+instance (as it now seems to us to have been) so grotesquely shaped from
+fancy, or, perhaps, from a desire to economise ground space, for it is
+therein expressly stated that the building to be used for a Post Office
+was to have the second storey extended to a truss of eighteen inches
+over the lane, for the purpose of enabling people to stand in the dry;
+for there was no indoor accommodation for the public provided in those
+days. "Let the imaginative reader," wrote an imaginative writer years
+ago, "picture to himself our great-great-grandfathers in doublet and
+ruff, standing in a row under the eighteen-inch truss, while the worthy
+postmaster, Pine himself, with perhaps one assistant, was sorting the
+contents of the mail bag. Doubtless," wrote he, "they grumbled when it
+rained that the said truss was not half a dozen inches wider, and many a
+person as he became saturated in his time of waiting for his letters
+growled out his intention of doing something very desperate to the
+powers that were."
+
+In the "Bargain" books of the Corporation is the following memorandum
+relating to the foregoing:--
+
+"_22nd June, 1700._ Then agreed by the Surveyors of the city lands with
+Henry Pine, deputy postmaster, that he, the said Henry Pine, shall have,
+hold, and enjoy the ground whereon now stands a shedd having therein
+four severall shopp seituate in All Saints' Lane, and as much more
+ground at the lower end of the same shedd as that the whole ground shall
+contain in length twenty-seven foot, and to contain in breadth from the
+outside to the churchyard wall five foot and a half outward into the
+lane, with liberty to build upon the same for conveniency of a Post
+Office (namely) The first storey to go forth into the said lane to the
+extent of that ground and no farther, and the second storey to have a
+truss of eighteen inches over the lane or more as the said Surveyors
+shall think fitt that persons coming to the Post Office may have shelter
+from the rain and stand in the dry. To hold the same from Michaelmas
+next for fifty years absolute in the yearly rent of 30s. clear of
+taxes...."
+
+This agreement must have been afterwards modified. For some reason or
+other, Pine paid no rent until Michaelmas, 1705, when a sum of 25s. was
+received by the Chamberlain, and "The post house produced the same
+yearly sum until 1742 when the rent was raised to £3."
+
+The site of the little Post Office alluded to was required in 1742 in
+connection with the building of the Exchange, and the Post Office was
+transferred to a house in Small Street, in later days occupied as the
+printing office of the _Times and Mirror_ newspaper.
+
+There seems to have been some informal understanding that when the
+Exchange was finished a suitable site would be provided by the
+Corporation for postal business, and in August, 1746, a Committee
+reported to the Council that they had contracted for the erection of "a
+house intended to be made use of as a Post Office, certain workmen
+having agreed to build and find all the materials at the rate of £60 per
+square (_sic_); while Mr. Thomas Pine (nephew to Henry, the former
+postmaster) had offered to become the tenant at £40 a year, which he
+alleged is the highest rent he is able at present to pay." The Council
+approved of the proposal, recommending the Committee to get as much rent
+as was practicable. The house, which was of scanty dimensions, cost £700
+exclusive of a ground rent of £15 a year given for the site. Only the
+ground floor was set apart for postal business, Mr. Pine residing on the
+premises. The first year's rent (£43) was paid in 1750. Between 1750 and
+1815 the building must have been considerably enlarged, for in the
+latter year the Post Office is spoken of as a handsome and convenient
+building of freestone, near to the western end of the Exchange, to which
+it has a wing projecting forward into the street; and there is another
+building, exactly similar to it, at the eastern end, which is occupied
+for a stamp office. In 1827 there was a contemplated removal of the Post
+Office, and it was deemed proper by the Chamber of Commerce to come on
+the scene by presenting a memorial to the Postmaster-General; it is
+stated that the timely remonstrance no doubt contributed to relieve the
+public of the inconvenience of such removal. Colonel Maberly, the
+Secretary to the Post Office, advised Lord Lichfield in 1838 that as the
+ground-floor portion of the Post Office premises occupied by the
+solicitors was necessary for the extension and improved accommodation of
+the office, no time should be lost in giving the several sub-tenants
+notice to quit, and Mr. Hall or the postmaster should be instructed to
+communicate with the Corporation as to the means of effecting such
+alterations as might be requisite. His lordship gave authority to that
+effect. In 1839 the Corporation granted the Government a new lease of
+the premises and of additional ground behind for the purpose of having
+the Post Office enlarged. The annual rent previous to this new
+arrangement had risen to £100.
+
+The building alluded to is that now rented by Messrs. Corner and Co. as
+a tea warehouse. Few indeed, even of the oldest citizens will remember
+the Bristol Post Office as located there, and the old square open public
+lobby where the letters were given out through barred windows. Only the
+ground floor was utilised, and the area, of the site was but 21 ft. by
+20 ft. A door opened from the passage by the Exchange into a very small
+public lobby. In this lobby was the letter-box, and here all business
+with the public--viz., giving out private letters, taking in letters
+prepaid in money, and the issuing and paying of money orders--was
+transacted by clerks standing in the office behind a glass partition.
+The prepayment of letters by means of postage stamps was not introduced
+till some months after penny postage was established. There was not at
+the time a continuous attendance of clerks at the glass partition. At
+two of the slides in the partition there were small brass door-knockers,
+and on the public knocking a clerk appeared; from the inside office and
+attended to the wants of the applicants. When letters for the private
+box renters were being sorted a blind was drawn down. When the mail was
+ready the blind was drawn up, and three clerks attended to disperse the
+crowd which had gathered during the half-hour or so while the office was
+closed. The small space behind the public lobby sufficed for the
+stamping, sorting, and other necessary duties. One man, history saith,
+amongst the crowd generally got to the front without difficulty; he was
+a flour-dusted messenger from the Welsh Back!
+
+In 1847 the Money Order Department had grown amazingly, and a separate
+room had to be provided for its accommodation. This caused the removal
+of certain solicitors from the first floor to make room for the
+postmaster's office, the one formerly held by him on the ground floor
+being converted into a money order office. In 1855 the shop on the north
+side of the entrance to Albion Chambers from Small Street was taken by
+the Post Office and converted into a money order office, it being found
+that the department devoted to this purpose at the general office in
+Exchange Buildings was not sufficiently commodious or convenient.
+
+It is on record that in 1863 the Post Office authorities offered £10,000
+towards erecting a new Post Office if the citizens would consent to
+contribute £2,000 more. A meeting of some gentlemen took place in the
+committee-room of the Council House to take the proposition into
+consideration, but owing to the small number of persons that attended
+further deliberation was postponed to a day not named. Some of the
+leading citizens were of opinion that it would be wise to defer any
+decision on the subject until the intention of the Government as to
+granting a criminal assize for Bristol was known; for should the answer
+from head-quarters be in the affirmative, it would be necessary to build
+a new court somewhere, in which case the Guildhall would perhaps suit as
+a Post Office. Nothing appears to have come of the negotiations, and the
+business of the Post Office was removed on the 25th of March, 1868, to
+the new office erected in Small Street on the site where it is now
+carried on. This original portion of the structure covers 11,000 square
+feet. The purchase of the site was completed on the 21st December, 1865.
+It is stated in a legal document that the bricks, stones, and material
+on part of the site belonged to the Bristol Chambers Co. Limited. Where
+the sorting office stands there formerly flourished a fine mulberry
+tree. There appears to have been no ceremonial in the way of laying a
+foundation stone, and the antiquarian of the distant future may be
+disappointed in not discovering the usual coins deposited on such
+occasions.
+
+In fifteen years the need arose for more space, and that then the
+Bristol public manifested a keen interest in the position of the Bristol
+Post Office was indicated by an animated debate which took place in our
+Council Chamber; and as this book affects to be in part a history as
+well as a narrative, it is thought well to give the report of the
+proceedings a full record herein, under permission from the proprietors
+of the _Bristol Times and Mirror_:--
+
+ _Friday, January 2nd, 1885._
+ "THE SITE FOR THE POST OFFICE.
+
+"The TOWN CLERK said that as the next part of the report referred to the
+site for the Post Office, he would read a letter he had received from
+Mr. Lewis Fry, M. P., which was as under:--
+
+ "'Goldney House, Clifton Hill,
+ _30th December, 1884_.
+
+"'My dear Sir,--As I observe that the question of the site of the new
+Post Office will come before the Council on Thursday, I think it best,
+in order to avoid any misunderstanding, to ask you to state to the
+Council that the matter is not to be considered as a proposal made by
+the Postmaster-General or the first Commissioner of Works. The exact
+position of the matter is this, that Mr. Shaw-Lefevre, soon after his
+visit to Bristol, requested me to intimate to the Corporation that in
+case they desire the change of situation to Baldwin Street, he is ready
+to entertain any proposal which they may make to him with that object,
+provided it be upon the basis of an exchange of properties as mentioned
+in the report of the Finance Committee.
+
+ "'I am, yours truly,
+ LEWIS FRY.
+ The Town Clerk of Bristol.'
+
+"Mr. ROBINSON said he would like to say a word or two on the subject of
+a new Post Office, as the wording in Mr. Fry's letter referred to the
+subject of the proposed change in the position of the Post Office. They
+did not want change for change's sake (applause), and if they could do
+without it they would be glad to do so, but sometimes change became a
+necessity (applause). He would wish to say a word or two with reference
+to the provisions for the postal arrangements in Bristol, as to the
+inconvenience that the officials and the public were subject to, and a
+word as to the great increase in postal matters in the city and in the
+country generally. He wished to convey to them the magnitude of the
+question and the very growing character of the communications by
+letters, parcels, and newspapers, which were being circulated through
+the medium of the Government and through the Post Office. He the
+previous day called upon Mr. Sampson, the head official of the Bristol
+Post Office, and he might say that his ability was only exceeded by his
+courtesy (applause). He gave him all the information he had asked for,
+and he showed him over a considerable part of the building. In the
+course of the interview he gave him no opinion as to the site, and he
+did not think it wise to ask him. All he asked him, was as to facts--as
+to the present accommodation. He described the condition of the office
+as being one of congestion, and that they were put to all kinds of
+shifts, and that the sorting and minor offices were inadequate for their
+respective purposes (hear, hear). He saw a room where eighty postmen
+were engaged in partial sorting. It was upstairs and was approached by
+winding stairs with only a 21-inch tread, and the room was utterly
+inadequate for the purpose. Letters had to be sent to Clifton to be
+sorted because of the want of space in the Post Office. Mr. Sampson said
+more particularly that a large hall was necessary on the ground floor
+for an entrance, from which the various subsidiary offices should be
+entered. Then he said that a good frontage was desirable. Some people
+had suggested tunnelling and going to the other side of the street, and
+others had suggested a viaduct. Offers of property had come from
+different people, so that the want of further accommodation seemed to be
+recognised not only by the Post Office itself, but outside. The present
+office was erected in 1868, and had the officials been sanguine, or
+known that the business would have increased as it had, they probably
+would not have selected the present site. The work of the office had
+perfectly outgrown the capacity of the place. Since 1868 new departments
+had been opened, and new duties had been created, and they wanted more
+room. The telegraph work was added in February, 1870, and the sale of
+revenue stamps and payment of stamps as money had also been added. The
+parcel post came into operation in 1883. They did not desire an
+extravagant outlay. The increase of the population was 1 per cent., and
+the letters increased 3 per cent. They were not asked to buy a whole
+street. He felt it would be admitted that the telegraphic despatches
+formed the essential, if not the primary, part of the arrangements of
+the Post Office. He was informed that the site in Baldwin Street was
+more convenient and closer to the warehouses and offices which greatly
+used the present telegraphic advantages than the present site in Small
+Street (a voice: 'No'). Well, he gave his word for what he had heard. He
+maintained that the Council had a supreme moment at the present time.
+They had a gentleman at the head of the Post Office who had viewed the
+new site, and now they found that the Post Office authorities were in
+the humour to make the outlay they had better embrace the opportunity.
+His resolution was: 'That, considering the want of adequate space in
+Small Street for postal and telegraphic arrangements, it is desirable
+that a new Post Office be erected in Baldwin Street, on the site
+recently viewed by the Postmaster-General, if equitable arrangements
+can be made with the Government for the transfer of the property.' If
+the Government were not prepared to lay out money for the site, they
+could let them have the property on a ground-rent, without an outlay
+being made. It would not cost less than £20,000 to £25,000 to enlarge
+and improve the present Post Office, and he maintained that that sum
+would go a great way towards erecting a new Post Office in Baldwin
+Street. They would not always be able to get sites; and they could not
+always buy sites as they could oranges and nuts (laughter). In America
+people ran after him and asked him to buy land. Not so here. He repeated
+that they had Mr. Shaw-Lefevre looking favourably upon the new site, and
+he thought it desirable that they should take a bold step--such a step
+as indicated in the resolution--and put up a building which not alone
+should be noble, but commodious (applause).
+
+"Mr. Alderman EDWARDS seconded the resolution. He was glad that the
+matter had been laid before the Postmaster-General. A great deal had
+been said about the present site being more useful and convenient than
+the proposed, but he felt that the difference was very small indeed. The
+sites were within a minute or two of each other. In Baldwin Street they
+had a road 60 ft. wide, and if Small Street were altered, however much,
+they would not widen it half as much as that. As to the positions of the
+banks, some of the important ones were nearer Baldwin Street than the
+other street. At any rate, the Old Bank, Stuckey's, and the National
+Provincial Banks were nearer Baldwin Street than Small Street. The
+speaker then named several large warehouses which were, he urged, closer
+to the proposed site than Small Street. At Baldwin Street they had an
+acre of ground for the present or future. He would not give the land to
+the Post Office authorities, but he suggested that they should be
+liberal towards them in their offer. If the Post Office authorities
+wished to give them the old office in exchange for the site, it might be
+utilised by the Corporation.
+
+"Mr. C. WILLS supported the resolution. He would advance one or two
+reasons why they should make the best terms they could with the
+Postmaster-General. That the present Post Office was inconveniently
+small was generally admitted, and he maintained that if the proposed
+additions were made to the existing building, the extra facilities would
+not meet the ever-increasing demands on the Post Office for more than
+six or eight years. The various departments of the present building were
+too small for development and carrying on the important work of a Post
+Office. Personally, he would as soon for the Post Office to be in one
+street as the other, but he felt it would redound to the credit of the
+city to see a fine building erected in Baldwin Street. If they had the
+Post Office there it would enhance the value of the other sites in the
+thoroughfare. Very shortly they would have the sixpenny telegrams, and
+then the increase in telegraphic communication would be very great
+indeed, and the present building would soon become inadequate to the
+demand. Then, again, they saw that the present Postmaster-General did
+not intend to give up the parcels post, and the development of this
+branch of the Post Office work would be very great indeed. Then, again,
+there would be increased vehicular traffic to the Post Office; and could
+this, he asked, be carried out to the comfort of the citizens in Small
+Street? The turning point arose from Mr. Shaw-Lefevre visiting the
+Chamber of Commerce recently. That gentleman visited the site in Baldwin
+Street, and he, no doubt, saw that the site would be better and superior
+to the one in Small Street.
+
+"Mr. PETHICK said that they had come to a turning point in the history
+of the city of Bristol. The question was whether they should continue
+the system of compression that they had suffered from for so many years.
+Small Street was a narrow thoroughfare; it was only a back lane to Broad
+Street. ('Oh! oh!') It was called Small Street and had a carriage way of
+only 9 ft. ('No, no.') He must repeat that at one point in Small Street
+the carriage way was only 9 ft. wide.
+
+"Mr. DANIEL protested against Mr. Pethick saying that Small Street was
+the back lane to Broad Street, and that the carriage road was only 9 ft.
+(hear, hear). The narrow part of Small Street would come down when the
+improvements to the Post Office took place.
+
+"Mr. PETHICK: I state facts--what the street is to-day.
+
+"Mr. DANIEL: But is the narrow part you speak of the entrance to Small
+Street?
+
+"Mr. PETHICK: It is the approach from Bristol Bridge, _viā_ the
+Exchange, for mail carriages and other traffic, and all must pass
+through the narrow part, which is only 9 ft. wide. Even if this were
+taken away, Mr. Pethick continued, they would still have a narrow space
+to pass through. The whole would not be 14,000 superficial feet; and
+above all, with so bad an access, they proposed to enlarge the present
+building.
+
+"Mr. Alderman PROCTOR BAKER: It is not proposed.
+
+"Mr. PETHICK observed that in Baldwin Street they had a good carriage
+way, and they would have a front and back entrance to a new building. He
+hoped no little or narrow parochial spirit would be put forward in this
+matter. The difference of the distance of the two sites was so small as
+to be insignificant, and he trusted they would endeavour to get a
+handsome and commodious building erected on the Baldwin Street side of
+the city.
+
+"Mr. Alderman PROCTOR BAKER said they were indebted to Mr. Robinson for
+his interesting details, but he did not think they were details for the
+Council to study, but for the study of the Government. The Post Office
+was a Government undertaking, and carried on for profit by the
+Government, and it was on their shoulders, and theirs alone, to provide
+proper premises. There were two questions involved in the resolution
+before them, and if it could be so arranged he should like a separate
+opinion being taken. One question was the actual position of the future
+Post Office--whether it was to be in Small Street or Baldwin Street. The
+other question was whether the Council was prepared to sell to the Post
+Office the land in Baldwin Street and receive in exchange the building
+in Small Street. As regarded the question of convenience there was very
+little to be said on either side; but with regard to the other matter he
+thought they should not agree to exchange the land for the present Post
+Office building. If they took over the existing building, it could only
+he pulled or used for public offices. Already they had a population of
+200,000 persons, and the area of the city was to be extended; and if
+they believed in the progress of the city they must expect it by-and-by
+to be the centre of a quarter of a million of people. It would be
+impossible, as it would be discreditable, for them to attempt to carry
+on that great municipality in such buildings as they now had. The
+chamber in which they were assembled was in a bad condition; the air at
+that moment was as foul as it could be; and if they took over the
+present Post Office and applied it for the purposes of the municipality,
+they would perpetuate the present discomfort, inconvenience, etc., of
+having divided offices, and postpone for half a century the erection of
+a large municipal building, in which all their offices would be. As to
+Baldwin Street and Small Street sites, there was much to be said on both
+sides; but if it was proposed to take in exchange the Post Office
+building for their land the Council should vote against it (hear, hear).
+He sincerely trusted they would not take over a building which would
+keep up the inconvenience they now suffered from (hear, hear).
+
+"Mr. LANE said it seemed to him that they were simply asked the question
+whether the Council were desirous that there should be such a change in
+the position of the Post Office. Every argument for the change was a
+thoroughly good one which should weigh with them. Selfish considerations
+and every consideration should be banished (applause), and they should
+consider it in the interest of the city and in the interest of the
+development of the trade of the future. The opinion of the postmaster
+was a great argument in favour of larger premises.
+
+"Mr. INSKIP argued that the representatives of the ratepayers were not
+there to carry out the bidding of the postmaster. It might be wise and
+proper for him to communicate his views to the department with which he
+was connected, but it seemed unreasonable to ask members of the Council
+to vote for what he was in favour of. He ventured to suggest that the
+arrangement proposed by the report would be unlawful, and to enter into
+the exchange would be an unlawful proceeding. They acquired land in
+Baldwin Street under the Public Health Act for carrying out
+improvements, and he could not see how it could be said that the
+buildings in Small Street would be required for the purpose of
+improvements. Before they entered into the exchange they ought to obtain
+power by Act of Parliament. If they entered into a speculation of that
+sort they would be transgressing the law of the land. With regard to the
+matter of convenience, if they took the outlying districts of the city
+they would see that the people who lived there went to the Post Office
+after the branch offices were closed, and they would see that Small
+Street was appreciably more convenient for the outlying population than
+the Baldwin Street site could possibly be (applause). Then as to the
+piece of land which would be obtained, the argument of Mr. Pethick was a
+strong one to retain it. The Guildhall was there, and it had been
+promised for years that Small Street should be improved, and that
+improvement would be accomplished if the Government had No. 3, Small
+Street, which would be set back, and they would have done a great deal
+to redeem the promise made some years ago (applause).
+
+"Mr. DIX said he was very much obliged to Mr. Robinson for his figures.
+They all felt that there had been a great growth in the postal
+arrangements of the country, and that there would be a great growth in
+the future; and if it had been shown to him that they could not have a
+good building in Small Street by having the one there altered by the
+authorities, and that they could have a proper one in Baldwin Street, he
+would say let them go to Baldwin Street; but it did not come before them
+in that light. They were anticipating that the postal authorities could
+not make a proper building in Small Street; but he could not see how Mr.
+Robinson and those who advocated the Baldwin Street site came to such a
+conclusion. If they had the buildings in Small Street, that street would
+be improved, which had been anticipated for years, and they would have
+the Post Office close to the Guildhall and that great place of
+commerce--the Commercial Rooms (applause). He argued that the city did
+not want the property in Small Street--it would be useless to them; and
+he hoped they would pronounce against it going forth to the
+Postmaster-General that it was the wish of the Council to alter the site
+(applause).
+
+"Mr. S. G. JAMES said he did not think that they should be saddled with
+a building that would not be any good to them. He suggested that it
+should be represented to the Government that the building would be a
+good one for a Stamp and Excise Office, and that it would be convenient
+to have those offices moved from Queen Square to the building in Small
+Street. He thought that would be a very wise suggestion to make to the
+Government.
+
+"Mr. DANIEL said he viewed the proposition to shift the Post Office as
+one of the most solemn and weighty that had been considered by the Town
+Council for years (hear, hear). By common consent, and by the
+development of the city trade, where the Post Office now was the centre
+of commerce, and they should hesitate very much before they changed it
+(hear, hear); and the Council, being trustees of the property owned by
+the city, and looking at the extent of that property in the
+neighbourhood of the Post Office, and the outlay made on it by the city,
+he could not understand why they made the suggestion to run away from
+Small Street (applause). They had under arbitration paid to the bank
+£9,600 for a piece of land, and that was surely not to keep the street
+as a narrow lane. If the present Post Office were retained, the
+authorities would take the houses that would be put in a line with the
+Post Office, and two-thirds of Small Street would be converted into a
+wide street--and it was only to shave off the Water Works offices and
+adjoining building, and then they would have a good wide street (hear,
+hear). The Corporation during the last twenty years had spent in the
+neighbourhood not less than £50,000, and if by establishing the Post
+Office in Baldwin Street they would enhance the value of the adjoining
+property, so taking it away from the centre of the city would depreciate
+the property there. It would not be doing justice to the citizens to
+take it away from Small Street and remove it to a remote spot like
+Baldwin Street. ('Oh, oh!' and laughter.) It was a remote spot, and he
+did not know that a street through which were a tram line and continual
+cab traffic was the best place for a Post Office. He believed a quiet
+street would be the better place. He farther argued that the proper
+place for the Post Office was where it was--in the neighbourhood of the
+Assize Courts, where the County Court was held all the year round, and
+the assizes and sessions were held, and at the back of the Commercial
+Rooms, to which there were upwards of 600 subscribers.
+
+"Mr. Alderman NAISH said that what weighed with him was that the
+Government had not applied for a better site. He apprehended that Mr.
+Shaw-Lefevre was perfectly satisfied with the accommodation he could get
+on the present site. He had seen the draft of the Bill promoted by the
+Government for taking possession of a building under the compulsory
+powers at a fair valuation. Someone in Bristol wished them to go
+somewhere else. All Mr. Shaw-Lefevre said was that if the citizens
+wanted to go elsewhere they must take the old building. The
+Postmaster-General did not suggest the removal, but somebody else did
+(hear, hear). The Postmaster-General knew his business, and he probably
+considered that the present office could be enlarged so as to provide
+all the accommodation necessary. They could thus have a good public
+improvement in the centre of the city, and at the same time provide for
+the postal requirements. They were simply asked to go to a street in
+which certain people were interested, which, although a large
+thoroughfare, had two lines of tramways running through it. He hoped the
+Council would not agree to the proposal.
+
+"Mr. MATTHEWS said if the question was put to them simply, did they
+require more postal accommodation?--they would unhesitatingly say that
+they did; but the question of site was a totally different matter. They
+had not gone into the question whether another site would not be a
+better one than the Baldwin Street one. He moved that the question of a
+site be remitted to a committee, with instructions to report to the
+Council, and that the committee consist of the Mayor, Aldermen Spark,
+Harvey, and Naish, and Messrs. Townsend, C. F. Hare, Barker, and Inskip.
+
+"Mr. LEVY considered that the city was indebted to those who suggested
+the Baldwin Street site. There could be no two opinions about the matter
+(cries of 'Oh,' and laughter). They had seen an amusing correspondence
+in the papers about it. He would not do anything to injure the _Times
+and Mirror_ for a moment (laughter). In Baldwin Street a Constitutional
+Club had been established, and the _Times and Mirror_ might consider
+that institution (laughter).
+
+"Mr. WHITWILL thought they should simply confine themselves to an
+expression of opinion as to the desirability of Baldwin Street site, for
+he should be strongly opposed to the exchange (hear, hear).
+
+"Mr. H. G. GARDNER said the position in Small Street was preferable to
+him, but they ought to sink personal convenience. The Chamber of
+Commerce suggested the matter, and he looked on that body as young
+Bristol.
+
+"Mr. ROBINSON said he only meant that the property should be taken over
+if an equitable arrangement could be come to. He would drop the last
+part of his resolution, and it would now read as follows:--'That,
+considering the want of adequate space in Small Street for the postal
+telegram arrangements, it is desirable that a new Post Office
+be erected in Baldwin Street on the site recently viewed by the
+Postmaster-General.'
+
+"The motion was then put with the following result:--_For_: Aldermen
+Lucas, Edwards, Jose, Spark; Messrs. Moore, Robinson, James, Pethick,
+Wills, Bartlett, Fear, Bush, Townsend, C. Gardner, Jefferies, H. G.
+Gardner, Low, Lane, Levy, Garton, Derham, Whitwill, Barker--23.
+_Against_: The Mayor; Aldermen Morgan, Smith, Naish, Fox, Jones,
+Hathway, Harvey, Cope-Proctor; Messrs. Terrett, Dix, Gibson, Alsop,
+Francis, Bastow, A. Baker, C. F. Hare, C. B. Hare, Harvey, C. Nash,
+Hall, Lockley, Daniel, Matthews, Follwoll, Sibly, Inskip--27. Aldermen
+Proctor Baker and George and Mr. Dole did not vote.
+
+"Mr. LEVY asked if the Postmaster-General made an offer it would be
+entertained.
+
+"The TOWN CLERK said he supposed that any offer from the
+Postmaster-General or anybody else would be considered."
+
+The Council dropped the matter of removal, and an enlargement of the
+Post Office was commenced in 1886 on 5,500 square feet of ground on
+which the Rectory House of St. Mary Werburgh formerly stood. The
+enlargement was completed in 1889. The structure was designed by the
+Surveyor of Her Majesty's Office of Works. In making his plan in 1868 no
+doubt the Surveyor thought he was building for, at least, fifty years;
+and so he set back his building to form a square structure, instead of
+following the line of street as laid down by the city authorities in
+their Act of Parliament. The new part of the building had to conform to
+the city line, and had, therefore, to be built at an angle with the old
+office, which detracts from the general appearance. The Post Office
+building in Small Street stands on a site 17,300 square feet in extent;
+and now, thirty-one years from the opening of the new office and ten
+years from its enlargement, further extension is necessary, and the
+erection of a second or supplementary office larger in dimensions than
+the present structure is about to be proceeded with.
+
+As the work in the Post Office goes on through the whole day and night,
+the air in the working rooms became vitiated and over-heated when
+lighted with gas. In 1896 the effectual remedy of abandoning the use of
+gas and adopting electric light was carried out. The Corporation
+provides the current. The lamps used are 4 arc lamps, of approximately
+750 candle-power each, and 450 glow lamps of 8, 16, or 25 candle-power.
+
+Two million gallons of water a year are used to keep the buildings
+clean.
+
+[Illustration: THE BRISTOL HEAD POST OFFICE IN 1899.
+
+_From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol._]
+
+As the Post Office, from its size, if not from its architectural beauty,
+dominates Small Street in some measure it may be well here to introduce
+particulars from an ancient manuscript in the City Library, which show
+that Small Street has been a street ever since Anglo-Saxon times.
+About Small Street and St. Leonard's Lane lived some of Bristol's
+greatest merchants. For hundreds of years there was not within the walls
+of Bristol a more fashionable street than Small Street. Many of the
+mansions there had good gardens. In the reign of Charles II. there were
+only six houses on the west, or Post Office, side of the street. Amongst
+the worthies who resided there were the Colstons, the Creswicks, the
+Kitchens, the Seymours, the Esterfields, the Codringtons, the Haymans,
+the Kilkes; John Foster, the founder of the almshouse on St. Michael's
+Hill; Nicholas Thorne, one of the founders of our Grammar School; and
+Thomas Fenn, attorney, who in 1762 succeeded to the Earldom of
+Westmoreland. It is not indicated whether he was related in any way to
+William Fenn, who was postmaster, 1778-88, but it might have been so,
+for William Fenn must have been a person of some note or the appointment
+would not at his death have been conferred on his widow. In Small
+Street, too, more Royal and noble visitors have lodged and received
+hospitality than in any other street in Bristol. The Earl of Bedford and
+his son were received there in 1569, and Robert Dudley, Earl of
+Leicester, one of Queen Elizabeth's favourites, and the Earl of Warwick,
+in 1587; the latter lodged at Robert Kitchen's. In 1643 King Charles I.,
+with Prince Charles and the Duke of York, lodged there, so did Oliver
+Cromwell and his wife in 1649; and James II., with George, Prince of
+Denmark, and the Dukes of Grafton, Beaufort, and Somerset, in 1688.
+Queen Catherine was entertained at Sir Henry Creswick's house in 1677,
+where Sir Henry, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, the good and great Duke
+of Ormonde, lodged for several days in 1665. We learn that Small Street
+was selected for the reception of these illustrious visitors "by reason
+of the conveniency of the street for entertaining the nobility."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE LOCAL POST OFFICE IN EARLY DAYS. SIR ROWLAND HILL.--RECENT PROGRESS.
+
+
+It is pleasing to look back to the time, little more than one hundred
+years ago, when Bristol was the premier provincial post town. It had
+long ranked next to London in wealth, in population, and in its Post
+Office. Bristol has, however, in a postal sense, yielded place to other
+towns, and now ranks after Birmingham, Glasgow, Liverpool, and
+Manchester.
+
+Dipping into history, it is found that there was a Post Office at
+Clifton a hundred years since. At about the time of the Battle of
+Waterloo it was situated near Saville Place, in a small tenement. The
+post keeper was a knight of the shears, who sat cross-legged at his work
+on a shop-board in the window, whilst his better-half sold "goodies."
+The "Staff" consisted of this pigeon pair, and the work of carrying the
+bags to and from Bristol, and of delivering the missives, was
+undertaken by them conjointly.
+
+The year 1793 was signalised by the extension to Bristol of the penny
+post for local letters, that is, letters for Bristol city, its suburbs,
+and neighbouring villages. That post covered a wide area ranging from
+Thornbury and Wotton-under-Edge in the North, to Temple Cloud,
+Chewton-Mendip, and Oakhill in the South; eastward in the direction of
+Box, and westward to Portishead. This institution had until then been
+established nowhere else but in London and in Dublin; but Birmingham,
+Edinburgh, and Manchester were granted the privilege at the same time as
+Bristol. During the year 1794-95 the penny post brought a clear gain to
+the revenue:--in Bristol of £469, in Manchester of £586, and in
+Birmingham of £240. Notwithstanding these gains, the Post Office
+authorities concluded that neither at Liverpool nor at Leeds, nor at any
+other town in the Kingdom, would a penny post defray its own expenses.
+
+There is little more on record about local Post Office details for some
+years; but we learn that in April, 1825, an evening delivery of post
+letters was ordered to Kingsdown, Montpelier, Wellington Place, and
+Catherine Place, Stoke's Croft, all the year round; and to Lawrence
+Hill, West Street, Gloucester Lane, in the parish of St. Philip and
+Jacob, from 1st of March to 1st of November in each year. A receiving
+house for letters was established at the corner of West Street on May
+20th, 1825; and also one in Harford Street, New Cut. In December, 1827,
+the population of Bristol was estimated at 50,000 persons; and in
+August, 1831, the number of persons the Post Office had to serve was
+59,070.
+
+Evans's _New Guide; or, Pictures of Bristol_, published in 1828,
+furnishes the next record. It stated that "the London mail goes out
+every afternoon at twenty minutes past 5, and arrives every day at 9.0
+in the morning. Bath: Out every morning at 7.0 and 10.0, and at twenty
+minutes past 5 in the evening; arrives at 9.0 morning, and a quarter
+before 5 and a quarter before 7 in the evening. Sodbury, through
+Stapleton, Hambrook, Winterbourne, and Iron Acton: Goes out at twenty
+minutes before 10 in the morning; arrives at half-past 4 in the evening.
+Thornbury, through Filton, Almondsbury, and Rudgeway: Goes out twenty
+minutes before 10 in the morning; arrives at half-past 4 in the evening.
+Bitton, through New Church, Kingswood, Hanham, and Willsbridge: Goes out
+at 10.0 in the morning; arrives at half-past 4 in the evening. Exeter
+and Westward: Out every morning between 9.0 and 10.0; arrives every
+evening between 4.0 and 5.0. Portsmouth, Chichester, Salisbury, etc.:
+Out at half-past 5 in the afternoon; arrives every day previously to the
+London mail. Tetbury and Cirencester: Out every morning at half-past 9;
+arrives every evening at 5.0. Birmingham and Northward: Out every
+evening at 7.0; arrives every morning between 6.0 and 7.0. Milford and
+South Wales: Out every day at half-past 9; arrives at half-past 3 in the
+afternoon. The Irish mail is made up every day, and letters from Ireland
+may be expected to arrive every day at half-past 3. Jamaica and Leeward
+Islands, first and third Wednesday in the month; Lisbon, every week;
+Gibraltar and Mediterranean, every three weeks; Madeira and Brazils,
+first Tuesday in each month; Surinam, Berbice, and Demorara, second
+Wednesday in each month; France and Spain, Sundays, Mondays,
+Wednesdays, and Thursdays; Holland and Hamburgh, Mondays and Thursdays;
+Guernsey and Jersey, Sundays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays. Letters for all
+parts may be put into the Post Office at any time, but should be
+delivered half an hour before the mail is made up. Letters delivered
+later than half an hour previous to the departure of the respective
+mails to be accompanied with one penny. Payment of postage will not be
+received unless tendered full half an hour before the time fixed for
+closing the bags. Letters for Axbridge, Weston-super-Mare, and adjacent
+places are sent and received by the Western mail. Letter bags are made
+up daily, after the sorting of the London mail, for Bourton, Wrington,
+Langford, Churchill, Nailsea, Clevedon, and their respective deliveries.
+The letters must be put in by 9.0 o'clock. The return to Bristol is at
+4.0 in the afternoon. Letters may be put into the receiving offices for
+all parts of the kingdom, and the full postage, if desired, paid with
+them. Letter carriers are despatched regularly every day (Sundays not
+excepted) with letters to and from Durdham Down, Westbury, Stapleton,
+Frenchay, Downend, Hambrook, and Winterbourne; and also to Brislington,
+Keynsham, and other places. The delivery of letters at Clifton is each
+day at 10.0 and 6.0. Letters should be in the offices at Clifton and the
+Wells for the London and the North mails by 4.0."
+
+It may be interesting to state, what the rates of postage from this city
+were in 1830. Thus: Australia, 11d.; Buenos Ayres, 3s. 5d.; Canary
+Islands, 2s. 6d.; Cape de Verde Islands, 2s. 6d.; Chili, 3s. 5d.; China,
+11d.; Colombo, 3s.; Cuba, 3s.; East Indies, 11d.; Havana, 3s.; St.
+Helena, 11d.; South America, 3s. 5d.; Van Dieman's Land, 11d.; whilst
+for the Continent the rates were considerably higher, thus: Austria, 2s.
+2d.; Belgium, 1s. 11d.; Corsica, 2s. 2d.; Denmark, 2s. 3d.; Flanders,
+2s. 2d.; France--Calais, 1s. 5d.; Germany, 2s. 3d.; Gibraltar, 2s. 6d.;
+Holland, 1s. 11d.; Italy, 2s. 2d.; Malta, 2s. 6d.; Poland, 2s. 3d.;
+Prussia, 2s. 3d.; Russia, 2s. 3d.; Spain, 2s. 2d.; Turkey, 2s. 2d. At
+that period the Inland Rates were very high, and the cost was regulated
+thus: From any Post Office in England or Wales, to any place not
+exceeding 15 miles from such office, 4d.; above 15 to 20 miles, 5d.; 20
+to 30 miles, 6d.; 30 to 50 miles, 7d.; 50 to 80 miles, 8d.; 80 to 120
+miles, 9d.; 120 to 170 miles, 10d.; 170 to 230 miles, 11d.; 230 to 300
+miles, 12d. And one penny in addition on each letter for every 100 miles
+beyond 300. Thus a letter from Bristol to Cirencester cost 7d.;
+Cheltenham, 8d.; Banbury, 10d.; Leeds, 11d.; Hull; 12d., and so on. Now
+a letter four ounces in weight can be sent from one end of the land to
+the other for a penny, and a parcel one pound in weight for threepence.
+
+The Bristol ex-Postal Superintendent, Mr. H. T. Carter, carrying his
+mind back over his forty years of diligent and zealous service, recalls
+the time when the mails for the not far-distant village of Shirehampton
+were conveyed in a cart drawn by a dog, the property of rural postman
+Ham. The cart was not large, but of sufficient size to carry postman and
+mail bags. The dog, of Newfoundland breed, got over the ground at a
+rapid pace. Ham was addicted to drink, but nevertheless, whether he was
+drunk or sober, asleep or awake, in stormy or fine weather, the dog took
+him and the mails to their proper destination.
+
+A venerable man now living at Earthcott Green, a hamlet within ten
+miles of our great city, well recollects the time when he received his
+letters through Iron Acton, at a special cost to him of 2d. each, with a
+delivery only every other day. The plan was for an additional penny to
+be charged on all letters sent out by rural posts for delivery, and in
+addition to this penny an extra charge was levied on all letters
+delivered from sub-Post Offices to bye houses or places beyond the
+several village deliveries. In some cases recognised men or women
+attended at the Head Office, Bristol, once or twice a week to take out
+letters for delivery in the remote country regions--of course for a
+"consideration."
+
+The Bristol district shared in the representations in 1838 of the
+hardships borne by poor people in respect of the heavy charges for the
+conveyance of letters. The postmaster at Congresbury deposed thus:--"The
+price of a letter is a great tax on poor people. I sent one, charged
+eightpence, to a poor labouring man about a week ago; it came from his
+daughter. He first refused it, saying it would take a loaf of bread from
+his other children; but, after hesitating a little time, he paid the
+money, and opened the letter. I seldom return letters of this kind to
+Bristol, because I let the poor people have them, and take the chance of
+being paid; sometimes I lose the postage, but generally the poor people
+pay me by degrees." Then the postmaster of Yatton stated as follows:--"I
+have had a letter waiting lately for a poor woman, from her husband who
+is at work in Wales; the charge was 9d.,--it lay many days, in
+consequence of her not being able to pay the postage. I at last trusted
+her with it." Of the desire of the poor to correspond, a Mr. Emery gave
+evidence, stating "that the poor near Bristol have signed a petition to
+Parliament for the reduction of the postage. He never saw greater
+enthusiasm in any public thing that was ever got up in the shape of a
+petition; they seemed all to enter into the thing as fully and with as
+much feeling as it was possible, as a boon or godsend to them, that they
+should be able to correspond with their distant friends."
+
+Uniform penny postage came in 1840. The Bristol citizens, of course,
+found it no cheaper than before to send a single letter to places in
+their own neighbourhood, but a light enclosure could be put in without
+extra charge, though the weight had to be brought down from four ounces
+to half an ounce.
+
+It may not be out of place to mention in these pages that one of the
+penny postage stamps of the very earliest issue after the penny postage
+system came into operation in 1840 was made use of for the prepayment of
+a letter sent by His Grace the Duke of Wellington to H. Nuttall Tomlins,
+Esq., of the Hotwells, Bristol. It was sent six days before stamps and
+stamped covers were first used by the general public, the Duke, as Prime
+Minister, having no doubt been supplied in advance with stamps, one of
+which he attached to his letter, to give a surprise to his friend
+Nuttall Tomlins. The envelope, with the stamp still upon it, is now in
+the possession of a well-known philatelist in London.
+
+The allusion to the "Penny Post" naturally calls to mind its originator.
+On the hill slope of the still pleasant rural village of Stapleton, four
+miles from Bristol Post Office,--once a Roman settlement, and in later
+days the head-quarters of Oliver Cromwell during the siege of
+Bristol,--the great postal reformer, Sir Rowland Hill, frequently spent
+some of his leisure time with his brother, the late Recorder of Bristol,
+Mr. Matthew Davenport Hill. There is in the Bristol postal service at
+the present time a mail officer who recalls that, in his very young
+days, it was his mission to set out from Heath House to fetch the
+morning letters for Sir Rowland from the Stapleton Post Office. He tells
+how he had to ride the old pony at a rapid rate, as, even in those days,
+Sir Rowland's time was valuable, and if his letters were late he had to
+curtail his "constitutional," which usually consisted of a three-mile
+sharp walk, with cap in hand instead of on head, over Purdown, past
+Stoke House, returning through Frenchay.
+
+In December, 1844, Sir Rowland Hill, in connection with the National
+Testimonial to him as the author of Penny Postage, recorded the
+circumstance that he had received a letter from Mr. Estlin, an eminent
+surgeon of Bristol, giving an account of proceedings in that important
+city anterior to any movement in London. Sir Rowland believed it was in
+Bristol, and from Mr. Estlin, that the testimonial had its origin. The
+sum presented from Bristol to the national collection amounted to about
+£300.
+
+The celebration of the Jubilee of Penny Postage in 1890 took the
+practical turn in one respect of increasing the Rowland Hill Benevolent
+Fund. Bristol contributed its quota of £72 14s. 6d., made up in great
+measure of public subscriptions. When the grand celebration took place
+on July 2nd, at the South Kensington Museum, with the Duke and Duchess
+of Edinburgh present at the conversazione, Bristol took its part, and
+immediately after a signal from South Kensington was received over the
+telegraph wire at 10 o'clock three hearty cheers for Her Majesty were
+given, the postmaster leading. The Post Office band then struck up the
+National Anthem, and cheers for the Queen were at once taken up by a
+body of about 200 postmen who had assembled in the Post Office yard.
+
+As in 1847 the state of things at the provincial offices generally was
+not regarded as satisfactory, Sir Rowland Hill, in accordance with the
+wish of the Postmaster-General, visited Bristol on April 1st in that
+year. He found that the first delivery of the day, by far the most
+important of all, was not completed until 12 o'clock; the
+letter-carriers, as he was informed, often staying after departure from
+the office to take their breakfast before commencing their rounds. He
+was able to show how at a small cost (only £125 a year) it might be
+completed by 9.0. The office itself he found small, badly lighted, and
+ill ventilated. The day mail bag to London was nearly useless, its
+contents for London delivery being on the morning of his inquiry only
+sixty-four letters, thirty-seven of which might have been sent by the
+previous mail on the mere payment of the extra penny. His impression
+regarding this mail, both in and out of the office, agreed exactly with
+his evidence in 1843; viz., that all day mails, to be efficient for
+their purpose, should start as late as was consistent with their
+reaching London in time for their letters to be forwarded by the
+outgoing evening mails. The satisfaction Sir Rowland felt in such
+improvements as he had been able to make on the spot was much enhanced
+by his receiving at the termination of his visit the thanks of both
+clerks and letter-carriers for the new arrangements. It should be said
+that Sir Rowland Hill did not by his action cast any reflection upon Mr.
+Todd Walton, junior, as he was at pains to say that, regarded as a
+specimen of the administration of provincial Post Offices at the time
+the Bristol specimen was by no means an unfavourable one. At that time
+there were only about 20,000 letters, etc., delivered in a week.
+
+The Bristol Chamber of Commerce took no notice of the Post Office for
+nearly twenty years (1835-1855), but in the latter year it did so, for
+its records of the annual meeting of 31st January, 1855, with John
+Salmon, President, in the chair, shew the following, viz.:--
+
+"The Post Office questions of salaries, internal arrangements, and local
+inquiry, are still in the same position as they were six months ago,
+except that, after repeated further applications to the
+Postmaster-General, your Committee extracted, on the 10th December last,
+a renewed promise from his lordship that 'no time should be lost in
+making the enquiry at the Bristol Post Office.' As the inefficiency of
+the public service arises from the unjust treatment of the employés and
+defective internal arrangements of the local office, your Committee
+cannot desist, notwithstanding the tedious and disagreeable nature of
+the task which they have undertaken, from insisting on these repeated
+promises being redeemed."
+
+Then, under the same presidency, at the next half-yearly meeting in the
+same year, it was stated that "Subsequent to the date of the last
+report, your Committee discovered that the Postmaster-General had caused
+a private local enquiry to be made with respect to the classification
+and salaries of the officers of the Bristol Post Office."
+
+There was this further remonstrance:--
+
+".... It would have been more satisfactory to your Committee if the
+Postmaster-General had fulfilled his promise to the deputation who
+waited upon him on the 30th of January, 1854, to hold a local enquiry at
+which they should be present, as there were several other matters
+connected with the internal arrangements of the Bristol Post Office
+(particularly the money order department, which is still very defective)
+with respect to which they were desirous of making some suggestions."
+
+Then followed a copy of the report made to the Postmaster-General by Mr.
+Tilley, who conducted the enquiry, also a statement of the proposed
+Establishment.
+
+At the Chamber's next annual meeting on 30th January, 1856, with James
+Hassell, the president, in the chair, the Post Office is again reproved
+thus:--
+
+"No further reply than the official printed acknowledgment and promise
+of attention has yet reached your Committee respecting the memorial on
+the subject of the Welsh mail, the West India mails, etc.; but past
+experience and general repute do not lead them to anticipate prompt
+redress from the Post Office authorities. It required repeated
+applications, extending over a period of about eighteen months, to
+obtain a remedy for the grievances set forth in our former memorial; and
+even now the Money Order Department is not completed, and probably
+similar perseverance will again be required, as it is now more than a
+month ago the memorial relating to the West India mail was presented."
+
+It was thought worthy of note in the _Bristol Mirror_ of November 5th,
+1831, that "500 letters were brought yesterday from Clifton for the
+general post." In demonstration of the strides which the Post Office has
+made, it may be mentioned that in the "fifties," in addition to the Post
+Office at Clifton, the only offices were the branches at Haberfield
+Crescent and Phippen Street, with four collections a day, and the
+receiving houses at Ashley Road, Bedminster, Hotwells, and Redland, with
+three collections a day. The city only boasted at that time of pillar
+letter boxes at Arley Chapel, Armoury Square, Bedminster Bridge, Bristol
+Bridge, Castle Street, Christmas Steps, College Green, Freemantle
+Square, Kingsdown, Milk Street, Railway Station, St. Philip's Police
+Station, Kingsland Road, Whiteladies Road, and Woodwell Crescent, with
+three collections daily. Now there are 167 Post Offices in the district.
+On the Gloucestershire side there are 99, at 41 of which telegraph
+business is carried on; and on the Somersetshire side 68, 27 of which
+are telegraph offices. In addition telegraph business is carried on for
+the Postmaster-General at five railway stations on the Gloucestershire
+side and five on the Somersetshire side. Licenses to sell postage stamps
+are held by over a hundred shopkeepers.
+
+There are now 350 pillar and wall letter boxes provided for public
+convenience.
+
+It may be mentioned in passing that during the strike amongst the
+deal-runners in Bristol, when men were brought from other towns and
+housed and fed at "Huntersholm" (a large wooden building erected
+specially in one of the timber yards), and allowed out under police
+supervision, a stamp license was applied for and granted, to meet a
+large demand for postage stamps which these men made in consequence of
+having to send their wages home weekly to their families.
+
+In detail, but without complication by mention of the names of all the
+districts, the local improvements for the seven years from March, 1892,
+to February, 1899, inclusive, were as follows:--New post offices
+established, 33; telegraph offices opened, 18; money order and savings
+bank business extended to 17 offices; postal orders sold at 6 additional
+offices; new pillar and wall boxes erected, 142; new or additional day
+mails from 34 districts; and out to 44 districts; new extra deliveries
+established in 65 districts, and two extra deliveries in 7 districts.
+Free delivery extended in 35 rural districts, and the ordinary second or
+third delivery extended in 44 rural districts; morning delivery
+accelerated in 63, and the day delivery in 8, rural districts. A later
+posting for North mail in 6, and for the night mail in 58, rural
+districts. New collections established in 73, and a later collection in
+30, rural districts.
+
+Increased facilities in the postal world are almost invariably followed
+by augmentation of business. It certainly has been so in the Bristol
+district, for there has been a marvellous development in the last seven
+years. The letters delivered have increased by 60 per cent., and those
+posted have grown at the rate of 55 per cent. Parcels have increased by
+25 per cent. There has been a similar marked increase in all branches of
+business. The three preceding periods of seven years were comparatively
+"lean" periods, for the increase in the number of letters during the
+whole twenty-one years was actually less than during the seven last
+years. The increase is altogether out of proportion to the growth of
+population, and it is far in excess of the general increase of letter
+correspondence throughout the country generally, which has been only at
+the rate of 22 per cent. during the period as against Bristol's 60 per
+cent. It is hoped that this may be taken as a sure indication of the
+well-being of the trade of Bristol, and as a sign that there is
+quickened life in the commerce of the good old city. At all events, it
+shows that the local Post Office organization is quite abreast of the
+times, and that the facilities afforded are appreciated and are fully
+taken advantage of.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+BRISTOL AS A MAIL STEAMER STATION FOR IRELAND, WEST INDIES, AMERICA, AND
+CANADA.
+
+
+From the archives of the Bristol Chamber of Commerce it transpires that
+from the very first constitution of the Chamber in 1823, it had before
+it a scheme for the conveyance of mails between this port and the South
+of Ireland by direct steam packet. It was considered that such a service
+would be highly advantageous to the city, and correspondence on the
+subject from time to time took place with the Post Office Department.
+Allusion is made to it in the Chamber's Annual Report in January, 1824;
+again in 1828, when the President of the Chamber, Mr. Joseph Cookson,
+had a conference with the leading officer of the Post Office; and once
+more in 1829. The case is so fully and ably set forth in the Board's
+Annual Report of the 26th January, 1829, that its reproduction _in
+extenso_ cannot fail to be of deep interest to the citizens of the
+present day as their attention is often drawn to the steamship traffic.
+It ran thus:--
+
+"The transmission of the mails direct from Bristol was earnestly pressed
+upon the attention of the Postmaster-General in the year 1823, on which
+occasion the Chamber minutely investigated the practicability, safety,
+and general advantages of the measure, the material points of which were
+embodied in a memorial, accompanied by a list of queries and replies.
+The Civic Corporation, the Society of Merchant Venturers, and the
+Bristol Dock Company each presented similar memorials.
+
+"In resuming the enquiry, the Board have resorted to the channels best
+calculated to convey accurate information. The managing proprietor of
+the steam packet establishments at this port, Captain Dungey, an
+individual on whose experience and judgment reliance may be placed, and
+other persons of practical knowledge, have been consulted on the
+subject. All concur in establishing the fact that the voyage to and from
+Dunmore may, with general certainty, be accomplished by efficient
+steamboats in from 24 to 26 hours during the eight summer months, and in
+from 26 to 30 hours in the four months of winter; that the instances of
+exceeding this scale would not be more frequent than at the present
+station, the navigation of the Bristol Channel being protected by the
+coast on either side, and consequently less influenced by severe weather
+than the Irish Sea.
+
+"The earlier arrival of the London mail and its later departure, as
+altered some time since, accords materially with the proposition for
+making Bristol a packet station. By the present regulations, the London
+mail arrives in Bristol at five minutes past 9 in the morning; and
+leaves at half-past 5 in the evening; it is capable of being still
+further accelerated by taking the two last stages in the direct line
+through Marshfield, instead of passing through Bath. According to the
+present arrangements, the Irish mails may with ease and convenience to
+passengers be despatched from the mouth of the Bristol river, five miles
+from the Post Office, every day at half-past 10, and those from Ireland,
+if arriving by 4.0, be forwarded to London the same evening. The time
+saved by this route as compared with that of Milford would be, at least
+during the summer months, equal to one whole day for the purposes of
+business, since the arrival at Dunmore would be in the morning instead
+of evening, and the departure at noon instead of at an early hour of the
+morning as at present.
+
+"The present slips at Lamplighter's Hall and Broad Pill now serve for
+landing passengers from the packets on special occasions; with very
+trifling expense they may be made efficient for passengers, and not more
+objectionable than the present accommodation for crossing the estuary of
+the Severn--carriages, horses, baggage, and heavy goods might at an
+earlier hour be put on board at the Bristol Docks, which the boat would
+leave at the height of tide in order to be in waiting for the mails at
+the place appointed for receiving them. At Lamplighter's Hall an hotel
+is established, which, with the contiguity to the city, would ensure to
+the public a supply of all the accommodation a packet station would
+require. These are the facilities which can at present be afforded. At
+no very distant date the accommodation will, in all probability, be yet
+further increased, first, by the erection of a pier with hotel and
+establishment at Portishead on the Somersetshire side of the Avon,
+which the Corporation of the City have for some time had under
+consideration with a view to promote the convenience of passengers by
+the steam vessels and thus encourage the intercourse between this city
+and the South of Ireland. In aid of the present enquiry they have
+directed a survey and report by Mr. Milne, the engineer, on the
+practicability and probable cost of the proposed pier. Secondly, and
+arising also from this scheme, is a plan for erecting a bridge across
+the Avon, by the application in part of a fund amounting to nearly
+£8,000, held by the Society of Merchant Venturers in trust under the
+will of William Vick, deceased, for the especial purpose; with the
+formation of an improved line of road by Mr. Gordon, Mr. Miles, and
+other landed proprietors on that side of the river, for the short
+distance to Portishead. These several improvements the respective
+parties interested are disposed to effect, and which any impelling
+motive, such as the establishment of a regular mail packet station, may
+induce them immediately to undertake. The accomplishment of these works
+would render Portishead a most eligible station. It is protected from
+weather, is a safe anchorage, would have ample depth of water at any
+state of the tide, the landing would be instant on arrival, and it would
+be supplied with every convenience and accommodation for passengers.
+
+"The Board believe an important saving of expense to Government would
+result from establishing Bristol as a mail packet station. The great
+deficiency on the Milford station in the receipts as compared with the
+expenditure arises from the very limited number of persons who avail
+themselves of that line of communication. The land journey of twenty
+hours at a fare of £3 10s., followed by a twelve hours' voyage by open
+sea at a further expense of £1 10s., with the inconvenience frequently
+sustained in crossing the estuary of the Severn, deters people from
+taking the Milford route by choice. The general introduction of steam
+packets, the degree of perfection in sailing to which they have been
+brought, the regularity and safety with which the voyages are performed,
+the accommodation to passengers, and the moderate scale of fares, have
+contributed to effect of late years a material change in the general
+opinion on steamboat conveyance. The long voyage by sea is now
+generally preferred to a long journey by land and the shorter one by
+sea. The number and efficiency of the Bristol boats, and the economy in
+the fares, induce a large proportion of travellers to take the direct
+course from Bristol. Indeed, to so great an extent has this preference
+operated that the contractors for conveying the mail throughout the
+whole line from Bristol to Milford are understood to have given notice
+of their intention to determine their engagement, on account of the
+gradual decrease in the number of passengers and the consequent loss
+they incur. A similar statement appears in the report of the
+Postmaster-General on the memorial of the innkeepers on the Holyhead
+route.
+
+"In favour of Bristol it may be fairly stated that, at a comparatively
+trifling expense, the port may be made commodious for a packet station;
+that the present strength of the establishment at Milford would serve,
+with some addition, for that of Bristol; that the difference in price of
+coal at Portishead would reduce the expense of sailing the packets from
+that station; that Bristol affords every prospect of increase of
+receipt, whilst at Milford it must, for the reasons before stated,
+necessarily decrease; that the demands of a large commercial city, with
+its populous adjoining and connected districts, will create a traffic
+for boats making quick and regular voyages, which Milford, from its
+position, never can acquire--the conveyance of fish and provisions alone
+could be made to yield a revenue of consequence. Numerous other sources
+of receipt would arise from the conveniency of its regularity and
+expedition. Indeed, so much are the Board impressed with the belief that
+the traffic would be extensive and productive that they venture to
+anticipate it may, at no very distant period, relieve the Government
+from any further charge than a comparatively nominal sum for the
+transport of the mails. The Board are induced also to put the
+proposition in a national point of view. They feel that the more closely
+Ireland can be brought into direct and active communication with this
+country, the more rapid will be its course of improvement. The
+introduction of steam navigation has, at this port, given an energy and
+extension to the Irish trade that far exceeds any previous expectations;
+each succeeding month brings a vast increase of import and a
+corresponding export, to the material benefit of each kingdom, and the
+more complete the intercourse can be established the more important will
+the trade become.
+
+"The port of Bristol, from its position, possesses numerous capabilities
+for a mail packet station. Its contiguity and means of land and water
+communication with the capital; its being the principal shipping port
+for the manufacturing districts of the South-west part of the kingdom;
+its close connection and water communication with Birmingham, Worcester,
+and other large towns in the centre of the kingdom; the convenience of
+its floating harbour; the reduced scale of its local tolls--all these
+circumstances combine to give Bristol a superiority over other places on
+the coast, whether the subject he viewed as regards the economy of the
+Post Office Department or the accommodation of the public.
+
+"The Board have placed the subject of the Commissioners' enquiry in the
+several points of view which appear to them fairly to arise upon the
+investigation and consideration it has received, and they shall feel
+sincere gratification if, on this or any future occasion, they should in
+the least degree prove of assistance to a department of Government, or
+should otherwise by their exertions conduce to the advancement of the
+public interests.
+
+ "THOMAS STOCK, President.
+ July 7th, 1828."
+
+A strong memorial (under the hand of Thomas Cookson, President) was
+forwarded to the Postmaster-General.
+
+Francis Freeling, Secretary, in his reply for the Postmaster-General,
+refused to admit that the port of Bristol did afford the requisite
+facilities for a station for His Majesty's packets. When the projected
+works were carried out the matter would be reconsidered by the
+Government.
+
+Replying further, Mr. Freeling, on the 2nd March, alluded to the
+impossibility of despatching the mails at a fixed time every day in the
+year, and said that that presented insurmountable objections to the
+choice of Bristol as a station for His Majesty's packets. He said that
+the first requisite for a packet station was that the port should afford
+the means for embarking and landing the mails at all times of tide and
+under all circumstances of weather.
+
+The Bristol Dock Directors and a Standing Committee of the Society of
+Merchants considered the matter, but did not see their way to press it
+under the chilling response received from the Postmaster-General.
+
+The Board did not give up the case, for in the Annual Report 28th
+January, 1833, it was stated that the proposition for establishing at
+this port a mail packet station by steam vessels to the South of Ireland
+was being diligently pursued, and that the House of Commons having
+appointed a Committee to enquire into the communications between England
+and Ireland, a favourable opportunity was presented of again urging the
+advantages Bristol port was calculated to afford.
+
+The numerous appeals, representations, and enquiries did not result in
+the manner desired, and to this day the mails from the South of Ireland
+for Bristol and its district follow the same route _viā_ Waterford and
+Milford Haven, the only difference being that from the latter port to
+Bristol the service is carried on by rail instead of by road.
+
+Bristol became a mail packet station eventually, as steamships carried
+the American mails between this port and New York for several years,
+commencing in 1837, the year of Her Most Gracious Majesty's accession to
+the throne. The _Great Western_, constructed under the direction of
+Brunel, the famous engineer of the Great Western Railway, was chiefly
+used in the service.
+
+[Illustration: THE "GREAT WESTERN."
+
+THE FIRST STEAMER WHICH CARRIED MAILS FROM BRISTOL TO NEW YORK.]
+
+On the 31st May, 1838, writing from 19 Trinity Street, Bristol, Mr.
+Claxton, managing director to the _Great Western_--which was then,
+nearly due,--asked the Bristol postmaster whether a consignee at New
+York might charge the foreign postage on letters to parts on the
+Continent with which no arrangement, similar to that then existing
+between France and England, had been made. The idea was that such
+letters might be put into a separate bag, and the foreign postage from
+Bristol be handed over to the local Post Office. He wrote that notice
+had been given by the Chamber of Commerce of Liverpool that masters of
+ships need not send anything but letters to the Post Office on arrival.
+Mr. Todd Walton replied on the next day to the effect that the agent
+should only direct letters to Mr. Claxton's care to forward from such
+persons as he could refer to in case of errors. Then followed a long
+communication from Mr. Walton to Colonel Maberly, Secretary to the Post
+Office, the gist of which was that a difficulty existed in preventing
+illegal conveyance of ship letters; that the commanders of vessels did
+not receive money with letters to any great extent; that the public
+prints stated that 1,600 letters were received on board the _Great
+Western_ besides those sent from the Post Office; that an immense number
+of letters was collected at the Great Western office; and that as the
+_Great Western_ and _Syrius_ were regularly established, and other
+vessels of the same description were preparing, unless some means were
+taken to protect the revenue, it could not fail to suffer very
+considerably.
+
+The _Great Western_ brought to England 5,500 post letters and 1,770 post
+papers, which, had that conveyance not been offered, would most likely
+have been sent by private ships. Mr. Walton conceived it would be very
+advantageous to the revenue to contract with those superior vessels to
+carry mails, so as to render the latter chargeable with package rates;
+and he submitted that ship letter mails should be made up at Bristol,
+the same as at London and Liverpool, for all vessels leaving this port.
+About 5,500 ship letters were brought to the Bristol Post Office
+annually, and he had no doubt that vast numbers were carried from
+Bristol in the same manner; but with the exception of those by the
+_Great Western_, no mails had ever been made up here for foreign
+countries. The Secretary, replying for the Postmaster-General, said it
+did not appear to Lord Lichfield that cognizance need be taken of the
+suggestion conveyed in Mr. Claxton's letter of the 31st May, for the
+transmission through this country of letters from the United States
+addressed to those foreign countries upon which the postage must be paid
+here before they can be forwarded to their destination. The Post Office
+could have no objection to such letters being addressed to the care of
+Mr. Claxton or any other agent in this country who would pay the foreign
+postage and send them on to their destinations. The letters in question,
+would, of course, be subject, so far as the Post Office was concerned,
+to the ship letter rate to Bristol, and when re-posted, to the inland
+and foreign rates forward.
+
+The postmaster's proposition for making up mails to be forwarded by the
+steam vessels charged with packet rates of postage was out of the
+question; but with regard to making up ship letter bags for foreign
+countries, so strangely neglected at this great port, the postmaster was
+to embrace every opportunity in his power of despatching ship letter
+bags by sailing as well as by steam vessels. There is no official
+record, however, of any such ship letter mails having been forwarded
+from Bristol.
+
+In the year 1841 a Royal Commission was appointed to enquire into the
+question of the most suitable port for the embarkation and debarkation
+of the West Indian Mails. The committee consisted of Mr. Freshfield,
+Lord Dalmeny, Lord Viscount Ingestre, Captain Pechell, Captain Duncombe,
+Mr. Chas. Wood, Sir Thomas Cochrane, Mr. John O'Connell, Mr. Cresswell,
+Lord Worsley, Mr. Gibson Craig, Mr. De Horsey, Mr. Oswold, Mr. Richard
+Hodgson, and Mr. Philip Miles, who was prominent as representing
+Bristol. Much evidence was given in favour of the ports of Bristol,
+Dartmouth, Devonport, Falmouth, Plymouth, Portsmouth, and Southampton
+respectively. The case of Bristol was strongly supported by Lieut. J.
+Hosken, R.N., commander of the _Great Western_ screw steamer from
+Bristol to New York, and Lieut. C. Claxton, R.N., the Bristol Harbour
+Master.
+
+The principal reasons put forward in favour of our old port were: that
+the Bristol Channel was navigable at all states of the tide and in all
+weathers; that there was good anchorage in the Kingroad; and that
+although Bristol was not quite so near to Barbadoes, the first island of
+call, as some of her rival ports, yet it admitted of quicker
+transmission of mails between London and the northern towns than any
+other English port. The arguments in favour of the Bristol port were not
+strong enough to induce the committee to report in its favour.
+
+From the "forties," when the American mail service was withdrawn from
+Bristol, no foreign or colonial mails left the port until the autumn of
+1898, when Mr. Alfred Jones, the enterprising managing director of the
+firm of Messrs. Elder, Dempster & Co., made arrangements for carrying
+private ship mails from Avonmouth to Montreal by a weekly service of
+steamers. The Bristol merchants found it convenient to make use of this
+ship mail system for the conveyance of their invoices, bills of lading,
+and advices, as, by travelling in the same ship as the goods which they
+related to, their delivery in time to be of use in connection with the
+ship's load was ensured. The first vessel to carry such a ship mail was
+the s.s. _Montcalm_.
+
+When it was in anticipation at the Bristol Post Office that the ship
+mail service might be resumed in 1899 on the breaking up of the ice in
+the Gulf of St. Lawrence, there came a cablegram from the Canadian
+Government intimating that a contract had been entered into with Messrs.
+Elder, Dempster and Co.; and, heigh presto! Avonmouth at once became the
+port of departure and arrival of the steamers carrying the direct
+Canadian mails. The suddenness of the event naturally created quite a
+stir after Bristol had been so long waiting, and the mail services
+outwards and inwards were watched with close attention by the public.
+The first steamer to run under the new contract was the s.s. _Monterey_.
+She left Avonmouth on the 23rd July, but time had not admitted of
+arrangements being made for her to carry the mails from Avonmouth, which
+were therefore picked up at Queenstown. The s.s. _Ikbal_ took the next
+trip, leaving Avonmouth on the 30th July. The parcels from the whole of
+the kingdom, including Ireland, were circulated on Bristol, and made up
+here in direct mails for Montreal, Quebec, Hamilton, Kingston, Toronto,
+Winnipeg, Prince Edward Island, Hawaii, St. Pierre and Miquelon, Nova
+Scotia, British Columbia, Kobe, Nagasaki, and Yokohama. The notice to
+the Bristol Post Office was very short, but the necessary arrangements
+were smartly made to meet the emergency. Mr. Kislingbury, the divisional
+superintendent of the Great Western Railway, ever ready to heartily
+co-operate with the local Post Office, had a special tender placed in
+readiness for the reception of the mails at Temple Meads and they were
+despatched by the 9.50 a.m. train to Avonmouth. On the part of the Dock
+authorities, the general manager, Mr. F. B. Girdlestone, had provided an
+engine to take the brake-vans containing the parcel mails direct from
+the Docks junction to the pier head. The system was fully tried, for the
+mails had to be taken from the train to the steam-tug _Sea Prince_ to be
+conveyed to the steamer, which was moored in Kingroad, having arrived
+too late to enter the dock. The mails weighed close upon three tons, and
+were contained in fifty-five large hampers. In the following week the
+s.s. _Arawa_ (a sixteen-knot boat, 440 feet long) carried the mails,
+which were taken by train alongside the ship in dock; and which
+consequently, although five tons in weight, were put on board under much
+more favourable circumstances than in the preceding week, when the
+steamer had to lie out in the Kingroad. It is noteworthy that the
+_Arawa_ took out 400 emigrants.
+
+[Illustration: R.M.S. "MONTEREY."
+
+FIRST LINER IN THE NEW CANADIAN MAIL SERVICE.
+
+_From a photograph by G. M. Roche, Esq., Dublin._]
+
+Subsequent steamers used for carrying on the mail service were the
+_Montfort_, _Monteagle_, and _Montrose_.
+
+The arrangements for the new service worked very smoothly from the
+outset, thanks in no small measure to Mr. Flinn, the local general
+manager for Messrs. Elder, Dempster & Co., who facilitated in every way
+the Post Office and Customs operations. The trial so far has proved that
+the use of Avonmouth as a port for the Canadian mail traffic is attended
+with advantages on this side of the ocean, but greater facilities for
+embarking and disembarking the mails at Avonmouth are absolutely
+necessary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+POSTAL SERVICE STAFF; ITS COMPOSITION, DUTIES, RESPONSIBILITIES.--VOLUME
+OF WORK.
+
+
+In 1855 the Bristol Post Office staff consisted of a postmaster and
+fifteen clerks, with sixty-four letter carriers. Over 1,500 people of
+all grades, including sub-postmasters and their assistants, are now
+employed; and the annual bill for salaries, wages, and allowances of
+men, women, and boys amounts to little short of £100,000. It will thus
+be seen that the Post Office ranks as one of the largest employers of
+labour in the western city.
+
+The head office is centrally situated both for the receipt and despatch
+of the letter correspondence. It is not very far from a point known as
+"Tramway Centre," upon which the tram services of the city converge. It
+plays an important part with regard to the Bristol postal system, as out
+of a total of 833,000 letters posted weekly in the city delivery
+area--exclusive of 55,300 Clifton posted letters--221,000 letters are
+posted at the head office itself, and the total posted within a radius
+of a mile is 652,290, or more than three-fourths of the whole. In
+addition to the 888,000 letters posted weekly in Bristol city and
+Clifton, there are 108,000 letters posted in the suburban and rural
+districts. The posting every Sunday consists of 35,000 letters.
+
+The greater extent to which the well-to-do classes in Bristol use the
+post than their less fortunate brethren may be gathered from the fact
+that the average yield of letters, newspapers, etc., per day per box in
+the Clifton district is 128 per cent. higher than in Redland and Cotham,
+and 179 per cent. higher than in Redcliffe; and in the Redland and
+Cotham district 22 per cent. higher than in Redcliffe.
+
+The mails are chiefly conveyed between the head office and the principal
+railway station by horsed carts.
+
+About 7,000,000 "forward" letters--that is, letters neither posted nor
+delivered locally, but passing through the Bristol Post Office--are
+dealt with annually.
+
+The parcel post, started in 1883, has done well in Bristol. Nearly
+three-quarters of a million of parcels are posted in the district
+annually. The greater part of the parcel despatching duties is performed
+at a separate parcel office on the Temple Meads Railway Station
+premises. People often avail themselves of the parcel post for obtaining
+a regular weekly supply of produce. A joint of beef from Scotland,
+weighing just under eleven pounds, invariably reaches Bristol at the
+week end, and a package of butter from Dublin is observed every Friday
+in the Bristol parcel depōt on its way to Weston-super-Mare.
+
+The London mail is, naturally, the most important mail which leaves
+Bristol. In the course of the day fifty-five mail bags are forwarded,
+containing about 20,000 letters; the trains used being those leaving at
+3.10 a.m., 7.50 a.m., 9.35 a.m., 11.40 a.m., 12.13 p.m., 1.54 p.m., 3.0
+p.m., 3.43 p.m., 4.45 p.m., 7.22 p.m., and 12.45 a.m. So numerous are
+the London and "London forward" letters in the evening, that three
+clerks are engaged from 5.0 p.m. to midnight in sorting them. In the
+opposite direction fifty mail bags are received from London daily,
+containing about 30,000 letters. Birmingham comes next in the
+importance of exchange, thus: twelve mail bags go out daily, containing
+5,500 letters, and ten bags come in, with 4,500 letters. The
+neighbouring city of Bath figures next, with ten outward mail bags
+daily, containing 4,200 letters, and ten inward bags, containing 2,700
+letters. The same three cities also stand in the forefront in respect of
+the import and export of parcels, 870 parcels being received from London
+and 550 parcels sent thereto daily. Birmingham sends 190 parcels and
+takes a like number; whilst Bath sends 160 and takes in return 250
+parcels daily.
+
+The members of the permanent staff have fallen on better days than their
+predecessors of old times. They are granted holidays varying in periods
+according to rank, from the twelve working days allowed to the telegraph
+messengers to the month enjoyed by the superintending officers. Medical
+attendance is afforded gratuitously, and full pay is, as a rule, given
+during sick absence, and under special circumstances sick leave on full
+pay is allowed for six months, and a further six months on half-pay.
+After that time, if there appears to be little or no chance of
+recovery, a pension or gratuity is given. The appointment of medical
+officer to the Post Office was in 1862 conferred upon Mr. F. Poole
+Lansdown, who has held the post ever since. For the last four years the
+average sick absence per year has been ten days for males and seventeen
+days for females per head; and during the last seven years the average
+mortality amongst the established officers of the Service has been two
+per annum.
+
+Uniform and boots are provided by the Department for the postmen and
+telegraph messengers, at an annual cost of about £2,000.
+
+Good-conduct stripes are the reward to all full-time postmen,
+established or unestablished, of unblemished conduct. A stripe is
+awarded after each five years' meritorious service, and each man is
+eligible for six stripes, each of which carry one shilling a week extra
+pay. The value of the stripes is taken into account in calculation of
+pensions.
+
+Of the 1,500 persons of all grades alluded to there are in the postal
+department a superintendent, 24 superintending officers, and 154 male
+and 8 female clerks.
+
+The selection of candidates for situations in the Bristol Post Office as
+sorting clerks and telegraphists, both male and female, was for many
+years vested entirely in the postmaster, and persons were given
+temporary employment without passing any educational test as to their
+special fitness for Post Office employment. It so happened that not
+infrequently a clerk would be employed in a temporary capacity for some
+years, and finally be rejected by the Civil Service Commissioners on
+educational or medical grounds. In 1892, however, a special preliminary
+educational examination was instituted. All candidates of respectable
+parentage, of good health and character, were allowed to sit at this
+examination, the successful ones being taken into the office and trained
+for appointment to the Establishment. The Civil Service Examination had,
+of course, to be undergone before an appointment could be obtained. In
+1896 a new system was introduced, whereby a Civil Service certificate
+had to be obtained before a person was taken into the office. This
+obviated the necessity of holding the preliminary educational
+examination, but the postmaster still exercised the privilege of
+nominating candidates to the situations. The open competitive system of
+examination was commenced last year, and the appointments are now open
+to general competition.
+
+There is a term of probation in the Post Office, and details of the
+duties devolving on postal clerks may not be without interest to the
+Bristol public. The business, with its multitudinous ramifications,
+takes a long time to learn thoroughly. To become a perfect all-round
+postal clerk a man must possess intelligence, must be cool, fertile in
+expedient, have a retentive memory, and withal be quick and active. He
+must know how to primarily sort, sub-divide, and despatch letters. He
+must have a good knowledge of Post Office circulation and be able to
+bear in mind the names of the smallest places--hamlets, etc.--in the
+kingdom, the varying circulations for different periods of the day, and
+the rates of postage of all articles sent through the post. Be must be
+able to detect the short-paid letter, and to deal with the ordinary
+letter, the large letter, the unpaid, the registered, the foreign, the
+"dead," insufficiently addressed, the official, the fragile, the
+insured, the postcard (single and reply), the letter card, the
+newspaper, the book-packet, and the circular (the definition of which is
+very difficult). He is responsible for the correct sortation of every
+letter that he deals with, and he has to be expert in tying letters in
+bundles. He has to cast the unpaid postage and enter the correct account
+on the letter bill; take charge of registered letter bags and loose
+registered letters, and advise them on the letter bill; see to the
+correct labelling, tying, and sealing of the mail bags he makes up;
+check the despatch of mails on the bag list; dispose of his letters by a
+given time, the hours of the despatch of mails being fixed. In
+consequence, he often has to work under great pressure in order to
+finish in time. The postal clerk has to surcharge unpaid and
+insufficiently prepaid correspondence; to see that all postage stamps
+are carefully obliterated, that the rules of the different posts are not
+infringed; to attend to the regulations relating to official
+correspondence. He has to decipher imperfectly and insufficiently
+addressed correspondence, search official and other directories to trace
+proper addresses. In addition to all this he has in turn to serve at the
+public counter, and there attend to money order, savings bank, postal
+order, and other items of business of the kind.
+
+As an illustration of the perspicacity of officers of the Post Office in
+the Western Division of the Kingdom and of the postmen of Bristol, may
+be cited the circulation through the post and prompt and safe delivery
+of a letter from Plymouth bearing as its only address the magic letters
+"W. G.," with cricket hat, stumps, and ball, so dear to the individual
+who bears the initials.
+
+Delay in delivery of articles sent by post, however, not infrequently
+takes place in consequence of misdirection. A parcel was addressed to a
+reverend gentleman at "Publow Church, near Bristol," and as it could not
+be presented at the fine old structure itself, the postman took it to
+the adjoining vicarage, where, in the absence of the vicar, it was taken
+in by a servant upon the inference that it might be intended for some
+future visitor. It turned out, however, that the address was inaccurate,
+and that the parcel was actually intended for a village some miles from
+Bristol, on the other side, having for its name Pucklechurch.
+
+Occasionally there is very slow transmission in these speedy days. A
+rather remarkable case occurred here of a postcard having occupied
+nearly eight years in travelling between Horfield Barracks and the
+premises of a firm in Stokes Croft,--a distance of less than two miles.
+The missive was posted and stamped on the 10th July, 1890, and trace of
+it was lost until it turned up at Bournemouth and received the
+impression of the stamp of that office in April, 1898, whence it was
+sent to Bristol and delivered. There were no other marks to indicate its
+long detention.
+
+Not infrequently the Post Office has to contend with difficulties
+arising from want of thought on the part of the trading community.
+Recently there was a somewhat unusual occurrence at the Bristol Post
+Office. A sack containing samples of biscuits in small tin boxes was
+received. Around the tins flimsy paper was tied, on which the addresses
+were written. The paper had become so frayed in transit that scarcely a
+single wrapper was complete, and when the tins were turned out of the
+sack there were showers of small pieces of paper like a snowstorm. In
+order that the samples might reach their destinations, the addresses
+were, as far as practicable, re-copied, and the samples sent out.
+Nearly every one of the 500 packets received was then sent out for
+delivery without delay, no doubt to the astonishment of those who
+received the biscuits in envelopes from the Returned Letter Office.
+
+In the sorting office all through the twenty-four hours there is work
+going on. As one batch of officials goes off duty another comes on, and
+these relays never cease--not even on Sundays, Christmas Days, or Bank
+Holidays. The sorting office is at its busiest from 5.15 to 6.45 in the
+evening, and from 8.30 p.m. till midnight. Then postmen enter hastily,
+one after another, with bags from the branch offices and pillar-boxes,
+which are immediately taken charge of, opened, and the contents shot
+out. The postmen rapidly arrange the small letters face upwards, pack
+them in "trays" of 400, pass them over to the stamping department; the
+stampers obliterate Her Majesty's head, and record the hour, date, and
+place of departure, with one and the same stroke of the stamp, at the
+rate of a hundred a minute. The stamped letters are placed on sorting
+tables, where the first division takes place. Those for Bristol and
+neighbourhood are assigned to a compartment for further sortation, and
+the outward correspondence is sorted out into the different "roads" by
+which it will travel. Letters for small places are sent to the mail
+trains, where they are sorted to their respective stations as the
+locomotive is whirling them along at the rate of fifty miles an hour.
+Many of the larger towns, such as Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool,
+Leeds, Exeter, Plymouth, Reading, Bath and Swindon, have their own bags
+made up at Bristol. Newspapers, packages, and book packets are sorted
+separately, and subsequently put into their respective bags. By-and-by
+the country postbags come pouring in, and no sooner are they opened than
+the letters they contain are subjected to the same analytical treatment.
+
+In a week 2,600 separate bags (or sacks containing several bags) are
+sent away from the Bristol Post Office over the Great Western and
+Midland Railway systems. The weight is 21 tons, or an average of over 18
+lbs. per bag or sack. Of the total number, 500 of the bags, with an
+average weight of nearly 14 lbs. each, are for places within the
+Bristol district, and 300 of them are sent to London, with a total
+weight of 4 tons 33 lbs., or an average of 30 lbs. per bag or sack. The
+bags and sacks received in Bristol from all quarters are about equal in
+number and weight to those going outwards. Those from London weigh 6
+tons 3 cwt. 44 lbs.--an average of 51 lbs each.
+
+In order to simplify the disposal of the letters in London, they are not
+sent up unsorted from Bristol, but are divided into thirty-seven
+labelled bundles or separate bags, a bundle or bag being made up for
+each London district, for each great railway out of London, for several
+foreign divisions, for seventeen large provincial towns, and even in
+such detail as for Paternoster Row and Wood Street.
+
+It is not often that ships of war appear in Bristol waters. Indeed, the
+old inhabitant saith that it is fifty years since a warship anchored in
+the vicinity. The recent visit of a squadron calls therefore for a
+passing mention. Such an event took place during the British Association
+Meeting in September, 1898. The ironclads composing the squadron were
+H.M.S. _Nile_, _Thunderer_, _Trafalgar_, _Sans Pareil_, and the gunboat
+_Spanker_. The vessels anchored in Walton Bay, midway between Clevedon
+and Portishead. In these pages the interest attaching to them must
+necessarily be centred in their mail arrangements. Nearly a thousand
+letters a day were received at Clevedon for delivery to the fleet. The
+ships' postman from each ship came ashore by launch three times a day to
+fetch the letters. Launches were specially employed to fetch telegrams
+on signal being given by flag from the end of Clevedon Pier.
+
+A first aid class in connection with the St. John's Ambulance Society
+was formed by members of the Bristol Post Office staff in 1894, and
+there was an average attendance of twenty members, under the skilled
+direction of Dr. Bertram Rogers, of Clifton. Of the members who
+presented themselves for examination at the termination of the course of
+lectures, eight were successful, and were presented with certificates at
+the Society's Annual Meeting, held at the Merchant Venturers' Technical
+College; and in the following year they qualified for the Society's
+much-prized medallion of efficiency. At the conclusion of the course,
+Dr. Bertram Rogers was presented with an ivory-handled and
+silver-mounted malacca cane, subscribed for by members of the class. A
+writing-case was also presented to Mr. Blake for organising the class.
+
+The want of a gymnasium in or near the Post Office premises is greatly
+felt, but the staff do not neglect opportunities of improving their
+health in other ways. Cycle Clubs have been in active operation; the
+Cricket Clubs come off victorious in many matches; and the Electric
+Swimming Club has been attended with great success.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+CHRISTMAS AND ST. VALENTINE SEASONS.
+
+
+A century ago the Christmas card was unthought of; whether it will be a
+thing of the past in the year 2000 cannot be foretold. The preparations
+made to meet the annually recurring pressure involve much forethought
+and considerable labour, and have to be in progress for a long time
+prior to Christmas. The time occupied in getting the instructions ready
+for the staff and making all arrangements incidental to the season is
+equivalent to more than the entire duty of a clerk for a whole year.
+Nothing whatever is left to chance; for unless the arrangements are
+organised in full detail, the work could not go on with the clock-like
+smoothness which is necessary to ensure a successful issue. At Christmas
+many people find a difficulty in deciding what to give their friends.
+The difficulty in the Post Office is how to convey Christmas gifts from
+friend to friend, from relative to relative, and the solution is found
+in the extensive preparations alluded to. They consist of many and
+various ways of affording means of rapid circulation and facilitating
+the traffic. Thus arrangements are made as regards London for direct
+bags to be made up at Bristol for each of the eight principal district
+offices, and separate bags for the inclusion of all the London
+sub-district letters throughout the day. At normal times such bags are
+made up only for the night mail and heaviest despatches. All foreign
+letters are sent in separate bags, so as to keep them apart on arrival
+in London from the inland Christmas missives. Then, in the reverse
+direction, London relieves the Bristol office by making a direct bag for
+the tributary office of Clifton by every mail, instead of by two mails
+only. To further facilitate matters, the parcels and letters for the
+environs of Bristol are kept separate from those for town delivery at
+all the large offices sending parcel baskets and mail bags here, and
+Bristol reciprocates by adopting the same plan for towns with which it
+exchanges mails. Even the expedient of putting specially-lettered
+neck-labels on the bags to indicate their contents is adopted. Where,
+ordinarily, bundles of letters are made up for particular towns, direct
+bags take their places, and where, ordinarily, letters are sent in bulk
+from many towns separate bundles are made up for each town: thus,
+letters from Bristol for Brighton, which are usually dealt with in
+London, are forwarded in a direct bag to pass through the metropolis
+unopened. The individual attendances of the ordinary staff are increased
+from eight hours to twelve, fourteen, and sixteen hours per day. All
+holidays are suspended for the time being, which enables some
+telegraphists to undertake postal duty; clerical labour is stopped,
+outside help is obtained, and altogether additional labour provided for
+to the extent of 50 per cent. over the normal staff. Although there is
+such a large augmentation numerically, the value of it cannot be judged
+in that way, as it takes a long time to make a really efficient postal
+officer, and the novices who are engaged, although willing enough, can
+do little more than undertake manual labour. Many army reserve men and
+army and navy pensioners are engaged to assist on the occasion. The
+weather is always a potent factor. The ordinary types of mail vehicles,
+contracted for by the Bristol Tramways Company, and always well turned
+out by Mr. G. Matthews, have to be supplemented at the Christmas season
+by the employment of large pair-horse trolleys, which, are used not only
+for the conveyance of mails between office and railway station, but are
+also sent round the town to pick up the heavy parcel collections from
+the numerous sub-offices.
+
+The great unpunctuality of the mail trains which invariably sets in
+early in the Christmas week causes no little inconvenience, particularly
+as regards the mails from the North of England, and the merchants are
+therefore not slow to avail themselves of the Post Office new system,
+under which, for a small fee, they can get their letters brought by
+delayed trains delivered by special messenger promptly on their arrival
+at the Head Post Office. The extra posting of letters and parcels for
+places abroad, intended for delivery about Christmas Day, begins to
+manifest itself early in November.
+
+A great number of people appear to think that Christmas cards and other
+printed matter may be sent by book-post in covers which are entirely
+closed, except for small slits cut at the sides. These packets are
+liable to charge at letter postage rates unless they are made up in such
+a manner as will admit of the contents being easily withdrawn for
+examination. To educate the public in the matter of full prepayment, it
+has become necessary for the Department to be particularly vigilant in
+surcharging the Christmas missives which contravene the regulations,
+and the Bristol clerks have the unpleasant task of raising an
+impost on letters during the Christmas season which infringe the
+Postmaster-General's not severe regulations. The custom of sending
+Christmas cards in open envelopes is increasing.
+
+With regard to telegrams, the public have recently received at the hands
+of His Grace the Duke of Norfolk the great benefit of being allowed to
+have their telegraphic messages delivered up to distances of three miles
+without payment of any charge whatever for porterage. In this
+neighbourhood, the concession has resulted in an increase in the number
+of messages for delivery over a mile, especially at Christmas. During
+the Christmas season there is always a decrease in the number of
+business telegrams, but that is in some measure made up for by a large
+number of telegrams being sent by the public who are travelling to keep
+holiday, and in this connection more use is made of the telegraph than
+the telephone service. The decrease in the volume of work admits of
+telegraphists aiding their brother officers on the postal side.
+
+The inflow of Christmas cards is pretty evenly dispersed over the
+earlier days of the season, but the great rush comes on the night of the
+23rd and the morning of the 24th of the month. Letters up to four ounces
+in weight are now conveyed at the small cost to the public of a penny.
+So far as this city is concerned, letters and book-packets over two
+ounces in weight, which are now blended in one post, are quadrupled in
+number at the Christmas season. This increase in the letter packets has
+the effect of retarding the postmen in effecting their deliveries,
+inasmuch as they have to search in their bags for the packages which
+they cannot carry tied up in consecutive order. The trouble arising
+therefrom is somewhat mitigated, however, by the circumstance that the
+charged letters are less numerous than heretofore, owing to the large
+increase in the weight which is now carried for a penny. The Christmas
+season is departmentally regarded as consisting of the days from the
+20th of the month to Christmas Day, the 25th, inclusive. From the most
+reliable calculations that the officials are capable of making, it would
+appear that during the Christmas period no fewer than 2,000,000 letters
+are dropped by the residents into the 500 receptacles dotted here and
+there over Bristol's large postal area. The letters distributed by
+Bristol's regular postmen, with their 250 followers, are a million and a
+half, in each case about an extra week's work to be got through in three
+days.
+
+Some 20,000 letters and parcels find their way to the Bristol Returned
+Letter Office as the flotsam and jetsam of the Christmas postings. They
+consist of letters without addresses, letters addressed in
+undecipherable caligraphy, letters for people dead, gone away, and not
+known; parcels of poultry and game without name of sender or addressee.
+Certainly handwriting does not improve, hence all these failures and
+embarrassments to the Post Office.
+
+The articles for transmission by parcel post handed in at the head Post
+Office, branch, offices, sub-offices in town, suburbs, and villages,
+reach the total of 40,000, being about four times as numerous as at
+ordinary periods. The rural districts alone produce 8,000 parcels. The
+parcels delivered number 35,000, being treble ordinary numbers. Ten
+thousand of these parcels are delivered in the villages. Nearly a
+thousand large hampers of parcels are exchanged between London and
+Bristol, and of these some forty contain foreign parcels alone.
+
+Notwithstanding the vastly increased numbers, it becomes noticeable at
+Bristol, year by year, that there is a diminution of parcels conveyed by
+parcel post containing articles of good cheer: the geese, the fowls, and
+the game having decreased, plum pudding's, however, being as much in
+evidence as ever. The reduction in the parcel post rates which took
+place in 1897 has had a very marked effect upon the parcel post traffic,
+and the increase, particularly in the heavy weights, has been very
+great. On the other hand, the reduction in the rates of charge for the
+conveyance of post parcels has had the effect of bringing about a
+decrease in the number of parcels weighing under 2 lb.
+
+As showing that the postal deliveries at the Christmas season are
+arranged as well as the extraordinary circumstances will admit, and that
+the public on its part can appreciate the difficulties to be contended
+with, it may be worthy of mention that complaints of delay are rarely
+made.
+
+The Postmaster-General is not unmindful of his duty in providing
+sustenance for his legions at the busy season, and refreshments are
+supplied for the permanent staff without stint. There are no trams
+running on Christmas Day, so that the postmen with their heavy loads are
+much worse off than on ordinary days, when, with lighter loads, they can
+ride to and fro on the tramcars. There are some pleasing social features
+which are worthy of record. For instance, the ladies of the Clifton
+Letter Mission have for some years past sent "A Christmas Letter" and
+Christmas card to each of the 150 telegraph messengers employed in the
+Bristol district. The ladies who manage the society known as the Postal
+and Telegraph Christian Association invariably send to every postman in
+the Bristol district a sympathetic and seasonable letter, accompanied
+by a pretty Christmas card and the best of all good wishes. The staff of
+the Bristol Post Office usually pay the compliments of the Christmas
+season to their postal friends elsewhere in the form of a
+prettily-designed card.
+
+Christmas Day of 1898 is rendered memorable in postal annals from the
+circumstance that on that day the postage on letters to and from many of
+our colonies and foreign possessions was reduced from the modest sum of
+2-1/2d. per half-ounce to the still more modest sum of 1d. per
+half-ounce. Bristol has a not inconsiderable colonial and foreign
+correspondence. British India takes 550 letters, etc., on the average
+weekly; the Dominion of Canada, 450; Newfoundland, 110; and Gibraltar,
+100; the other countries to which the reduced rate of postage has been
+applied take 500 in the week.
+
+One of the many changes that have taken place in the manners and customs
+of the people as affecting the Post Office is very noticeable as regards
+the observance of St. Valentine's Day. Thirty years ago the votaries of
+the patron saint, in their thousands, vied with each other, year after
+year, to honour his memory, and make the Post Office the medium of
+sending to every close friend some kind of love token, ranging from the
+artistic production at one guinea, down to the humble penny fly-leaf
+which contained the simple but expressive pleading, at the bottom of a
+neat woodcut, "O come, true love, be mine." Only too often, however, the
+day was made the occasion to strike a blow at the fickle lover by means
+of some gross caricature. On the eve of St. Valentine the energies of
+the staff, which was limited as compared with now, were formerly greatly
+taxed to get rid of the enormous piles of packets which flooded the
+various receptacles in the city. All this is, however, changed; the
+occasion now passes by almost unnoticed in the sorting office and by the
+postmen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+PUBLIC OFFICE: ITS BUSINESS--THE SAVINGS BANK--PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS.
+
+
+[Illustration: THE PUBLIC HALL, BRISTOL.
+
+_From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol._]
+
+The public office of the Bristol Post Office is very commodious (50 ft.
+by 44 ft.), and affords ample counter accommodation to the citizens for
+properly conducting their Post Office business. It is markedly superior
+as regards size and fitting-up to almost any other provincial office,
+and indeed its equal in those respects is scarcely to be found in all
+London. In contrast to the spacious public hall of the Bristol Post
+Office and the civility of its clerks, the writer's first impressions of
+the postal service of his country were by no means of a pleasant
+character. When quite a small child, he was entrusted by his mother with
+the mission of conveying a small rose-coloured and delicately-perfumed
+letter to the Post Office in a world-famed Warwickshire town--an errand
+of which he was "no end" proud. Timidly he knocked at a little wicket in
+the window of the house to which he was directed. Almost immediately
+the wicket was thrown open, and a very red visage appeared. "What do you
+want?" "Will you put a stamp on this letter, sir, please?" "No! What the
+devil do you mean by bringing letters like this? 'Tisn't big enough.
+It'll get lost in some hole or corner." Frightened at this "Giant Grim,"
+a hasty retreat was made, and the irascible old postmaster was left to
+do as he liked with letter and penny.
+
+The penny combined postage and Inland Revenue stamp was introduced in
+1881. A new series of postage stamps was issued in 1884, and the present
+series in January, 1887.
+
+In the year 1833 the value of the postage stamps obtained from London
+for distribution in the Bristol district was £33,844; in 1862 it had
+only grown to £35,720; but in 1898 it had reached the more prodigious
+proportions of £171,000, of which sum those stamps of the halfpenny
+denomination were of the value of £30,700, and in number 14,735,000; and
+the penny stamps in value £85,775 and in number 20,586,000. Stamps of
+other denominations were issued thus:--1-1/2d., 207,360; 2d., 205,920;
+2-1/2d., 207,000; 3d., 364,320; 4d., 277,680; 4-1/2d., 16,000; 5d.,
+147,120; 6d., 534,600; 9d., 51,200; 10d., 27,840; 1s., 82,320; 2s. 6d.,
+2,800; 5s., 2,588; 10s., 688; 20s., 550 and £5, 4. Post-cards, embossed
+envelopes, newspaper wrappers, telegraph forms and other articles of the
+kind were of the value of £14,334. At the earlier period the postmaster
+of the day was allowed 1 per cent. on the value of the stamps sold, in
+addition to his salary. It is not so now!
+
+Under the system inaugurated in 1880 the postal orders issued and paid
+at the Bristol public office counter number nearly half a million in the
+year. The money orders paid at the counter preponderate over those
+issued--the amounts respectively being £237,000 and £34,000. These sums
+include the amounts received in respect of telegraph money orders--the
+Department's new departure of 1890. The Government insurance and annuity
+business commenced by the Post Office in 1865 is making progress in
+Bristol, and the same may be said of the system started in 1880 of
+investments in Government stock through Post Office medium.
+
+The first Post Office Savings Bank in the district was established at
+the Clifton Branch Post Office on the 16th September, 1861, the year in
+which savings bank business was commenced throughout the country
+generally. Several accounts were opened on that day, and the amount
+deposited was £35 4s. A similar institution was opened in the city in
+March, 1862, at the Money Order Office, then located in the corner shop
+in Albion Chambers, Small Street, opposite the present Head Post Office.
+From such small beginnings a vast savings bank business has grown up.
+The sum standing to the credit of depositors in the Post Office Savings
+Bank in the Bristol postal area at the end of 1895, when the last
+account was published, was nearly £2,000,000, deposited by some 100,000
+separate individuals. The deposits made at the head office in Small
+Street reached close upon £400,000, and the other part of the amount is
+made up thus: Gloucestershire side--Town Post Offices, £659,085; rural
+Post Offices, £192,934. Somersetshire side--Town Post Offices, £215,295;
+rural Post Offices, £91,944. The estimated amount due to depositors in
+the Post Office Savings Banks throughout the whole country on the 21st
+December, 1898, was £123,155,000, and the amount due to trustees of
+Savings Banks on November 20th, 1898,--the latest date on which the
+figures were made up--was £50,634,655. The Bristol Savings Bank was
+closed in 1888, and its 12,814 accounts were transferred to the Post
+Office Savings Bank. The amount of money involved was a little over half
+a million.
+
+During Mr. Fawcett's administration at the Post Office, thrift on the
+part of the nation was encouraged in every possible way. Then was
+inaugurated the now familiar system for facilitating the placing of
+small sums in the Post Office Savings Bank by means of postage stamps
+affixed to a Post Office form as penny after penny is saved until an
+amount of one shilling is reached, the minimum for a Post Office Savings
+Bank deposit.
+
+A case occurred at a Bristol Post Office fifteen years since, in which a
+young servant girl, in her desire to be thrifty under the system alluded
+to, craftily obtained the key of the letter box from the secret place in
+which the sub-postmaster kept it, and abstracted a number of circular
+letters on School Board business, and took off the stamps for
+attachment to the Savings Bank slips. She was sentenced to a term of
+imprisonment, which, on account of her youth, was limited to six months.
+
+Amusing incidents sometimes occur to break the monotony of counter work.
+For instance, a woman applied for a postal order, and when it was handed
+to her, the clerk, acting upon the official instructions, recommended
+the good lady to take the number before sending the order away. A few
+days afterwards she appeared at the Post Office with the order and
+complained that payment had been refused because the order had been
+mutilated. The clerk on examining the order found that the direction to
+"take the number of the order" had been acted on literally. The number
+had been carefully cut out, and retained in the possession of the
+applicant. It was some time before she could be made to realize her
+mistake. In another instance early one fine autumn morn a young couple
+presented themselves at the public office of the Bristol Post Office and
+begged in earnest language that they might be supplied with a marriage
+license. The request could not, of course, be complied with, but the
+applicants, much to their satisfaction, were informed where they could
+obtain the needed document. On another occasion some money was observed
+on the counter, and on the very small child near it being asked what was
+required, "Two ounces of tea and a pound of sugar" were at once
+demanded. This mistake no doubt arose from the fact that the business
+carried on in the late Post Office building in Exchange Avenue is that
+of a tea dealer. It is a rule of the Service that letters should not be
+delivered from the _Poste Restante_ except to the actual addressees or
+to other persons bearing authority to receive the letters on behalf of
+the addressees. A request was made at the Bristol Head Post Office for
+the delivery of letters to a person other than the addressee, which
+person could not produce the necessary authority to act as recipient.
+The excuse given for non-production of authority was that the addressee
+was asleep. The enquirer having been advised to get authority when the
+addressee awoke, rather astonished the counter clerk by saying that such
+awaking would not take place until Saturday, the day of application
+being Tuesday. It transpired that the application was made in respect of
+letters for a person who was undergoing a state of hypnotism at a
+Bristol music hall. The touching incident occurred at the Bristol Post
+Office of a poor woman--pressing want having come upon her at last--who
+had to withdraw a shilling which she had thirty years previously
+deposited in a trustee savings bank which was taken over by the Post
+Office. She had to receive one penny by way of interest for the use of
+her mite for thirty years. Some years since a collector of old issues of
+crown-pieces presented seventy of such coins, in a good state of
+preservation, at the Bristol Post Office counter as a Savings Bank
+deposit. The depositor, after taking the trouble to accumulate these old
+coins, had come to the conclusion that an annual interest of eight
+shillings and sixpence would be more useful to him than an occasional
+inspection of the coins. Few people know so little about Post Office
+matters as an individual from over the Severn who recently asked for a
+postage stamp. "Do you want a penny or a halfpenny stamp?" asked the
+clerk. "I want a South Wales stamp," was the reply of Taffy. Then the
+surprise of the counter officer must have been great when, on counting
+up his money, he found that on one of the shillings the legend "Baby"
+boldly appeared impressed where the Queen's head is usually found, the
+coin having evidently been used as a brooch.
+
+The Department, in communicating with the public, prescribes that its
+officers should subscribe themselves as the public's most obedient
+servants, and on some of the printed forms which have to be returned in
+answer to queries raised by the Department the same style is adopted for
+the public to use. One dignified gentleman returned his form, from which
+he had erased "Your obedient servant" and substituted "Yours
+respectfully," adding a marginal note to the effect that he was not the
+servant of the Department, but that the Department was his servant.
+
+The postmaster of Bristol is addressed by the public in various ways, as
+for instance: "Postmaster General," "General Postmaster," "Bristol
+Postmaster," "H.M. Chief Postmaster," "To the Postmaster in State, Small
+Street, Bristol," "Head Post-Master and Surveyor of the Bristol
+District," "Head Master, Post Office," "Post Office Master,"
+"Postmaster-in-General," "Master General, Post-Office," "Mr. ----, Esq.,
+Post M.G.," "Mr. ----, Esq., Post Office General," "To the Reverend Sir
+Postmaster, Bristol, England."
+
+It is astonishing how many Foreigners and Colonists apply to the Bristol
+Post Office respecting their relations, or for information as regards
+trading matters. The former questions are sometimes answered, but the
+latter are handed over to the courteous secretary of the Chamber of
+Commerce to deal with.
+
+Very unusual was the circumstance of the receipt at the Bristol Post
+Office in 1895, anonymously, of a sum of ten shillings in postage stamps
+as conscience money, and, oddly enough, the next day threepence in
+stamps was received in the same anonymous manner and for the same
+purpose. These two instances were the first and the last.
+
+The difference between romance and fact is exemplified by an article
+which appeared in a monthly magazine as follows, viz.:--
+
+ "A PUBLIC SERVANT."
+
+"Her Majesty possesses one more faithful public servant than she is
+aware of, though its name does not transpire in the list of the
+Ministry. Every night at the General Post Office, Bristol, a spirited
+mare attached to the red mail-cart is brought, at a quarter before
+midnight, to fetch the bags of letters, &c. She stands perfectly still,
+waiting while the mails are sealed and tossed one by one into the
+vehicle. At the five minutes before twelve, however, should all not be
+ready for departure, her driver sings out 'Any more for the down train?'
+by way of hurrying the officials. No sooner does the mare hear those
+words than she begins to dance and curvet, showing in every possible way
+her anxiety to start and her sense of the importance of her duties. But
+if by any chance the first stroke of midnight should sound before they
+are ready to proceed to the station, she takes matters into her own
+hands, and nothing will then hold her in. Those who have to do with this
+clever and beautiful creature are very proud of her, on account of the
+example she sets of punctuality and attention to the affairs of the
+nation."
+
+The real facts on which this incident is founded were, that the horse
+(not mare) remained in the Post Office yard quietly from 11.10 p.m.
+until midnight on one particular night only, and not generally, and
+when the loading of the van commenced the horse became restive, the
+final slamming of the van doors causing it to start off for the street.
+In consequence of a repetition of this restlessness on another night,
+and "kicking-in" the front of the van, the horse was taken off the Royal
+Mail Service.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+TELEGRAPHS, TELEPHONES, EXPRESS DELIVERY.
+
+
+The Saxon King, Edmund I., doubtless never conceived, when he held court
+(A.D. 940-946) at his palace in the village of Pucklechurch, seven miles
+from Bristol, that in generations to come there would exist, as there
+does now, a telegraph office within a few yards of the site of his
+castle, whence a question could be wired to the ends of the earth, and a
+reply obtained in the short space of a few hours. Probably at that
+remote period a journey from Pucklechurch to the north of Scotland would
+have been considered as great an achievement as that in recent days of
+Dr. Nansen in his endeavour to get to the North Pole.
+
+The first actual working telegraph was erected in 1838 between
+Paddington and West Drayton on the Great Western Railway, and in the
+following year Wheatstone and Cook constructed a telegraph line from
+Paddington to Slough. Mr. Brunel then wished to extend the line to this
+city, but the shareholders would not support him to that extent. In
+1852, however, the Great Western Railway Board had the line constructed
+through to Bristol. By means of it messages could, at that later date,
+be forwarded to and from most parts of the kingdom from the office at
+the Bristol Railway Station. Arrangements were put in progress for
+extending the wires into the centre of the city, in order that greater
+facilities might be afforded to those parties who might wish to avail
+themselves of the means of inter-communication, and before the end of
+the year the wires were laid from the railway station to the Commercial
+Rooms, and subsequently three telegraph offices were opened in the city,
+viz.: the Electric and International, on the Exchange; the Magnetic, in
+Exchange Avenue; and the United Kingdom, in Corn Street. A telegraph
+line was laid to Shirehampton, and the committee of the Commercial Rooms
+subscribed £30 a year towards its maintenance.
+
+It is recorded that in 1859 the firm of Messrs. W. D. and H. O. Wills,
+tobacconists and snuff manufacturers of this city, laid down an
+electric telegraph wire between their warehouse in Maryport Street and
+their manufactory in Redcliff Street, whereby the partners and employés,
+although engaged in different parts of the city, were enabled to
+converse with each other as readily as if occupying the same
+counting-house. The wire was used solely for their own business.
+
+In 1862 a turnpike road telegraph was spoken of as being in course of
+construction between Bristol and Birmingham.
+
+Mr. James Robertson, the senior assistant superintendent o£ the Bristol
+Telegraph Office, during his forty-two years' service, thirteen of which
+were passed in the employment of the Electric and International
+Telegraph Company, has had many experiences. He has culled from his
+"ancient history" the fact that the amount of telegraph business
+transacted by the E. and I. T. Co. at Falmouth, Plymouth, Bristol, and
+London (Lothbury, head office) on March 10th, 1858, at the respective
+times of day stated, was:--Falmouth, 8 messages, handed in by 10.20
+a.m.; Plymouth at 10.36 had managed to transmit 7; Bristol, at noon,
+39; and Lothbury had received 116 by 12.17 p.m. Plymouth transmitted for
+Falmouth, and Bristol for Plymouth. Bain's chemical recorder was the
+system used on the Falmouth wire, the double needle on the Plymouth and
+Bristol, and "Bains" and needles on Bristol-London circuits. The average
+delay on messages at Plymouth was eighty-three minutes and at Bristol
+fourteen minutes. The charge at the time from Falmouth to London was
+four shillings for twenty words, addresses free. The present proprietor
+of _Lloyd's Newspaper_, Mr. Thomas Catling, records an incident in which
+Mr. Robertson was concerned. Mr. Catling was the only London newspaper
+reporter who visited Windsor on the eventful night when the deeply
+lamented Prince Consort breathed his last on 14th December, 1861. On
+reaching Windsor by the last train from London he learned that His Royal
+Highness had passed away about twenty minutes previously. Having
+obtained at the Castle particulars of the sad event, Mr. Catling hunted
+out the residence of the clerk of the Electric and International
+Telegraph Company. On ringing him up, the clerk pleaded that before
+going to bed he had been taking gruel and hot water to get rid of a bad
+cold. He, however, got up and proceeded with Mr. Catling to the
+telegraph office in High Street, whence intelligence was wired to
+London. Mr. Catling preserved the receipt of that message as a souvenir
+of the occasion. Mr. Robertson was the telegraph clerk who arose from
+his bed to perform the service in the dead of night.
+
+On the transfer of the telegraph business from the companies to the
+State early in 1870, the Post Office, Bristol, engaged sixteen clerks
+from the Electric and International Telegraph Company, five from the
+United Kingdom Company, and six from the Magnetic Company. Additional
+clerks were employed by the Post Office as soon as the volume of work
+could be gauged, but in the meantime the transferred clerks had to do
+practically double duty. The officials taken over from the companies
+were located in the Small Street Post Office, but it was not until
+January, 1872, that room could be found there for the entire staff,
+which had then grown to be ninety clerks and fifty messengers. The
+telegraphic system soon after the Government took to it was extended in
+this district to twenty of the principal villages. In the first year of
+Post Office working there were 450,000 messages dealt with here, and now
+the yearly number is 3,500,000. The sixpenny telegram was introduced in
+1885. The local telegraph service now has a staff consisting of a
+superintendent, 23 superintending officers, 140 male and 44 female
+telegraphists, eight telephonists, and 155 telegraph messengers.
+Telegrams are delivered from the head office, two branch offices,
+fifteen town sub-offices, forty rural sub-offices, and four railway
+stations. The head office has 600,000 messages delivered from it
+annually, the branch and town sub-offices 220,000, and the rural
+districts 74,000. Of the latter (74,000), about 8,000 are delivered at
+distances of from one to three miles, and 350 at distances over three
+miles. After 8.0 p.m. all the messages in the town area are delivered
+from the head office. The Duke of Norfolk's 1897 concession of free
+delivery of telegrams for all distances under three miles has been
+appreciated by all those concerned.
+
+The telegraph gallery has direct telegraphic connection with the
+undermentioned towns: Bath, Birmingham, Bridgwater, Cardiff,
+Cheltenham, Chippenham, Clevedon, Cork, Exeter, Glasgow, Gloucester,
+Guernsey, Jersey, Leeds, Liverpool, London, Manchester, Newport (Mon.),
+Oxford, Plymouth, Reading, Southampton, Swansea, Swindon, Taunton, and
+Weston-super-Mare, and thirty-two smaller towns.
+
+Bristol plays a not unimportant part in the Post Office telephone trunk
+line system, commenced in 1896. It has direct trunk lines to Bath,
+Birmingham, Cardiff, Exeter, Gloucester, London, Newport, Sharpness,
+Taunton, and Weston-super-Mare. The conversations held by the public
+through the medium of these lines number 4,000 weekly.
+
+[Illustration: THE TELEGRAPH INSTRUMENT ROOM, BRISTOL POST OFFICE.
+
+_From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol._]
+
+The well-ventilated and well-lighted telegraph instrument room is on the
+upper floor, and extends from end to end of the building. In it there
+are 102 telegraph instruments of various kinds in use, viz.: 5 A.B.C.'s,
+19 double-plate sounders, 30 sounders, 28 duplexes, 5 quadruplexes, 5
+Wheatstone sets, 7 repeaters or relays, 2 concentrators and 1 hexode.
+Divested of technicalities, it may be said that telegraphing on the
+A.B.C. instruments is effected by alphabetic manipulative keys, which
+are depressed by the fingers of the left hand of the sender at the
+same time that a handle is turned with the right hand, and a
+corresponding effect is produced on the dial plate of the receiver. The
+double-plate sounder is read by sound from two small metal hands
+striking right and left against two pieces of metal. In sending, the
+working is by means of keys manipulated by the hand. The sending upon
+the sounder instrument, which is that chiefly used, is done by a small
+key with handle being depressed and released according to the dots and
+dashes of the Morse alphabet. The signals by which messages are received
+and read by the ear are produced by a bar of soft iron striking upon a
+steel point placed between two coils of wire. With the A.B.C.,
+double-plate sounder, and sounder, only one message can be sent or
+received on the wire at one time; but the duplex sounder instruments are
+so constructed that two messages can be sent on the wire--one in each
+direction--at the same time. Double-current duplex instruments are in
+use for telegraphing to busy towns such as Plymouth, Exeter, Cardiff,
+Swansea, &c., &c. The quadruplex consists of two duplex sets upon one
+wire. Upon these circuits two distinct messages may be sent
+simultaneously from each end. The hexode has six instruments at each end
+of a single wire, enabling twelve clerks to operate at the same
+time--six at each end,--and thus admits of a single wire doing so much
+work as six wires worked with the ordinary sounder instrument.
+
+At times of pressure when race meetings are going on, or during the
+cricket and football seasons, the ordinary methods of working are
+supplemented by extraordinary means, thus: the duplex working between
+Bristol and Manchester is augmented by Manchester connecting there a
+Bristol wire with a Newcastle wire: Newcastle in like manner further
+connecting the line with Glasgow, Glasgow with Edinburgh, Edinburgh with
+Dundee, and Dundee with Aberdeen. Then at the Bristol end, instead of
+working by means of the ordinary keys, Wheatstone working is resorted
+to, viz.: the messages instead of being "keyed" are "punched," the
+punching process being performed by means of iron punching sticks upon
+an apparatus called the "perforator." The sticks are rapidly worked by
+skilful operators upon three steel keys, which, when struck,
+mechanically draw a strip of white paper tape, at the same time
+perforating holes which indicate signs in accordance with the Morse
+alphabet system. These slips thus "punched"--which, by-the-by, very much
+resemble the perforated slips used in connection with the organette
+instrument--are passed through a Wheatstone "transmitter," and buzzed
+through so rapidly that 400 or 500 words can be sent in a minute. The
+signals are simultaneously reproduced upon blue slips in the form of
+dots and dashes at Manchester, at Newcastle, at Glasgow, at Edinburgh,
+at Dundee, and at Aberdeen. The message recorded on the slips is broken
+off at about every hundred words to form a "press" page at the receiving
+offices for writing up by the telegraphists, a large number of whom can
+be employed on the work at the same time. When this process is resorted
+to the battery power for the wire has to be greatly increased. The
+repeater instruments are worked in like manner, except that the system
+is permanent instead of occasional. The concentrator is a recent
+invention, and is used for the purpose of economising force and
+apparatus, and of minimising delay and table space. By its means the
+wires for eighteen to twenty offices, which use the same form of
+telegraphic instrument, are led into a special switch-board, and each
+wire as it is required is "switched" through to a telegraph instrument,
+at which a clerk is ready to send or receive the message. Thus the
+telegraphist is "fed" by the operator at the concentrator, and has to
+send a message to any one of the thirty towns instead of, under ordinary
+working, to only three or four towns.
+
+In place of over 700 batteries with 3,500 cells of the Bichromate,
+Daniel and Leclanche type in use at the Bristol telegraph office for
+many years, a system of accumulators or storage batteries has been
+brought into operation. The power for charging the accumulators is
+generated on the spot by a Crossley's gas engine driving a dynamo. The
+accumulators number 250, and each has seven divisions. The hexode
+instrument between Bristol and London requires a voltage of 400 dry
+cells. There are two complete sets of accumulators, each with separate
+connecting wires to the instrument room. One set is in use at a time.
+The system of accumulators has been introduced for the purposes of
+economy and saving of space.
+
+It may be interesting to the uninitiated to learn that in telegraphy the
+earth plays the part of a return wire; thus the circuit between Bristol
+and Birmingham is rendered complete by earth. The wires connected with
+the two towns indicated are brought into the test boxes at the
+respective places, and there connected to a single wire at each town
+which finds earth by means of a zinc plate buried some twelve feet in
+the soil near or under the Post Office buildings.
+
+Occasionally when people have been out for a drive or a cycle ride, and
+their eyes have been delighted with the grand scenery to be found around
+Bristol, they look, as they journey homewards, to the Government poles
+and to the many wires therefrom suspended, and wonder which are
+telegraph wires, which are telephone wires, where they all lead to, and
+between what points messages are sent and conversations held. Such
+travellers returning to Bristol by way of Almondsbury would see the
+wires on the one side (telegraphs), which run from Bristol to Falfield,
+Newport, Cardiff, Swansea, Gloucester, Liverpool; London to Swansea,
+Newport, and Cardiff; Birmingham to Exeter; Plymouth to Liverpool; and
+(telephones) Bristol to Birmingham, Gloucester, Cardiff; and on the
+other side of the road (telephones) Horfield, Fylton, Almondsbury,
+Newport, Cardiff, Gloucester and Birmingham. In some instances there are
+two or three wires for the same place. The telegraph, and telephone
+wires cross and recross each other at frequent intervals along the road,
+and the whole sets of wires cross from side to side of the road between
+Fylton and Almondsbury.
+
+Alternative routes for the wires are adopted where practicable, so that
+in case of a break-down on one line communication may be kept up on the
+other.
+
+By way of illustration of such alternate routes, it may be mentioned
+that the two wires from the Head Post Office in Small Street for Swansea
+run underground to Stapleton Road, at which point they are brought above
+ground and diverge, one running to Wee Lane, thence to Ashley Hill,
+Horfield, Almondsbury, Alveston Ship, Falfield and Berkeley, up to the
+Severn Bridge; and the other branching off at the end of Stapleton Road,
+and carried along the Fishponds and Chipping Sodbury roads nearly to
+Yate, and down the Tortworth road to just beyond Falfield, where it
+joins the other Swansea and South Wales wires, and passes over the
+Severn Bridge into Wales.
+
+The telegraph and telephone wires in this district are chiefly erected
+and maintained by soldiers of the Royal Engineers. Sixteen military
+telegraphists, members of the Royal Engineers, are attached to the
+Bristol Post Office, and kept in training for telegraph service with the
+army. Twelve of them are now--November, 1899--in South Africa on active
+service, in connection with the troubles in the Transvaal.
+
+In the great hurricane which occurred in January, 1899, the telephone
+and telegraph wires radiating from Bristol were blown down in all
+directions. In consequence Bristol was entirely cut off from direct
+telephonic communication with Birmingham for 21 hours, and had only one
+wire instead of two for 9-1/4 hours; from Bath for 18 hours, and had
+only one wire instead of two for 5-1/2 hours; from Cardiff for 18 hours,
+and had only two wires instead of three for 10-1/2 hours; from
+Weston-super-Mare entirely for 24-1/2 hours; from Taunton for 28-1/2
+hours; from Exeter for 27 hours; from Sharpness for 26 hours. There was
+only one wire instead of two to Gloucester for 26-1/4 hours, to London
+for 6 hours, and to Newport for 20-3/4 hours.
+
+The trunk telephone lines were more or less interrupted for a week,
+caused by the working parties engaged on repairs.
+
+The telegraph wires for the counties of Gloucester, Somerset, Monmouth,
+Warwick, Shropshire, Worcester, Wilts, Devon, Cornwall and Lancashire
+were those chiefly deranged.
+
+It is believed that there is only one telegraph cable in the Bristol
+district, and that cable does not belong to the Postmaster-General. It
+crosses the river Avon at a point adjacent to Pill and Shirehampton, and
+was used by the Commercial Rooms in connection with reports of the
+arrival of vessels. Up to the time of its introduction, as already
+stated, "warners" were employed. The last of the old running "warners"
+were Gerrish and Case. These men lived at Pill, and on hearing news from
+pilots-men of the arrival of a ship in the Bristol Channel they started
+off on foot to Bristol and _warned_ the merchants and wives of sailors
+of the vessel's arrival in the Channel, getting, of course, fees for
+their trouble,--a guinea from the merchants, and so on, down to the
+shillings of the sailors' wives,--and fifty years ago these fees were
+willingly paid, and the heavy postages too. The runners were men of some
+little mark.
+
+The Post Office at Avonmouth, a Bristol sub-office, is much used for
+telegraph purposes by persons on board vessels passing up and down the
+Kingroad in the Bristol Channel. The Bristol Corporation placed outside
+the port a large white notice board with "TELEGRAPH OFFICE" painted upon
+it in black letters, to attract the attention of mariners. The messages
+are chiefly received from vessels with cargoes consigned to Sharpness,
+which in neap tides have often to lie in the roads for days.
+
+Telegrams for vessels lying in Kingroad are often taken out by boat at
+midnight or in the early hours of the morning. This is often in
+consequence of the tide not serving, or being too strong for the boatman
+to go out at seasonable hours.
+
+Lundy Island, in the Bristol Channel, is connected with the mainland by
+a submarine cable, which is considered to be one of the most perfect of
+its kind. Letters for Lundy, from Bristol and elsewhere, are carried
+across by boat from Instow once a week. The nearer small islands of
+Flat Holm and Steep Holm have cable telephonic communication with
+Weston-super-Mare. The telephone, which is carried into the Weston Post
+Office, is rented by the War Office Authorities, who allow the islanders
+the use of it. Letters from Bristol for the Flat Holm are conveyed by
+way of Cardiff. The island is rented from the Cardiff Corporation by a
+farmer who resides upon it. His son, who lives in Cardiff, daily visits
+the island in a yacht, and conveys the letters for the Trinity House
+officials and residents. For the Steep Holm, Bristol letters are sent
+from Weston-super-Mare; the services to the island being
+tri-weekly--Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday,--and are performed by a
+contractor, who goes across on behalf of the War Office. The Steep Holm
+is inhabited by military men only. In a manuscript of 30th March, 1825,
+it is described as "Stipe Holme." One of the first serious efforts in
+connection with the plan of telegraphing through space without
+connecting wires was conducted between the diminutive island of Flat
+Holm and the shore, a distance of about five miles; and between Penarth
+and Brean Down, a distance of nine miles. An interesting illustration
+of the system of wireless telegraphy was given, under the direction of
+Mr. W. H. Preece, C.B., F.R.S. (now Sir W. H. Preece, K.C.B., F.R.S.),
+at the Clifton College conversazione, held in honour of the learned
+British Associates during the meeting of the Association at Bristol in
+1898.
+
+The telegraph staff have seldom had their skill and smartness more
+thoroughly tested than on the memorable Monday evening in February,
+1893, when press messages of great length relating to the introduction
+of the Home Rule Bill were sent over the wires. Twenty minutes after Mr.
+Gladstone rose to speak in the House of Commons the first instalment of
+the special summary of his speech reached this city. The conclusion of
+the summary was received at two minutes to 7. The verbatim report
+commenced to arrive at 4.49, and the last instalment reached the Bristol
+Office at 8 o'clock. The total number of words in the messages sent to
+Bristol was nearly 40,000.
+
+During the early potato season telegraphing is very brisk with Jersey.
+Bristol is the only large office besides London which has direct
+communication with the island. Some idea may be gathered of the extra
+labour entailed on the telegraph service from the fact that in the month
+of June, 1899, no fewer than 20,904 telegrams passed between Bristol and
+Jersey, the normal number being only 5,800 monthly. Five or six
+telegraph operators are usually sent during the season to Jersey from
+Bristol.
+
+In Bristol about 700 firms use abbreviated telegraphic addresses.
+
+The telegraph money order system, started in 1889, is exhibiting
+marvellous developments in the local service.
+
+The express letter delivery service, which came into operation in 1891,
+is very useful to the public. By means of this agency the Post Office
+distributes by express messenger 300,000 letters and parcels annually.
+Of that number Bristol contributes 7,000 services. Bicycles and
+tricycles are now delivered for the public from any telegraph office in
+Bristol and district by special messenger at a fee of 3d. per mile,
+without any charge for weight. The messengers are not permitted to ride
+upon the cycles, except by the permission of the senders, but will wheel
+them up to a distance of three miles.
+
+An express delivery messenger has been used, ere now, for the convoy of
+a traveller from point to point in a town unknown to him or her. The
+Post Office is often required to assist even more closely in the
+domestic relations of life. Recently a gentleman from America wrote to
+the Clifton Post Office to enquire whether a certain near relative of
+his could be found, as he was very anxious to see her before return to
+America. He enclosed a shilling stamp for a reply by telegraph, and
+begged for urgency. The relative was found and her address given. The
+applicant's ardour to see his relative cooled, or his stay in the
+country was abridged, for instead of paying the proposed visit, he
+begged the Post Office officials to expend five shillings, which he
+sent, in the purchase of cut roses for his relative. Of course, this was
+outside the round of Post Office duties, but the clerks obligingly
+attended to it, with the aid of a telegraph messenger who was off duty
+at the moment.
+
+Occasional mistakes are not to be wondered at when people write
+illegibly. Through the improper formation of the capital letter, D, in
+the proper name Dyster, has in telegraphing been turned into O, and the
+name made Oyster, with the result of misdelivery of the telegram to a
+firm of fishmongers having "Oyster" as an abbreviated address. It must
+have been extremely painful to an anxious parent to receive a telegram
+summoning him to a nursing home far distant, in terms that his "sow was
+worse," and begging him to come at once; the telegraphist having made
+the slight mistake of transcribing "w" for "n." The gentleman who sent a
+telegram to his town house in the West End of London asking that his
+covert coat might be forwarded to him was no doubt considerably
+astonished when his butler returned the telegram to him by post asking
+for an explanation, and he found that the text of it was "Pigs, 9/3,
+8/9, and 8/-." The error was occasioned in connection with the use of
+multiple addresses for a bacon-trading firm's telegrams. In another
+instance a curious complication resulted through imperfect spacing on
+the part of the signalling telegraphist, thus:--A telegram written by
+the sender as "To ----, Fore St., Northam, Bideford. Be in attendance
+Public Offices," was transcribed thus:--"To ---- forest, Northam,
+Bideford. Be in at ten dance Public Offices," and, owing to the number
+of words counting the same as the number signalled, the inaccuracy was
+not discovered until a repetition had been obtained from the office of
+origin on application of the addressee. It was printed in a Midland
+newspaper that at the presentation of a sword of honour to the Sirdar
+the Common Councilmen attended in their "margarine gowns," and, of
+course, the error of using "margarine" for "mazarine" was put down to
+the carelessness of the telegraph clerk. A telegram was sent indicating
+arrival at 8 Mostyn Crescent, in a favourite North Wales town. At one
+stage in transmission "Mostyn" became converted into "mostly," and at
+the next office of transmission "Crescent" became "pleasant," and the
+telegram when delivered read "Arrived 8 mostly pleasant." The Prime
+Minister who had informed his audience that "there was no prospect of an
+immediate general election, that they had a working majority, and the
+Government was of good cheer," would not have been pleased had he seen
+that the last word in the telegram posted up in the Bristol Commercial
+Rooms had been transcribed as "of good cheek."
+
+A telegram, "Have arranged for Sunday. Dening," with the first two words
+struck out, and "arrangement complete" substituted underneath, was
+handed in at a telegraph office by a well-known and much respected
+Bristol clergyman. At the forwarding office the message was
+unfortunately read "For Sunday Dinning arrangement complete," the
+erasure and addition not having been properly understood and the proper
+name misspelt. At the delivering office the message again suffered
+alteration, and became "For Sunday dining arrangements complete." It may
+readily be supposed that the addressee was somewhat astonished at the
+peculiar text of the message.
+
+The following is from the Bristol _Times and Mirror_ of February, 1893,
+and has reference to a little inaccuracy on the part of a telegraph
+assistant employed at a Bristol sub-post office. The incident itself is
+correctly reported:--"Garraways, 12 o'clock. Dear Mrs. B.--Chops and
+tomato sauce. Yours Pickwick," settled the hash of a well-known
+character; and a wire, "Going to Bath to meet girl. Not back to dinner,"
+had, very nearly, a similar effect on the domestic relations of one of
+the smartest solicitors in our city. The telegraph has had, in its time,
+much to answer for, "but never aught like this." When Puck said: "I'll
+put a girdle round about the earth in forty minutes," he little thought
+what mischief he might do. It was only the other day we read how a stray
+dropped line destroyed a horse, killed a cow, and cut off the head of a
+nigger; but these accidents were a trifle compared with what might have
+happened if the message first quoted could not have been explained. The
+learned gentleman it appears has a brother, by name Gilbert, familiarly
+known in the circle as "Gil." The latter, having business in Bath, wrote
+asking his relative to dine with him at the "Christopher." The learned
+advocate at once accepted; but, being a thoroughly domesticated man,
+telegraphed to his better-half: "Going to Bath to meet Gil; not back to
+dinner." Then came in the "cussedness" of the wire which substituted
+"girl" for "Gil," and hence the temporary ructions when the happy
+husband, having succeeded with his latchkey, sought repose.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+TELEGRAPH MESSENGERS.
+
+
+The telegraph messengers in uniform employed in the Bristol district
+number about 160. They have a literary institute, a drum and fife band,
+hold swimming classes, etc. That there is need of night classes may be
+inferred from the following specimens of telegraph messengers'
+orthography and syntax:--
+
+(1) "Supt, Sir, I will try to be more careful in the pass. Yours obed,
+H. P----."
+
+(2) "Supt, Sir, I having asked where the message was ment for and they
+told me to go up the road where I should see a chemist shop where I
+should find it about there and I having could not find it I asked, a
+gentleman which he said it was farther up the road and I left it with
+cotton the undertaker which he said it was quite right.--G. H----."
+
+(3) "Supt, sir, I will try to be more extint in the future as this is
+the truth.--M. T----."
+
+(4) "Supt, Sir, I much regret not returning my report But I left it home
+in my other Pocket in my overcoat which is home drying which was wet
+through on Saturday last. Yours obed H. E----."
+
+The institute was inaugurated at a public meeting at the Colston Hall on
+the 1st December, 1892, which was attended by a large and influential
+gathering of citizens. Upon the platform were the Mayor of Bristol (Mr.
+W. R. Barker), who presided, the Very Rev. the Dean of Bristol (Dr.
+Pigou), Mr. Charles Townsend, M.P., Rev. R. Cornall, Mr. R. C. Tombs
+(the postmaster), Mrs. R. C. Tombs, Dr. Lansdown, jun., Miss Synge, Miss
+Pollock, Messrs. John Harvey, Arthur Baker, E. G. Clarke, H. Lewis, C.
+H. Tucker, R. L. Leighton, W. H. Lindrea, J. R. Bennett, E. Sampson;
+also Messrs. A. J. Flewell (superintendent of the telegraph department),
+W. H. Gange, J. Robertson, J. S. Gover, J. J. Mackay, H. T. Carter
+(superintendent of the postal department).
+
+It was explained that the telegraph messengers were engaged at from
+thirteen to fourteen years of age, and the lessons they had learned at
+school had chiefly been supplemented by a knowledge acquired in the
+streets. The object was to counteract street influences by providing
+elementary instruction, recreation, and interesting literature. There
+was no desire to educate the boys to such a pitch that Jack would think
+himself better than his master, but to take care that they should not
+degenerate. It was announced that the hours of labour had just been
+reduced from sixty-two to fifty per week, which would be a great boon to
+the boys. It was further stated that a private appeal had been made, not
+in vain, to a few of Bristol's most generous citizens, and that through
+their kindly aid, with subscriptions from the members of the staff and
+the grant which it was hoped to earn from the Education Department, the
+institute would be carried on without pecuniary embarrassment. The
+description of the institute's work was as follows:--
+
+1. The institute would be open to the telegraph messengers and to junior
+officers of the postal and telegraph service, the charge to each member
+to be one penny per week.
+
+2. The institute would be carried on in a room at the General Post
+Office.
+
+3. In connection with the institute an evening school would be held, the
+educational session to last from October to May. An annual examination
+of the members of the classes would be held.
+
+4. In addition to the three elementary subjects,--reading, writing, and
+arithmetic,--classes would be arranged for the study of Scripture,
+geography, drawing, composition, and shorthand.
+
+5. For the purpose of recreation certain games would be provided.
+
+6. In connection with the institute there would be a library, which had
+been formed by means of books generously given by the citizens of
+Bristol.
+
+7. The library would be open to any established or unestablished officer
+of the postal and telegraph service at a slight subscription per month.
+
+8. A penny savings bank would also be started.
+
+The Chairman said he gladly consented, to preside that evening, because
+the object of the meeting was one in which he took deep interest, and
+one which he felt sure would commend itself to a very large number of
+his fellow-citizens. He thought he might say that everything connected
+with the postal service was peculiarly interesting to them all, and
+anything they could do to ameliorate the lot of those who daily rendered
+them such important service they would be very glad to do. He thought it
+would not be well to make the movement too "goody" in its character, or
+too educational, so he was glad to see that there was a lighter side to
+the scheme.
+
+Mr. Charles Townsend, M.P., Mr. Arthur Baker, Mr. Harold Lewis, Miss
+Synge, and members of the postal and telegraph, staff, also spoke.
+
+Then, the Dean of Bristol addressed the telegraph messengers, and said
+he really should have been disappointed if he had not been invited to
+attend the meeting. It was a pleasant part of his privilege in
+ministering in Bristol to be asked to take a share in such an
+interesting gathering as they were holding that evening. One of the best
+features of this institute was that it would assist them to put their
+leisure to the most profitable use.
+
+The educational work has been progressing steadily ever since its
+inauguration, and much good has resulted from it to the messengers.
+
+Ever ready to give their countenance to entertainments for the benefit
+of the community, their Graces the late lamented Duke, and the Dowager
+Duchess, of Beaufort, as their first public act after coming to reside
+at Stoke Park, near our city, attended a concert at the Redland Park
+Hall, which was held for the purpose of benefiting the funds of the
+Telegraph Messengers' Institute. Later on, May 21st, 1898, they were
+kind enough to attend an annual meeting and a prize distribution at the
+Colston Hall. The late Duke, who presided on the occasion, said it was a
+great pleasure to him to be present. He had witnessed a good deal of the
+care and discipline with which the Post Office messengers were looked
+after. Like everybody who had a great deal of correspondence, he had the
+privilege of having the services of the best regulated Post Office in
+the world. They also had in this country the privilege of being able to
+use the best regulated telegraph service. They might be perfectly sure
+that if a man wanted to send a telegram, when once he put it into the
+hands of the postal officials, however ill-written or badly addressed it
+might be, it was very probable that the telegram would reach its
+destination. Those who had a good deal of correspondence were deeply
+indebted for the splendid organisation of the Bristol Department. They
+were also very much indebted to the telegraph clerks, who deciphered the
+scrawls handed them, and who transmitted the messages. They were deeply
+indebted also to the boys for the way in which they refrained from
+stopping to play marbles, and did their duties with great zeal, and
+delivered their messages at the proper places and to the proper persons.
+They would understand that they were Government officers, and that they
+had to discharge important duties. He could personally say that those
+duties were thoroughly well carried out in the city of Bristol and its
+neighbourhood.
+
+The Duchess of Beaufort then distributed the prizes, after which a
+telegraph messenger presented Her Grace with a basket of choice flowers.
+
+The Bishop of Bristol addressed the lads, and urged them to do their
+duty thoroughly when on duty, and to enter heartily into healthy play
+when off duty. In doing their duty they should remember one or two
+things. They might be charged with the delivery of a message which was a
+matter of life or death; it might be one regarding which thousands of
+pounds depended; or it might be one of little importance. But, whatever
+it was, it was not for them to enquire, but to deliver the message with
+punctuality and promptness. Having spoken of the discipline and training
+telegraph boys received, he observed that of all telegraph boys, for
+punctuality, steadiness, courtesy, and politeness, the Bristol boys were
+about the best. He urged them also to live pure lives and observe
+complete honesty, that they might become worthy citizens of whom the
+country might be proud. He was glad to hear the name of the lady (Miss
+Pollock) who conducted the scriptural class so cordially received, which
+showed that the lady and her work had taken hold of the hearts of the
+boys. The excellence of their work as boys, and as men, and the
+enjoyment of their lives, in the best sense, depended upon their
+becoming God-fearing. He should be pleased to give a prize in connection
+with the Scripture class.
+
+The letters of the Bishop, written with reference to the occasion,
+should not be left unchronicled. They ran as follows, viz.:--
+
+ "Church House,
+ Dean's Yard, S.W.,
+ _May 10th, 1898_.
+
+"MY DEAR POSTMASTER,--I am speaking at Bath on the afternoon of the
+20th, and am engaged to stay the night. But I think your proposal so
+important that I am writing to my host, Mr. S., to ask if he has engaged
+friends to meet me. If he can excuse me, I will, if all be well, come to
+you and say something.
+
+ "Yours very truly,
+ G. F. BRISTOL."
+
+ "The Athenęum,
+ _May 12th, 1898_.
+
+"MY DEAR POSTMASTER,--I have arranged to return to Bristol on the
+evening of May 20, and if all be well can be with you. Send me a card of
+place and hour.
+
+ "Yours very truly,
+ G. F. BRISTOL."
+
+The following extract from a letter in which His Grace wrote concerning
+the meeting, is indicative of the interest which he took in matters
+affecting the postal and telegraph services of Bristol, viz.:--
+
+ "Stoke Park,
+ Stapleton, near Bristol,
+ _21st May, 1898_.
+
+"DEAR MR. TOMBS,--I must write you a few lines of thanks for the very
+pleasant evening you gave us last night. Both the Duchess and I enjoyed
+it very much. I was remarkably struck with the appearance of your boys:
+such nice, clean, smart-looking youths. What a difference drill makes to
+lads! They have already a smart--soldierlike, I should call
+it--appearance, and I am sure it tends to sharpen their minds as well as
+to straighten their bodies.
+
+ "Believe me to remain,
+ Yours truly,
+ BEAUFORT."
+
+The messengers little thought as they listened to the Duke's encouraging
+words, addressed to them on the occasion of the meeting, that they
+would before a year had passed away be sending a modest, humble, but
+loving tribute, in the form of a wreath, which was thought worthy to be
+suspended over the pulpit in Badminton Church at the Duke's obsequies,
+in juxtaposition with a wreath of mammoth proportions sent by the
+officers of the 7th Dragoons (the Duke's old Regiment).
+
+The Bristol telegraph messengers have cause to remember that bright
+Saturday afternoon in 1895 when, preceded by their drum and fife band,
+they marched out to Burfield, Westbury-on-Trym, the country residence of
+Sir (then Mr.) R. H. Symes, the Mayor of Bristol. They were there
+enabled to have a few hours of recreation and pleasure, and to forget
+the busy hum of the city with its turmoil and heat. Following the
+excellent example, Mr. Arthur Baker, of Henbury, and other country
+gentlemen have invited the boys out on Saturday afternoons, to encourage
+them to keep banded together for good purposes, and to maintain that
+_esprit de corps_ which is so necessary in a body of youths drawn
+together after the manner of the Telegraph Messengers' Class.
+
+A most memorable occasion was that in 1897, when the messengers were
+inspected by Lieutenant-Colonel MacGregor, of the 24th Middlesex R.V.C.,
+London. They mustered at the Post Office, and, under the direction of
+Inspectors Mawditt, Appleby (late 29th Regiment and sergeant-major
+Scinde Volunteers), and Cook (late Royal Marines), and headed by their
+drum and fife band, marched to the Artillery Drill Ground in Whiteladies
+Road where, in presence of many visitors, military and civilian, they
+were put through manual exercises, physical drill to music, and then
+reviewed on the parade ground. In the speeches which followed the boys
+were complimented on their efficiency and smart appearance. It was on
+this occasion that it was announced the Postmaster-General had obtained
+the sanction of the Treasury for a grant of money in order to encourage
+telegraph messengers' institutes and drill in the large towns. Under
+this scheme, prizes for proficiency in drill and general good conduct
+are awarded--a system which has since been found to work admirably.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+LETTER DELIVERY SYSTEM. POSTMEN: THEIR DUTIES AND RECREATIONS.
+
+
+The extent of the Bristol postal establishment in 1775 may be gleaned
+from the reply given by the Postmasters-General to a memorial
+complaining that there was only one letter carrier for the delivery of
+all the letters received in Liverpool. The answer was that only one
+letter carrier was maintained in any provincial town, including the
+premier city of Bristol, and that they did not think themselves
+justified in incurring for Liverpool the expense of another. An
+additional Bristol postman was, however, appointed between then and
+January, 1778. In 1792 there were four letter carriers at Bristol, but
+only two appear to have been allowed by the Department, the other two
+being employed as extras, and provided for, probably, by an extra charge
+on the letters delivered. The Bristol letter carriers were not supplied
+with uniform clothing until 1858. Then, a hat and coat once yearly, and
+a waterproof cape once in two years, were given to them. The uniform
+clothing was not supplied to the auxiliary letter carriers. Bags or
+pouches for the men to carry for the protection of the letters were at
+that time provided.
+
+In 1859 the postmen wore scarlet uniform and issued out from the Post
+Office three times daily to traverse the length and breadth of the city
+in the distribution of letters. In 1899 the "men in blue" sally forth
+six times every day.
+
+In the postmen's department there are now seven inspectors and three
+hundred and seventy postmen. The delivery of letters in the town
+district is made from the head office. There is a branch delivering
+office at Clifton, but those at North Street and Phippen Street were
+long since abandoned. In the Bristol postal district, sixty years ago,
+there were fewer than 20,000 letters delivered in a week, or about
+1,000,000 in a year--a number now nearly reached in a week. The letters
+delivered annually from the Central Post Office number 31,000,000; from
+the Clifton Post Office, 6,250,000; from the suburban offices and rural
+offices, 7,300,000. It is a noteworthy fact that the letters posted in
+Bristol for delivery within its own limit form 27 per cent. of the
+total number, which percentage is only surpassed at two or three of the
+large cities of the Kingdom. Six deliveries of letters and five
+deliveries of parcels are made in the city, with ten collections. The
+average number of persons to whom letters are delivered by each postman
+in Bristol (city) is 1,800. There are 666,536 parcels delivered
+annually. To each of two firms are delivered more than one quarter of a
+million letters annually, equal to one hundredth part of the total
+number of letters delivered.
+
+The distances from the head office to the extreme outward terminal City
+and Clifton delivery points are as follows:--Westbury Park, 2-1/2 miles;
+Horfield Barracks, 3 miles; Ridgeway, 2-1/2 miles; Barton Hill, 1-3/4
+miles; Arno's Vale, 1-3/4 miles; Totterdown, 2 miles; Bedminster Down, 2
+miles; Ashton Gate, 2 miles; and Clifton Suspension Bridge, 1-1/2 miles.
+The trams are used by the postmen, and the Department pays the Tramways
+Company a lump sum in respect thereof. The convenience in this respect
+will be enhanced when the electric traction system is fully introduced.
+
+In the sorting office the letters are sorted to the various rounds by
+postmen dividers, and the general body of postmen then have to arrange
+them at their desks seated on little revolving stools. The process
+adopted by the postmen in setting in their letters for delivery may be
+explained by the following example relating to what is technically known
+as the "Cotham Brow Walk." The letters are first primarily divided
+(upright) into streets, roads, squares, courts, etc., taken thus--viz.:
+(_a_) Sydenham Road, 1 to 18 (one side only); (_b_) Sydenham Hill, 45 to
+11, odd numbers (one side only); (_c_) Tamworth Place 13 to 1 (one side
+only); (_d_) Arley Hill, 2 to 34 and 5 to 27 (cross); (_e_) Arley Park
+(cross); (_f_) Arley Hill, 36 and 38 and 29 to 41 (cross); (_g_) Cotham
+Brow, 124 to 88 and 125 to 27 (cross); (_h_) Southfield Road, 2 to 28
+and 1 to 27 (cross); (_i_) Upper Sydenham Road, 38 to 19 (one side
+only); (_j_) Springfield Road, 47 to 85, odd numbers (one side only).
+Then the letters for one of the above-named ten divisions or streets are
+taken one by one and placed in order of actual delivery flat on the
+table; then all are gathered together and stood upright, the letters
+for each division being treated in like manner. When the letters for
+any one street or road, etc., have been set in order, fresh batches of
+letters of, say, thirty or so, are fully sub-divided by the same process
+before being set in with the accumulated and finished letters. This
+course is necessary in order to obviate the postman having to go through
+a set of fifty or a hundred letters time after time as he gets a fresh
+batch of letters. Two hours are allowed for the morning delivery and one
+and a half hours for other deliveries. As those who have the longest
+rounds have the lightest burdens, they all contrive to finish at about
+the same time.
+
+The Clifton Suspension Bridge, which was erected in 1864 at a cost of
+£100,000, plays a very unimportant part in postal affairs, as it serves
+for the passage over the Avon of three postmen only, who cross with
+letters for the Leigh Woods and Failand districts. Long Ashton, which
+has a carriage road approached by the bridge from the Clifton side,
+receives its letters by a postman who crosses by a ferry lower down the
+river and reaches his destination more expeditiously than by crossing
+over the bridge.
+
+A Bristol postman, who was well acquainted with the locality which he
+had to serve, met with an ugly accident through colliding with a
+lamp-post, recently erected and not supplied with gas for lighting up.
+It had been put up during the man's interval of duty, so that he came
+upon it for the first time when it was shrouded in darkness. The
+postmen, having in the discharge of their duties to be early birds and
+to be first out and about in the morning, often pick up articles lost or
+deposited overnight. Thus it was that a postman found on one winter's
+morn in a Bristol suburb a parcel containing the dead body of a child,
+and had to constitute himself a corpse-carrier for the nonce. It was in
+this city of Bristol that the following somewhat amusing and certainly
+interesting incident took place. Two rats were found in combat over a
+letter, which, delivered in due course by the postman, had fallen upon
+the floor at the entrance to a warehouse, and had been dragged thence to
+the spot where the rodents were engaged in their fierce encounter, the
+gum on the flap probably being the attraction. The letter contained a
+cheque for £300, and its loss for some days caused no small amount of
+consternation and anxiety to the gentleman who should have received it,
+and who, it need scarcely be said, at once gave orders for a letter-box
+to be attached to his warehouse door.
+
+It was well for the Magistrates' Clerk for the Gloucestershire Division
+of Bristol that he was well known to the postman, or assuredly he would
+never have received the letter addressed thus: "Mr. Latchem Laforegat
+pleace stashun," the proper address being: "Mr. Latcham, Lawford's Gate
+Police Station, Stapleton Road, Bristol."
+
+Recently many valuable dogs were poisoned in different parts of the
+city, and a suggestion appeared in the newspapers that the postmen might
+be urged to constitute themselves amateur detectives for the discovery
+of the miscreants, on the ground that they enter every garden and knock
+at every door throughout the length and breadth of Bristol, and that at
+early morn and late at night as well as by day. The postmen are public
+spirited, but it is hardly likely that they would go considerably out of
+their way for the purpose, considering the risks which they run from
+dogs and the annoyances to which they are subjected to by them. The
+postmen have to face the snappish terrier and the ferocious-looking
+bulldog. Not infrequently they get bitten, and more frequently get
+soundly abused if, for their own protection, they belabour a dog
+occasionally, or give it a taste of their belt for want of a better
+weapon of defence or offence. Reciprocity would demand that if the
+postmen look out for dog poisoners, the owners of dogs on their part
+should take the utmost care to keep their dogs properly secured when
+known to be dangerous or to have a special dislike to the public
+servants in blue. The bold announcement given on the pillar of a gateway
+of a residence in a fashionable suburb of Bristol, "Beware of the
+bulldog," is not calculated to give confidence to the postmen who have
+to deliver the letters. One poor dog, well known in the city, fell dead
+in Small Street; and as the dog had just been seen to visit the Post
+Office, and even to drink from a Bristol Dogs' Home trough standing in
+the portico, it was assumed by the many spectators of the poodle's sad
+death that he had come to an untimely end through drinking poisoned
+water from the Post Office trough. The vessel was therefore confiscated
+by an over-zealous supporter of the Dogs' Home, and the water was
+subjected to analysis, but investigation proved that it was innocuous,
+although from an examination it transpired that the dog really had died
+from poison, which had, however, been taken in meat.
+
+A London firm made indignant enquiry as to why a letter had been
+returned to them through the Returned Letter Office, seeing that it was
+addressed to a well-known and distinguished baronet living near Bristol.
+It turned out that the right hon. gentleman was himself the cause of the
+return of the letter, as he read the contracted words "Rt. Honb.," in a
+line preceding his own name, as the name of "Robt. Hunt," a person who
+lived near his mansion, and he gave the letter back to the postman with
+the foregoing result. In 1847 a letter indicative of the times, with the
+following superscription, as noticed in the post:--"To the Post Office,
+Bristol, Somersetshire, England, 115 miles west of London, this letter
+is to be delivered to the Ladey that transported Jobe Smith and 2 others
+with him near Bristol." Members of the public complain from time to time
+in indignant terms respecting the loss of letters in the post, but in
+very many instances they afterwards write in meeker strain to say they
+have discovered the missing letters--in most unlikely places in their
+homes.
+
+At a dinner given by officials of the Bristol Post Office, the Dean of
+Bristol bestowed praise on the postmen for success in conveying
+ill-addressed letters to their destination. Dr. Pigou cited their
+performances in his own case. He had been addressed as Pigue, Picken,
+Pigon, Pigour, Pickles, Peggue, Puegon, Ragou, and Pagan. That
+"Ragou"--not being a name beginning with "P"--should have reached him,
+he thought could only be explained as the result either of a flash of
+inspiration or of the recollection of previous "hashes" of his name; but
+"Pickles" evidently got home on the mere strength of its initial letter,
+and though, as he complained, it is hard lines to be addressed as "Dr.
+Pagan" after having been thirty or forty years in orders, the written
+word would much more nearly resemble his real name than several of the
+other addresses which did find him. "The Head Gamekeeper, the Deanery,
+Bristol," was, of course, mysterious. The letter contained a circular
+advertising wire netting for pheasants, rabbits, and hares; and when the
+Dean replied, pointing out that the only space available on his
+premises--an area of 30 ft. by 40 ft.--was too small to rear pheasants
+in, he received, a further circular recommending a trial of "our dog
+biscuits." Occasionally, also, the local postmen meet with letters so
+peculiarly addressed as that for "Mr. ----, Oction her and Countent,
+Corn Street, Bristol," and another for "Chowl, near Temple," intended
+for "Cholwell, near Temple Cloud." The postmen collect, too, letters
+peculiarly addressed to other places.
+
+There are still a few postmen veterans in the Bristol Post Office who
+are toiling on long after having exceeded their "three score years."
+Doubtless these aged men excite sympathy as they are seen on their daily
+rounds, and the thought presents itself to the public mind that the Post
+Office is harsh to make them labour when so far advanced in years. Such
+is not the case, however, as the men, unfortunately not being entitled
+to pensions, have been allowed to continue to perform their duties long
+after pensionable established men would have been retired, either
+willingly or compulsorily, under the regulations which now call for a
+Civil servant's retirement to be considered his reaching the age of
+sixty years. These old worthies are not Post Office short-service men;
+but, as their good conduct stripes testify, they have for long years
+served their Queen and country.
+
+J. S., one of these life-long toilers, who worked as an uncovenanted
+postman for many years, commenced his career in the navy. When fifteen
+years of age (1844) he joined the gunnery ship _Excellent_ at
+Portsmouth, Captain (afterwards Admiral) Chade being then in command.
+After serving two years, he was transferred to the old _Conway_, then
+engaged in putting down the slave trade in East African waters; and
+after three years on board that vessel he went to the brig _Helena_, and
+was with her in the West Indies for several years. In about 1854 he was
+passed to the _Britannia_ for Mediterranean service. While sailing from
+Gibraltar to Malta, S. met with a serious accident. Being considered a
+smart young man, he was ordered by the captain to assist another "A.B."
+to rig the topgallant yard-arm. While thus at work he fell from the
+maintopmast cross-trees into the main rigging, again to the main chains,
+and then overboard--a drop in all of 120 feet. A boat was lowered
+promptly, and he was soon picked up, but he was in an insensible
+condition. It was found on examination by the ship's surgeon that his
+skull was fractured. He went into hospital on arrival at Malta, and
+there he remained six months. Shortly after the accident, the
+_Britannia_, which was the Admiral's flagship, was ordered to the Crimea
+(1855), and not only did the seaman who took over S.'s gun meet with his
+death by the shells from the fortifications at Sebastopol, but the whole
+of the gallant tars fighting on the starboard side of the ship were
+killed. S. was taken to London on board the _Growler_ (Sir Charles
+Wood), the first steamer he had ever seen, and was incapacitated for two
+or three years, but fortunately he obtained a pension on having to leave
+the navy. He was engaged in private life till 1878, when, at the age of
+49 years, he was given Post Office work, on which he was employed for
+twenty years, and, indeed, until he again came to grief through an
+accident when on duty at Christmas, 1898. On this occasion he was
+knocked over by a cart in Victoria Street, which ran into the parcel
+handcart S. was wheeling, and which sent him flying into the mud and his
+parcels all about in the road. This put an end to his Post Office
+career, and the old man, with disabled body from his first accident and
+somewhat impaired faculty from the latter, has now sunk back into
+seclusion, and it is hoped that he may end his days in peace. Except for
+three weeks' illness caused by influenza, he was never away on sick
+leave out of his twenty years of Post Office service. Not once was S.
+late at work. He was, he says, always out of bed at 3 a.m., and so
+punctual was he known to be that the remark was often made when he
+entered the office, that "We know what time it is without looking at the
+clock." On leaving the Post Office service this year (1899) a small
+gratuity was awarded him.
+
+S. T., although in his 71st year, managed up till quite recently to
+perform Post Office work for a few hours daily. From early boyhood up to
+his 22nd year, T. was engaged at shoemaking in this city; then he
+enlisted and served as gunner and driver in the Royal Horse Artillery
+for three years. Having obtained his discharge from the army, he acted
+as policeman on the Great Western Railway for a few months. At the time
+of the Crimean War, T. again enlisted, this time as a seaman and gunner
+in Her Majesty's Navy. He was disabled in action and discharged with a
+life pension. For the next twenty-seven years he followed his former
+occupation of shoemaking and rounding, working for about twenty years
+for one firm in this city. When 53 years of age, he first obtained
+employment in the Post Office, working for a few hours daily, and
+receiving 10s. per-week. He is a member of the Crimean and Indian
+Veterans' Association.
+
+A Bristol Post Office benefit society was established in March, 1861. It
+became the Bristol Letter Carriers' Sick Benefit Society in 1862, and
+was carried on under that title up to 1890 when it ceased.
+
+Early in the year of 1896, the remains of the late Thomas Rutley, one of
+the oldest of Bristol postmen, were interred at Greenbank Cemetery.
+About one hundred postmen, headed by the Post Office band, were in
+attendance to mark their sympathy, and respect to his memory. The Rev.
+Moffat Logan conducted the service. Such a mark of respect is not always
+accorded to deceased Post Office servants. The writer recollects on a
+bright summer day having attended the funeral at Highgate Cemetery of
+one of the oldest and most respected superintendents in the Post Office,
+London. The good man was so much liked by those who served under him
+that he had gained for himself the name of "Honest John," yet there was
+only one other official besides the writer to stand by his graveside.
+
+The postmen have a military band, composed of thirty members of their
+own staff. The primary object is to advance the art of music in the Post
+Office, and, secondarily, to provide concerts in the open spaces in
+Bristol for the benefit of the public. A grand concert is given by the
+band every year, which is usually attended by some 3,000 of the
+inhabitants, attracted chiefly by the popularity of the Post Office and
+by the fame of artistes so eminent as Madame Ella Russell, Madame Fanny
+Moody, Mr. Plunkett Greene, and others, who have from time to time been
+engaged.
+
+The "D" Company of the 1st Volunteer Battalion Gloucester Regiment is
+composed almost exclusively of members of the Bristol Post Office. For
+three years in succession, (1894-5-6), this company won the first prize
+in the drill competition and also first prize and challenge vase in the
+volley firing competition. The company challenge bowl and first prize,
+and the brigadier's cup and third prize in the Western District of
+England, were also won by the company during the same period. For many
+years the Bristol Post Office has had two out of the nine
+representatives of the battalion competing for the Queen's Prize. The
+company has also been well represented in all the battalion and county
+shooting matches. Of the eight battalion signallers, five are Post
+Office men, who have on several occasions held first place in the
+Volunteer service annual examinations.
+
+The postmen of Bristol maintain for the winter months two of the old
+veterans who are under the auspices of the Crimean and Indian Mutiny
+Veterans' Association.
+
+Mr. Goodenough Taylor, one of the proprietors of the _Times and Mirror_
+newspaper, has kindly given a Ten Guinea Challenge Cup, to be raced for
+by Bristol postmen who use bicycles in connection with their Post Office
+business of delivering and collecting letters. The cup has to be won
+three years, not necessarily in succession, before it becomes the
+postman's sole property. The terms under which the competition for the
+cup is held are as follows, viz.:--"Competitors to be postmen of any
+age or rank; appointed, unestablished, auxiliary, or sub-postmaster's
+assistant, of not less than two years' service, who have never won a
+prize in public competition. Competitors to be certified as having in
+the course of the preceding twelve months, under official sanction or
+direction, ridden 150 miles in the execution of their official duties,
+or to and from the office when attending duty. The race to be a handicap
+race of two miles, to take place on the Gloucestershire County Ground or
+other enclosure during each year. The postmaster, assisted by experts
+in the Post Office service, to be the handicapper. The handicap to be
+framed on points of age, physical ability, and regard to be had to the
+weight or kind of bicycle to be used in competition." Postman Newman,
+of Coalpit Heath, was the winner this year (1899).
+
+The postmen have a library, consisting now of some 700 volumes. It was
+started in 1892. The writer made an appeal through the local press for
+gifts of books to form the nucleus of a library for the postmen and
+telegraph messengers attached to the Bristol Post Office. This appeal
+was liberally and promptly responded to by the residents of Bristol and
+Clifton. Warmest thanks are due to the newspaper proprietors for their
+kindness in inserting paragraphs relating to the subject, as, but for
+their powerful co-operation in the matter, the movement could not have
+been brought to a successful issue. A well-known literary gentleman at
+Clifton gave eighty volumes, Mr. Harold Lewis, B.A., showed his interest
+in the movement by the donation of 200 copies; and Mr. J. W. Arrowsmith
+has frequently given fifty volumes at a time. The postmen themselves
+manage the library, and contribute small sums weekly towards its
+maintenance and further development.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+POST LETTER BOXES: POSITION, VIOLATION, PECULIAR USES.
+
+
+The three hundred and fifty pillar and wall letter boxes are placed at
+convenient points, regard being had to the wants of the immediate
+neighbourhood that each has to serve--to approach by paved crossings, to
+contiguity to a public lamp, to being out of the way of pedestrians and
+as far removed from mud-splashing as possible. At the same time, the
+inspectors endeavour to place the boxes so that they may be an
+attraction, rather than an eyesore, to the spot where erected.
+
+The sign of "The Pillar Box" has been given to a public-house before
+which a Post Office box stands. Occasionally the Post Office letter
+boxes are greatly misused. Some little time since a woman in Bristol was
+savage enough to drop oil of vitriol, nitric acid, and other dangerous
+fluids into the boxes. She even poured paraffin into the letter box at a
+post office, and dropped an ignited match in after it. A conflagration
+was only averted by the fortunate circumstance of the postman clearing
+the box just in time to extinguish the commencing fire. The woman's
+determination is evidenced from the fact that her hands were severely
+burned by the strong acid she used; but, notwithstanding this, she
+continued night after night to carry on her dastardly work. She was
+found out after much anxious watching, and having, on trial, been found
+guilty, she was sentenced by a lenient judge to six months'
+imprisonment. She would assign no reason for her incomprehensible
+behaviour even when asked by the judge in court. Not infrequently,
+mischievous children place lighted matches, rubbish, etc., in the Post
+Office letter boxes, and in the letter boxes of private houses and
+warehouses. The Post Office officials are always on the alert to
+discover the delinquents. It is desirable also that the public, in their
+own interests, should call the attention of postmen and the police at
+once to any case in which they may observe letter boxes being tampered
+with. It may not be generally known that offences of this kind are
+punishable by imprisonment under the Post Office Protection Act.
+
+A remarkable case was that of a servant who was a somnambulist, and who
+for some time wrote letters in her sleep, night after night, and took
+them to adjacent letter boxes to post. Sometimes she was fully attired,
+and at other times only partially so. As a rule, the letters were
+properly addressed, but the girl did not always place postage stamps
+upon them.
+
+Occasionally the postmen have to encounter the difficulties arising from
+a frost-bound letter box. Such a case occurred with a box situated on
+the summit of the Mendip Hills. The letter box and the wall in which the
+box is built were found by the postman to be covered with ice, caused by
+rain and snow having frozen on them. The door resisted all his efforts
+to open it, and he had to leave it for the night. On making another
+effort when morning came, it taxed his ingenuity and that of other
+interested and willing helpers to get the box open. Hot water was tried,
+paraffin was poured into the lock, and it was only after a hammer had
+been used and a fire in a movable grate had been applied for a time that
+the lid could be opened.
+
+A letter box erected in a brick pillar in a secluded spot on the East
+Harptree road, about a mile distant from any habitation, was, late one
+night, damaged to the extent of having its iron door completely smashed
+off, apparently either by means of a large stone which lay at its base
+when the violation was discovered, or by means of a hammer and jemmy.
+Although the adjacent ground, ditches, and hedges were searched, no
+trace of the iron door could be found. As three roysterers were known to
+have passed the box on the night in question, it was assumed that the
+damage was done by them out of pure mischief and not from any desire to
+rob Her Majesty's mails. Whether such were the case or not, they had the
+unpleasant experience of being locked up over the Sunday on suspicion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+RURAL DISTRICT SUB-POSTMASTERS. RURAL POSTMEN. INCIDENTS.
+
+
+The Bristol postal area is an extensive one, the distance from point to
+point being thirty miles, with width ranging from five to twelve miles.
+It is bounded on one side by the river Severn, from a point about five
+miles below Sharpness to a point close to Portishead; thence the
+boundary stretches across country to the Mendip Hills, up to Cheddar
+Cliffs; then from a point four miles north-east of Wells to
+Newton-St.-Loe, near Bath; across the river Avon, under Lansdown, thence
+in a line by Pucklechurch, Iron Acton, and Thornbury across to the
+starting-point on the Severn. The large rural area is for the greater
+part agricultural in character, but there are collieries and stone
+quarries in some few districts.
+
+At the Bristol town and rural sub-Post Offices there are 554 assistants
+of all kinds employed. Many rural sub-postmasters act as postmen; in
+the main it is a healthy occupation, and proves a very good antidote to
+sedentary employment, although there are hardships to be borne, as the
+toil has to be undergone in all weathers--the scorching sun of summer,
+the pitiless cold of winter--in rain, hail, and snow. In connection With
+the Early Closing Movement, at some of the outer Post Offices business
+is suspended at 5.0 on one day in the week--usually Wednesday.
+
+In the suburban and rural districts there are 105 sub-Post Offices, and
+78 of them are letter delivery offices, served by an aggregate number of
+226 postmen. Of the 78 districts, 42 have two daily deliveries 28 three,
+and 6 four, with about a corresponding number of collections.
+
+The sorting clerks and telegraphists at head-quarters gain some sort of
+acquaintance with sub-postmasters through daily communication by mail
+bag and wire; also in the passage of reports and counter-reports; but
+occasionally people performing postal work throughout the extensive
+Bristol district are brought into closer harmony and touch with each
+other by means of social functions, such as "outings" and Bristol
+Channel steamer trips, when town and country officials take their
+pastime in company, and the sub-postmasters and sub-postmistresses of
+the Somersetshire portion of the district get acquainted with those of
+the Gloucestershire side, and all with the head office officials. By
+these means of friendly intercourse and interchange of kindly feeling,
+the service is much benefited. As an indication of this exchange of
+courtesy, the felicitations exchanged by telegram when the first annual
+trip by steamer to Ilfracombe was taken ran thus:--
+
+"From Postmaster, Bristol.--Pleasant journey to you. Long may
+Sub-Postmasterly friendship continue."
+
+"From Sub-Postmasters at Ilfracombe.--Telegram received. Thanks for good
+wishes. Have just drank your good health. Pleasant trip. Regret your
+absence extremely.--Sub-Postmasters."
+
+The Bristol Post Office has only recently had electric light introduced,
+but the squire of East Harptree had long before set the good example of
+progress by having the Post Office in his village illuminated by
+electricity. In the Bristol area very many villages have their little
+counterpart of the huge combination shops in London, where the villager
+is enabled to procure everything that his modest income will allow him
+to purchase. It is at these village "Whiteleys" that the Post Office is
+generally to be found, and a surveying officer may soon become well
+versed in the qualities of bacon, cheese, bread, flour, candles, and get
+a knowledge of rakes, prongs, and besoms, without much difficulty. In
+other instances no business except that of Post Office work is carried
+on.
+
+The picture of the sub-Post Office at Cribbs Causeway, five miles from
+Bristol, may give our readers who are "in cities pent" an idea of a
+delightful place for the sale of postage stamps and postal orders and
+the distribution of letters. This unique Post Office has few houses
+anywhere near it, but it serves a large, albeit very sparsely populated,
+area. Some of its interest rests in the fact that it was formerly the
+half-way inn on the once important highway from Bristol to New Passage,
+for the ferry over the Severn into South Wales. Some of our elderly
+readers may probably recollect it as the stopping stage of the coaches
+which ran prior to the introduction of the railway system. The sub-Post
+Office, which stands on high ground, is held by two sisters, who went to
+it as a health resort from a farm in the low-lying Severn marsh. They
+act as postwomen, and brisk exercise and the early morning dew has
+brought such roses to their cheeks as would be envied by their Post
+Office sisters whose fate it is to reside in smoke-begrimed regions.
+
+[Illustration: CRIBBS CAUSEWAY POST OFFICE.]
+
+Although some of the Bristol district villages are situated at a long
+distance from town and remote from main roads, yet only one of the Post
+Offices presents the primitive condition of having a thatched roof. None
+of the rural postmen now avail themselves on their journeys of the
+services of that faithful creature, the donkey; but the last animal so
+used was on the road until 1890, when its master, poor Sims, the
+Congresbury to Shipham postman, shuffled off this mortal coil. Times
+change, and our manners change with them; so also do our tests for gold
+coins. At the Wrington Post Office there are brass testing weights, for
+sovereigns and half-sovereigns, inscribed "Royal Mint, 1843," such as
+have not been observed by the writer at any other Post Office, either in
+the Bristol district or in London. A certain sub-postmistress in the
+district has for many years been in the habit of keeping her sheets of
+reserve postage stamps in a large Family Bible. Not that she is
+irreverent--indeed, she is a pious woman,--but, being a lone widow, she
+has kept them in that manner for safety, as she imagines that no burglar
+would look for them in such a depository.
+
+[Illustration: MR. EDWARD BIDDLE.
+
+(_Sub-Postmaster of Rudgeway._)
+
+_Photographed by Mr. Protheroe, Narrow Wine Street, Bristol, from an oil
+painting._]
+
+A notable man in his day was Edward Biddle, on the Thornbury side of
+Bristol. Mr. Biddle was sub-postmaster of Rudgeway for over forty years,
+and occupied the post until his death in 1889, at the ripe age of 91
+years, when he was succeeded by his daughter, and she, in turn, was
+succeeded by his son, William Biddle, who still holds the appointment.
+Prior to becoming sub-postmaster, Mr. Edward Biddle was "Pike" keeper at
+Stone, and used to pay £752 per annum for his post. There he had to open
+his gate to no fewer than twenty mail coaches daily, on their way
+between Bristol and Gloucester. At Rudgeway he carried on the joint
+occupation of sub-postmaster and innkeeper, at a tavern where the Post
+Office business had been conducted for many years before he succeeded to
+it; but the innkeeping business had in course of time to be given up,
+under Post Office regulations. Mr. Elstone, of Alveston House, wrote
+expressing his satisfaction that the Post Office was to be carried on at
+a private house, and not as previously at a "roadside pothouse," which
+all the district considered a very improper place. At that time John
+Blann and other stage carriers drove their unwieldy waggons, drawn by
+four strong cart-horses at a walking pace, along the Gloucester turnpike
+road. The waggons were indeed the goods trains of olden times. The
+present sub-postmaster, the son of Edward Biddle, who has had for many
+years to use "Shanks's" pony in the delivery of letters, was engaged in
+olden times in going on horseback down to the Passage to take, in
+saddlebags, the mails for South Wales and receive them therefrom. As
+late as 1850, letters from Rudgeway for Bristol were impressed with a
+stamp thus:--
+
+ BRISTOL
+ 4 JA 50.
+ BY POST.
+
+Mr. James Tiley, the village blacksmith of Clutton, now an octogenarian,
+calls to mind that sixty years ago the letters for Clutton, Temple
+Cloud, Stowey, Bishop Sutton and adjacent districts were delivered from
+Old Down, a hamlet on the main coach road from Bath to Wells, distant
+from Tyburn Turnpike, London, 121 miles. Mr. Tiley has had the luxury of
+paying 10d. for a letter brought from London by the above means; and as
+it was dear to him at the time, it is dear to him now in another sense
+as a reminiscence of the past. Mr. Tiley recalls the sending of letters
+of the district by waggoners to Bristol or Bath to save the postage, and
+slyly remarks: "So stupid were the waggoners that as often as not they
+brought the letters back again, having forgotten to--what Post Office
+people now term--'properly dispose of them.'" Also that Joseph Tippett,
+a postman of the olden time, was brutally assaulted on Stowey Hill, and
+nearly lost his life and his letters. His assailants were discovered
+and were transported for life. The Old Down postman was timed to reach
+Temple Cloud Bridge at 12.0, and always blew horn or whistle to let the
+village schoolmaster know the time of day. During the Bristol riots the
+arrival of the mail every morning was eagerly awaited by persons far and
+near, anxious to hear the latest news.
+
+So recently as the year 1867, a postman had to trudge right away from
+Bristol to the distant village of Chew Stoke, having to breast the steep
+hill of Dundry and pass through Chew Magna on his way. All the letters
+and newspapers then delivered at Bishopsworth, Dundry, Chew Magna and
+Chew Stoke were carried by this man. Now, with the introduction of the
+parcel post and a cheaper letter post, and consequently increased
+weight, the morning mail is carried in a mail cart, and that service is
+supplemented by two or three other despatches to Chew Magna and Chew
+Stoke by train _viā_ Pensford. The hamlets of Breach Hill, Moreton and
+Herons Green were at that time unserved by the postman officially, and
+if delivered privately by him he charged for them at the rate of an
+extra penny each. The residents in those outlying districts who did not
+get their letters delivered in that way, and who did not call for them
+at the Chew Stoke Post Office, usually obtained them--two, three, or
+four days old--from the postman on Sundays, who stationed himself at the
+church door to oblige such worshippers. Some of the older country
+postmen say that in by-gone days the poor people, unable to read
+themselves, considered it part of a postman's duty to read their letters
+for them, and they looked for sympathy from the postmen in case of
+receipt of bad news. The Chew Stoke postman had a walk, in and out, of
+over twenty miles, and had to carry whatever load there was for the
+route. The pay attached to the post was small. This was in the good (?)
+days of not so long ago, but the postman who then had to take the
+journey is by no means anxious for a return to them, for now he receives
+double the amount of pay then allowed. He was out from five o'clock in
+the morning till seven or eight o'clock at night; but now he performs
+his eight hours' duty straight off, and has, therefore, more time at
+home for his private purposes.
+
+When, about eight years since, there was a deep fall of snow in this
+district, the West Town postman, who is likewise sub-postmaster, very
+considerably added to his labours by carrying tea, sugar, medicine, and
+even bread to the people on the Mendips, who were snowed up and deserted
+by baker, butcher, grocer, and indeed by everyone except the faithful
+Queen's messenger. The floods of November, 1894, which proved very
+disastrous in the West of England, interfered in no small degree with
+Post Office arrangements in the rural districts around Bristol. In some
+villages the roads were submerged from three to four feet, and it was
+impossible for the public to get to the letter boxes, the postmen and
+postwomen being, perhaps, the greatest sufferers. In order to avoid
+flooded roads, it was necessary to change routes and make long detours.
+Many postmen were compelled to wade through the water waist deep, whilst
+others had to be driven through in horse and cart. The inhabitants and
+farmers in many places kindly lent their horses and carts for the
+purpose, and but for these kindnesses the letters would have been
+delayed for many hours. In spite of all difficulties, the letters were
+generally delivered without much delay, and only in a few cases had the
+letters to be held over for any length of time until the waters had
+subsided.
+
+[Illustration: LETTER BOX AT WINTERBOURNE.]
+
+A tit made her nest in the bottom of a Post Office letter box at
+Winterbourne, near Bristol, laid her eggs, and notwithstanding that
+letters were posted in the box and that the box was cleared by the
+postman everyday, the bird tenaciously held to her nest and brought up
+five young tits, two of which perished in their attempts to get out of
+the box by means of the small posting aperture through which their
+mother had squeezed so frequently, carrying with her all the materials
+for the nest. The three survivors flew off one day when the door of the
+box was purposely left open for a time by the obliging postman portrayed
+in the picture.
+
+That all is not gold that glitters has been recently brought home to
+three or four of the sub-postmasters in the Bristol district, a
+"sharper" having presented coins gilded to represent sovereigns and
+half-sovereigns, and obtained Postal Orders in exchange for them.
+Through the vigilance of the Bristol police the offender was eventually
+taken into custody, and, having been sentenced at the Assizes to six
+months' imprisonment, he had plenty of time to reflect on his offences.
+A bright, shining new farthing was received at the Bristol head office,
+sent inadvertently in a remittance from a sub-office as a
+half-sovereign, and mixed up with coins of that value, only to be
+detected, however, by the vigilant check clerk. The sub-postmaster who
+accepted it in error for a coin of more precious metal, and did not
+discover the mistake even in preparing the remittance, had to bear the
+loss.
+
+One sub-postmaster, who has now departed this life, was wont to furnish
+his explanations and reports in rhyme, a course which was tolerated on
+account of its singularity and of the writer's zeal and known devotion
+to his duty. The following is an example:--
+
+To the POSTMASTER OF BRISTOL:
+
+ "I willingly answer the question
+ Respecting the length of the track
+ From Shirehampton P.O. to Kingsweston
+ House front door, or lodge at the back;
+ But respecting the relative merits
+ Of back door, or door at the front,
+ As delivery door, I aver it's
+ A question I cannot but shunt.
+ To return to the question of distance:
+ Suppose that the birds of the air,
+ Sworn in as Post Office assistants,
+ To Kingsweston would messages bear:
+ As straight through their skiey dominions
+ They flew from front door to front door,
+ The length of the track of their pinions
+ In yards would be 1224.
+ When a featherless biped is bearer,
+ And through the lone woods his path picks,
+ The feet of this weary wayfarer
+ Cover yards quite 1466.
+ Should the wight have a key, there's a second
+ Way thro' the sunk fence's locked gate,
+ And then his poor feet must be reckoned
+ To make yards 1388.
+ As regards the back door, I pass by it;
+ The back lodge itself is much less
+ Than a mile, howsomdever you try it,
+ By Shirehampton Post Office Express.
+ I do not pretend to correctness,
+ To one yard or even a dozen;
+ No need for extreme circumspectness,
+ The margin's too ample to cozen.
+ I'm obliged by your flattering reference,
+ And when you've another dispute on,
+ I shall still be, with all proper deference,
+ Your obedient Servant,--G. NEWTON."
+
+The turnpike gates in the neighbourhood of Bristol were abolished in
+October, 1867, and the consequence was that the proprietors of the
+various omnibuses by which day mail bags were conveyed to and from
+several of the districts around Bristol applied for, and obtained, a
+money payment in lieu of the tolls, the exemption, from which had formed
+the sole remuneration for the services performed.
+
+The Bristol mail carts running to the rural districts, by permission of
+the Post Office, carry for the newspaper proprietors bundles of papers,
+weighing on an average on ordinary days 40 lbs., and on Saturdays 80
+lbs. The enterprise of the Bristol newspaper proprietors in circulating
+by private means the many thousands of the newspapers which they daily
+print is evidenced, from the circumstance that they find it necessary to
+commit to the agency of the Post Office only about 160 copies for
+distribution, and that chiefly in remote rural districts.
+
+Sub-postmasters in the rural districts of Bristol attain to great ages.
+The sub-postmaster of Mangotsfield, who had long since passed
+three-score years and ten, had his cross to bear, having at 60 entirely
+lost his eyesight. Although blind, and unable to work in consequence, he
+quaintly appeared in his apron to the end, and said that having worn it
+for so many years he did not feel happy without it. A daughter acted as
+his deputy, and mitigated, as far as possible, his hard lot. At his
+funeral some hundreds of people, representing various religious and
+other bodies, attended to pay their last tribute of respect to him.
+
+At Bitton, a village midway between Bristol and Bath, there died
+Sub-postmaster James Brewer, in the 87th year of his age, and in the
+fifty-seventh year of his Post Office service. It was more pleasant to
+enter this Post Office and find the old man calmly smoking his
+churchwarden pipe before the fire, cheery and chatty, than to have such
+a welcome as that afforded at another office by the exhibition on the
+Post Office counter of a miniature coffin and artificial wreaths for
+graves. Another worthy of local Post Office fame has lately passed away
+in the person of Join Warburton, aged 84, who for thirty years was the
+sub-postmaster of Henbury, and who for five years was his daughter's
+adviser after her succession to the appointment. The sub-postmaster of
+the village of High Littleton lost an arm some fifty years ago, but
+notwithstanding that affliction he manages with adroitness to sell
+postage stamps and issue postal orders to the public. This will not be
+considered a very great feat, considering that he has been for years a
+crack one-handed shot, and even now, at the age of 70, can bowl over a
+pheasant or a rabbit quite as readily as many of our sportsmen who have
+the use of both arms.
+
+Sub-postmistresses of great longevity are also to be found. One dame
+(Martha Pike), now in her 93rd year, represented the Department until
+quite recently in the charming little village of Wraxall. When nearly
+90 years old she had a three hour letter round every morning up hill and
+down dale, and she even trudged a mile and a half to fetch a letter and
+parcel mail from the railway station. The sub-postmistress of Stoke
+Bishop died at the age of 84; she and her father had held the Post
+Office in the village for over fifty years. An equally remarkable case
+was that of Hannah Vowles, the sub-postmistress of Frenchay, who, after
+performing the active duties of that position in the village of Frenchay
+for forty-seven years, resigned when within five years of 100 years old.
+In her youth she lived for some time in the West Indies; but she gave up
+her employment there in order to return home to support her mother, who
+was 90 years of age when she died. Mrs. Hannah was succeeded in the
+office of sub-postmistress by Miss Kate Vowdes, a relation, who had
+already been postwoman in the same district forty-two years!
+
+[Illustration: HANNAH BREWER.
+
+(_Postwoman._)]
+
+Hannah Brewer is one of the Bristol Post Office worthies. Her father was
+the sub-postmaster of the village of Bitton alluded to herein. Hannah
+commenced to deliver letters in the hamlets and at the farmhouses near
+Bitton when a mere child, and continued to do so during all the years
+our gracious Sovereign has sat on the throne. Recently, however, she had
+to give up the work, as, having attained the advanced age of 72 years
+and walked her quarter of a million of miles, she felt that she ought
+to take life more easily than hitherto. In distance her round was eleven
+miles daily, and the route was a very trying one on account of the steep
+hills she had to traverse, and of great exposure to the sun in summer,
+and to the wind, frost, and snow in winter. It may be interesting to
+record that Hannah Brewer, although she had to serve a district sparsely
+populated, was never robbed, stopped, nor molested in any way. She was
+the recipient of the first official waterproof clothing issued to
+postwomen in England, and in her picture she is represented as wearing
+it. She only occasionally made visits even to places so near as Bath or
+Bristol, and was, as a rule, a stay at home.
+
+She was not a great reader of the newspapers, but persons on her round
+looked to her as an oracle, and derived information from her as to
+passing events. Hannah naively says that, as regards Christmas boxes,
+she fared very well in olden times, but they were not so plentiful in
+her later years. Hannah, through her devotion to her father when he was
+alive, and through her assiduous attention to her duties as a humble
+servant of the Crown, had gained the respect of all those who knew her,
+both in her native village and on the long round she daily had to
+traverse. As she served the Post Office throughout her long life (her
+memory carrying her back to the days when the letters reached Bitton by
+mail coach and a "single" letter from London cost 10d.), it is
+gratifying that in her old age, when unable to continue to do her daily
+round, the Lords of the Treasury, under her exceptional circumstances,
+granted her half-pay pension, a sum which, with her savings, will serve
+to maintain her until the end of her days. The writer has had few more
+pleasurable duties than that which he undertook of presenting Hannah, in
+her neat and trim cottage, with her first pension warrant.
+
+At the celebration of the Queen's Diamond Jubilee in the village, the
+opportunity was taken, in the midst of the festivities, to make a
+presentation of an elegant marble clock and purse to Miss Brewer. The
+inscription ran: "Presented during Her Majesty's Diamond Jubilee,
+together with a purse of money, by the inhabitants of the postal
+district of Bitton, Gloucestershire, to Miss Hannah Brewer, postwoman,
+upon her retirement, having served this office from the commencement of
+Queen Victoria's reign."
+
+Even Post Office surveyors are sometimes the subject of little jokes on
+the part of their subordinates. An assistant surveyor, when testing a
+rural postman's walk, said that if he had arranged the round originally,
+he should have taken a shortcut across the fields to a certain little
+hamlet so as to serve it before instead of after a more distant place,
+when the postman drily said that he should not have done anything of the
+kind, as there was a rhine about 18 ft. wide and very deep, which could
+not well be got over or through, and, turning to the surveyor, he
+remarked: "Evidently you never were a postman." The humour of this
+incident lies in the fact that the surveyors have always been drawn from
+the élite of the Service. A certain imperious surveyor visited a
+sub-office for the purpose of reprimanding the sub-postmaster for some
+delinquency, and after soundly rating the individual he addressed, and
+refusing to hear a single word in explanation, he, when his harangue
+was over, was coolly informed that he had made a slight mistake, as the
+circumstance referred to another sub-office altogether.
+
+On a certain occasion recently, on entering a Post Office the writer
+heard proceeding from a back room a voice, recognisable as that of the
+sub-postmaster, shouting out a greeting in his (the writer's) Christian
+name: "Come in, Robert." Well, the sub-postmaster thought he saw through
+the partly-curtained glass in the door a friend of that name, and meant
+no disrespect to his surveyor-postmaster.
+
+On calling at another little Post Office on a Saturday, the aged
+sub-postmistress was washing her stone floor--down on her knees in
+business-like attitude. Without looking up, her greeting to the writer
+was: "Halloa! I thought you had been to Jericho. You have not been to
+see me for such a long time!" That salutation was rather embarrassing;
+but on getting to the perpendicular the old lady was the confused party,
+as she had thought her visitor was a local resident who occasionally
+looked in to have a cheery word with her.
+
+It would seem that postal improvements in the Bristol district have been
+carried almost as far as is needful; indeed, in one district, not seven
+miles from the city, contemplated improvements whereby letters would be
+delivered an hour earlier in the morning and might be posted two hours
+later at night, and a day mail in and out be afforded, were declined by
+the parish authorities in council and by memorial from the villagers
+generally. In this rural hollow the people are very clannish, and rather
+than let their postwoman suffer a loss of two shillings a week, which
+the change involved, they were content to forego improved postal
+facilities, and were not greatly stirred by the "lasinesse of posts" as,
+according to history, was King James of old.
+
+While Bristol is ever expanding and while splendid buildings are being
+erected, there are not wanting places within a short distance of the
+ancient city where there are signs of decadence, as indicated by houses
+unoccupied and cottages in ruins, and by shrinkage in the number of
+letters. At Stanton Drew, where some thirty large stones alone remain to
+mark a site where there probably stood a splendid Druidical Temple, the
+postal arrangements a few years since were not in a satisfactory
+condition. Not unlike the story which has recently been going the round
+of the newspapers, that a sub-postmaster of an Oxfordshire village fixed
+this notice up: "Have gone fishing. Will be back in time to sell
+stamps," the sub-postmistress of this Somersetshire hamlet went away for
+days without putting up any notice whatever, and left her son to supply
+the inhabitants with postage stamps when he got home in the evening from
+his work as an agricultural labourer. Still, people did not complain, so
+that they may be regarded as accessories to the sub-postmistress's
+delinquencies. There was, however, a postal super-session in that
+village!
+
+There is still in the rural service a postman who labours under the
+disabilities of having only one arm and of being unable to read or
+write. He has not a very extensive delivery, and so his pockets are made
+to do duty in the place of the faculty of reading. The left breast
+pocket indicates that letters placed in it are for Cliff Farm, those in
+the right breast pocket for Rush Hill Farm, several other pockets
+serving in like manner.
+
+From very old official books sent into store on the change of holders of
+sub-offices, it is noticeable that the writing of fifty years ago was
+much superior to that of the present day, indicating that
+sub-postmasters of olden time either took more interest in caligraphy
+than their successors, or possibly had more leisure in which to make the
+necessary entries than is afforded in the present period of high
+pressure.
+
+'Tis strange that it was so, as at the time the steel pen had not ousted
+the quill. Even so short a time as forty years since a new intrant to
+the Post Office, hailing from the Emerald Isle, had, like all other
+new-comers, to enter his name and address in the Order Book on his first
+introduction to St. Martin's-le-Grand. A steel pen was handed to him,
+with which he dallied for a time, and when asked why he did not proceed,
+said: "Sure, I was waiting for a feather."
+
+The institution for the care of consumption started in this country, and
+known as Nordrach-upon-Mendip, is in the Bristol postal district at one
+of its most distant points on the range of the Mendip Hills, at an
+altitude of 850 feet above sea level. It has already played an important
+part as regards the Bristol Post Office, inasmuch as a consumptive
+telegraph clerk has benefited considerably from the new treatment, and
+has indeed left the institution as cured. It is not generally known that
+until recently there existed a small Convalescent Home on the Mendips,
+but "Cosy Corner," founded and maintained by Sir Edward Hill, K.C.B.,
+stood there as such, and it served a good part as regards a postal
+servant. A postman employed at the Bristol railway station as mail
+porter, who had suffered from a serious attack of typhoid fever, and who
+had been verily at death's door, passed several weeks at this rural
+retreat, and derived such benefit from the kind treatment he received
+and from the bracing air of the district that he quite recovered from
+his ailment and is now in robust health. "Cosy Corner" has now been
+affiliated to Nordrach-upon-Mendip.
+
+The rule of the Service is that coins, postage stamps, and other
+articles of value picked up in a sorting office are regarded as treasure
+trove and have to be handed over to the authorities for disposal; but a
+letter carrier's round can hardly be regarded in the light of a Post
+Office, and so a postman of the Thornbury district who at Aust Cliff,
+picked up a well-preserved bronze coin with the image and superscription
+of Claudius Cęsar (A.D. 41-54) did not consider himself called upon to
+give it up to the sub-postmaster, but disposed of it for the sum of 15s.
+6d. The purchaser presented it to the Leicester Museum.
+
+Tradition hath it that Miss Hannah More, the celebrated authoress and
+philanthropist, when residing (1770) at Wrington, near Bristol, in the
+churchyard of which place her remains now repose, made an arrangement
+with the postman of the period whereby on passing along the road near
+her residence he was to signal to her when any event of importance had
+occurred. Her sitting and bedroom windows commanded a view of the walk
+near which the postman had to pass, so that she could see him coming,
+and she always hurried down to the wicket-gate in readiness to meet him
+when he put up his flag. A son of the postman, now alive, remembers well
+that his father told him that he had given the signal on the death of
+Queen, Caroline. It was outside the postman's function, to wave the red
+flag with which Mistress Hannah, had provided him, but Post Office
+matters were not carried on so strictly in those days as under the
+present regime. The Wrington postman obtained the news about important
+passing events from the mail-man who rode through the village on his way
+from Bristol to Axbridge. George Vowles, who died twenty-six years ago,
+at the ripe age of 88 years, was the mail-man who conveyed to the
+villages on his way the news of the battle of Waterloo, brought down
+from London by the mail coach, which had been decorated with laurels and
+flowers in honour of the great event.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+GENERAL FREE DELIVERY OF LETTERS.
+
+
+No stone has been left unturned in the endeavour to afford a free
+delivery of letters at the door of every house in the district; and at
+last all houses and cottages, even in the remotest localities, have been
+reached, and the woodman, the gamekeeper, and the lone cottager now
+receive a daily visit from the postman. In visiting out of the way
+places of the kind with a view to arranging a delivery, the surveyor has
+to look out for dogs. A certain warren house in this district affords a
+typical case. It is far from the ordinary haunts of man, and was without
+an official delivery on account of its extreme inaccessibility. The
+approach is through a deep gorge, known as Goblin Combe, and the path to
+the house is precipitous. The gamekeeper residing there had to send to a
+farmhouse a mile and a quarter distant for his letters, which the
+obliging farmer had consented to take in for him. The attempts of the
+staff to arrange a method of delivery by postmen had long been baffled.
+At the time when the writer went to view the place there was a rumour in
+the neighbourhood that, owing to serious depredations by poachers,
+fierce dogs roamed the enclosed warren; and on passing out on to the
+warren from the wood corner, there was observed standing on a wall near
+the house what in the distance and misty morn, appeared to be a large
+bloodhound, and so the advance had to be made warily. The attendant
+rural postman was armed with a riding whip, on which his grip tightened,
+for he had already been four times bitten by dogs, as the scars on his
+hand testified, and he desired to guard himself against another attack.
+At last, as the place was neared, the object of distrust was found to
+be--a large goat! Another out-of-the-way place in the same
+neighbourhood, also unserved by the postman, was a woodman's house in a
+dense wood, which, with its bowling-green, is said once to have been
+used by "Bristol bloods" of old time as a safe retreat where they could
+indulge in a little business connected with the prize ring and cock
+fighting. That the Duke of Norfolk's liberal policy in Her Majesty's
+Diamond Jubilee year has proved a boon and a blessing to many residents
+in isolated spots is indicated, for instance, by what a poor woman
+living in a wild district stated. She had recently to trudge the whole
+way from her house to Bristol, a distance of eight miles out and eight
+miles back, while a letter which would have obviated her journey had
+been lying undelivered for days at a Post Office only two miles off.
+
+Blaize Castle, which is within four miles of the Head Post Office, was
+singularly enough almost the last habitation in the Bristol district
+which was granted a free delivery of letters daily, for until 1898 the
+postman in his official capacity had never penetrated to that
+rock-elevated and remote part of the Blaize Woods where the castle
+stands. That reproach to the Bristol district has now been removed, and
+the custodians of the castle have obtained their rights as citizens of
+the great kingdom in having their letters delivered at the door daily by
+the Postmaster-General's representative. It was a difficult matter to
+find out all the houses at which the postman did not call, and this
+particular castle, which is now only occupied by caretakers, was not
+notified by the rural postman, as the occupiers had signified to him
+that they did not care for a delivery and were quite satisfied if the
+letters were left in the village till called for. The circumstance may
+be of interest to Bristolians, from the fact that Blaize Castle is
+spoken of by many but is seen by very few. Its flagstaff is visible from
+some little distance, but the castle itself can scarcely be discerned
+through its wooded surroundings, even from the far-famed Arbutus Walk,
+which is separated from it by a deep gorge. The castle is situated on a
+lofty plateau in the midst of the large woods. Close to it is a sheer
+perpendicular rock, three hundred feet high, known as "The Giant's
+leap." The castle is said to have derived its name from St. Blaisius,
+the Spanish patron of wool-combers, to whom a chapel was dedicated on a
+hill in the grounds where the castle now stands, and where there was
+once a Roman encampment. The interest attaching to this castle is
+enhanced from a postal point of view by the circumstance that the son of
+the lady who owns the property married a daughter of the late
+Postmaster-General, the Right Hon. H. C. Raikes.
+
+Mr. Raikes was one of the hardest working of Postmasters-General. So
+diligent indeed was he, that almost nightly, when the House of Commons
+was sitting, the right hon. gentleman, after all other Members had gone
+home, retired to his official room and went through the papers which had
+been sent up from the Post Office for his consideration. So absorbed
+would he become in the documents, which he read carefully through from
+end to end, so that he might judge from his own standpoint and not from
+that of his official advisers, that he would sit well into the small
+hours of the morning, whilst that patient and most obliging of
+officials, the postmaster of the House, Mr. Pike, kept weary vigil,
+waiting to take the despatch-bag to the Post Office in the City before
+he went home to his well-earned rest. Mr. Raikes's invariably clear and
+even writing betokened that, long past the hour for bed as the time
+might be, he never had any idea of doing his work in a hurry. He was
+probably known to many of the citizens of Bristol, through his frequent
+visits to a mansion on the Westbury side of the Downs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+LOCAL RETURNED LETTER OFFICE.
+
+
+The Bristol Post Office has its returned letter branch, with which
+almost all the towns in the West of England, and South Wales are
+affiliated for "dead letter" work. Through its agency over a million
+letters and postal packets are returned to senders annually. Book
+packets and circulars form 50 per cent. of the total number, and of
+these only 75 per cent. can be restored to the persons who posted them.
+Over 10,000 letters containing property are recorded in the ledgers, and
+they represent a total value in cash, bank-notes, bills, cheques,
+postage stamps, etc., of about £36,000 per annum, nearly the whole of
+which reaches the hands of the senders. About 400 letters containing
+money orders, and 1,700 letters containing value, compulsorily
+registered, are returned in the course of the year. Amongst the
+curiosities of returned letter office experience may be mentioned the
+following. A letter was received thus peculiarly addressed:--"Miss ----,
+4, Pleasant View, in that beautiful city which charms even eyes familiar
+with the masterpieces of Bramanto and Palladio, and which the genius of
+Anstey and of Smollett, of Frances Burney and of Jane Austen has made
+classic ground." The pundits in the returned letter office who deal with
+derelict letters properly divined that the place so glowingly described
+was Bath, and issuing the letter accordingly, it was duly delivered in
+the fair city.
+
+A packet was received simply addressed "Post Office, Bristol, to be
+called for." The contents were an army reserve man's discharge papers
+and pension application forms. The application bore evidence that it
+referred to Lichfield, and the packet was accordingly sent to that
+military depōt. Two or three days afterwards an old soldier called at
+the Bristol office for his letter, and could not possibly understand why
+it had been opened in the returned letter branch, and the contents sent
+to Lichfield. His fury was unbounded, and he consigned all and sundry to
+Hades. His papers were soon obtained for him from Lichfield, and his
+gratitude at getting them, was as effusively manifested as his
+disappointment had been in not finding the papers awaiting him on first
+application. His thanks were conveyed in the following terse
+communication:--
+
+"Dear Boss,--A thousand pardons, everything comes right to those who
+wait. Patience is a virtue.
+
+ "Obt servt,
+ W. H. ----."
+
+"Sir," wrote a Bristol citizen on a postcard, "I have lost a ingine off
+3 gine oneing to the delay of a post care wich Mr. ---- send of wine ts
+plaa to ingury and abould youre turly I ----, 10, ---- lane rielence
+Bristol." It was not at first apparent what the writer of the card
+actually required, but by degrees it was made out that what he meant
+was:--"I have lost an engagement of 3 guineas owing to the delay of a
+postcard which Mr. ---- sent, of Wine Street. Please to enquire and
+oblige, yours truly, I. ----, 10, ---- Lane, Residence, Bristol."
+
+Danger lurks in unexpected places, even for Post Office cleaners.
+Packages which have remained in the returned letter office for the
+prescribed period have to be destroyed from time to time. Sometimes
+they contain chemicals. It chanced that at Bristol one of the charwomen,
+when pouring out hot water into a large waste bucket, was startled by
+the emission from the bucket of a fierce, bright, flame which badly
+burned her hand and caused her no small fright. The flame lasted for a
+minute. The fumes were overpowering, and unpleasantly pervaded the whole
+telegraph gallery above. Upon investigation, it appeared that another
+charwoman who had been instructed to "dispose" of a bottle of sodium
+amalgam, had carelessly emptied it into the waste bucket with the
+startling result narrated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Post Office is ever progressing, and in course of time there will be
+further particulars for a future writer to relate concerning the
+"Bristol Royal Mail."
+
+THE END
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Note: Discovered publisher's punctuation errors have been
+corrected. In addition, the following spelling errors have been
+corrected:
+
+p. 22: 6th instant intead[instead] of on the first of the month. The
+
+p. 136: in the chair, the Post Office is again roproved[reproved]
+
+p. 163: about 30,000 letters. Birminghan[Birmingham] comes next in
+
+p. 229: spoken of the disclipine[discipline] and training telegraph
+
+p. 283: Office, hailng[hailing] from the Emerald Isle, had, like all
+
+p. 164: pension or gratuity is given. The apppointment[appointment]
+
+p. 112: Post Office now was was[delete second 'was'] the centre of
+
+p. 153: not [been] offered, would most likely have been sent
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bristol Royal Mail, by R. C. Tombs
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+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bristol Royal Mail, by R. C. Tombs
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Bristol Royal Mail
+ Post, Telegraph, and Telephone
+
+Author: R. C. Tombs
+
+Release Date: November 2, 2010 [EBook #34197]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRISTOL ROYAL MAIL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Adrian Mastronardi, Henry Gardiner, The
+Philatelic Digital Library Project at http://www.tpdlp.net
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p>Transcriber's Note: No copyright date is indicated in the source
+material, but the last date mentioned is November, 1899.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<!--[1.png]-->
+
+<h2>THE <br /><br />
+BRISTOL ROYAL MAIL.</h2>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<!--[4.png]-->
+<!--[3.png]-->
+<!--[2.png]-->
+
+
+<!--[5.png]-->
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_0" id="Page_0">[Pg 0]</a></span><br /></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 497px;">
+<img src="images/i004.jpg" width="497" height="314" alt="The Postmaster&#39;s Office, Bristol.
+From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine St., Bristol." title="" />
+<span class="caption">The Postmaster&#39;s Office, Bristol.</span><br />
+<i style='font-size: small;'>From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine St., Bristol.</i>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 432px;">
+<img src="images/i004a.jpg" width="432" height="365" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h5 class='u'>
+<i>All rights reserved.</i>
+</h5>
+<p><br /><br /></p>
+
+
+
+<h2>The</h2>
+<h1 style='letter-spacing: 0.2em; padding-bottom: 0.7em;'>Bristol Royal Mail.<br /></h1>
+<h4 style='font-family: arial;'>POST, TELEGRAPH, AND<br /><br />
+TELEPHONE.<br /><br /><br /></h4>
+<h5>BY<br /></h5>
+<h2 style='letter-spacing: 0.3em;'>R. C. TOMBS,</h2>
+<h5 style='word-spacing: 0.5em;'><i>Postmaster of Bristol,<br />
+Ex-Controller of the London Postal Service.</i><br /><br /><br /></h5>
+
+<h4 style='padding-top: 10em; padding-bottom: 0.0em; line-height: 0.2em;'>BRISTOL:</h4>
+<h5 style='padding-top: 0em; line-height: 0.2em; padding-bottom: 3em;'><span class="smcap">J. W. Arrowsmith, 11 Quay Street.</span></h5>
+
+<!--[7.png]-->
+<!--[6.png]-->
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="x">
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER I.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>DEVELOPMENT OF THE MAIL SERVICES. RALPH ALLEN. 1532-1764.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>Chapter II.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>MAIL COACH ERA. JOHN PALMER. 1770-1818.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_17">17</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER III.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>
+ 1818 ONWARDS. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE. OLD MAIL GUARDS.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_35">35</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER IV.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>VICTORIAN ERA, 1837-1899. MAIL TRANSPORT BY RAILWAY. TRAVELLING POST OFFICES.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER V.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BRISTOL POSTMASTERS. 1678-1899.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER VI.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>NOTABLE POST OFFICE SERVANTS OF BRISTOL ORIGIN.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_82">82</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER VII.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>POST OFFICE BUILDINGS.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_89">89</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER VIII.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>
+ THE LOCAL POST OFFICE IN EARLY DAYS. SIR ROWLAND
+ HILL. RECENT PROGRESS.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td>
+ </tr>
+<!--[8.png]-->
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER IX.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>BRISTOL AS A MAIL PORT.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_141">141</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER X.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>POSTAL SERVICE. STAFF: ITS COMPOSITION, DUTIES,<br />RESPONSIBILITIES. VOLUME OF WORK.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_160">160</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER XI.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>CHRISTMAS AND ST. VALENTINE SEASONS.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_175">175</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER XII.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>PUBLIC OFFICE: ITS BUSINESS. THE SAVINGS BANK.<br />PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_186">186</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER XIII.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TELEGRAPHS. TELEPHONES. EXPRESS DELIVERY.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER XIV.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>TELEGRAPH MESSENGERS.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_222">222</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER XV.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>LETTER DELIVERY SYSTEM. POSTMEN: THEIR DUTIES AND RECREATIONS.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_234">234</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER XVI.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>POST LETTER BOXES: POSITION, VIOLATION, PECULIAR USES.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER XVII.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RURAL DISTRICT SUB-POSTMASTERS. RURAL POSTMEN. INCIDENTS.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_257">257</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER XVIII.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>GENERAL FREE DELIVERY OF LETTERS.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_287">287</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='toc_chap'>CHAPTER XIX.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align='left'>RETURNED LETTER OFFICE.</td>
+ <td align='right'><a href="#Page_292">292</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<!--[9.png]-->
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="ILLUSTRATIONS" id="ILLUSTRATIONS"></a>ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
+
+<table class='illus' border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="20" summary="x">
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>THE POSTMASTER'S OFFICE, BRISTOL</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_0"><i>Page</i> 0</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>RALPH ALLEN OF CROSS POST FAME</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_6">6</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;HIS RESIDENCE AT PRIOR PARK, BATH</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_9">9</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;HIS TOWN HOUSE IN BATH</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;HIS TOMB AT CLAVERTON</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_16">16</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>JOHN PALMER, INTRODUCER OF MAIL COACHES</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>OLD ENGLISH "FLYING" MAIL COACH</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>MAIL COACH PLATE DEDICATED TO PALMER</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_34">34</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>THE WEST COUNTRY MAIL COACHES ABOUT TO LEAVE PICCADILLY</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_36">36</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>THE LAST OF THE MAIL GUARDS</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_44">44</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>ARRIVAL OF THE BATH AND BRISTOL MAIL COACH AT
+ ROADSIDE INN</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_48">48</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>START OF MAIL COACHES FROM BUSH INN, BRISTOL</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_52">52</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>THE OLD PASSAGE, AUST</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_56">56</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>JOHN GARDINER</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>THOMAS TODD WALTON, SENIOR</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_72">72</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>THOMAS TODD WALTON, JUNIOR</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>EDWARD CHADDOCK SAMPSON</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>SIR FRANCIS FREELING, BART</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>THE BRISTOL HEAD POST OFFICE IN 1899</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_117">117</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>THE "GREAT WESTERN"</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_152">152</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>R.M.S. "MONTEREY"</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>THE PUBLIC HALL OF THE BRISTOL POST OFFICE</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_186">186</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>THE TELEGRAPH INSTRUMENT ROOM, BRISTOL</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_204">204</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>CRIBBS CAUSEWAY POST OFFICE</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_261">261</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>MR. EDWARD BIDDLE</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_263">263</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>LETTER BOX AT WINTERBOURNE</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_269">269</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='d1'>HANNAH BREWER, THE BITTON POSTWOMAN</td>
+ <td class='d2'><a href="#Page_276">276</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<!--[11.png]-->
+<!--[10.png]-->
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[Pg i]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>In these days when books on every conceivable
+subject are written in their thousands annually;
+when monthly journals are produced by scores,
+and daily newspapers in hundreds, to supply the
+public with a record of the world's doings; and
+when readers are found for them all, it may not
+be thought unfitting that each large mail centre
+in the United Kingdom which contributes by its
+postal and telegraph organisation to the dissemination
+of much of this literature, should in its turn
+have some record of its own doings. This present
+compilation has, therefore, been undertaken with that
+object in view, as regards the Bristol Post Office,
+and in the hope that the facts, figures, and incidents
+contained in it relating to past doings and present
+days and present ways may prove of interest to the
+inhabitants of the County and City, and its surrounding
+districts, and in an unpretentious way<!--[12.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[Pg ii]</a></span>
+commence, or add to, local Post Office history, and
+demonstrate that though Bristol is not, unfortunately,
+the leading provincial seaport, as of yore, she has
+not lagged one step behind her competitors in
+respect of postal progress.</p>
+
+<p>The profit which may accrue from the publication
+of <i>The Bristol Royal Mail</i> will be devoted exclusively
+to the Rowland Hill Memorial and Benevolent Fund,
+the chief patron of which is Her Most Gracious
+Majesty the Queen-Empress, who is about to show
+her great interest in works of the kind by visiting
+our ancient city to open the new Convalescent Home.
+The object of the fund is the relief of all Post Office
+servants throughout the United Kingdom, who,
+through no fault of their own, have fallen into
+necessitous circumstances. It also affords assistance
+to their widows and orphans, for whom no provision
+is made under the Superannuation Acts. The fund
+is managed by a body of trustees, who are assisted
+by a committee of recommendation composed of
+officers of the Post Office. The trustees are well-known
+gentlemen of high standing and repute in
+the city of London, to whose benevolent efforts on
+behalf of the department the fund owes its origin.<!--[13.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</a></span>
+The Superannuation Acts afford pensions to those
+who have been in the Post Office not less than ten
+years. Sometimes a deserving and distressed Post
+Office servant has not served long enough to qualify
+for a pension, and sometimes help is needed by
+persons whose time has been partly spent in the
+postal service, but who, because they have been
+permitted to carry on some other occupation, are not
+entitled by law to any pension at all. A pension,
+even if it should prove to be sufficient for the pensioner's
+own support, ceases at death, and the widow
+and orphans are often left destitute. There are
+more than eighty-one thousand, and, counting those
+employed only a portion of their time, nearly one
+hundred and fifty thousand servants in the Post
+Office; and in comparison with the number of
+persons amongst whom cases needing relief may
+arise, the assured income at the disposal of the
+trustees of the fund is still inadequate. In the
+period since 1893 the trustees have granted to
+necessitous cases in the Bristol district &pound;120, so
+that any proceeds from the sale of this book will
+be bestowed where such bestowal is certainly due.</p>
+
+<p>It is right to state that some of the information<!--[14.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</a></span>
+in these pages has been derived from <i>The
+History of the Post Office</i>, by the late Mr. Herbert
+Joyce, C.B.; <i>Forty Years at the Post Office</i>, by Mr. F.
+E. Baines, C.B.; <i>The Royal Mail</i>, by Mr. J. Wilson
+Hyde; and from <i>St. Martin's-le-Grand Magazine</i>,
+also Latimer's <i>Annals of Bristol</i>. Thanks are due
+also to Mr. Norris Mathews, the Bristol City
+Librarian, for his courtesy in permitting and facilitating
+access to old records in the Public Library;
+to Mr. H. J. Spear, Secretary to the Chamber of
+Commerce; to the proprietors of the <i>Times and
+Mirror</i>, for allowing inspection of their old files; and
+for illustrations to Mr. A. F. Walbrook, of the <i>Bath
+Chronicle</i>; to the proprietor, <i>Black and White</i>, and
+many others whose kindness is hereby acknowledged.<!--[15.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p>
+<h1 style='padding-top: 4em; padding-bottom: 3em;'><a name="The_Bristol_Royal_Mail"
+ id="The_Bristol_Royal_Mail"></a>THE BRISTOL ROYAL MAIL.</h1>
+<hr style='width: 25%;' />
+
+
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h5>1532-1764.<br /><br />
+DEVELOPMENT OF THE MAIL SERVICES.<br />
+RALPH ALLEN.</h5>
+
+
+<p>It appears that before Post Offices were established
+special messengers were employed to carry
+letters. It is recorded that such a special messenger
+was paid the sum of one penny for carrying a letter
+from Bristol to London in the year 1532, but the
+record affords no further particulars as to the service,
+and the assumption is that the special messenger
+was, in his own person, a rough-and-ready "post."
+Later on, a post would be suddenly established for
+a particular purpose, and as soon abandoned when
+no longer specially required. Thus in the year 1621
+a post to Ireland&mdash;Irish firms being then considered<!--[16.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+to require "oftener despatches and more expedition"&mdash;was
+set up by way of Bristol, only to be
+discontinued in a few years.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 295px;">
+<img src="images/i019.jpg" width="295" height="377" alt="Ralph Allen.
+By permission of the Proprietor of &quot;The Bath and County Graphic.&quot;" title="Ralph Allen.
+By permission of the Proprietor of &quot;The Bath and County Graphic.&quot;" />
+<span class="caption">Ralph Allen.</span><br />
+<i style='font-size: small'>By permission of the Proprietor of &quot;The Bath and County Graphic.&quot;
+</i></div>
+
+<p>There was in 1660 a direct but irregular post
+between London and some of the larger provincial
+towns, but there were no cross posts between two
+towns not being on the same post road. Letters
+could only circulate from one post road to another
+through London, and such circulation through
+London involved additional rates of postage. Bristol
+and Exeter are less than eighty miles apart, but,
+not being on the same post road, letters from one
+place to the other passed through London, and
+were charged, if single, 6d., thus:&mdash;one rate of 3d.
+from Exeter to London, and another rate of 3d.
+from London to Bristol. This was in conformity
+with a system established in the reign of Charles II.
+That system went on until 1696 when a post was
+established between Bristol and Exeter, that being
+the first cross post in the kingdom authorised by
+the Monarch's own personal assent. From Bristol
+the posts went on Mondays and Fridays, starting
+at 10.0 in the morning. The posts left Exeter on
+Wednesdays and Saturdays at 4.0 in the afternoon,<!--[17.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+and arrived at Bristol at the same hour on the
+following days. Under this cross post plan, the
+two towns being less than eighty miles apart, the
+charge was reduced to 2d. for a single letter. In
+three or four years the new post produced a profit
+of &pound;250 a year. In 1678 Provost Campbell established
+a coach to run from Glasgow to Edinburgh,
+"drawn by sax able horses, to leave Edinboro' ilk
+Monday morning, and return again (God willing)
+ilk Saturday night." In 1700 the service between
+Bristol and London became fixed, and on alternate
+days at irregular hours, depending upon the state
+of the weather and the roads, the extent of the
+journey and the caprices of the postboys and the
+sorry nags that carried them, the mail arrived in
+Bristol. There were, however, only a mere handful
+of letters and newspapers. At the end of the same
+year, the Post Office authorities in London, after
+being earnestly petitioned by local merchants,
+counselled the Government to establish a "cross
+post" from this city to Chester. Up to that time
+the Bristol letters to Chester, Shrewsbury, Worcester,
+and Gloucester had been carried round
+by London under the system already described,<!--[18.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+involving double postage and great delay. The
+effect of this system, as on the Bristol and Exeter
+road, had been to throw nearly all the letters into
+the hands of public carriers, by whose wagons they
+were conveyed more quickly than by the postboys
+through London, and at a cheaper rate. Moved
+by the success of the new cross posts from Bristol
+to Exeter, the Treasury consented to the starting
+of the Chester service. The Post Office reported
+to the Treasury in March, 1702, that the profit for
+the first eighteen months of the Chester service
+had been about &pound;156. The accounts of Henry Pyne,
+the Bristol postmaster, appended to the report in
+the State papers, show that so far as this part of
+the service was concerned, he had received &pound;168 for
+letters by this post, whilst his expenses had been
+&pound;60.</p>
+
+<p>The people of Cirencester and Exeter, hearing
+of the Chester concession, hastened to complain
+of shortcomings affecting themselves. The Devon
+clothiers had a considerable trade with the wool
+dealers of the district of Cirencester, which town
+was served by the postboys riding between Gloucester
+and London, with a branch postboy mail to<!--[21.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+<!--[20.png]-->
+<!--[19.png]-->
+Wotton-under-Edge. By there being no direct postal
+service of any kind between Bristol and Wotton-under-Edge,
+correspondence between Exeter and
+Cirencester had to be sent <i>vi&acirc;</i> London, and a fortnight
+elapsed between the despatch of a letter and
+the receipt of an answer, the result being that not
+one letter in twenty was sent through the post. All
+that was needed to shorten the transit from fourteen
+days to four was to put Bristol in direct communication
+with Wotton, the expense being estimated at
+only &pound;30 a year. The Government declined to
+comply with this reasonable request, and nothing
+was done!</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 479px;">
+<img src="images/i023.jpg" width="479" height="347" alt="Prior Park, Bath.
+(Formerly residence of Ralph Allen.)
+By permission of the Proprietor of &quot;The Bath and County Graphic.&quot;" title="Prior Park, Bath.
+(Formerly residence of Ralph Allen.)
+By permission of the Proprietor of &quot;The Bath and County Graphic.&quot;" />
+<span class="caption">Prior Park, Bath.</span><br />
+<i>(Formerly residence of Ralph Allen.)</i><br />
+<i style='font-size: small'>By permission of the Proprietor of &quot;The Bath and County Graphic.</i>&quot;
+</div>
+
+<p>Soon after this time a Post Office reformer arose in
+our immediate district in the person of Ralph Allen.
+He, unlike later reformers, passed all his working
+days in the Post Office service. Born at the "Duke
+William Inn," at St. Blazey Highway, in Cornwall
+in about 1693, he went as a boy to help his grandmother,
+who was postmistress at St. Columb. In
+1710 he was transferred as a clerk to Bath, and on
+the 26th March, 1712, he became postmaster of that
+city, in succession to one Mary Collins, and in that
+year appears to have taken over the management of<!--[22.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+the Bristol and Exeter Cross Road Post, previously
+farmed by Joseph Quash, postmaster of Exeter. In
+1720 Ralph Allen contracted to farm the cross-country
+posts throughout the country generally, and
+to carry the mails by what were subsequently known
+as "Allen's Postboys," who were supposed to travel
+on horseback at a pace averaging five miles an hour.
+A robbery from these postboys carrying the mails
+between London and Bristol was a common occurrence.
+Two men were executed in April, 1720, for
+having twice committed that crime, yet the letter bags
+were again stolen seven times during the following
+twelve months. The <i>London Journal</i> of August 27th
+remarked: "It is computed that the traders of
+Bristol have received &pound;60,000 damages by the late
+robberies of the mail." In 1722 the postboys were
+robbed twice in a single week, and for the crimes
+three men were executed in London. Another
+incident of the kind worthy of mentioning occurred
+in September, 1738. The bag then carried off by
+three highwaymen contained a reprieve for a man
+lying under sentence of death in Newgate, and a
+second reprieve despatched after the robbery became
+known would have arrived too late to save the man's<!--[25.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+<!--[24.png]-->
+<!--[23.png]-->
+life, had not the magistrates postponed the execution
+for a day or two in order that it might not clash with
+the festivities of a new Mayor's inauguration.</p>
+
+<p>About 1732 the Bristol riding boys were deprived
+of their perquisite of 1d. a letter for "dropping of
+letters" at the towns and villages through which
+they passed. This was done because the postboys
+not only carried letters which they picked up on
+the road and did not account for at the next post
+office of call, but even went to the length of taking
+out letters from the mail bags when those bags
+were, as was the case sometimes, not properly
+chained and sealed. In connection with Ralph
+Allen's "By-Posts," in the year 1735 arrangements
+were made so that the mails sent from Manchester,
+Liverpool, or any other place in Lancashire, to
+Worcestershire, Gloucestershire, Somerset, Devon,
+etc., might be answered four days sooner than
+they could possibly have been answered before.
+In 1740 a new branch by-post was established from
+Bristol and Bath to Salisbury, through Bradford,
+Trowbridge, Devizes, Lavington, Tinhead, Westbury,
+Warminster, Heytesbury, and Wilton. In 1741
+the growth of trade and population encouraged the<!--[26.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+Bristol citizens to appeal to the Ministry for an
+improvement in the postal communication with
+London, which was still limited to three days per
+week. Yielding to this pressure, Allen converted
+the tri-weekly posts into six-day posts in June,
+1741. The post began to run every day of the
+week, except Sunday, between London and Bristol,
+and all intervening towns participated in the benefit.
+In 1746 a further extension took place, whereby
+letters were conveyed six days in every week,
+instead of three days, at Mr. Allen's expense,
+between London and Wells, Bridgwater, Taunton,
+Wellington, Tiverton, and Exeter, through Bristol.
+The mail service is not in further evidence in local
+history until 1753, when the Bristol merchants again
+showed themselves tenacious of their rights, and
+waged a bitter war against the Postmasters-General
+in respect of the imposition of a double rate of
+postage on letters which, although under an ounce
+in weight, contained patterns of silk or cotton or
+samples of grain. There was a lawsuit, and the
+Bristol merchants won it.</p>
+
+<p>A Government notification in the local newspapers
+of the 4th September, 1752, announced an acceleration<!--[29.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+<!--[28.png]-->
+of the mails between the Southern Counties and
+Bristol. In future a postboy was to leave Salisbury
+on Mondays at six o'clock in the morning, to arrive
+at Bath (a distance of about thirty-nine miles) at
+eight or nine at night, and to leave Bath for Bristol
+at six next morning. On Wednesdays and Fridays
+the departure from Salisbury was in the evening,
+the journey occupying about nineteen hours. By
+this arrangement letters from Portsmouth were
+received in this city two days earlier than before.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 294px;">
+<img src="images/i027.jpg" width="294" height="554" alt="Ralph Allen&#39;s Town House in Bath.
+By kind permission of the Proprietor of the &quot;Bath and County Graphic.&quot;" title="Ralph Allen&#39;s Town House in Bath.
+By kind permission of the Proprietor of the &quot;Bath and County Graphic.&quot;" />
+<span class="caption">Ralph Allen&#39;s Town House in Bath.</span><br />
+<i style='font-size: smaller'>By kind permission of the Proprietor of the &quot;Bath and County Graphic.&quot;</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>Ralph Allen's improvements had great influence
+in the Post Office services in this western city. The
+profits on the contracts enabled Allen to take up
+his residence at Prior Park, Bath, one of the finest
+Italian houses in England, in addition to having a
+grand house in the City. It is said that the
+profits which accrued to him from his long contracts
+amounted to about half a million of money.</p>
+
+<p>Mansions so lordly are not for the hardest and
+best workers in the Post Office field of present
+times, for the nation does not reward its great
+men so liberally as then. Nowadays an introducer
+of the inland parcel post service, the foreign parcel
+post service, an improver of the telegraph service,<!--[30.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+and leader in bringing about vastly accelerated
+mail services throughout the country,&mdash;works of
+great moment, even if not comparable with Ralph
+Allen, John Palmer, or Rowland Hill's great
+achievements,&mdash;has, after forty years at the Post
+Office, to be contented on retirement with no more
+than the modest pension due to him, which will
+not even be continued to his nearest and dearest
+relative.</p>
+
+<p>Allen benefited the Bristol postal district in
+another way than by his improved Post Office
+services when he built the bridge over the Avon
+at Newton-St.-Loe at a cost of &pound;4,000. He was
+buried in Claverton Churchyard, near Bath. The
+inscription on his tomb runs thus:&mdash;"Beneath this
+Monument lieth entombed the Body of Ralph
+Allen, Esqr., of Prior Park, who departed this
+life y<sup>e</sup> 29th day of June, 1764, in the 71st year
+of his Age. In full hope of everlasting happiness
+in another state thro' the infinite merit and mediation
+of our blessed Redeemer, Jesus Christ."</p>
+
+<p>Ralph Allen did not hoard up his money or
+spend it on riotous living, but bestowed a considerable
+portion of his income in works of charity,<!--[31.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+especially in supporting needy men of letters. He
+was a great friend and benefactor of Fielding, and
+in <i>Tom Jones</i> the novelist has gratefully drawn Mr.
+Allen's character in the person of Squire Alworthy.
+He enjoyed the friendship of Chatham and Pitt;
+and Pope, Warburton, and other men of literary
+distinction were his familiar companions. Pope has
+celebrated one of his principal virtues&mdash;unassuming
+benevolence&mdash;in the well-known lines:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Let humble Allen, with an awkward shame,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Do good by stealth, and blush to find it fame."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Derrick has thus described Allen's personal
+appearance shortly before his death: "He is a
+very grave, well-looking man, plain in his dress,
+resembling that of a Quaker, and courteous in his
+behaviour. I suppose he cannot be much under
+seventy. His wife is low, with grey hair, and of
+a very pleasing address." Kilvert says that he was
+rather above the middle size and stoutly built, and
+that he was not altogether averse to a little state,
+as he often used to drive into Bath in a coach
+and four. His handwriting was very curious; he
+evidently wrote quickly and fluently, but it was so<!--[32.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+overloaded with curls and flourishes as to be sometimes
+scarcely legible.</p>
+
+<p>The lack of all show about his garb seems to
+have somewhat annoyed Philip Thicknesse, the
+well-known author of one of the Bath Guides, for
+he speaks of Allen's "plain linen shirt-sleeves, with
+only a chitterling up the slit."</p>
+
+<p>Allen's son Philip became Comptroller of the
+"By-Letter" Department in the London Post
+Office.<!--[33.png]--></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 449px;">
+<img src="images/i033.jpg" width="449" height="350" alt="Ralph Allen&#39;s
+Tomb in Claverton Churchyard, near Bath.
+By kind permission of the Proprietor of the
+&quot;Bath and County Graphic.&quot;"
+title="Ralph Allen&#39;s Tomb in Claverton Churchyard, near Bath.
+By kind permission of the Proprietor of the &quot;Bath and County Graphic.&quot;" />
+<span class="caption">Ralph Allen&#39;s Tomb in Claverton Churchyard, near Bath.</span><br />
+<i style='font-size: small'>By kind permission of the Proprietor of the &quot;Bath and County Graphic.&quot;</i>
+</div><!--[35.png]-->
+<!--[34.png]-->
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h5>1770-1818.<br /><br />
+
+MAIL COACH ERA.&mdash;JOHN PALMER.</h5>
+
+
+<p>Notwithstanding Ralph Allen's innovations,
+the conveyance of letters between the
+principal towns was carried on in a more or less
+desultory fashion. Speaking of the want of improvement
+in 1770, and the haphazard system under
+which Post Office business was conducted, a local
+newspaper gave this instance of unpunctuality: "The
+London Mail did not arrive so soon by several hours
+as usual on Monday, owing to the mailman getting
+a little intoxicated on his way between Newbury
+and Marlborough, and falling from his horse into a
+hedge, where he was found asleep, by means of his
+dog." Mr. Weeks, who entered upon "The Bush,"
+Bristol, in 1772, after ineffectually urging the proprietors
+to quicken their speed, started a one day
+coach to Birmingham himself, and carried it on
+against a bitter opposition, charging the passengers<!--[36.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+only 10s. 6d. and 8s. 6d. for inside and outside seats
+respectively, and giving each one of them a dinner
+and a pint of wine at Gloucester into the bargain.
+After two years' struggle his opponents gave in,
+and one day journeys to Birmingham became the
+established rule.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 360px;">
+<img src="images/i039.jpg" width="360" height="437" alt="John Palmer.
+The Founder of the Mail Coach System.
+By kind permission of the Proprietor of the &quot;Bath and County Graphic.&quot;" title="John Palmer.
+The Founder of the Mail Coach System.
+By kind permission of the Proprietor of the &quot;Bath and County Graphic.&quot;" />
+<span class="caption">John Palmer.<br />
+The Founder of the Mail Coach System.</span><br />
+<i style='font-size: small'>By kind permission of the Proprietor of the &quot;Bath and County Graphic.&quot;</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>The mail service was carried on chiefly by means
+of postboys (generally wizened old men), who
+continued to travel on worn-out horses not able
+to get along at a speed of more than four miles an
+hour on the bad roads. On the London and Bristol
+route, indeed, it had been found necessary to provide
+the postboys with light carts, but that method of
+conveyance of the mail bags brought about no
+acceleration in time of transit,&mdash;from thirty to forty
+hours, according to the state of the roads. A letter
+despatched from Bristol or Bath on Monday was not
+delivered in London until Wednesday morning. On
+the other hand a letter confided to the stage coach of
+Monday reached its destination on Tuesday morning,
+and the consequence was that Bristol traders and
+others sent letters of value or urgency by the stage
+coach, although the proprietors charged 2s. for each
+missive.<!--[37.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At this period John Palmer, of Bath, came on
+the scene. He had learnt from the merchants
+of Bristol what a boon it would be if they could
+get their letters conveyed to London in fourteen
+or fifteen hours, instead of three days. It is
+said, however, that it was the sight of Ralph
+Allen's grand place at Prior Park, and the knowledge
+of how Allen's money had been made, which
+first suggested to Palmer the attempt to bring a
+scheme for a mail coach system to the notice of
+the postal authorities. John Palmer was lessee and
+manager of the Bath and Bristol theatres, and went
+about beating up actors, actresses and companies in
+postchaises, and he thought letters should be carried
+at the same pace at which it was possible to travel
+in a chaise. He devised a scheme, and Pitt, the
+Prime Minister of the day, who warmly approved
+the idea, decided that the plan should have a trial
+and that the first mail coach should run between
+London and Bristol. On Saturday, the 31st July,
+1784, an agreement was signed in connection with
+Palmer's scheme under which, in consideration
+of payment of 3d. a mile, five inn-holders&mdash;one
+belonging to London, one to Thatcham, one to<!--[38.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+Marlborough, and two to Bath&mdash;undertook to provide
+the horses, and on Monday, the 2nd August, 1784,
+the first "mail coach" started. On its first journey
+it ran from Bristol,&mdash;not from London as generally
+supposed,&mdash;and Palmer was present to see it off. A
+well-armed mail guard in uniform was in charge of
+the vehicle, which was timed to perform the journey
+from Bristol to London in sixteen hours. Only four
+passengers were at first carried by each "machine,"
+and the fare was &pound;1 8s. The immediate effect was
+to accelerate the delivery of letters by a day. The
+coaches were small, light vehicles, drawn by a pair of
+horses only, but leaders were subsequently added, and
+four-horse coaches soon became the order of the day,
+and more passengers were carried. An old painting
+represents the Bath and Bristol mail trotting along
+close to a wall, the guard receiving one bag and
+handing another to the postmaster without the
+coachman pulling up. One coach left Bristol at 4.0
+in the afternoon, reached Bath a couple of hours
+later, and arrived at the General Post Office, London,
+before 8.0 the next morning. The down coach
+started from London at 8.0 in the evening, was at
+the "Three Tuns," Bath, at a few minutes before<!--[41.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+<!--[40.png]-->
+10.0 the next morning, and pulled up at the
+"Rummer Tavern," Bristol, at noon. Palmer gave
+up his theatrical enterprises and entered the service
+of the Post Office as Comptroller at a salary of
+&pound;1,500 a year, and certain emoluments, which,
+after a year or two, brought him in an annual sum
+of more than &pound;3,000. Before Palmer's mail coaches
+were at work the post left London at all hours of
+the night, but it was part of his scheme that the
+mails should all leave at the same time, 8.0; and as
+the number of mails increased so there was more
+and more bustle in the vicinity of the General Post
+Office at that hour. In London the arrival of all
+the mails was awaited before any one of them was
+delivered; and this led to the delivery sometimes not
+taking place until 3.0 or 4.0 in the afternoon, or
+even later. Palmer, with his regard for the Bristol
+coach, occasionally had the Bristol mails distributed
+immediately on reaching St. Martin's-le-Grand, but
+all other mails if behind were kept waiting as
+before.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/i043.jpg" width="500" height="289" alt="Old English &quot;Flying&quot; Mail Coach." title="Old English &quot;Flying&quot; Mail Coach." />
+<span class="caption">Old English &quot;Flying&quot; Mail Coach.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Upon the beginning of Palmer's system on the
+Bristol road a marvellous superstructure was raised.
+Coaches were at once applied for by the municipalities<!--[42.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+of the largest towns, Liverpool being the first to aim
+at equality with Bristol, and York claiming what
+was due to the great highway to the North.
+Palmer's plan made rapid progress and was attended
+with complete success. A splendid mail service was
+eventually set up all over the country. One result
+was that the "expresses" to Bristol, which before
+had been as many as two hundred in the year,
+ceased altogether. In July, 1787, the mails from
+Bristol to Birmingham and the North, previously
+three per week, were ordered to be run daily. The
+London to Bristol coach was stopped by other means
+than those employed by highwaymen, the service
+having at one time in 1790 been suspended
+for several days by Palmer, in defiance of the
+Postmaster-General.</p>
+
+<p>In Bonner and Middleton's (weekly) <i>Journal</i> for
+the 11th February, 1792, is an announcement to the
+effect that the Irish mails arrived in Bristol on the
+6th instant instead of on the first of the month. The
+bare fact was stated, and the assumption is, therefore,
+that it was not an unusual circumstance. Five days'
+delay would be thought intolerable now, as, indeed,
+is the present length of time occupied by the Irish<!--[45.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+<!--[44.png]-->
+night mails on their journey to Bristol. After being
+conveyed by fast boat to Holyhead and express train
+to Birmingham, they come on from that city by a
+"crawler" and do not reach Bristol until nearly the
+mid-day hour.</p>
+
+<p>In the same year (1792) sixteen mail coaches
+worked in and out of London every day. There
+were fifteen cross-country mail coaches, as, for
+instance, the coach between Bristol and Oxford, or,
+as it was commonly called, Mr. Pickwick's coach.
+During winter, in frosty weather, at this period,
+some of the mail coaches did not run at all, but
+were laid up for the season, like ships during
+Arctic frosts.</p>
+
+<p>There is a model of an old mail coach at the
+General Post Office, St. Martin's-le-Grand, London,
+popularly supposed to be the model of the first mail
+coach which was built, but such is not the case, for,
+as already stated, the first mail coach ran between
+Bristol and London, and the model has upon it
+the inscription "Royal Mail from London to
+Liverpool."</p>
+
+<p>The expense of horsing a four-horsed coach
+running at the speed of from nine to ten miles an<!--[46.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+hour was reckoned at &pound;3 a double mile. Mails
+were exempt from turnpike tolls.</p>
+
+<p>With the introduction of the mail coaches with
+well-armed, resolute guards, there was a cessation of
+mail robberies on the main roads. Pilfering, however,
+was occasionally carried on; for instance, in the
+early winter of 1794 one Thomas Thomas travelled
+day after day up and down on the London and
+Bristol coach. At last his opportunity came when
+the guard temporarily left his coach with the mailbox
+unlocked, and then Thomas Thomas looted the
+mails. On the cross roads the saddle horse and cart
+posts were frequently stopped and robbed (1796).
+One of the worst roads in this respect was that
+between Bristol and Portsmouth. Proposals for
+the postboys to be furnished with pistols, cutlasses,
+and caps lined with metal, like hunting caps,
+for the defence of the head, fell through on account
+of the expense which their supply would have
+entailed.</p>
+
+<p>There exists a popular belief that the mail
+coaches were driven up and down the steep Queen
+Street in Bristol now known as Christmas Steps.
+The belief is erroneous, for an inscription over<!--[47.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+the recessed seats at the top of the passage tells
+us that&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"This <span class="smcap">Streete was Steppered Done</span><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">&amp; Finished, September, 1669.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Right Worpfl Thomas Stevens,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Esqr. Mayor.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">Named <span class="smcap">Qveene Streete</span>."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Probably, however, the postboys who carried the
+mails in earlier days rode up the steep incline.</p>
+
+<p>A gentleman now writing in the <i>Bristol Times and
+Mirror</i> under the <i>nom-de-plume</i> of "Old File," delving
+in the historical garden of <i>Felix Farley's Journal</i>,
+has unearthed the following very interesting announcements
+and advertisements, which throw light
+on the mail services of the time:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class='Title'>
+"MILFORD AND BRECKNOCK MAIL COACH.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"A coach sets out from the 'White Hart,' Broad
+Street, Bristol, over the Old Passage (Aust), every
+Sunday, Wednesday, and Friday, at noon, and joins
+the above coach at Ragland the same day; and a
+corresponding coach returns from Milford on certain
+days." The chief point in the advertisement was
+in the paragraph: "N.B.&mdash;This road is nineteen<!--[48.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+miles nearer to Carmarthen and Milford than the
+lower one," that is, by the New Passage.<br /></p>
+
+
+<p>This was replied to by another advertisement, as
+follows:</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">A Caution.</span>&mdash;The public will please to observe
+that no other mail coach whatever does now, or ever
+has, run from Bristol to Milford Haven, excepting
+the Royal London, Bath, Bristol, and Milford Haven
+mail coach, which sets out from the 'Bush Inn
+and Tavern,' Corn Street, every Monday, Tuesday,
+Thursday, and Saturday, and the mail coach to
+Swansea every day from the same inn, notwithstanding
+the flaming advertisement of a certain set
+of men to deceive and mislead the public, by their
+asserting that the road over the Old Passage is
+nineteen miles nearer than that over the New
+Passage, which is so far from being a fact that
+the road of the New Passage is seven and three-quarters
+nearer, as was proved by admeasurement
+by orders of the office, making a difference of
+twenty-six miles and three-quarters nearer the
+lower (that is, the New Passage) than the upper
+road."<br /></p>
+
+<p>On August 4th the proprietors of the New Passage<!--[49.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+coach came out with a larger announcement, and
+produced figures to prove their assertion&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"N.B.&mdash;This road is nineteen miles nearer to
+Milford than the lower one, viz:&mdash;</p>
+
+<pre>
+ UPPER ROAD. | LOWER ROAD.
+ Miles. | Miles.
+Old Passage 11 | New Passage 10
+Across the Water 1 | Across the Water 3
+Ragland 14 | Newport 15
+Abergavenny 9 | Cardiff 12
+Brecknock 19 | Cowbridge 12
+Trecastle 10 | Pill 12
+Llandovery 9 | Neath 13
+Llandilo 12 | Ponterdilas 10
+Carmarthen 15 | Kidwelly 14
+St. Clare's 9 | Carmarthen 9
+Narberth 13 | St. Clare's 9
+Haverford-West 10 | Narberth 13
+Milford 10 | Haverford-West 10
+ | Milford 10
+ --- | ---
+Total 142 | Total 161
+</pre>
+
+<p>In favour of the Upper Road, 19 miles."<br /></p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+"<span class="smcap">Bristol</span>, <i>4th January, 1799</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Lost, on Monday morning, small letter-bag,
+marked on it 'Worcester and Bristol.' Whoever
+has found the same shall, on delivering it at the
+Post Office, receive five guineas reward; and whoever
+detains it after this notice will be prosecuted."<!--[50.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span><br /></p>
+
+
+<p class='right'>
+"<span class="smcap">General Post Office</span>,<br />
+<i>Friday, 15th February, 1799</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"George Evans, of Steep Street, St. Michael's,
+in the City of Bristol, Grocer, having been committed
+to the Gaol of Newgate, in the said City,
+charged with feloniously negotiating two Bills of
+Exchange contained in the bag of letters from
+Worcester for Bristol of the 30th December last,
+which was lost or stolen, and there being great
+reason to believe that one or more person or persons
+is or are privy to or concerned with him in the said
+felony: Whoever will give information at the Council
+Chamber in Bristol within one month from the date
+hereof, so that the said George Evans may be convicted
+of the offence with which he is charged,
+shall be entitled to a reward of fifty pounds. And
+if an accomplice shall make discovery he will also
+receive His Majesty's most gracious pardon.</p>
+
+<p>
+"By command of the Postmaster-General.<br />
+"<span class="smcap">Francis Freeling</span>, Secretary."<br />
+<br /></p>
+
+
+<p class='right'>
+<i>June 29th, 1799.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"We understand that a bill for &pound;50, drawn by
+the Worcester Bank on Messrs. Harfords, Davis<!--[51.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+and Co., of this City, and which was one of the
+bills contained in the Worcester bag lost on the
+31st December last, has been presented within
+these few days for payment&mdash;a circumstance which
+may probably lead to the discovery of the party
+who found the said bag."<br /></p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+<i>August 10th.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Last week George Evans, who was tried at the
+Old Bailey in June last on a charge of forging
+endorsements on two bills (which, with many
+others, were contained in the Worcester bag
+destined for this City that was lost on the 21st
+December last, and of which intelligence has since
+been obtained), but who was acquitted for want of
+sufficient evidence, was again apprehended, and was
+committed to gaol on a charge of having stolen a
+promissory note, drawn by Messrs. Harfords, Davis
+and Co., of this City, value fifty pounds, which note
+was likewise sent by the same conveyance from
+Worcester, and being attempted to be negotiated,
+was stopped and traced back into the hands of the
+said Evans, against whom a detainer was lodged
+on account of a similar charge for another bill of<!--[52.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+the same value, and precisely under all the circumstances
+attending the former."<br /></p>
+
+
+<p class='right'>
+"<span class="smcap">General Post Office</span>,<br />
+"<i>October 11th, 1798</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"The postboy carrying the mail from Bristol to
+Salisbury on the 9th instant was stopped between
+the hours of eleven and twelve o'clock at night by
+two men on foot within six miles of Salisbury, who
+robbed him of seven shillings in money, but did
+not offer to take the mail. Whoever shall apprehend
+the convict, or cause to be apprehended and
+convicted both or either of the persons who committed
+this robbery, will be entitled to a reward of
+fifty pounds over and above the reward given by
+Act of Parliament for apprehending highwaymen.
+If either party will surrender himself and discover
+his accomplice he will be admitted as evidence for
+the Crown, receive His Majesty's most gracious
+pardon, and be entitled to the said reward.</p>
+
+<p>
+"By command of the Postmaster-General.<br />
+"<span class="smcap">Francis Freeling</span>, Secretary."<br />
+<br /></p>
+
+
+<p>There is no record that anyone claimed the reward.</p>
+
+<p>This, so far, is the end of "Old File's" researches.<!--[53.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>As the Bristol mail coach was going through
+Reading on the night of Thursday, the 18th
+January, 1799, the coachman was shook off the
+box, and, through his hands having been so benumbed
+by the cold, was unable to save himself.
+The guard jumped down and endeavoured to stop
+the horses, but without effect. They ran as far
+as Hare Hatch (four miles), where the coach changed
+horses, and then stopped, having met with no
+accident whatever, though they passed two wagons.
+The passengers in the coach did not know anything
+of it at the time.</p>
+
+<p>According to the <i>Bristol Directory</i> for 1811, the
+"Bush Tavern" office in Corn Street, conducted by
+John Townsend, played an important part in the
+mail coach system of the country. Its announcement
+ran thus: "Royal mail coach to London at
+4.0 every afternoon; comes in at half-past 11
+every morning. 'Loyal Volunteer' to London at
+12.0 every day. Royal mail coach to Newport,
+Cardiff, Cowbridge, Neath, Swansea, and Carmarthen
+every day on the arrival of the London mail. Royal
+mail coach through Newport, Cardiff, Cowbridge,
+Swansea, Carmarthen, to Haverfordwest and Milford<!--[54.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+Haven every Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and
+Saturday on the arrival of the London mail. The
+'Cambrian,' a light post coach, the same route as
+the mail, to Swansea every Monday, Wednesday,
+and Friday morning at 6 o'clock; returns every
+Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday evenings.</p>
+
+<p>"Royal mail coach to Birmingham through Gloster,
+Tewkesbury, Worcester and Bromsgrove every evening
+at 7.0; comes in every morning at 6.0. A post
+coach to Birmingham every day. Royal mail coach
+through Bath to Tetbury, Cirencester, and Oxford,
+every morning at quarter-past 7, comes in at 6.0
+every evening. Royal mail coach through Bath,
+Warminster, and Salisbury to Southampton and
+Portsmouth at 3.0 every day; comes in at 10.0 in
+the morning. Coach to Salisbury, Romsey, Southampton,
+and Gosport every day at 5.0 (Saturdays
+excepted), comes in at half-past 10.0 at night.
+Exeter, <i>Original</i> 'Duke of York' coach, through
+Bridgwater, Taunton, Wellington, and Cullompton
+every Tuesday, Thursday."</p>
+
+<p>In 1813 the London to Bristol mail coach was
+robbed of the Bankers' parcel, value &pound;2,000 or
+upwards. This was made known in the form of a<!--[55.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+warning to the mail guards who travelled in charge
+of the Post Office bags. When in 1813-14 the
+great frost occurred, the Bristol mail coaches were
+obstructed by the heavy snowdrifts on the roads, and
+they came in day after day drawn by six horses
+each when they could struggle into the City.</p>
+
+<p>The literature of the period yields nothing of
+interest again for some time.</p>
+
+<p>The "Bristol Guide" in 1815 stated that&mdash;"Bristow
+is the richest city of almost all the cities
+of this country, receiving merchandize from neighbouring
+and foreign places with the ships under
+sail." And again, "Bristow is full of ships from
+Ireland, Norway and every part of Europe, which
+brought hither great commerce and large foreign
+wealth." There was no mention of their carrying
+mails.</p>
+
+<p>The year 1818 is memorable in postal annals as
+that in which John Palmer died. His decease took
+place at Brighton, but not before he had lived long
+enough to see mail coaches splendidly turned out.
+Palmer, on the conclusion of his connection with
+the Post Office, was awarded a pension of &pound;3,000
+a year, equal to his full salary, which sum he<!--[56.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+declared did not represent the amount of his salary
+and emoluments. Further difficulties ensued, and
+his son, Colonel Palmer, fought his father's battles
+right manfully in the House, and eventually, in
+1813, the Government gave John Palmer a sum
+of &pound;50,000.</p>
+
+<p>In recognition of Palmer's great invention, the
+Chamber of Commerce of Glasgow not only made
+him an honorary member, but voted him fifty
+guineas for a piece of plate. The fifty guineas was
+spent on a silver cup, which bore the following
+inscription:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class='center' style='font-size: small'>
+TO<br />
+JOHN PALMER, <span class="smcap">Esq.</span>,<br />
+SURVEYOR AND COMPTROLLER-GENERAL<br />
+OF THE POSTS OF GREAT BRITAIN,<br />
+FROM<br />
+THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE<br />
+AND MANUFACTURERS<br />
+IN THE CITY OF GLASGOW,<br />
+AS AN ACKNOWLEDGMENT<br />
+OF THE BENEFITS<br />
+RESULTING FROM HIS PLAN<br />
+TO THE<br />
+TRADE AND COMMERCE<br />
+OF THIS KINGDOM,<br />
+1789.<br />
+<br />
+</p>
+<!--[57.png]-->
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 459px;">
+<img src="images/i057.jpg" width="459" height="355" alt="To John Palmer, Esq., Surveyor and Comptroller-General of the Post Office
+this Plate of the Mail Coach is respectfully inscribed
+by his obedient humble servant, James Fittler." title="" />
+<span class="caption">To John Palmer, Esq., Surveyor and Comptroller-General of the Post Office
+this Plate of the Mail Coach is respectfully inscribed
+by his obedient humble servant, James Fittler.</span>
+</div><!--[58.png]-->
+<!--[59.png]-->
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h5>1819 ONWARDS.<br /><br />
+CHAMBER OF COMMERCE INTERVENES IN MAIL AFFAIRS.<br />
+OLD MAIL GUARDS.</h5>
+
+
+<p>A new coach, from "The Bush Hotel" to
+Exeter, was put on the road on the 6th of
+April, 1819, the time allowed for the journey&mdash;74¾
+miles&mdash;being fourteen hours&mdash;less than 5½ miles an
+hour. In June, 1820 a new coach started for Manchester,
+performing the journey in two days, the intervening
+night being spent at Birmingham. To
+accomplish the first half of the task, the vehicle left
+Bristol at half-past 8 in the morning and reached
+Birmingham&mdash;85½ miles&mdash;in thirteen hours. An
+advertisement, published in December, 1821,
+headed "Speed Increased," informed the public
+that the "Regulator" coach left London daily at
+5 a.m. and arrived at the "White Hart," Bristol,
+at five minutes before 9 at night, the speed being
+barely seven miles an hour.<!--[60.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>No fewer than twenty-two coaches were by this
+time utilised daily between this city and London.
+The start of the West Country mail coaches from
+Piccadilly at this period was an interesting sight.
+The continued wretched condition of the highways
+was not conducive to quick travelling; but
+in about 1825 matters were improved in that
+respect in our district by Mr. John Loudon
+MacAdam, who studied and practised road-making.
+Mr. MacAdam was general surveyor of Bristol turnpike
+roads, and although he found the trustees'
+funds only one remove from bankruptcy and their
+roads almost impassable, he succeeded so well that
+the finances flourished, and his highways became an
+object lesson to the world. Mr. Latimer, the Bristol
+historian, mentions that although MacAdam was
+shabbily treated by members of the old unreformed
+Corporation, and had many opponents, Bristol
+deserves the credit of being the first to appreciate
+the value of his labours, which were recognised
+later by a Parliamentary grant. He left Bristol
+for London, and died in 1836; but his son became
+surveyor of the Bristol roads, and continued to hold
+the appointment till his death in 1857.<!--[61.png]--></p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/i061.jpg" width="500" height="254" alt="The West Country Mail Coaches about to leave Piccadilly
+withGo Cart, Bringing up Late Mails
+from the G.P.O." title="The West Country Mail Coaches about to leave Piccadilly
+with Go Cart, Bringing up Late Mails
+from the G.P.O." />
+<span class="caption">The West Country Mail Coaches about to leave Piccadilly
+with &quot;Go Cart,&quot; Bringing up Late Mails
+from the G.P.O.</span>
+</div><p><!--[63.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+<!--[62.png]--></p>
+
+
+<p>The <i>Gentlemen's Magazine</i>, November, 1827, announced:
+"A Steam Coach Company are now
+making arrangements for stopping places on the
+line of road, between London, Bath and Bristol,
+which will occur every six or seven miles, where
+fresh fuel and water are to be supplied. There are
+fifteen coaches built." The Turnpike Trustees, who
+imposed extraordinary tolls on steam carriages,
+frustrated this scheme; but the threatened competition
+stirred up the coach proprietors, who increased
+the speed of their vehicles from the jog-trot
+of six or seven miles an hour, although not to such
+an extent as desired by the Bristol Chamber of
+Commerce, which in this year made a suggestion to
+the Post Office for bringing the London mail to the
+city in twelve hours. The Postmaster-General was
+also memorialised to accelerate the arrival of the
+West mail, so as to effect its delivery before the
+departure of the London mail,&mdash;a convenience of no
+little moment to the West India trade of the port,
+since it was thought that it would save one day in
+the conduct of business with the metropolis. At a
+general meeting in January, 1828, it was announced
+that the president had a conference on the subject<!--[64.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+with the leading officer of the Post Office Department,
+with the result that the latter proposed
+alterations which were carried out, and were held
+to be proofs of the Postmaster-General's disposition
+to consult the accommodation of the Bristol public.
+The former proposal was not adopted at the time,
+for at the Accession of his late Majesty King
+William IV. (1830) the London mail coach took
+13 hours 37 minutes on its journey <i>vi&acirc;</i> Reading.
+It departed at 8 p.m., reached Bath 8.11 a.m., and
+arrived in Bristol at 9.37 a.m., leaving again at
+5.50 p.m. for the G.P.O. The Bristol and Brighton
+coach (138 miles) was bound to a speed of 10.4
+miles per hour.</p>
+
+<p>In January, 1830, there were further Post Office
+matters on the agenda of the Chamber of Commerce,
+for it was resolved&mdash;"That this meeting recommends
+to the Board the instituting an enquiry into
+the exact distance between the Post Office of London
+and Bristol, with a view to ascertain whether the
+rate of postage at present demanded is correct."
+The enquiry was prosecuted with vigour, for at
+the January annual meeting in the following year
+reference was made to the Turnpike Commissioners<!--[65.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+for the several districts on the line of road between
+London and Bristol having supplied a statement of
+the precise extent of ground over which the mail
+coach travelled, comprised in their respective trusts.
+In several instances measurements were expressly
+made. In the result it appeared that the route
+exceeded in distance 120 miles, and the Post Office
+Department was therefore entitled legally to obtain
+the rate of 10d. per letter as the amount fixed by the
+provisions of the Act of Parliament. It was thought
+by taking the route from Chippenham through
+Marshfield instead of Bath the distance would be
+considerably shorter, and consequently bring about
+a reduced rate of postage. It was reported in the
+next year (January, 1832) that the requisition for
+changing the route had been pursued, and the
+president held a conference with Sir F. Freeling
+on the subject; but though every due consideration
+was promised, the alteration had not yet been
+acceded to. There was the significant addition that
+the application would nevertheless be renewed. A
+new royal mail direct from Bristol to Liverpool was
+established in 1831, leaving the "White Lion,"
+Broad Street, Bristol, at 5.0 p.m., reaching Liverpool<!--[66.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+at twenty minutes past 12 a.m. The new service
+was notified to Mr. Samuel Harford, the President
+of the Commerce Chamber, by Sir Francis Freeling,
+in the following terms:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+"G.P.O., <i>27th August, 1831</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;Having brought under consideration the
+memorial from the Board of Directors of the
+Chamber of Commerce of Bristol, and from the
+bankers, merchants, and other inhabitants of
+Liverpool, transmitted in your letter of the 2nd
+May last, I have the satisfaction to acquaint you
+that His Grace the Postmaster General (Duke of
+Richmond) has consented to try the experiment
+of a mail coach between those towns, through
+Chepstow, Hereford, and Monmouth, and I flatter
+myself that it may commence about the middle
+of next month.</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have the honour to be, Sir,<br />
+Your most obedient Servant,<br />
+<span class="smcap">F. Freeling</span>, Secretary.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Samuel Harford, Esq."<br />
+<br /></p>
+
+
+<p>In the next year the Chamber learnt with satisfaction
+that the direct Liverpool mail through<!--[67.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+Chepstow, Monmouth, Hereford, Shrewsbury and
+Chester, which was started as an experiment, had
+been continued, to the decided advantage of the
+public, particularly to all connected with the line of
+country through which it passed. As compared with
+the former route, the saving of time was equal to
+one day; the rate of postage was likewise reduced.
+The starting and arriving were at the most convenient
+hours the distance and circumstances, with
+reference to the passage of the two rivers, Severn
+and Medway, would permit. The coach had to run
+over the flat parts of the ground at a great pace, to
+make up for time lost at the hills. The contract
+time was 9 miles 2 furlongs in the hour.</p>
+
+<p>One of the chief mail coaches in the kingdom in
+1837 was the Bristol, Carmarthen and Milford (150
+miles <i>vi&acirc;</i> Passage, one hour allowed for ferry),
+Cardiff and Swansea. Its down journey occupied
+19 hours 38 minutes, and its up journey 20 hours.</p>
+
+<p>The Liverpool and Milford mails were conveyed
+across the Severn at Aust Passage, where the ferry
+had been located since the Lord Protector's time.
+A moderate expenditure on the piers at Aust
+Passage, though little regarded by the citizens at<!--[68.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+the time the work was in progress, with the introduction
+there of a steam vessel, was one of the
+principal means of bringing about the establishment
+of the additional communication with the
+districts over the Severn, the uncertainty and inconvenience
+of crossing its estuary being then
+to a large extent removed.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Oliver Norris, now nearly 80 years of age,
+and who has lived in the district adjoining the
+Severn Tunnel from his boyhood, can call to mind
+the time when the Liverpool and Milford coaches
+were running. They had to make their way from
+Pilning through Northwick, up to the Old Passage
+at Aust, and in rough weather the passengers must
+have had a cold ride on the bleak river banks over
+which they had to journey. When the Bristol and
+South Wales Railway was opened in 1863, the Aust
+Passage was abandoned, and the ferry steamers
+commenced to cross from the revived New (or
+Pilning) Passage, to connect with the new train
+services at Portskewet. When the penny post was
+introduced, Mr. Morris says that as the coaches
+passed through the villages the inhabitants in his
+district adopted a primitive way of posting their<!--[69.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+letters, which was to place the letter and penny in
+a cleft stick, and so hand up to the mail guard as
+the coach was driven by, and who, if the penny was
+not forthcoming, promptly threw the letter to the
+ground.</p>
+
+<p>The mail coach system was attended with many
+adventures. Mr. Moses James Nobbs, the last of
+the mail coach guards, recounted in the history of
+his career how, in the winter of 1836, when guard
+of the Bristol to Portsmouth coach, there were
+terrible snow-storms towards Christmas time, and
+many parts of the country were completely blocked.
+After leaving Bristol one night at 7 p.m. all went
+well until the coach was nearing Salisbury, at about
+midnight. Snow had been falling gently for some
+time before, but after leaving Salisbury it came
+down so thick and lay so deep that the coach had
+to be brought to a standstill, and could proceed no
+further. Consequently Nobbs had to leave the
+coach and go on horseback to the next changing
+place, where he took a fresh horse and started for
+Southampton. There he procured a chaise and
+pair, and continued his journey to Portsmouth,
+arriving there about 6 p.m. the next day. He was<!--[70.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+then ordered to go back to Bristol. On reaching
+Southampton on his return journey the snow had
+got much deeper, and at Salisbury he found that
+the London mails had arrived, but could not go
+any further, the snow being so very deep. Not to
+be beaten, he took a horse out of the stable, slung
+the mail bags over his back, and pushed on for
+Bristol, where he arrived next day, after much
+wandering through fields, up and down lanes, and
+across country&mdash;all one dreary expanse of snow.
+By this time he was about ready for a rest. But
+there was no rest for him in Bristol, for he was
+ordered by the mail inspector to take the mails on
+to Birmingham, as there was no other mail guard
+available. At last he arrived at Birmingham, having
+been on duty for two nights and days continuously
+without taking his clothes off. For his exertions
+and perseverance in getting the mails through Mr.
+Nobbs received a special commendation from the
+Postmaster-General.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 336px;">
+<img src="images/i071.jpg" width="336" height="472" alt="Moses Nobbs.
+The Last of the Mail Guards." title="Moses Nobbs.
+The Last of the Mail Guards." />
+<span class="caption">Moses Nobbs.<br />
+The Last of the Mail Guards.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Mr. Nobbs tells that one night when the Bristol
+coach was between Bath and Warminster, two men
+jumped out of the hedge; one caught hold of the
+leaders, and the other the wheelers, and tried to stop<!--[73.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+<!--[72.png]-->
+the coach. The coachman, immediately whipped up
+the horses, and called out, "Look out! we are going
+to be robbed!" Mr. Nobbs took the blunderbuss
+out of the arms case (which was a box just in front
+of the guard's seat); but, just as he did so, he saw
+the fellows making towards the hedge, and then lost
+sight of them altogether. To let them know that
+he was prepared, he fired off into the hedge. He
+didn't know whether he hit anything, but he heard
+no cries or groans. The recoil of the blunderbuss,
+however, nearly knocked him off his seat. The
+blunderbuss, he said, kicked like a mule. It had
+no doubt been loaded to the muzzle, as was usual
+with those weapons. In the memorable storm of
+Christmas, 1836, alluded to by Mr. Nobbs, the
+Bath and Bristol mail coach, due in London on
+Tuesday morning, was abandoned eighty miles from
+the metropolis, and the mails taken up in a post-chaise
+and four by the two guards, who reached
+St. Martin's-le-Grand at 6.0 on the Wednesday
+morning. For seventeen miles of the distance
+the guards had from time to time to go across
+the fields to get past the deep snowdrifts.</p>
+
+<p>In the annual procession of mail coaches round<!--[74.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+London, at the head thereof was "the oldest
+established mail,"&mdash;the Bristol mail, probably with
+Guard Nobbs in charge. Some twenty-seven to thirty
+coaches took part in the procession thus headed.
+The old mail guards had a literature of their own.
+As an example, one report on a guard's way-bill ran
+as follows (it was a note to account for loss of time
+on North Road):&mdash;"As we wos comin' over Brumsgroove
+Lickey won of the leaders fell, and wen we
+com to him he was ded."</p>
+
+<p>One old fellow used to laugh, as the men said,
+down in his boots, or like a pump losing its water.
+Another used facetiously to say that he had better
+than a dozen children. "Oh, Mr. &mdash;&mdash;," said a
+barmaid to him one day, "what can you do with so
+many?" "Well, my dear," he replied, "you see
+I've got but two, and they be, you must confess, a
+good deal better than a dozen."</p>
+
+<p>It is said that, with the exception of a single
+instance, no guard was ever convicted of a breach of
+trust while performing his duties.</p>
+
+<p>In the year of Her Majesty's accession (1837)
+there were no fewer than twenty-seven coaches
+running daily between Bristol and London, and<!--[75.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+twenty-seven others passed between this city and
+Bath every twenty-four hours. The times of the
+London coach were as follow: London depart 8.0
+p.m., Bath 7.21 a.m., Bristol arrive 8.43 a.m.,
+depart 6.15 p.m., arrive G.P.O. 6.58 a.m.,&mdash;a slight
+acceleration over 1830.</p>
+
+<p>Where now is the fashionable roadside "Ostrich
+Inn" on Durdham Down of a century ago, approached
+by a rough and winding track from Black Boy Hill?
+At this inn the coaches called on their way to the
+Passage. Where now are the old four-horsed
+coaches rattling up to "The Bush," "White Hart,"
+and "White Lion" hostelries, and the old jolly dozen-caped
+coachmen and scarlet-liveried mail guards,
+with blunderbuss and horn? Where now the Bath
+and Bristol mail pulling up at the roadside "King's
+Head Inn"? The inns are gone, the coaches gone,
+the jolly guards all gone too. What happiness their
+smiling faces brought to many who watched for
+their arrival by the mail coach from the West of
+England, and how gladdening the sight of their
+colonial mail bags to the merchants of the city and
+to the sailors' wives looking out anxiously for the
+monthly mail of those days! Though single-sheet<!--[76.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+letters cost 2s. 1d. each, what of that? Did they not
+contain accounts of sugar and rum cargoes, and of
+good news from absent ones. Letters were letters
+in those days, and not the notes and cards and
+"flimsies" of to-day.<!--[77.png]--></p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 468px;">
+<img src="images/i077.jpg" width="468" height="348" alt="Arrival of the Bath and Bristol Mail Coach at a Roadside Inn." title="Arrival of the Bath and Bristol Mail Coach at a Roadside Inn." />
+<span class="caption">Arrival of the Bath and Bristol Mail Coach at a Roadside Inn.</span>
+</div><p><!--[79.png]-->
+<!--[78.png]--></p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h5>VICTORIAN ERA, 1837-1899.<br /><br />
+
+MAIL TRANSPORT BY RAILWAY.&mdash;TRAVELLING POST
+OFFICES.</h5>
+
+
+<p>Although the world's railway system was
+inaugurated by the opening of the Stockton
+and Darlington Railway in 1825, it was not until 1838
+that any attempt was made by a great railway to
+open up the traffic to the West from the Metropolis.
+It was in that year that the Great Western Company
+made a line between Paddington and Maidenhead,
+and mails were sent by it. The section from Bristol
+to Bath was opened in the same year. <i>Woolmer's
+Gazette</i> of January, 1840, speaks of the 9.0 a.m.
+"Exquisite" coach for Bristol, Cheltenham, Birmingham,
+Manchester, and Liverpool, with part of
+the service by rail. Intermediate sections of the
+railway were completed from time to time, and,
+finally, on the 30th January, 1841, the Western
+line was opened throughout, and the coaches which<!--[80.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+had formed so striking a feature both of town and
+country life generally disappeared. One coach,
+however, obstinately held its ground in spite of the
+railway, and continued to carry passengers from
+and to London and Bristol at the rate of 1d. per
+mile until October, 1843.</p>
+
+<p>In consequence of the completion of the Great
+Western Railway to Bristol, extensive mail alterations
+had to be made, and they were commenced on
+the 30th July, 1841, affecting the whole district
+right through Somersetshire and Devonshire into
+Cornwall. Some towns were made post towns and
+others were reduced from the rank of post towns
+to that of sub-post offices. To meet the altered
+circumstances, revised sacking of bags had to be
+resorted to. The instructions given by the President
+to the staff in St. Martin's-le-Grand ended thus:</p>
+
+<p>".... Any bags in addition to the ordinary
+number must be reported to the road officers by the
+clerks of the divisions, that they may be entered
+under the head of 'extra,' also any agents or portmanteaus
+for Falmouth; and they must instruct the
+men carrying out the sacks and bags first to report
+them to the check clerk, and then take them through<!--[81.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+the letter carriers' office to the Devonport or Gloucester
+omnibus, as the case may be, as the guards
+will not for the future come into the office."</p>
+
+<p>It was at this time that the villages of Hallatrow,
+High Littleton, Paulton, Harptree (East and West),
+Farrington Gurney, Temple Cloud, Cameley, and
+Hinton Blewett were transferred from the postal
+control of Bath to that of Bristol, under which they
+still remain.</p>
+
+<p>For several years the only trains carrying third-class
+passengers from Bristol started at 4.0 o'clock
+in the morning and 9.0 o'clock at night, offering the
+travellers, who were wholly unprotected from the
+weather, an alternative of miseries, and at first
+travellers were not much better off in point of speed
+when travelling by railway, as third-class passengers
+were 9<sup>1</sup>&frasl;<sub>2</sub> hours on the railway between Bristol and
+London. The coach at the time of its being taken
+off performed the journey under 12 hours.</p>
+
+<p>The "Bush" coach office was closed in March,
+1844.</p>
+
+<p>The Bristol and Gloucester Railway was opened
+to the public on the 8th July, 1844. Of the seven
+coaches which had been running between the two<!--[82.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+cities six were immediately withdrawn, and on the
+22nd July the time-honoured "North Mail" left
+Bristol for the last time, the horses' heads surmounted
+with funereal plumes and the coachman
+and guard in equally lugubrious array.</p>
+
+<p>As late as 1845 Her Majesty's mails were conveyed
+between Bristol and Southampton in a closed
+covered cart, "proper for the purpose," as set forth
+in an advertisement inviting tenders for a new
+contract. The whole journey had to be performed
+at the rate of eight miles within the hour, stoppages
+included. The hours of despatch were:
+From Bristol at about 6.0 p.m., and from Southampton
+about 9.0 p.m.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 542px;">
+<img src="images/i083.jpg" width="542" height="306" alt="&quot;The Old Bush Hotel,&quot; Corn Street, Bristol.
+From a picture in the possession of E. G. Clarke, Esq." title="&quot;The Old Bush Hotel,&quot; Corn Street, Bristol.
+From a picture in the possession of E. G. Clarke, Esq." />
+<span class="caption">&quot;The Old Bush Hotel,&quot; Corn Street, Bristol.</span><br />
+<i style='font-size: small'>From a picture in the possession of E. G. Clarke, Esq.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>In 1849 a great mail robbery took place, which
+was committed with very much daring. The
+robbers, who booked from Starcross station on the
+1st January, left a compartment of the up night
+mail train (which left Bridgwater at 10.30 p.m. and
+reached Bristol at midnight); they crept along the
+ledge, only 1½ inch wide, to the mail-brake at the
+rear of the post office sorting carriage, and effected
+an entrance, having previously possessed themselves
+of a key of the lock. After having rifled the mail<!--[85.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+<!--[84.png]-->
+bags they crept back to their compartment, and
+alighted from the train at the Bristol station, giving
+up their tickets to the Great Western Railway
+policeman. Not contented with robbing the up
+mail, they got into the night mail train from
+London to the West, which left Bristol at 1.15 a.m.,
+and actually had the daring to pursue the same
+tactics with regard to the mail bags in the locked
+brake. This further audacity brought about their
+capture, for the news of the robbery of the up mail
+reached the ears of the officers at Bristol who were
+in the down mail, and so they were on the alert.
+On arrival, therefore, at Bridgwater the second
+robbery was at once detected, all exit from the
+station was stopped, and the train searched. Two
+men were discovered in a first-class compartment
+near the travelling post office, and registered letters
+and money letters were found upon them. In
+addition to the letters, masks, and false moustache
+found, a woolstapler's hook, which it is supposed
+was used by the thieves to hang on to the tender
+when leaving the first-class carriage, was also discovered.
+One of the registered letters stolen, it was
+stated, contained &pound;4,000, and the loss, as far as it<!--[86.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+was known, unquestionably amounted to <i>fifty times</i>
+that sum. The robbers turned out to be Henry
+Poole, a discharged Great Western guard, and
+Edward Nightingale, a London horse dealer. The
+case excited a great deal of interest in the West of
+England, and when the trial took place at Exeter
+the court was crowded to excess, and the avenues
+and approaches thereto were very inconveniently
+crowded. Mr. Rogers, Q.C., and Mr. Poulden
+appeared for the prosecution, and Mr. Slade, Mr.
+Cockburn, Q.C., and Mr. Stone defended.</p>
+
+<p>Evidence was given by clerks in the Lombard
+Street Post Office, messengers and letter-carriers in
+the G.P.O., "register" clerks, clerk at Charing Cross
+Post Office, the clerk of the Devonport Road, guard
+of the mail from St. Martin's-le-Grand to Paddington,
+and by letter-sorters in the travelling Post
+Office. Jane Crabbe, barmaid at the "Talbot Inn,"
+Bath Street, Bristol, recollected the two men entering
+the bar and calling for two small glasses of brandy-and-water.
+They were shown to an adjoining room,
+where they remained until 1 o'clock, and then went
+to the bar to pay. They appeared impatient, and
+looked at the clock. It was suspected that all the<!--[87.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+property which, had been abstracted from the up mail
+was secreted somewhere in Bristol, and a most rigid
+search was instituted, but without success. Mr.
+Cockburn's speech to the jury for the defence occupied
+over two hours. Lord Justice Denman, the Judge
+of the Spring Assize, sentenced the culprits to
+fifteen years' transportation.</p>
+
+<p>A Select Committee was appointed in 1854 to
+inquire into the causes of irregularity in the conveyance
+of mails by railways, and to consider the best
+means of securing speed and punctuality; also to
+consider the best mode of fixing the remuneration of
+the various Railway Companies for their services.
+The local witnesses, Mr. James Creswell Wall and
+Mr. J. B. Badham, Secretary and Superintendent
+respectively of the late Bristol and Exeter Railway
+Company, and Bristol residents, gave evidence before
+the Committee, composed of Mr. Wilson Patten
+(chairman), Mr. James MacGregor, Mr. H. G. Liddell,
+Mr. H. Herbert, Mr. C. Fortescue, Mr. Cowan, Mr.
+Thompson, Mr. Philipps, and Mr. Milner.</p>
+
+<p>Replying to questions, witnesses considered two
+hours forty minutes, as fixed by the Post Office Department,
+insufficient time for the down night mail to<!--[88.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+travel from Bristol to Exeter, including six stoppages.
+The delivery of mail bags at certain stations by
+apparatus without stopping the train was suggested,
+but witnesses considered the plan dangerous and
+that it could not with safety be adopted.</p>
+
+<p>The Secretary of the South Wales Railway
+Company, Mr. F. G. Saunders, gave evidence as to
+the frequent loss of time sustained by the South
+Wales night mail through the late receipt of the
+Bristol and West of England mails at Chepstow.
+At that time the bags for South Wales were still
+conveyed from Bristol to the Aust Passage, thence
+by ferry to the opposite bank of the Severn and on
+to Chepstow. The conveyance of mails for South
+Wales <i>vi&acirc;</i> Gloucester was subsequently adopted.</p>
+
+<p>All the witnesses complained of the reduction of
+railway parcel traffic through the then recent establishment
+of book postage and consequent falling off
+of receipts, also that the remuneration awarded for
+the carriage of mails was insufficient, although
+decided by mutually-appointed umpires.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
+<img src="images/i089.jpg" width="475" height="294" alt="The Old Passage, Aust." title="The Old Passage, Aust." />
+<span class="caption">The Old Passage, Aust.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>For many years the night mails were conveyed
+between Paddington and Bristol by a special train,
+which did not carry passengers. It was the only<!--[91.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+<!--[90.png]-->
+train of its kind in the kingdom, but so useful was
+it held to be in securing a regular delivery of letters
+that the Government introduced a clause in a Postal
+Bill in 1857 rendering it compulsory for all railways
+to provide similar trains. On the 1st June, 1869,
+the Post Office special Great Western train commenced
+to be a mail train limited to carry a certain
+number of passengers, so that opinion had by that
+time become altered as regards the value in relation
+to cost of a train exclusively for Post Office
+purposes.</p>
+
+<p>The travelling Post Office service assists greatly in
+the speedy distribution of letters, and by its agency
+remote places are put on an equality with the
+country generally in respect of deliveries and
+despatches. Two of the most important travelling
+Post Office systems in the kingdom are conducted
+through, or to, Bristol&mdash;the gate to the Western
+country&mdash;viz.: The Great Western Railway, with a
+travelling Post Office annual mileage of 500,000;
+and the Midland and North-Eastern lines from
+Newcastle, with a mileage of 220,000. Travelling
+Post Offices, with a combined coach length of from
+48 feet on the day mails to 158 feet on the night<!--[92.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+mails, are attached to the Great Western down
+trains which arrive at Bristol at 12.13 a.m. and
+8.48 a.m.; to the up trains, at 12.45 a.m. and 3.0
+p.m.; to the trains leaving Bristol for the West at
+6.15 a.m. and 12.9 p.m., and for the North at 7.40
+p.m. The Midland travelling Post Office carriages
+are attached to the 5.40 a.m. inward train and to
+the 7.0 p.m. outward train.</p>
+
+<p>There is living at Midford, about fifteen miles
+distant from Bristol, a gentleman (Mr. Coulcher)
+who&mdash;now pensioned from the Post Office&mdash;was
+the clerk in charge of the Midland Travelling Post
+Office on its first run from Bristol to Derby in 1857.
+He well recollects the night, and what impressed
+it upon his memory more than anything else was
+the fact that on reaching Bristol, after he and his
+two subordinate clerks and his mail-guard (Samuel
+Bennett) had made almost superhuman efforts to
+get the work completed, he had to send 13,000
+letters unsorted into the Bristol Post Office, there
+to await despatch by day mails to towns in the West
+of England, instead of going at once in direct
+travelling Post Office bags by the connecting early
+morning train.<!--[93.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>Samuel Bennett, the old mail guard mentioned,
+and contemporary of Moses Nobbs, was frequently
+injured on road and rail. In 1847 he was much
+shaken when a Birmingham-to-Bath train by which
+he was travelling ran off the line. A few years
+later he nearly came to an untimely end, having
+been regarded as dead after being much knocked
+about when two trains between Bristol and Birmingham
+collided. On that occasion, after he
+recovered consciousness, he got together some of
+his mail bags and carried them on to Bristol.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Gloucester Journal</i> said of the occurrence:&mdash;"Samuel
+Bennett, the guard of the mail bags,
+appeared dead when found, and was dreadfully cut;
+but on recovering, he manifested great anxiety for
+the bags. When the special train arrived in which
+the wounded passengers were conveyed onward,
+Bennett, with great courage, determined to take the
+bags by this train, which was done."</p>
+
+<p>And the <i>Bristol Mercury</i> wrote of him as follows:&mdash;"The
+mail guard, Samuel Bennett, was very much
+cut over the face and head, and bled profusely.
+Happily, he was not rendered long unconscious or
+disabled, and with a conscientious and self-denying<!--[94.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+attention to duty not often met with, he refused
+any attention to his hurts until he had gathered
+up the mutilated letter bags and their contents,
+and made provision for bringing them on to this
+city."</p>
+
+<p>In the Bristol district there is a railway Post Office
+apparatus station at Fishponds, on the Midland
+Railway, bags being deposited thereat by the train
+due at Bristol at 5.40 a.m., and taken up by the
+train ex Bristol at 7.0 p.m. On the Great Western
+Railway, the apparatus arrangement is in operation
+at Flax Bourton, Nailsea, Yatton, and Hewish,
+chiefly in connection with the 6.15 a.m. train ex
+Bristol. It rarely happens that any failures
+occur at Fishponds or Hewish, but vagaries of the
+apparatus are more frequent at Yatton. About once
+a year something or other goes wrong, the pouch
+usually being dropped and carried along by the train,
+with mutilation of the mail bags and a general
+scattering of the letters. On the last occasion, after
+the line had been searched up and down, the embankment
+closely looked over, and the ground on the
+other side of the hedge on the down side closely
+scrutinized, all unavailingly, some two or three days<!--[95.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+after the accident a bundle of letters was picked up
+which, such was the force of the impact, had been
+"skied" into a field over two hedges of an intervening
+lane.</p>
+
+<p>On another similar mishap, a Post Office remittance
+letter containing &pound;20 in gold was burst open
+and the coins scattered over the line. After diligent
+search in every direction, &pound;18 10s. was recovered.
+One half sovereign, bent in an extraordinary manner,
+was found between the metals three-quarters of a
+mile from the apparatus standard. The apparatus
+has to be adjusted with mathematical nicety, and
+if not so arranged failures are liable to occur. It
+is well that the public should bear in mind that
+packets sent by mails which are exchanged by
+apparatus are in more or less danger, and any
+article of a fragile or costly nature should, if possible,
+be forwarded by mails carried by stopping-trains.
+The places so affected in this neighbourhood are:&mdash;Alveston,
+Bitton, Blagdon, Burrington, Clevedon,
+Congresbury, Downend, Fishponds, Flax Bourton,
+Frampton Cotterell, Frenchay, Glastonbury, Hambrook,
+Hewish, Iron Acton, Langford, Mangotsfield,
+Nailsea, Oldlands Common, Portishead, Pucklechurch,<!--[96.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+Rudgeway, Sandford, Staple Hill, Thornbury,
+Tockington, Warmley, West Town, Willsbridge,
+Winterbourne, Wrington, and Yatton.</p>
+
+<p>Until lately mails for Bristol were forwarded by
+the midnight train from Euston (L. &amp; N. W. R.)
+and reached this city by way of Birmingham in
+time for the North mail delivery. It was on that
+railway that in 1890 a sad occurrence happened at
+Watford, when a young man whilst in the discharge
+of his duties as fireman lost his life. The deceased
+was leaning over the side of his engine, which was
+stationary, watching for the signals to be turned,
+when the day mail train from London dashed by.
+The travelling Post Office apparatus net which had
+picked up a pouch at a point a few score yards away
+was still extended and it struck the unfortunate
+young man on the head, completely severing it from
+the body. The poor fellow's cap was torn from his
+head by the apparatus net and fell into the travelling
+Post Office carriages with the mail pouches much to
+the consternation of the travelling sorters, who found
+evidence of the mutilation on the apparatus framework.
+The net was only down for the short space
+of ten seconds. The travelling officials first heard<!--[97.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+full details of the accident on their arrival at Tring,
+where the train next stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"Once upon a time," writes Mr. A. W. Blake in
+the <i>St. Martin's-le-Grand Magazine</i>, "the London
+afternoon mail was made up at a provincial office
+down West (Chippenham), and despatched to be
+taken off by apparatus. All proceeded as usual up
+to the actual point of transfer, when a strange thing
+happened. Instead of falling soberly into the net,
+the man in charge was astonished to see the pouch
+leap high into the air and descend he knew not
+whither. Search was carefully made along the
+track of the departed train, but not a vestige of
+the missing pouch could be seen, and a local
+inspector who was travelling up the line promised
+to keep a look-out for it. Just at this time an 'S.G.'
+was received from the officer in charge of the sorting
+tender notifying the non-receipt of the pouch. As
+the mystery seemed to deepen, word was received
+that a signalman at a level crossing two miles away
+had noticed the missing article on the top of the
+train. Quoth the worthy apparatus man: 'If it'll
+ride two miles, it'll ride two hundred'; and accordingly
+a wire was sent to the sorting-tender people<!--[98.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+asking them to search the top of the train, and soon
+came the reply that the pouch had been found on
+the roof of the guard's van at Didcot. The train
+had stopped the regulation time at that hub of the
+Great Way Round, Swindon, and proceeded on its
+way without the extraordinary position of Her
+Majesty's mails being discovered."</p>
+
+<p>The occurrence was attributed to the swaying of
+the carriage, and to the apparatus-net not working
+quite steadily in consequence.</p>
+
+<p>At a later period than the mishap narrated by
+Mr. Blake, the bags for Oxford and Abingdon, due
+to be picked up at Wantage by the up night mail
+travelling Post Office apparatus, and to have been
+delivered by the same process at Steventon, were
+not found when the net was drawn in, and it was
+thought they had been missed; but at Didcot it
+was discovered they had been thrown over the end
+of the net and were hanging outside it.</p>
+
+<p>Since the opening of the Severn Tunnel in 1883
+it has not often been found an absolute necessity to
+make use of it for the conveyance of mails diverted
+from the route from South Wales through Gloucester
+to London; but such was the case in February of<!--[99.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+the present year (1899), when a tidal wave of forty
+feet was experienced in the Bristol Channel,
+which caused serious damage by displacing the
+railway line between Lydney and Wollaston.
+The effects of the high tide were disastrous. A
+wave dashed on to the Great Western Railway with
+huge force, and so disintegrated the ballasting of
+the permanent way that the lines were twisted into
+all manner of shapes. The mails to and from
+Paddington to South Wales were circulated <i>vi&acirc;</i>
+Bristol and the Tunnel for some time.</p>
+
+<p>Bristol is at a disadvantage as compared with
+London in respect of its Continental correspondence,
+but is far better situated than many other provincial
+towns. The letters from the Continent by night
+mails reach Bristol by the train leaving London at
+9.0 a.m. and, arriving at Temple Meads at 11.57 a.m.,
+are on delivery in the private box renters' office
+at about 12.30 p.m. The postmen start out with the
+letters at 1.10 p.m. As the hour of posting for the
+outward Continental night mails is 2.10 p.m., it is
+only the private box renters who have time, brief
+though it be, to reply to their correspondence on the
+day of receiving it.<!--[100.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>An appeal to the Hon. Member for Bristol East
+was made by the writer at a Chamber of Commerce
+dinner to exercise his influence as a director of the
+Great Western Railway in the direction of obtaining
+the use of a goods train for the conveyance to Bristol
+of a midnight mail from London. In the end the
+Railway Company afforded the Post Office the means
+of bringing down a midnight mail, not by goods
+train as was originally contemplated, but by new
+and fast passenger train, with the result that half a
+million letters a year now fall into the first delivery
+throughout the town, instead of into the second
+delivery as heretofore. The letters posted in London
+up to 9.0 p.m. reach the head office in Small Street in
+time to be delivered throughout the city and suburbs
+by the postmen on their first round. Under the old
+system, when "routed" <i>vi&acirc;</i> Birmingham, the arrival
+was often so late and irregular that the letters missed
+even the second delivery. The letters for the rural
+districts having no day mail deliveries had to lie at
+Bristol for twenty-four hours, while now they are
+delivered on the morning of receipt from London.
+The advantages o&pound; the new system apply to parcels
+as well as letters, and the acceleration in delivery<!--[101.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+is particularly serviceable as regards parcels containing
+perishable articles.</p>
+
+<p>The Railway Company recently gave the Department
+another opportunity of improving the mail
+services by establishing a merchandise train from
+Cornwall and the West to London, reaching the
+Metropolis in time for the letters sent by it to be
+delivered some three or four hours earlier than when
+conveyed by the first passenger train in the morning.
+Strangely enough, the establishment of this new
+mail service was the means of enabling the hon.
+baronet (Sir W. H. Wills), the Member for Bristol
+East, to take his seat in the House of Commons
+on the day of his last election, for the writ and
+return were sent by that mail to London in time to
+reach the Crown Office for all formalities to be gone
+through in connection with the seat being taken at
+once.<!--[102.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+<h5>1678-1899.<br /><br />
+BRISTOL POSTMASTERS.</h5>
+
+
+<p>Official records at St. Martin's-le-Grand show
+that postmasters of Bristol were appointed as
+follows; viz., Thomas Gale, 1678; Wm. Dickinson,
+1690; Daniel Parker, 1693; Henry Pine, September,
+1694; Thomas Pine, senior, 1740; Thomas Pine,
+junior, 16th January, 1760; William Fenn, 1778;
+Mrs. Fenn, 1788; Mr. Fry managed the office for
+Mrs. Penn from 1797 to December, 1805, when he
+died, and Mrs. Fenn retired on an allowance in 1806;
+Mr. Cole, March, 1806, died whilst holding office;
+John Gardiner, 9th June, 1825; Thomas Todd
+Walton, senior, 21st February, 1832; Thomas Todd
+Walton, junior, 23rd May, 1842, succeeded his
+father; Edward Chaddock Sampson, 21st June, 1871;
+Robert Charles Tombs, 19th April, 1892, after
+having been invalided from Controllership of the
+London postal service.</p>
+
+<p>In his history of the Post Office, Mr. Joyce tells
+us that in 1686 the Postmaster-General himself<!--[103.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+settled applications for salary. Thus when Thomas
+Gale, postmaster of Bristol, applies for an increase
+of salary, Frowde the governor satisfies the Earl of
+Rochester, the Postmaster-General, that the increase
+will be proper. Forthwith issues a document, of
+which the operative part is as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You are therefore of opinion that the said salary
+(&pound;50) is very small considering the expense the
+petitioner is att, and his extraordinary trouble,
+Bristoll being a greate Citty, but you say that you
+doe not think all the things he setts downe in the
+aforesaid accompt ought to be allowed him, the
+example being of very ill consequence, for (as you
+informe me) you doe not allow either candles, pack-thread,
+wax, ink, penns or paper to any of the
+postmasters, nor office-rent, nor returns of mony,
+you are therefore of opinion that tenn ponnds
+per annum to his former salary of &pound;50 will be a
+reasonable allowance, and the petitioner will be therewith
+satisfied, these are therefore to pray and require
+you 'to raise his salary from &pound;50 to &pound;60 accordingly.'</p>
+
+<p>
+"<span class="smcap">Rochester.</span><br />
+Whitehall Treasury Chambers,<br />
+<i>December 13th, 1686</i>."<br />
+<!--[104.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span><br /></p>
+
+
+<p>The office of postmaster was in the hands of the
+Pine family, grandfather, father, and son, from
+1694 till 1778. In an old manuscript in the public
+library it is stated that there was a portrait in the
+possession of a descendant of the family, then residing
+on Kingsdown, representing the older Pine in the
+midst of his official duties, a bracket supporting a
+bust of Mercury, and
+in his hand a letter
+thus addressed:&mdash;"On
+His Majesty's
+Service. To Mr.
+Pine, Postmaster of
+Bristol," and in the
+corner, "P. Express.
+T. Strickland." Endeavours
+to trace the
+descendants and the
+portrait have proved
+fruitless.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 170px;">
+<img src="images/i104.jpg" width="170" height="240" alt="Mr. John Gardiner.
+Postmaster of Bristol, 1827-1832." title="Mr. John Gardiner.
+Postmaster of Bristol, 1827-1832." />
+<span class="caption">Mr. John Gardiner.</span><br />
+<i>Postmaster of Bristol, 1827-1832.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>There is little
+history obtainable
+of the postmasters until the time of Mr. John
+Gardiner, of whom it is related that, born October<!--[105.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+15th, 1777, he held the office of postmaster
+of Bristol from 1825 till his death in 1832.
+It is believed that he obtained his appointment
+in a great measure through friendship
+with Mr. Francis Freeling. Mr. Gardiner had to
+bear the brunt of the Bristol Riots (1831), in so far
+as they affected the Post Office administration of the
+city. In order to save the mails and belongings
+which were portable, such as the books, post dating
+stamps, etc., he set off with them in a coach and four
+for Bath Post Office. He got safely through the
+mob and reached Bath, where the Bristol Post Office
+business was carried on until the riots had been
+quelled. Mr. Gardiner, in addition to being postmaster,
+was also an exporter of woollen and
+Manchester goods, chiefly to the West Indies until
+the slave trade was abolished. He then traded with
+Newfoundland. He was High Sheriff of the city
+in the year 1820, residing at that time in Berkeley
+Square. Later, however, he was enabled to live
+quietly at the Old Manor House, Easton-in-Gordano.
+He was buried at St. Peter's Church, Bristol.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 164px;">
+<img src="images/i106.jpg" width="164" height="240" alt="Mr. Thomas Todd Walton.
+Postmaster of Bristol, 1832-1842." title="Mr. Thomas Todd Walton.
+Postmaster of Bristol, 1832-1842." />
+<span class="caption">Mr. Thomas Todd Walton.</span><br />
+<i>Postmaster of Bristol, 1832-1842.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>Mr. Anthony Todd, the Secretary to the Post
+Office, 1762-65 and 1768-98, seems to have been<!--[106.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+attracted to Todd Walton, of Cheshunt, Herts, either
+by relationship or from his name, and took him in
+hand. Born in 1772, Mr. Todd Walton entered the
+Post Office in 1786 (fourteen years old). He had
+the long spell of service of forty-six years in the
+foreign Post Office
+and ten years as
+postmaster of
+Bristol. He was
+five times selected
+for foreign missions,
+which compelled his
+residence in Holland,
+Sweden, Spain, and
+Portugal during the
+most disturbed state
+of those countries.
+Mr. Walton is
+described as having
+been a fine old
+English gentleman, one of the olden time, who wore
+hair powder, blue coat with gilt buttons, and shoes
+and gaiters; one who used to express his meaning
+distinctly, and mean what he said too. This description<!--[107.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+is borne out by his appearance in his portrait.
+He used to visit the Bristol Post Office after his
+retirement, especially to have a morning glass of
+water from the old well on the premises. He died in
+July, 1857, at his residence, King's Parade, Clifton,
+in his eighty-fifth year, and was buried in the adjacent
+church of St. John's. On his tombstone is this
+inscription: "Here rests the body of Thomas Todd
+Walton, late of Cheshunt, Herts, and of the foreign
+post, London, Esquire. A quarter of a century an
+inhabitant of this parish, and for some years head
+postmaster of the Bristol district. Deceased 13th
+July, 1857. Aged 85. Also of Catherine Elizabeth,
+his wife, elder daughter of Thomas Todd, of Durham,
+Esquire. She died April 11th, 1860, aged 77 years."</p>
+
+<p>On Mr. Walton's retirement, in 1842, in view of
+his services, Lord Viscount Lowther, the Postmaster-General
+of the day, conferred the appointment of
+postmaster of Bristol on his son, Thomas Todd
+Walton, who had been employed as chief clerk in
+the Bristol Post Office for ten years. Mr. Todd
+Walton, it seems, was properly initiated into the
+mysteries of the Post Office art by his father, who
+decreed that he should commence at the bottom of<!--[108.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+the ladder and work his way up thence, so that
+young Todd Walton was in his day to be found at
+mail-bag opening, letter sorting and other routine
+work of the kind, which will account for the thorough
+knowledge of his
+business which he
+is said to have
+possessed when
+called upon to take
+the reins of office
+handed over to him
+by his popular
+parent.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 170px;">
+<img src="images/i108.jpg" width="170" height="239" alt="Mr. Thomas Todd Walton
+(junior).
+Postmaster of Bristol, 1842-1871." title="Mr. Thomas Todd Walton
+(junior).
+Postmaster of Bristol, 1842-1871." />
+<span class="caption">Mr. Thomas Todd Walton
+(junior).</span>
+<i>Postmaster of Bristol, 1842-1871.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>In connection with
+the recent selection
+of the port of Bristol
+as a mail station,
+alluded to in later
+pages, it may be
+mentioned that Mrs.
+Todd Walton well remembers how, when the
+<i>Great Western</i> steamship, which carried the American
+mails between Bristol and New York for several
+years, was first due (1838) to reach this port, her<!--[109.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+husband organised his small staff for a night
+encounter with the pressure of work which the
+heavy mail would inevitably occasion, and obtained
+auxiliary aid. The little staff was at "attention"
+for two or three days, and when the news
+came by means of the runner from Pill that the
+ship was coming up the Avon, Mr. Walton turned
+out at 2 a.m., rallied his little band, and went
+manfully to the work, which lasted for many hours
+before the letters were fully sorted and sent off to
+their respective destinations or delivered through the
+streets and lanes of the old city. In the autumn of
+1841 the <i>Great Western</i> happened to arrive on the
+same day that a large ship mail from Australia by
+the <i>Ruby</i> was received, and the whole staff available&mdash;then
+only ten men for all duties&mdash;had to work
+night and day continuously to get off the letters by
+the mails to other towns. As many as 20,000 letters
+and newspapers were brought by these two vessels
+on that occasion. It is recorded that every available
+space in the premises was filled with letters piled as
+high as they could be got to stand, and great was
+the joy of the sorters when the flood of letters
+subsided.<!--[110.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>Mr. Todd Walton had many other night reminders
+of the mail services besides those respecting the
+arrival of direct mails from America, as the rattling
+of the horses' hoofs, the clang of the pole-chains and
+the twang of the mail guard's horn as the coaches
+dashed past his house on their way to the passages
+must have frequently reminded him of his responsibilities
+as "mail master" of Bristol. He would
+have blessed Bristol's very able General Manager of
+the Tramways Company had he been to the fore in
+those days to procure the benefit of freedom from
+the noise of traffic by the use of wood paving in our
+principal thoroughfares.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Todd Walton had the interests of the staff of
+the Post Office at heart, and, as an exemplification
+of his sympathy with them, it may be mentioned that
+when a promising officer in the heyday of youth
+met with an accident which eventually necessitated
+the amputation of his right leg, Mr. Walton did
+not allow the misfortune to stand in the way of the
+young man's continuing in remunerative employment
+in the Post Office, but found for him a suitable
+sedentary duty which he performed for fourteen
+years.<!--[111.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>Mr. Todd Walton the second counted amongst
+his contemporaries and personal friends those Post
+Office literary stars, Anthony Trollope and Edmund
+Yates.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Walton retired from the Post Office in 1871.
+His death occurred at the Clifton Down Hotel on
+the morning of Christmas day, 1885. He was in
+the act of dressing to attend the early morning
+service at All Saints' Church, when he fell into a
+fit of apoplexy, from which he did not rally. The
+<i>Times and Mirror</i> of January 2nd, 1886, gives the
+following memoir of him:&mdash;"The death of this
+estimable gentleman calls for more particular notice
+than the necessarily brief one given in last Saturday's
+impression; for although Mr. Walton had for
+some time past ceased to be a citizen of Bristol, he
+continued to feel an interest in the old city and its
+surroundings, and was remembered by many Bristolians
+as one who had obtained, as he deserved,
+their affectionate esteem. Succeeding his father&mdash;a
+gentleman of the 'old school'&mdash;as postmaster of
+Bristol, Mr. Todd Walton, through the long series
+of years in which he occupied that public position,
+evinced unwearied industry, keen intelligence, and<!--[112.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+singular courtesy in discharging the multifarious
+duties connected with it, and when on his retirement
+(carrying with him into private life the respect
+of his fellow-citizens) he was called upon to fulfil
+the duties of High Sheriff of Bristol, those duties
+were discharged by him for two years successively
+in a manner distinguished by great public spirit
+and generous hospitality. He was a man of considerable
+culture and taste, an extensive reader, and
+a reader who, happily, remembered what he had
+read. He possessed also a sense of humour and
+a ready wit which made him an agreeable and
+intelligent companion; whilst to those who enjoyed
+his friendship he was ever a friend, courteous and
+kind. Blessed with abundant means, he helped
+without ostentation the poor and needy, many of
+whom in our own city will share in the general
+regret his loss has occasioned."</p>
+
+<p>In the centre of the church garden at All Saints',
+Clifton, stands a cross, which Mrs. Walton erected
+in 1888 to the memory of her husband. It was
+designed by Mr. J. L. Pearson, R.A. It is of
+granite, and stands on three steps. In the centre
+of the shaft is a figure of the Good Shepherd, and<!--[113.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+at the top are four sculptures, beautifully executed,
+of the Annunciation, the Crucifixion, the Resurrection,
+and the Ascension. Over these rises a
+crocketed finial, and the whole is surmounted by a
+cross. At the base are inscribed the words: "In
+loving memory of Thomas Todd Walton, sometime
+churchwarden of the Church of All Saints, and a
+most generous benefactor to that church."</p>
+
+<p>By the death of Edward Chadwick Sampson,
+the next postmaster, which occurred at Clevedon,
+December 7th, 1895, the Post Office lost one of its
+most gentlemanly and genial pensioners.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 177px;">
+<img src="images/i115.jpg" width="177" height="215" alt="Edward Chaddock Sampson.
+Postmaster of Bristol, 1871-1891.
+From a photograph by Mr. Abel Lewis, Bristol." title="Edward Chaddock Sampson.
+Postmaster of Bristol, 1871-1891.
+From a photograph by Mr. Abel Lewis, Bristol." />
+<span class="caption">Edward Chaddock Sampson.</span><br />
+<i>Postmaster of Bristol, 1871-1891.</i><br />
+<i style='font-size: small'>From a photograph by Mr. Abel Lewis, Bristol.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>For many years postmaster of Bristol, Mr.
+Sampson was well known throughout the city, and
+held in high esteem by all with whom he was
+brought into contact. He had a long service in
+the postal department, dating, as it did, from 1837
+to the last day of 1891. In 1837 he began his
+connection with the Bristol Post Office. He went
+to Manchester as chief clerk in 1865, but was away
+only six years, and returned in 1871 to assume the
+postmastership of his native city. It is interesting,
+as showing the enormous increase in the postal
+traffic, to recall the fact that when Mr. Sampson<!--[114.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+joined the Corn Street office in 1837 the premises
+were only twenty feet square, there were only
+fifteen clerks and postmen all told, and no one was
+allowed to have his letters from the boxes whilst a
+mail was being sorted.</p>
+
+<p>For his wide experience, his ability, and high
+integrity his work was greatly valued by leading
+officials in the postal service; whilst his sincerity
+and kindliness of disposition endeared him to
+employ&eacute;s of every grade over whom he had
+control.</p>
+
+<p>As the postman came to Mr. Sampson's door one
+morning, it was seen that the man was too ill
+to discharge his duties. Mr. Sampson thereupon
+begged the man to come into his house and rest,
+and he himself, with the aid of his son, delivered
+every one of the letters at its destination, afterwards
+seeing the poor man safely home. That kind
+act was indicative of Mr. Sampson's general consideration
+for those over whom he ruled.</p>
+
+<p>On the resignation of Mr. Sampson, it was
+generally felt that he should not be allowed to retire
+into private life without taking with him tangible
+evidence of the goodwill and respect of those with<!--[117.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+<!--[116.png]-->
+whom he had been associated. This feeling found
+expression in a gratifying manner, and the services
+he had rendered the commercial community during
+his postmastership were gracefully recognised by
+the Chamber of Commerce presenting him with an
+address illuminated and engrossed on vellum.</p>
+
+<p>Exactly at midnight on the last night of 1891
+he was invited, as his last official act, to seal what
+is known to Post Office employ&eacute;s as the "London
+and Exeter T.P.O., going west"&mdash;that is, the mail
+bag of the travelling Post Office bound for Exeter.
+Mr. Sampson discharged the slight duty devolving
+upon him, and received the new year greetings of
+his former colleagues, "Auld Lang Syne" being
+afterwards sung.<!--[118.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<h5>NOTABLE POST OFFICE SERVANTS OF<br /><br />
+BRISTOL ORIGIN.</h5>
+
+
+<p>Probably the most illustrious man of the Post
+Office service who had Bristol for a birthplace
+was Sir Francis Freeling. Sir Francis was born in
+Redcliffe parish, Bristol, in 1764, and was educated
+partly at Colston School and in part by the Master
+of Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School. In an
+ancient city record it is stated that he commenced
+his official career as "an apprentice" at the Bristol
+Post Office, where the combined results of his
+education, probity, and talents were soon discovered.
+On the establishment of the new system
+of mail coaches in 1784, he was appointed to aid
+the inventor, Palmer, in carrying his improvements
+into effect. Two years later he was transferred to
+the General Post Office, London, where, in course
+of time, he successively filled the offices of Surveyor,
+Principal and Resident Surveyor, Joint-Secretary,<!--[121.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+<!--[120.png]-->
+and Secretary from 1798-1836. In a debate in the
+House of Lords, in 1836, the Duke of Wellington
+stated that the English Post Office under Freeling's
+management had been better administered than any
+Post Office in Europe, or in any other part of the
+world. He possessed "a clear and vigorous understanding
+... and the power of expressing his
+thoughts and opinions, both verbally and in writing,
+with force and precision." For his public services
+a baronetcy was conferred upon him on March
+11th, 1828, a meet reward for his long, arduous,
+and valuable services. He was a warm supporter
+of Pitt, but he suffered no political partisanship
+to affect his administration of the Post Office.
+Freeling's leisure was devoted to the formation of
+a curious and valuable library. He was elected a
+Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1801, and
+was one of the original members of the Roxburgh
+Club, founded in 1812. He died while still at his
+post on the business of the country which he had so
+faithfully served, and was buried in the church of
+St. Mary Redcliffe, Bristol.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 413px;">
+<img src="images/i119.jpg" width="413" height="375" alt="Sir Francis Freeling, Bart.
+Secretary to the G.P.O., 1798-1836." title="" />
+<span class='caption'>Sir Francis Freeling, Bart.</span><br />
+<i>Secretary to the G.P.O., 1798-1836.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>The inscription on the memorial tablet runs thus:
+"To the memory of Sir Francis Freeling, Baronet,<!--[122.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+who was born in this parish the 25th August, 1764,
+and who died in Bryanston Square, in the county of
+Middlesex, the 10th July, 1836. For more than
+half a century his life was devoted to the public
+service in the General Post Office, in which for
+thirty-eight years he discharged the arduous duties
+of Secretary. By unwearied industry in the employment
+of great talents, and by unblemished integrity,
+grounded upon Christian principles, he acquired
+and retained the favour of three successive
+Sovereigns, and the approbation of the public.
+He has left a name which will be remembered with
+honour in his birthplace, and which is cherished
+with affection and veneration by his children, who
+have raised this monument."</p>
+
+<p>Sir Francis Freeling was thrice married. By his
+first wife, Jane, daughter of John Christian
+Kurstadt, he had two sons. He was succeeded in
+the baronetcy by the elder, Sir George Henry
+Freeling, born in 1789, who matriculated at New
+College, Oxford, 17th March, 1807, and was for
+some time Assistant-Secretary at the Post Office,
+and subsequently Commissioner of Customs (1836-1841).
+There is a descendant of Sir Francis in the<!--[123.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+service, and the name may again be read of in Post
+Office history.</p>
+
+<p>The editor of <i>Felix Farley's Journal</i> (Mr. J. M.
+Gutch), of 15 Small Street, Bristol, wrote many
+letters on "the impediments which obstruct the
+trade and commerce of the city and port of
+Bristol," under the signature of "Cosmo," in the
+years 1822-3. The letters were afterwards published
+in book form, and the dedication was&mdash;"To
+Francis Freeling, Esq., Secretary to the General
+Post Office, F.A.S., etc., a native of Bristol, than
+whom, whenever opportunity has occurred, no
+citizen has exerted himself more in the promotion
+of the public and private welfare of this city, the
+following letters are dedicated, and this humble
+opportunity gladly embraced of testifying the
+obligations and sincere respect of his obedient
+servant, <span class="smcap">The Author</span>."</p>
+
+<p>A Postmaster-General has not emanated from our
+western city, but Mr. Arnold Morley, late General-in-Chief,
+is the son of one who worthily represented
+Bristol in Parliament for many years, the late highly-respected
+Mr. Samuel Morley, the legend on whose
+statue near Bristol Bridge tells us&mdash;"Samuel Morley,<!--[124.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+Member of Parliament for this city from 1868 to 1885.
+To preserve for their children the memory of the
+face and form of one who was an example of justice,
+generosity, and public spirit, this statue was given
+by more than 5,000 citizens of Bristol."&mdash;"I believe
+that the power of England is to be reckoned not by
+her wealth or armies, but by the purity and virtue
+of the great men of her population."&mdash;<span class="smcap">S. Morley.</span></p>
+
+<p>Although Sir Francis stands out pre-eminently,
+there is a long list of Bristol officers who have gone
+forth and gained Post Office laurels. First on that
+honourable roll may be mentioned J. D. Rich, who,
+over half a century ago, first hung up his hat in the
+Bristol Post Office, a "furry" hat of the old stovepipe
+kind, as he tells the story. Mr. Rich showed so
+much ability in meeting the requirements of the times
+at Bristol that he rose to the position of president
+clerk. In 1848, on the recommendation of the Surveyor
+General, he was removed to Bath, as peculiarly
+fitted to assist Mr. Musgrave, who from his advanced
+age was unequal to the duties, and the result was
+apparent in a great improvement of the local
+service. That Mr. Rich won golden opinions was
+proved by a memorial for his appointment to<!--[125.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+succeed Mr. Musgrave, addressed to the Postmaster-General,
+and signed in a short time by more than a
+thousand citizens. The memorial was, however,
+unavailing. Mr. Rich, after performing various
+services under five other provincial postmasters,
+found himself at last in the enviable position of
+lord of postal matters in Liverpool, and Surveyor
+of the Isle of Man. On retiring from the Service
+recently, he was made a Justice of the Peace in
+recognition of his distinguished services to the city.
+Mr. Kerry, telegraph superintendent, became postmaster
+of Warrington, Mr. Harwood of Southport,
+Mr. Carter (chief clerk) of Southampton, Mr. Brown
+(telegraph assistant-superintendent) of King's Lynn,
+Mr. Rogers (postal assistant-superintendent) of
+Newton Abbot, Mr. Walton of Teignmouth, Mr.
+Righton of Penzance, and Mr. Barnett (chief clerk
+for twenty years) of Swansea.</p>
+
+<p>Several officers of the Bristol Post Office have
+entered telegraph services abroad. Mr. J. Wilcox is
+in the service of the Western Australian Government
+at Perth, and Mr. W. A. Devine in that of the
+British South Africa Chartered Company at Fort
+Salisbury. Mr. C. Harrison is employed at Pretoria,<!--[126.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+and was carrying on his vocation of telegraph
+operator at that town at the time of the Jameson
+raid. Mr. Keyte has become assistant storekeeper
+under the British Government in Chinde, on the
+East Coast of Africa.<!--[127.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<h5>POST OFFICE BUILDINGS.</h5>
+
+
+<p>There is record of a Post Office having been
+established in Bristol by the Convention Parliament
+in 1670, but the site is unknown, and
+probably the postmaster had post horses&mdash;not
+letters&mdash;to attend to. In the year 1700 Mr. Henry
+Pine, the postmaster of the day, was one of the
+parties to an agreement for leasing a piece of land
+"with liberty to build upon the same for the conveniency
+of a Post Office." The wording of the
+said agreement shows that the old-fashioned form
+of building was not in every instance (as it now
+seems to us to have been) so grotesquely shaped
+from fancy, or, perhaps, from a desire to economise
+ground space, for it is therein expressly stated that
+the building to be used for a Post Office was to
+have the second storey extended to a truss of
+eighteen inches over the lane, for the purpose of
+enabling people to stand in the dry; for there was<!--[128.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+no indoor accommodation for the public provided in
+those days. "Let the imaginative reader," wrote
+an imaginative writer years ago, "picture to himself
+our great-great-grandfathers in doublet and ruff,
+standing in a row under the eighteen-inch truss,
+while the worthy postmaster, Pine himself, with
+perhaps one assistant, was sorting the contents of the
+mail bag. Doubtless," wrote he, "they grumbled
+when it rained that the said truss was not half
+a dozen inches wider, and many a person as he
+became saturated in his time of waiting for his
+letters growled out his intention of doing something
+very desperate to the powers that were."</p>
+
+<p>In the "Bargain" books of the Corporation is
+the following memorandum relating to the foregoing:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>22nd June, 1700.</i> Then agreed by the Surveyors
+of the city lands with Henry Pine, deputy postmaster,
+that he, the said Henry Pine, shall have,
+hold, and enjoy the ground whereon now stands a
+shedd having therein four severall shopp seituate
+in All Saints' Lane, and as much more ground at
+the lower end of the same shedd as that the whole
+ground shall contain in length twenty-seven foot,<!--[129.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+and to contain in breadth from the outside to the
+churchyard wall five foot and a half outward into
+the lane, with liberty to build upon the same for
+conveniency of a Post Office (namely) The first
+storey to go forth into the said lane to the extent
+of that ground and no farther, and the second storey
+to have a truss of eighteen inches over the lane or
+more as the said Surveyors shall think fitt that
+persons coming to the Post Office may have shelter
+from the rain and stand in the dry. To hold the
+same from Michaelmas next for fifty years absolute
+in the yearly rent of 30s. clear of taxes...."</p>
+
+<p>This agreement must have been afterwards
+modified. For some reason or other, Pine paid
+no rent until Michaelmas, 1705, when a sum of 25s.
+was received by the Chamberlain, and "The post
+house produced the same yearly sum until 1742
+when the rent was raised to &pound;3."</p>
+
+<p>The site of the little Post Office alluded to was
+required in 1742 in connection with the building
+of the Exchange, and the Post Office was transferred
+to a house in Small Street, in later days
+occupied as the printing office of the <i>Times and Mirror</i>
+newspaper.<!--[130.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>There seems to have been some informal understanding
+that when the Exchange was finished a
+suitable site would be provided by the Corporation
+for postal business, and in August, 1746, a Committee
+reported to the Council that they had contracted for
+the erection of "a house intended to be made use of
+as a Post Office, certain workmen having agreed to
+build and find all the materials at the rate of &pound;60
+per square (<i>sic</i>); while Mr. Thomas Pine (nephew
+to Henry, the former postmaster) had offered to
+become the tenant at &pound;40 a year, which he alleged
+is the highest rent he is able at present to pay."
+The Council approved of the proposal, recommending
+the Committee to get as much rent as was practicable.
+The house, which was of scanty dimensions, cost
+&pound;700 exclusive of a ground rent of &pound;15 a year given
+for the site. Only the ground floor was set apart
+for postal business, Mr. Pine residing on the
+premises. The first year's rent (&pound;43) was paid in
+1750. Between 1750 and 1815 the building must
+have been considerably enlarged, for in the latter
+year the Post Office is spoken of as a handsome
+and convenient building of freestone, near to the
+western end of the Exchange, to which it has a wing<!--[131.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+projecting forward into the street; and there is
+another building, exactly similar to it, at the eastern
+end, which is occupied for a stamp office. In 1827
+there was a contemplated removal of the Post Office,
+and it was deemed proper by the Chamber of
+Commerce to come on the scene by presenting a
+memorial to the Postmaster-General; it is stated that
+the timely remonstrance no doubt contributed to
+relieve the public of the inconvenience of such
+removal. Colonel Maberly, the Secretary to the
+Post Office, advised Lord Lichfield in 1838 that as
+the ground-floor portion of the Post Office premises
+occupied by the solicitors was necessary for the extension
+and improved accommodation of the office, no
+time should be lost in giving the several sub-tenants
+notice to quit, and Mr. Hall or the postmaster
+should be instructed to communicate with the
+Corporation as to the means of effecting such
+alterations as might be requisite. His lordship gave
+authority to that effect. In 1839 the Corporation
+granted the Government a new lease of the premises
+and of additional ground behind for the purpose of
+having the Post Office enlarged. The annual rent
+previous to this new arrangement had risen to &pound;100.<!--[132.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>The building alluded to is that now rented by
+Messrs. Corner and Co. as a tea warehouse. Few
+indeed, even of the oldest citizens will remember
+the Bristol Post Office as located there, and the old
+square open public lobby where the letters were
+given out through barred windows. Only the ground
+floor was utilised, and the area, of the site was but
+21 ft. by 20 ft. A door opened from the passage
+by the Exchange into a very small public lobby.
+In this lobby was the letter-box, and here all
+business with the public&mdash;viz., giving out private
+letters, taking in letters prepaid in money, and the
+issuing and paying of money orders&mdash;was transacted
+by clerks standing in the office behind a glass partition.
+The prepayment of letters by means of
+postage stamps was not introduced till some months
+after penny postage was established. There was
+not at the time a continuous attendance of clerks
+at the glass partition. At two of the slides in the
+partition there were small brass door-knockers, and
+on the public knocking a clerk appeared; from the
+inside office and attended to the wants of the
+applicants. When letters for the private box renters
+were being sorted a blind was drawn down. When<!--[133.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+the mail was ready the blind was drawn up, and
+three clerks attended to disperse the crowd which
+had gathered during the half-hour or so while the
+office was closed. The small space behind the
+public lobby sufficed for the stamping, sorting, and
+other necessary duties. One man, history saith,
+amongst the crowd generally got to the front
+without difficulty; he was a flour-dusted messenger
+from the Welsh Back!</p>
+
+<p>In 1847 the Money Order Department had
+grown amazingly, and a separate room had to be
+provided for its accommodation. This caused the
+removal of certain solicitors from the first floor to
+make room for the postmaster's office, the one
+formerly held by him on the ground floor being
+converted into a money order office. In 1855 the
+shop on the north side of the entrance to Albion
+Chambers from Small Street was taken by the
+Post Office and converted into a money order office,
+it being found that the department devoted to this
+purpose at the general office in Exchange Buildings
+was not sufficiently commodious or convenient.</p>
+
+<p>It is on record that in 1863 the Post Office
+authorities offered &pound;10,000 towards erecting a new<!--[134.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+Post Office if the citizens would consent to contribute
+&pound;2,000 more. A meeting of some gentlemen
+took place in the committee-room of the Council
+House to take the proposition into consideration,
+but owing to the small number of persons that
+attended further deliberation was postponed to a
+day not named. Some of the leading citizens were
+of opinion that it would be wise to defer any decision
+on the subject until the intention of the Government
+as to granting a criminal assize for Bristol was
+known; for should the answer from head-quarters
+be in the affirmative, it would be necessary to build
+a new court somewhere, in which case the Guildhall
+would perhaps suit as a Post Office. Nothing
+appears to have come of the negotiations, and the
+business of the Post Office was removed on the 25th
+of March, 1868, to the new office erected in Small
+Street on the site where it is now carried on. This
+original portion of the structure covers 11,000
+square feet. The purchase of the site was completed
+on the 21st December, 1865. It is stated in
+a legal document that the bricks, stones, and material
+on part of the site belonged to the Bristol Chambers
+Co. Limited. Where the sorting office stands there<!--[135.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+formerly flourished a fine mulberry tree. There
+appears to have been no ceremonial in the way of
+laying a foundation stone, and the antiquarian of the
+distant future may be disappointed in not discovering
+the usual coins deposited on such occasions.</p>
+
+<p>In fifteen years the need arose for more space, and
+that then the Bristol public manifested a keen interest
+in the position of the Bristol Post Office was indicated
+by an animated debate which took place in our
+Council Chamber; and as this book affects to be in
+part a history as well as a narrative, it is thought
+well to give the report of the proceedings a full
+record herein, under permission from the proprietors
+of the <i>Bristol Times and Mirror</i>:&mdash;<br /></p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>
+<i>Friday, January 2nd, 1885.</i><br /><br />
+<span style='font-size: small'>"THE SITE FOR THE POST OFFICE.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"The <span class="smcap">Town Clerk</span> said that as the next part of
+the report referred to the site for the Post Office, he
+would read a letter he had received from Mr. Lewis
+Fry, M. P., which was as under:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p style='text-align: right'>
+"'Goldney House, Clifton Hill,<br />
+<i>30th December, 1884</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"'My dear Sir,&mdash;As I observe that the question
+of the site of the new Post Office will come before<!--[136.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+the Council on Thursday, I think it best, in order to
+avoid any misunderstanding, to ask you to state to
+the Council that the matter is not to be considered
+as a proposal made by the Postmaster-General or the
+first Commissioner of Works. The exact position of
+the matter is this, that Mr. Shaw-Lefevre, soon after
+his visit to Bristol, requested me to intimate to the
+Corporation that in case they desire the change of
+situation to Baldwin Street, he is ready to entertain
+any proposal which they may make to him with that
+object, provided it be upon the basis of an exchange
+of properties as mentioned in the report of the
+Finance Committee.</p>
+
+<p>
+"'I am, yours truly,<br />
+<span class="smcap">Lewis Fry</span>.<br />
+The Town Clerk of Bristol.'<br />
+<br /></p>
+
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Robinson</span> said he would like to say a word
+or two on the subject of a new Post Office, as the
+wording in Mr. Fry's letter referred to the subject
+of the proposed change in the position of the Post
+Office. They did not want change for change's
+sake (applause), and if they could do without it
+they would be glad to do so, but sometimes change
+became a necessity (applause). He would wish to<!--[137.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+say a word or two with reference to the provisions
+for the postal arrangements in Bristol, as to the
+inconvenience that the officials and the public were
+subject to, and a word as to the great increase in
+postal matters in the city and in the country generally.
+He wished to convey to them the magnitude of the
+question and the very growing character of the
+communications by letters, parcels, and newspapers,
+which were being circulated through the medium of
+the Government and through the Post Office. He
+the previous day called upon Mr. Sampson, the head
+official of the Bristol Post Office, and he might say
+that his ability was only exceeded by his courtesy
+(applause). He gave him all the information he had
+asked for, and he showed him over a considerable
+part of the building. In the course of the interview
+he gave him no opinion as to the site, and he did
+not think it wise to ask him. All he asked him, was
+as to facts&mdash;as to the present accommodation. He
+described the condition of the office as being one of
+congestion, and that they were put to all kinds of
+shifts, and that the sorting and minor offices were
+inadequate for their respective purposes (hear, hear).
+He saw a room where eighty postmen were engaged<!--[138.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+in partial sorting. It was upstairs and was approached
+by winding stairs with only a 21-inch tread,
+and the room was utterly inadequate for the purpose.
+Letters had to be sent to Clifton to be sorted
+because of the want of space in the Post Office.
+Mr. Sampson said more particularly that a large hall
+was necessary on the ground floor for an entrance,
+from which the various subsidiary offices should be
+entered. Then he said that a good frontage was
+desirable. Some people had suggested tunnelling
+and going to the other side of the street, and others
+had suggested a viaduct. Offers of property had
+come from different people, so that the want of
+further accommodation seemed to be recognised not
+only by the Post Office itself, but outside. The
+present office was erected in 1868, and had the
+officials been sanguine, or known that the business
+would have increased as it had, they probably would
+not have selected the present site. The work of the
+office had perfectly outgrown the capacity of the
+place. Since 1868 new departments had been
+opened, and new duties had been created, and they
+wanted more room. The telegraph work was added
+in February, 1870, and the sale of revenue stamps<!--[139.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+and payment of stamps as money had also been
+added. The parcel post came into operation in 1883.
+They did not desire an extravagant outlay. The
+increase of the population was 1 per cent., and the
+letters increased 3 per cent. They were not asked
+to buy a whole street. He felt it would be admitted
+that the telegraphic despatches formed the essential,
+if not the primary, part of the arrangements of the
+Post Office. He was informed that the site in
+Baldwin Street was more convenient and closer to
+the warehouses and offices which greatly used the
+present telegraphic advantages than the present site
+in Small Street (a voice: 'No'). Well, he gave his
+word for what he had heard. He maintained that
+the Council had a supreme moment at the present
+time. They had a gentleman at the head of the
+Post Office who had viewed the new site, and now
+they found that the Post Office authorities were in
+the humour to make the outlay they had better
+embrace the opportunity. His resolution was:
+'That, considering the want of adequate space in
+Small Street for postal and telegraphic arrangements,
+it is desirable that a new Post Office be
+erected in Baldwin Street, on the site recently<!--[140.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+viewed by the Postmaster-General, if equitable
+arrangements can be made with the Government for
+the transfer of the property.' If the Government
+were not prepared to lay out money for the site,
+they could let them have the property on a ground-rent,
+without an outlay being made. It would not
+cost less than &pound;20,000 to &pound;25,000 to enlarge and
+improve the present Post Office, and he maintained
+that that sum would go a great way towards erecting
+a new Post Office in Baldwin Street. They would
+not always be able to get sites; and they could not
+always buy sites as they could oranges and nuts
+(laughter). In America people ran after him and
+asked him to buy land. Not so here. He repeated
+that they had Mr. Shaw-Lefevre looking favourably
+upon the new site, and he thought it desirable that
+they should take a bold step&mdash;such a step as
+indicated in the resolution&mdash;and put up a building
+which not alone should be noble, but commodious
+(applause).</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Alderman <span class="smcap">Edwards</span> seconded the resolution.
+He was glad that the matter had been laid before
+the Postmaster-General. A great deal had been
+said about the present site being more useful and<!--[141.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+convenient than the proposed, but he felt that the
+difference was very small indeed. The sites were
+within a minute or two of each other. In Baldwin
+Street they had a road 60 ft. wide, and if Small
+Street were altered, however much, they would not
+widen it half as much as that. As to the positions
+of the banks, some of the important ones were
+nearer Baldwin Street than the other street. At
+any rate, the Old Bank, Stuckey's, and the National
+Provincial Banks were nearer Baldwin Street than
+Small Street. The speaker then named several large
+warehouses which were, he urged, closer to the
+proposed site than Small Street. At Baldwin Street
+they had an acre of ground for the present or future.
+He would not give the land to the Post Office
+authorities, but he suggested that they should be
+liberal towards them in their offer. If the Post
+Office authorities wished to give them the old office
+in exchange for the site, it might be utilised by the
+Corporation.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. C. <span class="smcap">Wills</span> supported the resolution. He
+would advance one or two reasons why they should
+make the best terms they could with the Postmaster-General.
+That the present Post Office was inconveniently<!--[142.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+small was generally admitted, and he
+maintained that if the proposed additions were made
+to the existing building, the extra facilities would
+not meet the ever-increasing demands on the Post
+Office for more than six or eight years. The various
+departments of the present building were too small
+for development and carrying on the important work
+of a Post Office. Personally, he would as soon for
+the Post Office to be in one street as the other, but
+he felt it would redound to the credit of the city
+to see a fine building erected in Baldwin Street. If
+they had the Post Office there it would enhance
+the value of the other sites in the thoroughfare.
+Very shortly they would have the sixpenny telegrams,
+and then the increase in telegraphic communication
+would be very great indeed, and the
+present building would soon become inadequate to
+the demand. Then, again, they saw that the
+present Postmaster-General did not intend to give
+up the parcels post, and the development of this
+branch of the Post Office work would be very great
+indeed. Then, again, there would be increased
+vehicular traffic to the Post Office; and could this,
+he asked, be carried out to the comfort of the<!--[143.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+citizens in Small Street? The turning point arose
+from Mr. Shaw-Lefevre visiting the Chamber of
+Commerce recently. That gentleman visited the
+site in Baldwin Street, and he, no doubt, saw that
+the site would be better and superior to the one
+in Small Street.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Pethick</span> said that they had come to a
+turning point in the history of the city of Bristol.
+The question was whether they should continue
+the system of compression that they had suffered
+from for so many years. Small Street was a narrow
+thoroughfare; it was only a back lane to Broad
+Street. ('Oh! oh!') It was called Small Street
+and had a carriage way of only 9 ft. ('No, no.')
+He must repeat that at one point in Small Street
+the carriage way was only 9 ft. wide.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Daniel</span> protested against Mr. Pethick
+saying that Small Street was the back lane to
+Broad Street, and that the carriage road was only
+9 ft. (hear, hear). The narrow part of Small Street
+would come down when the improvements to the
+Post Office took place.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Pethick</span>: I state facts&mdash;what the street is
+to-day.<!--[144.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Daniel</span>: But is the narrow part you speak
+of the entrance to Small Street?</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Pethick</span>: It is the approach from Bristol
+Bridge, <i>vi&acirc;</i> the Exchange, for mail carriages and
+other traffic, and all must pass through the narrow
+part, which is only 9 ft. wide. Even if this were
+taken away, Mr. Pethick continued, they would
+still have a narrow space to pass through. The
+whole would not be 14,000 superficial feet; and
+above all, with so bad an access, they proposed to
+enlarge the present building.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Alderman <span class="smcap">Proctor Baker</span>: It is not
+proposed.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Pethick</span> observed that in Baldwin Street
+they had a good carriage way, and they would have
+a front and back entrance to a new building. He
+hoped no little or narrow parochial spirit would be
+put forward in this matter. The difference of the
+distance of the two sites was so small as to be
+insignificant, and he trusted they would endeavour
+to get a handsome and commodious building erected
+on the Baldwin Street side of the city.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Alderman <span class="smcap">Proctor Baker</span> said they were
+indebted to Mr. Robinson for his interesting details,<!--[145.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+but he did not think they were details for the
+Council to study, but for the study of the Government.
+The Post Office was a Government undertaking,
+and carried on for profit by the Government,
+and it was on their shoulders, and theirs alone, to
+provide proper premises. There were two questions
+involved in the resolution before them, and if it
+could be so arranged he should like a separate
+opinion being taken. One question was the actual
+position of the future Post Office&mdash;whether it was
+to be in Small Street or Baldwin Street. The
+other question was whether the Council was prepared
+to sell to the Post Office the land in Baldwin
+Street and receive in exchange the building in Small
+Street. As regarded the question of convenience
+there was very little to be said on either side; but
+with regard to the other matter he thought they
+should not agree to exchange the land for the
+present Post Office building. If they took over
+the existing building, it could only he pulled
+or used for public offices. Already they had a
+population of 200,000 persons, and the area of
+the city was to be extended; and if they believed
+in the progress of the city they must expect it<!--[146.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+by-and-by to be the centre of a quarter of a million
+of people. It would be impossible, as it would be
+discreditable, for them to attempt to carry on that
+great municipality in such buildings as they now
+had. The chamber in which they were assembled
+was in a bad condition; the air at that moment was
+as foul as it could be; and if they took over the
+present Post Office and applied it for the purposes
+of the municipality, they would perpetuate the
+present discomfort, inconvenience, etc., of having
+divided offices, and postpone for half a century the
+erection of a large municipal building, in which
+all their offices would be. As to Baldwin Street
+and Small Street sites, there was much to be said
+on both sides; but if it was proposed to take in
+exchange the Post Office building for their land
+the Council should vote against it (hear, hear).
+He sincerely trusted they would not take over a
+building which would keep up the inconvenience
+they now suffered from (hear, hear).</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Lane</span> said it seemed to him that they were
+simply asked the question whether the Council were
+desirous that there should be such a change in the
+position of the Post Office. Every argument for<!--[147.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+the change was a thoroughly good one which should
+weigh with them. Selfish considerations and every
+consideration should be banished (applause), and
+they should consider it in the interest of the city
+and in the interest of the development of the trade
+of the future. The opinion of the postmaster was
+a great argument in favour of larger premises.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Inskip</span> argued that the representatives of
+the ratepayers were not there to carry out the
+bidding of the postmaster. It might be wise and
+proper for him to communicate his views to the
+department with which he was connected, but it
+seemed unreasonable to ask members of the Council
+to vote for what he was in favour of. He ventured
+to suggest that the arrangement proposed by the
+report would be unlawful, and to enter into the
+exchange would be an unlawful proceeding. They
+acquired land in Baldwin Street under the Public
+Health Act for carrying out improvements, and he
+could not see how it could be said that the buildings
+in Small Street would be required for the purpose
+of improvements. Before they entered into the
+exchange they ought to obtain power by Act of
+Parliament. If they entered into a speculation of<!--[148.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+that sort they would be transgressing the law of the
+land. With regard to the matter of convenience, if
+they took the outlying districts of the city they
+would see that the people who lived there went to
+the Post Office after the branch offices were closed,
+and they would see that Small Street was appreciably
+more convenient for the outlying population
+than the Baldwin Street site could possibly be
+(applause). Then as to the piece of land which
+would be obtained, the argument of Mr. Pethick
+was a strong one to retain it. The Guildhall was
+there, and it had been promised for years that Small
+Street should be improved, and that improvement
+would be accomplished if the Government had
+No. 3, Small Street, which would be set back, and
+they would have done a great deal to redeem the
+promise made some years ago (applause).</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Dix</span> said he was very much obliged to Mr.
+Robinson for his figures. They all felt that there
+had been a great growth in the postal arrangements
+of the country, and that there would be a great
+growth in the future; and if it had been shown to
+him that they could not have a good building in
+Small Street by having the one there altered by the<!--[149.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+authorities, and that they could have a proper one
+in Baldwin Street, he would say let them go to
+Baldwin Street; but it did not come before them
+in that light. They were anticipating that the
+postal authorities could not make a proper building
+in Small Street; but he could not see how Mr.
+Robinson and those who advocated the Baldwin
+Street site came to such a conclusion. If they had
+the buildings in Small Street, that street would be
+improved, which had been anticipated for years,
+and they would have the Post Office close to the
+Guildhall and that great place of commerce&mdash;the
+Commercial Rooms (applause). He argued that the
+city did not want the property in Small Street&mdash;it
+would be useless to them; and he hoped they would
+pronounce against it going forth to the Postmaster-General
+that it was the wish of the Council to alter
+the site (applause).</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. S. G. <span class="smcap">James</span> said he did not think that they
+should be saddled with a building that would not
+be any good to them. He suggested that it should
+be represented to the Government that the building
+would be a good one for a Stamp and Excise Office,
+and that it would be convenient to have those offices<!--[150.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+moved from Queen Square to the building in Small
+Street. He thought that would be a very wise
+suggestion to make to the Government.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Daniel</span> said he viewed the proposition to
+shift the Post Office as one of the most solemn and
+weighty that had been considered by the Town
+Council for years (hear, hear). By common consent,
+and by the development of the city trade, where the
+Post Office now was the centre of commerce,
+and they should hesitate very much before they
+changed it (hear, hear); and the Council, being
+trustees of the property owned by the city, and
+looking at the extent of that property in the neighbourhood
+of the Post Office, and the outlay made
+on it by the city, he could not understand why
+they made the suggestion to run away from Small
+Street (applause). They had under arbitration paid
+to the bank &pound;9,600 for a piece of land, and that
+was surely not to keep the street as a narrow lane.
+If the present Post Office were retained, the
+authorities would take the houses that would be
+put in a line with the Post Office, and two-thirds of
+Small Street would be converted into a wide street&mdash;and
+it was only to shave off the Water Works<!--[151.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+offices and adjoining building, and then they would
+have a good wide street (hear, hear). The Corporation
+during the last twenty years had spent in the
+neighbourhood not less than &pound;50,000, and if by
+establishing the Post Office in Baldwin Street they
+would enhance the value of the adjoining property,
+so taking it away from the centre of the city would
+depreciate the property there. It would not be
+doing justice to the citizens to take it away from
+Small Street and remove it to a remote spot like
+Baldwin Street. ('Oh, oh!' and laughter.) It was a
+remote spot, and he did not know that a street
+through which were a tram line and continual cab
+traffic was the best place for a Post Office. He
+believed a quiet street would be the better place.
+He farther argued that the proper place for the
+Post Office was where it was&mdash;in the neighbourhood
+of the Assize Courts, where the County Court was
+held all the year round, and the assizes and sessions
+were held, and at the back of the Commercial
+Rooms, to which there were upwards of 600
+subscribers.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Alderman <span class="smcap">Naish</span> said that what weighed
+with him was that the Government had not applied<!--[152.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+for a better site. He apprehended that Mr. Shaw-Lefevre
+was perfectly satisfied with the accommodation
+he could get on the present site. He had
+seen the draft of the Bill promoted by the Government
+for taking possession of a building under the
+compulsory powers at a fair valuation. Someone in
+Bristol wished them to go somewhere else. All
+Mr. Shaw-Lefevre said was that if the citizens
+wanted to go elsewhere they must take the old
+building. The Postmaster-General did not suggest
+the removal, but somebody else did (hear, hear).
+The Postmaster-General knew his business, and he
+probably considered that the present office could be
+enlarged so as to provide all the accommodation
+necessary. They could thus have a good public
+improvement in the centre of the city, and at the
+same time provide for the postal requirements.
+They were simply asked to go to a street in which
+certain people were interested, which, although a
+large thoroughfare, had two lines of tramways
+running through it. He hoped the Council would
+not agree to the proposal.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Matthews</span> said if the question was put to
+them simply, did they require more postal accommodation?&mdash;they<!--[153.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+would unhesitatingly say that
+they did; but the question of site was a totally
+different matter. They had not gone into the
+question whether another site would not be a
+better one than the Baldwin Street one. He
+moved that the question of a site be remitted to
+a committee, with instructions to report to the
+Council, and that the committee consist of the
+Mayor, Aldermen Spark, Harvey, and Naish, and
+Messrs. Townsend, C. F. Hare, Barker, and Inskip.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Levy</span> considered that the city was indebted
+to those who suggested the Baldwin Street site.
+There could be no two opinions about the matter
+(cries of 'Oh,' and laughter). They had seen an
+amusing correspondence in the papers about it. He
+would not do anything to injure the <i>Times and Mirror</i>
+for a moment (laughter). In Baldwin Street a Constitutional
+Club had been established, and the <i>Times
+and Mirror</i> might consider that institution (laughter).</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Whitwill</span> thought they should simply confine
+themselves to an expression of opinion as to the
+desirability of Baldwin Street site, for he should be
+strongly opposed to the exchange (hear, hear).</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. H. G. <span class="smcap">Gardner</span> said the position in Small<!--[154.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+Street was preferable to him, but they ought to sink
+personal convenience. The Chamber of Commerce
+suggested the matter, and he looked on that body
+as young Bristol.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Robinson</span> said he only meant that the
+property should be taken over if an equitable
+arrangement could be come to. He would drop the
+last part of his resolution, and it would now read
+as follows:&mdash;'That, considering the want of adequate
+space in Small Street for the postal telegram arrangements,
+it is desirable that a new Post Office be erected
+in Baldwin Street on the site recently viewed by the
+Postmaster-General.'</p>
+
+<p>"The motion was then put with the following
+result:&mdash;<i>For</i>: Aldermen Lucas, Edwards, Jose,
+Spark; Messrs. Moore, Robinson, James, Pethick,
+Wills, Bartlett, Fear, Bush, Townsend, C. Gardner,
+Jefferies, H. G. Gardner, Low, Lane, Levy, Garton,
+Derham, Whitwill, Barker&mdash;23. <i>Against</i>: The
+Mayor; Aldermen Morgan, Smith, Naish, Fox,
+Jones, Hathway, Harvey, Cope-Proctor; Messrs.
+Terrett, Dix, Gibson, Alsop, Francis, Bastow, A.
+Baker, C. F. Hare, C. B. Hare, Harvey, C. Nash,
+Hall, Lockley, Daniel, Matthews, Follwoll, Sibly,<!--[155.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+Inskip&mdash;27. Aldermen Proctor Baker and George
+and Mr. Dole did not vote.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <span class="smcap">Levy</span> asked if the Postmaster-General made
+an offer it would be entertained.</p>
+
+<p>"The <span class="smcap">Town Clerk</span> said he supposed that any
+offer from the Postmaster-General or anybody else
+would be considered."</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 275px;">
+<img src="images/i157.jpg" width="275" height="434" alt="The Bristol Head Post Office in 1899.
+From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol." title="The Bristol Head Post Office in 1899.
+From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol." />
+<span class="caption">The Bristol Head Post Office in 1899.</span>
+<i style='font-size: small'>From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Council dropped the matter of removal, and
+an enlargement of the Post Office was commenced
+in 1886 on 5,500 square feet of ground on which
+the Rectory House of St. Mary Werburgh formerly
+stood. The enlargement was completed in 1889.
+The structure was designed by the Surveyor of Her
+Majesty's Office of Works. In making his plan in
+1868 no doubt the Surveyor thought he was building
+for, at least, fifty years; and so he set back his
+building to form a square structure, instead of
+following the line of street as laid down by the
+city authorities in their Act of Parliament. The
+new part of the building had to conform to the city
+line, and had, therefore, to be built at an angle
+with the old office, which detracts from the general
+appearance. The Post Office building in Small<!--[156.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+Street stands on a site 17,300 square feet in extent;
+and now, thirty-one years from the opening of the
+new office and ten years from its enlargement,
+further extension is necessary, and the erection of a
+second or supplementary office larger in dimensions
+than the present structure is about to be proceeded
+with.</p>
+
+<p>As the work in the Post Office goes on through
+the whole day and night, the air in the working
+rooms became vitiated and over-heated when lighted
+with gas. In 1896 the effectual remedy of abandoning
+the use of gas and adopting electric light was
+carried out. The Corporation provides the current.
+The lamps used are 4 arc lamps, of approximately
+750 candle-power each, and 450 glow lamps of 8,
+16, or 25 candle-power.</p>
+
+<p>Two million gallons of water a year are used to
+keep the buildings clean.</p>
+
+<p>As the Post Office, from its size, if not from its
+architectural beauty, dominates Small Street in
+some measure it may be well here to introduce
+particulars from an ancient manuscript in the City
+Library, which show that Small Street has been
+a street ever since Anglo-Saxon times. About<!--[159.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+<!--[158.png]-->
+Small Street and St. Leonard's Lane lived some of
+Bristol's greatest merchants. For hundreds of years
+there was not within the walls of Bristol a more
+fashionable street than Small Street. Many of the
+mansions there had good gardens. In the reign of
+Charles II. there were only six houses on the west,
+or Post Office, side of the street. Amongst the
+worthies who resided there were the Colstons, the
+Creswicks, the Kitchens, the Seymours, the Esterfields,
+the Codringtons, the Haymans, the Kilkes;
+John Foster, the founder of the almshouse on St.
+Michael's Hill; Nicholas Thorne, one of the
+founders of our Grammar School; and Thomas
+Fenn, attorney, who in 1762 succeeded to the
+Earldom of Westmoreland. It is not indicated
+whether he was related in any way to William
+Fenn, who was postmaster, 1778-88, but it might
+have been so, for William Fenn must have been a
+person of some note or the appointment would not
+at his death have been conferred on his widow. In
+Small Street, too, more Royal and noble visitors
+have lodged and received hospitality than in any
+other street in Bristol. The Earl of Bedford and
+his son were received there in 1569, and Robert<!--[160.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+Dudley, Earl of Leicester, one of Queen Elizabeth's
+favourites, and the Earl of Warwick, in 1587; the
+latter lodged at Robert Kitchen's. In 1643 King
+Charles I., with Prince Charles and the Duke of
+York, lodged there, so did Oliver Cromwell and his
+wife in 1649; and James II., with George, Prince
+of Denmark, and the Dukes of Grafton, Beaufort,
+and Somerset, in 1688. Queen Catherine was entertained
+at Sir Henry Creswick's house in 1677,
+where Sir Henry, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland,
+the good and great Duke of Ormonde, lodged for
+several days in 1665. We learn that Small Street
+was selected for the reception of these illustrious
+visitors "by reason of the conveniency of the street
+for entertaining the nobility."<!--[161.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<h5>THE LOCAL POST OFFICE IN EARLY DAYS.<br /><br />
+SIR ROWLAND HILL.&mdash;RECENT PROGRESS.</h5>
+
+
+<p>It is pleasing to look back to the time, little
+more than one hundred years ago, when Bristol
+was the premier provincial post town. It had
+long ranked next to London in wealth, in population,
+and in its Post Office. Bristol has, however,
+in a postal sense, yielded place to other towns, and
+now ranks after Birmingham, Glasgow, Liverpool,
+and Manchester.</p>
+
+<p>Dipping into history, it is found that there was
+a Post Office at Clifton a hundred years since. At
+about the time of the Battle of Waterloo it was
+situated near Saville Place, in a small tenement.
+The post keeper was a knight of the shears, who
+sat cross-legged at his work on a shop-board in the
+window, whilst his better-half sold "goodies." The
+"Staff" consisted of this pigeon pair, and the
+work of carrying the bags to and from Bristol,<!--[162.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+and of delivering the missives, was undertaken
+by them conjointly.</p>
+
+<p>The year 1793 was signalised by the extension to
+Bristol of the penny post for local letters, that is,
+letters for Bristol city, its suburbs, and neighbouring
+villages. That post covered a wide area ranging
+from Thornbury and Wotton-under-Edge in the
+North, to Temple Cloud, Chewton-Mendip, and
+Oakhill in the South; eastward in the direction of
+Box, and westward to Portishead. This institution
+had until then been established nowhere else but
+in London and in Dublin; but Birmingham, Edinburgh,
+and Manchester were granted the privilege
+at the same time as Bristol. During the year
+1794-95 the penny post brought a clear gain to
+the revenue:&mdash;in Bristol of &pound;469, in Manchester
+of &pound;586, and in Birmingham of &pound;240. Notwithstanding
+these gains, the Post Office authorities
+concluded that neither at Liverpool nor at Leeds,
+nor at any other town in the Kingdom, would a
+penny post defray its own expenses.</p>
+
+<p>There is little more on record about local Post
+Office details for some years; but we learn that in
+April, 1825, an evening delivery of post letters was<!--[163.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+ordered to Kingsdown, Montpelier, Wellington
+Place, and Catherine Place, Stoke's Croft, all the
+year round; and to Lawrence Hill, West Street,
+Gloucester Lane, in the parish of St. Philip and
+Jacob, from 1st of March to 1st of November in
+each year. A receiving house for letters was
+established at the corner of West Street on May
+20th, 1825; and also one in Harford Street, New Cut.
+In December, 1827, the population of Bristol was
+estimated at 50,000 persons; and in August, 1831,
+the number of persons the Post Office had to serve
+was 59,070.</p>
+
+<p>Evans's <i>New Guide; or, Pictures of Bristol</i>, published
+in 1828, furnishes the next record. It stated
+that "the London mail goes out every afternoon at
+twenty minutes past 5, and arrives every day at 9.0
+in the morning. Bath: Out every morning at 7.0 and
+10.0, and at twenty minutes past 5 in the evening;
+arrives at 9.0 morning, and a quarter before 5 and
+a quarter before 7 in the evening. Sodbury,
+through Stapleton, Hambrook, Winterbourne, and
+Iron Acton: Goes out at twenty minutes before 10
+in the morning; arrives at half-past 4 in the
+evening. Thornbury, through Filton, Almondsbury,<!--[164.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+and Rudgeway: Goes out twenty minutes before
+10 in the morning; arrives at half-past 4 in the
+evening. Bitton, through New Church, Kingswood,
+Hanham, and Willsbridge: Goes out at 10.0 in the
+morning; arrives at half-past 4 in the evening.
+Exeter and Westward: Out every morning between
+9.0 and 10.0; arrives every evening between 4.0
+and 5.0. Portsmouth, Chichester, Salisbury, etc.:
+Out at half-past 5 in the afternoon; arrives every
+day previously to the London mail. Tetbury and
+Cirencester: Out every morning at half-past 9;
+arrives every evening at 5.0. Birmingham and
+Northward: Out every evening at 7.0; arrives every
+morning between 6.0 and 7.0. Milford and South
+Wales: Out every day at half-past 9; arrives at
+half-past 3 in the afternoon. The Irish mail is
+made up every day, and letters from Ireland may
+be expected to arrive every day at half-past 3.
+Jamaica and Leeward Islands, first and third
+Wednesday in the month; Lisbon, every week;
+Gibraltar and Mediterranean, every three weeks;
+Madeira and Brazils, first Tuesday in each month;
+Surinam, Berbice, and Demorara, second Wednesday
+in each month; France and Spain, Sundays, Mondays,<!--[165.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+Wednesdays, and Thursdays; Holland and Hamburgh,
+Mondays and Thursdays; Guernsey and
+Jersey, Sundays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays. Letters
+for all parts may be put into the Post Office at
+any time, but should be delivered half an hour
+before the mail is made up. Letters delivered later
+than half an hour previous to the departure of
+the respective mails to be accompanied with one
+penny. Payment of postage will not be received
+unless tendered full half an hour before the time
+fixed for closing the bags. Letters for Axbridge,
+Weston-super-Mare, and adjacent places are sent
+and received by the Western mail. Letter bags
+are made up daily, after the sorting of the London
+mail, for Bourton, Wrington, Langford, Churchill,
+Nailsea, Clevedon, and their respective deliveries.
+The letters must be put in by 9.0 o'clock. The
+return to Bristol is at 4.0 in the afternoon. Letters
+may be put into the receiving offices for all parts
+of the kingdom, and the full postage, if desired,
+paid with them. Letter carriers are despatched
+regularly every day (Sundays not excepted) with
+letters to and from Durdham Down, Westbury,
+Stapleton, Frenchay, Downend, Hambrook, and<!--[166.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+Winterbourne; and also to Brislington, Keynsham,
+and other places. The delivery of letters at Clifton
+is each day at 10.0 and 6.0. Letters should be in
+the offices at Clifton and the Wells for the London
+and the North mails by 4.0."</p>
+
+<p>It may be interesting to state, what the rates of
+postage from this city were in 1830. Thus: Australia,
+11d.; Buenos Ayres, 3s. 5d.; Canary Islands, 2s. 6d.;
+Cape de Verde Islands, 2s. 6d.; Chili, 3s. 5d.;
+China, 11d.; Colombo, 3s.; Cuba, 3s.; East Indies,
+11d.; Havana, 3s.; St. Helena, 11d.; South
+America, 3s. 5d.; Van Dieman's Land, 11d.; whilst
+for the Continent the rates were considerably higher,
+thus: Austria, 2s. 2d.; Belgium, 1s. 11d.; Corsica,
+2s. 2d.; Denmark, 2s. 3d.; Flanders, 2s. 2d.;
+France&mdash;Calais, 1s. 5d.; Germany, 2s. 3d.; Gibraltar,
+2s. 6d.; Holland, 1s. 11d.; Italy, 2s. 2d.; Malta,
+2s. 6d.; Poland, 2s. 3d.; Prussia, 2s. 3d.; Russia,
+2s. 3d.; Spain, 2s. 2d.; Turkey, 2s. 2d. At that
+period the Inland Rates were very high, and
+the cost was regulated thus: From any Post
+Office in England or Wales, to any place not
+exceeding 15 miles from such office, 4d.; above 15
+to 20 miles, 5d.; 20 to 30 miles, 6d.; 30 to 50 miles,<!--[167.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+7d.; 50 to 80 miles, 8d.; 80 to 120 miles, 9d.; 120
+to 170 miles, 10d.; 170 to 230 miles, 11d.; 230 to
+300 miles, 12d. And one penny in addition on each
+letter for every 100 miles beyond 300. Thus a
+letter from Bristol to Cirencester cost 7d.; Cheltenham,
+8d.; Banbury, 10d.; Leeds, 11d.; Hull; 12d.,
+and so on. Now a letter four ounces in weight
+can be sent from one end of the land to the other
+for a penny, and a parcel one pound in weight for
+threepence.</p>
+
+<p>The Bristol ex-Postal Superintendent, Mr. H. T.
+Carter, carrying his mind back over his forty years
+of diligent and zealous service, recalls the time
+when the mails for the not far-distant village of
+Shirehampton were conveyed in a cart drawn by a
+dog, the property of rural postman Ham. The cart
+was not large, but of sufficient size to carry postman
+and mail bags. The dog, of Newfoundland breed,
+got over the ground at a rapid pace. Ham was
+addicted to drink, but nevertheless, whether he was
+drunk or sober, asleep or awake, in stormy or fine
+weather, the dog took him and the mails to their
+proper destination.</p>
+
+<p>A venerable man now living at Earthcott Green,<!--[168.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+a hamlet within ten miles of our great city, well
+recollects the time when he received his letters
+through Iron Acton, at a special cost to him of 2d.
+each, with a delivery only every other day. The
+plan was for an additional penny to be charged on
+all letters sent out by rural posts for delivery, and
+in addition to this penny an extra charge was levied
+on all letters delivered from sub-Post Offices to bye
+houses or places beyond the several village deliveries.
+In some cases recognised men or women attended at
+the Head Office, Bristol, once or twice a week to
+take out letters for delivery in the remote country
+regions&mdash;of course for a "consideration."</p>
+
+<p>The Bristol district shared in the representations
+in 1838 of the hardships borne by poor people in
+respect of the heavy charges for the conveyance of
+letters. The postmaster at Congresbury deposed
+thus:&mdash;"The price of a letter is a great tax on poor
+people. I sent one, charged eightpence, to a poor
+labouring man about a week ago; it came from his
+daughter. He first refused it, saying it would take
+a loaf of bread from his other children; but, after
+hesitating a little time, he paid the money, and
+opened the letter. I seldom return letters of this<!--[169.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+kind to Bristol, because I let the poor people have
+them, and take the chance of being paid; sometimes
+I lose the postage, but generally the poor people
+pay me by degrees." Then the postmaster of
+Yatton stated as follows:&mdash;"I have had a letter
+waiting lately for a poor woman, from her husband
+who is at work in Wales; the charge was 9d.,&mdash;it lay
+many days, in consequence of her not being able to
+pay the postage. I at last trusted her with it." Of
+the desire of the poor to correspond, a Mr. Emery
+gave evidence, stating "that the poor near Bristol
+have signed a petition to Parliament for the
+reduction of the postage. He never saw greater
+enthusiasm in any public thing that was ever got up
+in the shape of a petition; they seemed all to enter
+into the thing as fully and with as much feeling as
+it was possible, as a boon or godsend to them, that
+they should be able to correspond with their distant
+friends."</p>
+
+<p>Uniform penny postage came in 1840. The
+Bristol citizens, of course, found it no cheaper than
+before to send a single letter to places in their own
+neighbourhood, but a light enclosure could be put
+in without extra charge, though the weight had<!--[170.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+to be brought down from four ounces to half an
+ounce.</p>
+
+<p>It may not be out of place to mention in these
+pages that one of the penny postage stamps of the
+very earliest issue after the penny postage system
+came into operation in 1840 was made use of for
+the prepayment of a letter sent by His Grace the
+Duke of Wellington to H. Nuttall Tomlins, Esq.,
+of the Hotwells, Bristol. It was sent six days
+before stamps and stamped covers were first
+used by the general public, the Duke, as Prime
+Minister, having no doubt been supplied in
+advance with stamps, one of which he attached
+to his letter, to give a surprise to his friend
+Nuttall Tomlins. The envelope, with the stamp
+still upon it, is now in the possession of a well-known
+philatelist in London.</p>
+
+<p>The allusion to the "Penny Post" naturally calls
+to mind its originator. On the hill slope of the
+still pleasant rural village of Stapleton, four
+miles from Bristol Post Office,&mdash;once a Roman
+settlement, and in later days the head-quarters of
+Oliver Cromwell during the siege of Bristol,&mdash;the
+great postal reformer, Sir Rowland Hill, frequently<!--[171.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+spent some of his leisure time with his brother,
+the late Recorder of Bristol, Mr. Matthew Davenport
+Hill. There is in the Bristol postal service at
+the present time a mail officer who recalls that, in
+his very young days, it was his mission to set out
+from Heath House to fetch the morning letters for
+Sir Rowland from the Stapleton Post Office. He
+tells how he had to ride the old pony at a rapid
+rate, as, even in those days, Sir Rowland's time was
+valuable, and if his letters were late he had to
+curtail his "constitutional," which usually consisted
+of a three-mile sharp walk, with cap in hand instead
+of on head, over Purdown, past Stoke House,
+returning through Frenchay.</p>
+
+<p>In December, 1844, Sir Rowland Hill, in connection
+with the National Testimonial to him as the
+author of Penny Postage, recorded the circumstance
+that he had received a letter from Mr. Estlin, an
+eminent surgeon of Bristol, giving an account of
+proceedings in that important city anterior to any
+movement in London. Sir Rowland believed it was
+in Bristol, and from Mr. Estlin, that the testimonial
+had its origin. The sum presented from Bristol to
+the national collection amounted to about &pound;300.<!--[172.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>The celebration of the Jubilee of Penny Postage
+in 1890 took the practical turn in one respect of
+increasing the Rowland Hill Benevolent Fund.
+Bristol contributed its quota of &pound;72 14s. 6d., made
+up in great measure of public subscriptions. When
+the grand celebration took place on July 2nd, at
+the South Kensington Museum, with the Duke and
+Duchess of Edinburgh present at the conversazione,
+Bristol took its part, and immediately after a signal
+from South Kensington was received over the telegraph
+wire at 10 o'clock three hearty cheers for
+Her Majesty were given, the postmaster leading.
+The Post Office band then struck up the National
+Anthem, and cheers for the Queen were at once
+taken up by a body of about 200 postmen who had
+assembled in the Post Office yard.</p>
+
+<p>As in 1847 the state of things at the provincial
+offices generally was not regarded as satisfactory,
+Sir Rowland Hill, in accordance with the wish of
+the Postmaster-General, visited Bristol on April
+1st in that year. He found that the first delivery
+of the day, by far the most important of all, was
+not completed until 12 o'clock; the letter-carriers,
+as he was informed, often staying after departure<!--[173.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+from the office to take their breakfast before commencing
+their rounds. He was able to show how
+at a small cost (only &pound;125 a year) it might be
+completed by 9.0. The office itself he found small,
+badly lighted, and ill ventilated. The day mail
+bag to London was nearly useless, its contents
+for London delivery being on the morning of his
+inquiry only sixty-four letters, thirty-seven of which
+might have been sent by the previous mail on the
+mere payment of the extra penny. His impression
+regarding this mail, both in and out of the office,
+agreed exactly with his evidence in 1843; viz., that
+all day mails, to be efficient for their purpose, should
+start as late as was consistent with their reaching
+London in time for their letters to be forwarded by
+the outgoing evening mails. The satisfaction Sir
+Rowland felt in such improvements as he had been
+able to make on the spot was much enhanced by
+his receiving at the termination of his visit the
+thanks of both clerks and letter-carriers for the new
+arrangements. It should be said that Sir Rowland
+Hill did not by his action cast any reflection upon
+Mr. Todd Walton, junior, as he was at pains to say
+that, regarded as a specimen of the administration<!--[174.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+of provincial Post Offices at the time the Bristol
+specimen was by no means an unfavourable one.
+At that time there were only about 20,000 letters,
+etc., delivered in a week.</p>
+
+<p>The Bristol Chamber of Commerce took no
+notice of the Post Office for nearly twenty years
+(1835-1855), but in the latter year it did so, for
+its records of the annual meeting of 31st January,
+1855, with John Salmon, President, in the chair,
+shew the following, viz.:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The Post Office questions of salaries, internal
+arrangements, and local inquiry, are still in the same
+position as they were six months ago, except that,
+after repeated further applications to the Postmaster-General,
+your Committee extracted, on the 10th
+December last, a renewed promise from his lordship
+that 'no time should be lost in making the enquiry
+at the Bristol Post Office.' As the inefficiency of
+the public service arises from the unjust treatment
+of the employ&eacute;s and defective internal arrangements
+of the local office, your Committee cannot desist, notwithstanding
+the tedious and disagreeable nature of
+the task which they have undertaken, from insisting
+on these repeated promises being redeemed."<!--[175.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>Then, under the same presidency, at the next
+half-yearly meeting in the same year, it was stated
+that "Subsequent to the date of the last report,
+your Committee discovered that the Postmaster-General
+had caused a private local enquiry to be
+made with respect to the classification and salaries
+of the officers of the Bristol Post Office."</p>
+
+<p>There was this further remonstrance:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>".... It would have been more satisfactory
+to your Committee if the Postmaster-General had
+fulfilled his promise to the deputation who waited
+upon him on the 30th of January, 1854, to hold
+a local enquiry at which they should be present, as
+there were several other matters connected with the
+internal arrangements of the Bristol Post Office
+(particularly the money order department, which is
+still very defective) with respect to which they were
+desirous of making some suggestions."</p>
+
+<p>Then followed a copy of the report made to the
+Postmaster-General by Mr. Tilley, who conducted
+the enquiry, also a statement of the proposed
+Establishment.</p>
+
+<p>At the Chamber's next annual meeting on 30th
+January, 1856, with James Hassell, the president,<!--[176.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+in the chair, the Post Office is again reproved
+thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"No further reply than the official printed
+acknowledgment and promise of attention has yet
+reached your Committee respecting the memorial
+on the subject of the Welsh mail, the West India
+mails, etc.; but past experience and general repute
+do not lead them to anticipate prompt redress from
+the Post Office authorities. It required repeated
+applications, extending over a period of about
+eighteen months, to obtain a remedy for the
+grievances set forth in our former memorial; and
+even now the Money Order Department is not
+completed, and probably similar perseverance will
+again be required, as it is now more than a month
+ago the memorial relating to the West India mail
+was presented."</p>
+
+<p>It was thought worthy of note in the <i>Bristol
+Mirror</i> of November 5th, 1831, that "500 letters
+were brought yesterday from Clifton for the general
+post." In demonstration of the strides which the
+Post Office has made, it may be mentioned that in
+the "fifties," in addition to the Post Office at
+Clifton, the only offices were the branches at<!--[177.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+Haberfield Crescent and Phippen Street, with four
+collections a day, and the receiving houses at
+Ashley Road, Bedminster, Hotwells, and Redland,
+with three collections a day. The city only boasted
+at that time of pillar letter boxes at Arley Chapel,
+Armoury Square, Bedminster Bridge, Bristol Bridge,
+Castle Street, Christmas Steps, College Green, Freemantle
+Square, Kingsdown, Milk Street, Railway
+Station, St. Philip's Police Station, Kingsland Road,
+Whiteladies Road, and Woodwell Crescent, with
+three collections daily. Now there are 167 Post
+Offices in the district. On the Gloucestershire side
+there are 99, at 41 of which telegraph business is
+carried on; and on the Somersetshire side 68, 27
+of which are telegraph offices. In addition telegraph
+business is carried on for the Postmaster-General
+at five railway stations on the Gloucestershire
+side and five on the Somersetshire side.
+Licenses to sell postage stamps are held by over
+a hundred shopkeepers.</p>
+
+<p>There are now 350 pillar and wall letter boxes
+provided for public convenience.</p>
+
+<p>It may be mentioned in passing that during the
+strike amongst the deal-runners in Bristol, when<!--[178.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+men were brought from other towns and housed
+and fed at "Huntersholm" (a large wooden
+building erected specially in one of the timber
+yards), and allowed out under police supervision,
+a stamp license was applied for and granted, to
+meet a large demand for postage stamps which
+these men made in consequence of having to send
+their wages home weekly to their families.</p>
+
+<p>In detail, but without complication by mention of
+the names of all the districts, the local improvements
+for the seven years from March, 1892, to February,
+1899, inclusive, were as follows:&mdash;New post offices
+established, 33; telegraph offices opened, 18; money
+order and savings bank business extended to 17
+offices; postal orders sold at 6 additional offices;
+new pillar and wall boxes erected, 142; new or
+additional day mails from 34 districts; and out
+to 44 districts; new extra deliveries established in
+65 districts, and two extra deliveries in 7 districts.
+Free delivery extended in 35 rural districts, and
+the ordinary second or third delivery extended in
+44 rural districts; morning delivery accelerated in
+63, and the day delivery in 8, rural districts. A
+later posting for North mail in 6, and for the<!--[179.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+night mail in 58, rural districts. New collections
+established in 73, and a later collection in 30, rural
+districts.</p>
+
+<p>Increased facilities in the postal world are almost
+invariably followed by augmentation of business.
+It certainly has been so in the Bristol district, for
+there has been a marvellous development in the
+last seven years. The letters delivered have
+increased by 60 per cent., and those posted have
+grown at the rate of 55 per cent. Parcels have
+increased by 25 per cent. There has been
+a similar marked increase in all branches of
+business. The three preceding periods of seven
+years were comparatively "lean" periods, for the
+increase in the number of letters during the whole
+twenty-one years was actually less than during the
+seven last years. The increase is altogether out of
+proportion to the growth of population, and it
+is far in excess of the general increase of letter
+correspondence throughout the country generally,
+which has been only at the rate of 22 per cent.
+during the period as against Bristol's 60 per
+cent. It is hoped that this may be taken as a sure
+indication of the well-being of the trade of Bristol,<!--[180.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+and as a sign that there is quickened life in the
+commerce of the good old city. At all events, it
+shows that the local Post Office organization is quite
+abreast of the times, and that the facilities afforded
+are appreciated and are fully taken advantage of.<!--[181.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<h5>BRISTOL AS A MAIL STEAMER STATION FOR IRELAND,
+WEST INDIES, AMERICA, AND CANADA.</h5>
+
+
+<p>From the archives of the Bristol Chamber of
+Commerce it transpires that from the very first
+constitution of the Chamber in 1823, it had before
+it a scheme for the conveyance of mails between
+this port and the South of Ireland by direct steam
+packet. It was considered that such a service would
+be highly advantageous to the city, and correspondence
+on the subject from time to time took
+place with the Post Office Department. Allusion
+is made to it in the Chamber's Annual Report in
+January, 1824; again in 1828, when the President
+of the Chamber, Mr. Joseph Cookson, had a conference
+with the leading officer of the Post Office;
+and once more in 1829. The case is so fully and
+ably set forth in the Board's Annual Report of the
+26th January, 1829, that its reproduction <i>in extenso</i>
+cannot fail to be of deep interest to the citizens of<!--[182.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+the present day as their attention is often drawn to
+the steamship traffic. It ran thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The transmission of the mails direct from Bristol
+was earnestly pressed upon the attention of the
+Postmaster-General in the year 1823, on which
+occasion the Chamber minutely investigated the
+practicability, safety, and general advantages of the
+measure, the material points of which were embodied
+in a memorial, accompanied by a list of queries and
+replies. The Civic Corporation, the Society of
+Merchant Venturers, and the Bristol Dock Company
+each presented similar memorials.</p>
+
+<p>"In resuming the enquiry, the Board have resorted
+to the channels best calculated to convey accurate
+information. The managing proprietor of the
+steam packet establishments at this port, Captain
+Dungey, an individual on whose experience and
+judgment reliance may be placed, and other persons
+of practical knowledge, have been consulted on the
+subject. All concur in establishing the fact that
+the voyage to and from Dunmore may, with general
+certainty, be accomplished by efficient steamboats
+in from 24 to 26 hours during the eight summer
+months, and in from 26 to 30 hours in the four<!--[183.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+months of winter; that the instances of exceeding
+this scale would not be more frequent than at the
+present station, the navigation of the Bristol
+Channel being protected by the coast on either side,
+and consequently less influenced by severe weather
+than the Irish Sea.</p>
+
+<p>"The earlier arrival of the London mail and its
+later departure, as altered some time since, accords
+materially with the proposition for making Bristol
+a packet station. By the present regulations, the
+London mail arrives in Bristol at five minutes past
+9 in the morning; and leaves at half-past 5 in
+the evening; it is capable of being still further
+accelerated by taking the two last stages in the
+direct line through Marshfield, instead of passing
+through Bath. According to the present arrangements,
+the Irish mails may with ease and convenience
+to passengers be despatched from the mouth of the
+Bristol river, five miles from the Post Office, every
+day at half-past 10, and those from Ireland, if
+arriving by 4.0, be forwarded to London the same
+evening. The time saved by this route as compared
+with that of Milford would be, at least during the
+summer months, equal to one whole day for the<!--[184.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+purposes of business, since the arrival at Dunmore
+would be in the morning instead of evening, and
+the departure at noon instead of at an early hour
+of the morning as at present.</p>
+
+<p>"The present slips at Lamplighter's Hall and
+Broad Pill now serve for landing passengers from
+the packets on special occasions; with very trifling
+expense they may be made efficient for passengers,
+and not more objectionable than the present accommodation
+for crossing the estuary of the Severn&mdash;carriages,
+horses, baggage, and heavy goods might
+at an earlier hour be put on board at the Bristol
+Docks, which the boat would leave at the height
+of tide in order to be in waiting for the mails
+at the place appointed for receiving them. At
+Lamplighter's Hall an hotel is established, which,
+with the contiguity to the city, would ensure to the
+public a supply of all the accommodation a packet
+station would require. These are the facilities
+which can at present be afforded. At no very
+distant date the accommodation will, in all
+probability, be yet further increased, first, by the
+erection of a pier with hotel and establishment at
+Portishead on the Somersetshire side of the Avon,<!--[185.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+which the Corporation of the City have for some
+time had under consideration with a view to
+promote the convenience of passengers by the
+steam vessels and thus encourage the intercourse
+between this city and the South of Ireland. In aid
+of the present enquiry they have directed a survey
+and report by Mr. Milne, the engineer, on the
+practicability and probable cost of the proposed
+pier. Secondly, and arising also from this scheme,
+is a plan for erecting a bridge across the Avon, by
+the application in part of a fund amounting to
+nearly &pound;8,000, held by the Society of Merchant
+Venturers in trust under the will of William Vick,
+deceased, for the especial purpose; with the formation
+of an improved line of road by Mr. Gordon, Mr.
+Miles, and other landed proprietors on that side of
+the river, for the short distance to Portishead.
+These several improvements the respective parties
+interested are disposed to effect, and which any
+impelling motive, such as the establishment of
+a regular mail packet station, may induce them
+immediately to undertake. The accomplishment of
+these works would render Portishead a most eligible
+station. It is protected from weather, is a safe<!--[186.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+anchorage, would have ample depth of water at
+any state of the tide, the landing would be instant
+on arrival, and it would be supplied with every
+convenience and accommodation for passengers.</p>
+
+<p>"The Board believe an important saving of
+expense to Government would result from establishing
+Bristol as a mail packet station. The great
+deficiency on the Milford station in the receipts as
+compared with the expenditure arises from the very
+limited number of persons who avail themselves of
+that line of communication. The land journey of
+twenty hours at a fare of &pound;3 10s., followed by a
+twelve hours' voyage by open sea at a further
+expense of &pound;1 10s., with the inconvenience frequently
+sustained in crossing the estuary of the Severn,
+deters people from taking the Milford route by
+choice. The general introduction of steam packets,
+the degree of perfection in sailing to which they
+have been brought, the regularity and safety with
+which the voyages are performed, the accommodation
+to passengers, and the moderate scale of fares,
+have contributed to effect of late years a material
+change in the general opinion on steamboat conveyance.
+The long voyage by sea is now generally<!--[187.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+preferred to a long journey by land and the shorter
+one by sea. The number and efficiency of the
+Bristol boats, and the economy in the fares, induce a
+large proportion of travellers to take the direct
+course from Bristol. Indeed, to so great an extent
+has this preference operated that the contractors for
+conveying the mail throughout the whole line from
+Bristol to Milford are understood to have given
+notice of their intention to determine their engagement,
+on account of the gradual decrease in the
+number of passengers and the consequent loss they
+incur. A similar statement appears in the report of
+the Postmaster-General on the memorial of the
+innkeepers on the Holyhead route.</p>
+
+<p>"In favour of Bristol it may be fairly stated that,
+at a comparatively trifling expense, the port may be
+made commodious for a packet station; that the
+present strength of the establishment at Milford
+would serve, with some addition, for that of Bristol;
+that the difference in price of coal at Portishead
+would reduce the expense of sailing the packets from
+that station; that Bristol affords every prospect of
+increase of receipt, whilst at Milford it must, for the
+reasons before stated, necessarily decrease; that the<!--[188.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+demands of a large commercial city, with its populous
+adjoining and connected districts, will create a traffic
+for boats making quick and regular voyages, which
+Milford, from its position, never can acquire&mdash;the
+conveyance of fish and provisions alone could be
+made to yield a revenue of consequence. Numerous
+other sources of receipt would arise from the conveniency
+of its regularity and expedition. Indeed,
+so much are the Board impressed with the belief
+that the traffic would be extensive and productive
+that they venture to anticipate it may, at no very
+distant period, relieve the Government from any
+further charge than a comparatively nominal sum
+for the transport of the mails. The Board are
+induced also to put the proposition in a national
+point of view. They feel that the more closely
+Ireland can be brought into direct and active communication
+with this country, the more rapid will be
+its course of improvement. The introduction of
+steam navigation has, at this port, given an energy
+and extension to the Irish trade that far exceeds any
+previous expectations; each succeeding month brings
+a vast increase of import and a corresponding export,
+to the material benefit of each kingdom, and the<!--[189.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+more complete the intercourse can be established the
+more important will the trade become.</p>
+
+<p>"The port of Bristol, from its position, possesses
+numerous capabilities for a mail packet station. Its
+contiguity and means of land and water communication
+with the capital; its being the principal
+shipping port for the manufacturing districts of
+the South-west part of the kingdom; its close connection
+and water communication with Birmingham,
+Worcester, and other large towns in the centre of
+the kingdom; the convenience of its floating
+harbour; the reduced scale of its local tolls&mdash;all
+these circumstances combine to give Bristol a
+superiority over other places on the coast, whether
+the subject he viewed as regards the economy of
+the Post Office Department or the accommodation
+of the public.</p>
+
+<p>"The Board have placed the subject of the
+Commissioners' enquiry in the several points of
+view which appear to them fairly to arise upon
+the investigation and consideration it has received,
+and they shall feel sincere gratification if, on this
+or any future occasion, they should in the least
+degree prove of assistance to a department of<!--[190.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+Government, or should otherwise by their exertions
+conduce to the advancement of the public
+interests.</p>
+
+<p>
+"<span class="smcap">Thomas Stock</span>, President.<br />
+July 7th, 1828."<br />
+<br /></p>
+
+
+<p>A strong memorial (under the hand of Thomas
+Cookson, President) was forwarded to the Postmaster-General.</p>
+
+<p>Francis Freeling, Secretary, in his reply for the
+Postmaster-General, refused to admit that the port
+of Bristol did afford the requisite facilities for a
+station for His Majesty's packets. When the projected
+works were carried out the matter would be
+reconsidered by the Government.</p>
+
+<p>Replying further, Mr. Freeling, on the 2nd
+March, alluded to the impossibility of despatching
+the mails at a fixed time every day in the year,
+and said that that presented insurmountable objections
+to the choice of Bristol as a station for His
+Majesty's packets. He said that the first requisite
+for a packet station was that the port should afford
+the means for embarking and landing the mails
+at all times of tide and under all circumstances of
+weather.<!--[191.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>The Bristol Dock Directors and a Standing
+Committee of the Society of Merchants considered
+the matter, but did not see their way to press it
+under the chilling response received from the
+Postmaster-General.</p>
+
+<p>The Board did not give up the case, for in
+the Annual Report 28th January, 1833, it was
+stated that the proposition for establishing at this
+port a mail packet station by steam vessels to the
+South of Ireland was being diligently pursued, and
+that the House of Commons having appointed a
+Committee to enquire into the communications
+between England and Ireland, a favourable
+opportunity was presented of again urging the
+advantages Bristol port was calculated to afford.</p>
+
+<p>The numerous appeals, representations, and
+enquiries did not result in the manner desired,
+and to this day the mails from the South of
+Ireland for Bristol and its district follow the
+same route <i>vi&acirc;</i> Waterford and Milford Haven, the
+only difference being that from the latter port to
+Bristol the service is carried on by rail instead
+of by road.</p>
+
+<p>Bristol became a mail packet station eventually,<!--[192.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+as steamships carried the American mails between
+this port and New York for several years, commencing
+in 1837, the year of Her Most Gracious
+Majesty's accession to the throne. The <i>Great
+Western</i>, constructed under the direction of Brunel,
+the famous engineer of the Great Western Railway,
+was chiefly used in the service.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 445px;">
+<img src="images/i193.jpg" width="445" height="355" alt="The &quot;Great Western.&quot;
+The First Steamer which carried Mails from Bristol to New York." title="The &quot;Great Western.&quot;
+The First Steamer which carried Mails from Bristol to New York." />
+<span class="caption">The &quot;Great Western.&quot;<br />
+The First Steamer which carried Mails from Bristol to New York.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>On the 31st May, 1838, writing from 19 Trinity
+Street, Bristol, Mr. Claxton, managing director to
+the <i>Great Western</i>&mdash;which was then, nearly due,&mdash;asked
+the Bristol postmaster whether a consignee
+at New York might charge the foreign postage on
+letters to parts on the Continent with which no
+arrangement, similar to that then existing between
+France and England, had been made. The idea
+was that such letters might be put into a separate
+bag, and the foreign postage from Bristol be handed
+over to the local Post Office. He wrote that notice
+had been given by the Chamber of Commerce of
+Liverpool that masters of ships need not send
+anything but letters to the Post Office on arrival.
+Mr. Todd Walton replied on the next day to the
+effect that the agent should only direct letters to
+Mr. Claxton's care to forward from such persons<!--[195.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+<!--[194.png]-->
+as he could refer to in case of errors. Then followed
+a long communication from Mr. Walton to Colonel
+Maberly, Secretary to the Post Office, the gist of
+which was that a difficulty existed in preventing
+illegal conveyance of ship letters; that the commanders
+of vessels did not receive money with
+letters to any great extent; that the public prints
+stated that 1,600 letters were received on board
+the <i>Great Western</i> besides those sent from the
+Post Office; that an immense number of letters
+was collected at the Great Western office; and that
+as the <i>Great Western</i> and <i>Syrius</i> were regularly
+established, and other vessels of the same description
+were preparing, unless some means were taken
+to protect the revenue, it could not fail to suffer
+very considerably.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Great Western</i> brought to England 5,500 post
+letters and 1,770 post papers, which, had that conveyance
+not been offered, would most likely have been sent
+by private ships. Mr. Walton conceived it would be
+very advantageous to the revenue to contract with
+those superior vessels to carry mails, so as to render
+the latter chargeable with package rates; and he
+submitted that ship letter mails should be made up<!--[196.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+at Bristol, the same as at London and Liverpool,
+for all vessels leaving this port. About 5,500 ship
+letters were brought to the Bristol Post Office
+annually, and he had no doubt that vast numbers
+were carried from Bristol in the same manner; but
+with the exception of those by the <i>Great Western</i>,
+no mails had ever been made up here for foreign
+countries. The Secretary, replying for the Postmaster-General,
+said it did not appear to Lord
+Lichfield that cognizance need be taken of the
+suggestion conveyed in Mr. Claxton's letter of the
+31st May, for the transmission through this country
+of letters from the United States addressed to those
+foreign countries upon which the postage must be
+paid here before they can be forwarded to their
+destination. The Post Office could have no objection
+to such letters being addressed to the care of
+Mr. Claxton or any other agent in this country who
+would pay the foreign postage and send them on
+to their destinations. The letters in question, would,
+of course, be subject, so far as the Post Office was
+concerned, to the ship letter rate to Bristol, and
+when re-posted, to the inland and foreign rates
+forward.<!--[197.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>The postmaster's proposition for making up mails
+to be forwarded by the steam vessels charged with
+packet rates of postage was out of the question;
+but with regard to making up ship letter bags for
+foreign countries, so strangely neglected at this
+great port, the postmaster was to embrace every
+opportunity in his power of despatching ship letter
+bags by sailing as well as by steam vessels. There
+is no official record, however, of any such ship letter
+mails having been forwarded from Bristol.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1841 a Royal Commission was
+appointed to enquire into the question of the
+most suitable port for the embarkation and debarkation
+of the West Indian Mails. The committee
+consisted of Mr. Freshfield, Lord Dalmeny, Lord
+Viscount Ingestre, Captain Pechell, Captain Duncombe,
+Mr. Chas. Wood, Sir Thomas Cochrane,
+Mr. John O'Connell, Mr. Cresswell, Lord Worsley,
+Mr. Gibson Craig, Mr. De Horsey, Mr. Oswold,
+Mr. Richard Hodgson, and Mr. Philip Miles, who
+was prominent as representing Bristol. Much
+evidence was given in favour of the ports of Bristol,
+Dartmouth, Devonport, Falmouth, Plymouth, Portsmouth,
+and Southampton respectively. The case<!--[198.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+of Bristol was strongly supported by Lieut. J.
+Hosken, R.N., commander of the <i>Great Western</i>
+screw steamer from Bristol to New York, and
+Lieut. C. Claxton, R.N., the Bristol Harbour Master.</p>
+
+<p>The principal reasons put forward in favour of
+our old port were: that the Bristol Channel was
+navigable at all states of the tide and in all weathers;
+that there was good anchorage in the Kingroad; and
+that although Bristol was not quite so near to
+Barbadoes, the first island of call, as some of her
+rival ports, yet it admitted of quicker transmission of
+mails between London and the northern towns than
+any other English port. The arguments in favour
+of the Bristol port were not strong enough to induce
+the committee to report in its favour.</p>
+
+<p>From the "forties," when the American mail
+service was withdrawn from Bristol, no foreign or
+colonial mails left the port until the autumn of
+1898, when Mr. Alfred Jones, the enterprising
+managing director of the firm of Messrs. Elder,
+Dempster &amp; Co., made arrangements for carrying
+private ship mails from Avonmouth to Montreal
+by a weekly service of steamers. The Bristol
+merchants found it convenient to make use of this<!--[199.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+ship mail system for the conveyance of their invoices,
+bills of lading, and advices, as, by travelling
+in the same ship as the goods which they related
+to, their delivery in time to be of use in connection
+with the ship's load was ensured. The first vessel
+to carry such a ship mail was the s.s. <i>Montcalm</i>.</p>
+
+<p>When it was in anticipation at the Bristol Post
+Office that the ship mail service might be resumed
+in 1899 on the breaking up of the ice in the Gulf
+of St. Lawrence, there came a cablegram from the
+Canadian Government intimating that a contract
+had been entered into with Messrs. Elder, Dempster
+and Co.; and, heigh presto! Avonmouth at once
+became the port of departure and arrival of the
+steamers carrying the direct Canadian mails. The
+suddenness of the event naturally created quite a
+stir after Bristol had been so long waiting, and the
+mail services outwards and inwards were watched
+with close attention by the public. The first
+steamer to run under the new contract was the
+s.s. <i>Monterey</i>. She left Avonmouth on the 23rd
+July, but time had not admitted of arrangements
+being made for her to carry the mails from
+Avonmouth, which were therefore picked up at<!--[200.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+Queenstown. The s.s. <i>Ikbal</i> took the next trip,
+leaving Avonmouth on the 30th July. The parcels
+from the whole of the kingdom, including Ireland,
+were circulated on Bristol, and made up here in
+direct mails for Montreal, Quebec, Hamilton,
+Kingston, Toronto, Winnipeg, Prince Edward
+Island, Hawaii, St. Pierre and Miquelon, Nova
+Scotia, British Columbia, Kobe, Nagasaki, and
+Yokohama. The notice to the Bristol Post Office
+was very short, but the necessary arrangements
+were smartly made to meet the emergency. Mr.
+Kislingbury, the divisional superintendent of the
+Great Western Railway, ever ready to heartily
+co-operate with the local Post Office, had a
+special tender placed in readiness for the
+reception of the mails at Temple Meads
+and they were despatched by the 9.50 a.m.
+train to Avonmouth. On the part of the Dock
+authorities, the general manager, Mr. F. B. Girdlestone,
+had provided an engine to take the brake-vans
+containing the parcel mails direct from the
+Docks junction to the pier head. The system was
+fully tried, for the mails had to be taken from the
+train to the steam-tug <i>Sea Prince</i> to be conveyed to<!--[203.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+<!--[202.png]-->
+the steamer, which was moored in Kingroad, having
+arrived too late to enter the dock. The mails
+weighed close upon three tons, and were contained
+in fifty-five large hampers. In the following week
+the s.s. <i>Arawa</i> (a sixteen-knot boat, 440 feet long)
+carried the mails, which were taken by train alongside
+the ship in dock; and which consequently,
+although five tons in weight, were put on board
+under much more favourable circumstances than in
+the preceding week, when the steamer had to lie out
+in the Kingroad. It is noteworthy that the <i>Arawa</i>
+took out 400 emigrants.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/i201.jpg" width="400" height="167" alt="R.M.S. &quot;Monterey.&quot;
+First Liner in The New Canadian Mail Service.
+From a photograph by G. M. Roche, Esq., Dublin." title="R.M.S. &quot;Monterey.&quot;
+First Liner in The New Canadian Mail Service.
+From a photograph by G. M. Roche, Esq., Dublin." />
+<span class="caption">R.M.S. &quot;Monterey.&quot;<br />
+First Liner in The New Canadian Mail Service.</span><br />
+<i style='font-size: small'>From a photograph by G. M. Roche, Esq., Dublin.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>Subsequent steamers used for carrying on the mail
+service were the <i>Montfort</i>, <i>Monteagle</i>, and <i>Montrose</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The arrangements for the new service worked
+very smoothly from the outset, thanks in no small
+measure to Mr. Flinn, the local general manager
+for Messrs. Elder, Dempster &amp; Co., who facilitated
+in every way the Post Office and Customs operations.
+The trial so far has proved that the use of Avonmouth
+as a port for the Canadian mail traffic is
+attended with advantages on this side of the ocean,
+but greater facilities for embarking and disembarking
+the mails at Avonmouth are absolutely necessary.<!--[204.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+<h5>POSTAL SERVICE STAFF; ITS COMPOSITION, DUTIES,
+RESPONSIBILITIES.&mdash;VOLUME OF WORK.</h5>
+
+
+<p>In 1855 the Bristol Post Office staff consisted
+of a postmaster and fifteen clerks, with sixty-four
+letter carriers. Over 1,500 people of all
+grades, including sub-postmasters and their assistants,
+are now employed; and the annual bill for
+salaries, wages, and allowances of men, women,
+and boys amounts to little short of &pound;100,000. It
+will thus be seen that the Post Office ranks as
+one of the largest employers of labour in the
+western city.</p>
+
+<p>The head office is centrally situated both for
+the receipt and despatch of the letter correspondence.
+It is not very far from a point known as
+"Tramway Centre," upon which the tram services
+of the city converge. It plays an important part
+with regard to the Bristol postal system, as out of
+a total of 833,000 letters posted weekly in the city<!--[205.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+delivery area&mdash;exclusive of 55,300 Clifton posted
+letters&mdash;221,000 letters are posted at the head
+office itself, and the total posted within a radius
+of a mile is 652,290, or more than three-fourths of
+the whole. In addition to the 888,000 letters posted
+weekly in Bristol city and Clifton, there are 108,000
+letters posted in the suburban and rural districts.
+The posting every Sunday consists of 35,000 letters.</p>
+
+<p>The greater extent to which the well-to-do classes
+in Bristol use the post than their less fortunate
+brethren may be gathered from the fact that the
+average yield of letters, newspapers, etc., per day
+per box in the Clifton district is 128 per cent. higher
+than in Redland and Cotham, and 179 per cent.
+higher than in Redcliffe; and in the Redland
+and Cotham district 22 per cent. higher than in
+Redcliffe.</p>
+
+<p>The mails are chiefly conveyed between the head
+office and the principal railway station by horsed
+carts.</p>
+
+<p>About 7,000,000 "forward" letters&mdash;that is,
+letters neither posted nor delivered locally, but
+passing through the Bristol Post Office&mdash;are dealt
+with annually.<!--[206.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>The parcel post, started in 1883, has done well
+in Bristol. Nearly three-quarters of a million of
+parcels are posted in the district annually. The
+greater part of the parcel despatching duties is
+performed at a separate parcel office on the Temple
+Meads Railway Station premises. People often
+avail themselves of the parcel post for obtaining
+a regular weekly supply of produce. A joint of
+beef from Scotland, weighing just under eleven
+pounds, invariably reaches Bristol at the week end,
+and a package of butter from Dublin is observed
+every Friday in the Bristol parcel dep&ocirc;t on its way
+to Weston-super-Mare.</p>
+
+<p>The London mail is, naturally, the most important
+mail which leaves Bristol. In the course of the day
+fifty-five mail bags are forwarded, containing about
+20,000 letters; the trains used being those leaving
+at 3.10 a.m., 7.50 a.m., 9.35 a.m., 11.40 a.m., 12.13
+p.m., 1.54 p.m., 3.0 p.m., 3.43 p.m., 4.45 p.m., 7.22
+p.m., and 12.45 a.m. So numerous are the London
+and "London forward" letters in the evening, that
+three clerks are engaged from 5.0 p.m. to midnight
+in sorting them. In the opposite direction fifty mail
+bags are received from London daily, containing<!--[207.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+about 30,000 letters. Birmingham comes next in
+the importance of exchange, thus: twelve mail bags
+go out daily, containing 5,500 letters, and ten bags
+come in, with 4,500 letters. The neighbouring city
+of Bath figures next, with ten outward mail bags
+daily, containing 4,200 letters, and ten inward bags,
+containing 2,700 letters. The same three cities also
+stand in the forefront in respect of the import and
+export of parcels, 870 parcels being received from
+London and 550 parcels sent thereto daily. Birmingham
+sends 190 parcels and takes a like number;
+whilst Bath sends 160 and takes in return 250
+parcels daily.</p>
+
+<p>The members of the permanent staff have fallen
+on better days than their predecessors of old times.
+They are granted holidays varying in periods
+according to rank, from the twelve working days
+allowed to the telegraph messengers to the month
+enjoyed by the superintending officers. Medical
+attendance is afforded gratuitously, and full
+pay is, as a rule, given during sick absence, and
+under special circumstances sick leave on full
+pay is allowed for six months, and a further six
+months on half-pay. After that time, if there<!--[208.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+appears to be little or no chance of recovery, a
+pension or gratuity is given. The appointment of
+medical officer to the Post Office was in 1862 conferred
+upon Mr. F. Poole Lansdown, who has held
+the post ever since. For the last four years the
+average sick absence per year has been ten days for
+males and seventeen days for females per head; and
+during the last seven years the average mortality
+amongst the established officers of the Service has
+been two per annum.</p>
+
+<p>Uniform and boots are provided by the Department
+for the postmen and telegraph messengers, at an
+annual cost of about &pound;2,000.</p>
+
+<p>Good-conduct stripes are the reward to all full-time
+postmen, established or unestablished, of
+unblemished conduct. A stripe is awarded after
+each five years' meritorious service, and each man is
+eligible for six stripes, each of which carry one
+shilling a week extra pay. The value of the stripes
+is taken into account in calculation of pensions.</p>
+
+<p>Of the 1,500 persons of all grades alluded to
+there are in the postal department a superintendent,
+24 superintending officers, and 154 male and 8
+female clerks.<!--[209.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>The selection of candidates for situations in the
+Bristol Post Office as sorting clerks and telegraphists,
+both male and female, was for many years vested
+entirely in the postmaster, and persons were given
+temporary employment without passing any educational
+test as to their special fitness for Post Office
+employment. It so happened that not infrequently
+a clerk would be employed in a temporary capacity
+for some years, and finally be rejected by the
+Civil Service Commissioners on educational or
+medical grounds. In 1892, however, a special
+preliminary educational examination was instituted.
+All candidates of respectable parentage, of good
+health and character, were allowed to sit at this
+examination, the successful ones being taken into
+the office and trained for appointment to the
+Establishment. The Civil Service Examination
+had, of course, to be undergone before an appointment
+could be obtained. In 1896 a new system
+was introduced, whereby a Civil Service certificate
+had to be obtained before a person was taken
+into the office. This obviated the necessity of
+holding the preliminary educational examination,
+but the postmaster still exercised the privilege of<!--[210.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+nominating candidates to the situations. The open
+competitive system of examination was commenced
+last year, and the appointments are now open to
+general competition.</p>
+
+<p>There is a term of probation in the Post Office,
+and details of the duties devolving on postal clerks
+may not be without interest to the Bristol public.
+The business, with its multitudinous ramifications,
+takes a long time to learn thoroughly. To become
+a perfect all-round postal clerk a man must possess
+intelligence, must be cool, fertile in expedient, have
+a retentive memory, and withal be quick and active.
+He must know how to primarily sort, sub-divide,
+and despatch letters. He must have a good
+knowledge of Post Office circulation and be able
+to bear in mind the names of the smallest
+places&mdash;hamlets, etc.&mdash;in the kingdom, the varying
+circulations for different periods of the day, and
+the rates of postage of all articles sent through
+the post. Be must be able to detect the short-paid
+letter, and to deal with the ordinary letter, the
+large letter, the unpaid, the registered, the foreign,
+the "dead," insufficiently addressed, the official,
+the fragile, the insured, the postcard (single<!--[211.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+and reply), the letter card, the newspaper,
+the book-packet, and the circular (the definition
+of which is very difficult). He is responsible
+for the correct sortation of every letter that he
+deals with, and he has to be expert in tying letters
+in bundles. He has to cast the unpaid postage and
+enter the correct account on the letter bill; take
+charge of registered letter bags and loose registered
+letters, and advise them on the letter bill; see to the
+correct labelling, tying, and sealing of the mail bags
+he makes up; check the despatch of mails on the
+bag list; dispose of his letters by a given time, the
+hours of the despatch of mails being fixed. In
+consequence, he often has to work under great
+pressure in order to finish in time. The postal clerk
+has to surcharge unpaid and insufficiently prepaid
+correspondence; to see that all postage stamps are
+carefully obliterated, that the rules of the different
+posts are not infringed; to attend to the regulations
+relating to official correspondence. He has to
+decipher imperfectly and insufficiently addressed
+correspondence, search official and other directories
+to trace proper addresses. In addition to all this
+he has in turn to serve at the public counter, and<!--[212.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+there attend to money order, savings bank, postal
+order, and other items of business of the kind.</p>
+
+<p>As an illustration of the perspicacity of officers
+of the Post Office in the Western Division of the
+Kingdom and of the postmen of Bristol, may be
+cited the circulation through the post and prompt
+and safe delivery of a letter from Plymouth bearing
+as its only address the magic letters "W. G.," with
+cricket hat, stumps, and ball, so dear to the
+individual who bears the initials.</p>
+
+<p>Delay in delivery of articles sent by post, however,
+not infrequently takes place in consequence of
+misdirection. A parcel was addressed to a reverend
+gentleman at "Publow Church, near Bristol," and
+as it could not be presented at the fine old structure
+itself, the postman took it to the adjoining vicarage,
+where, in the absence of the vicar, it was taken in
+by a servant upon the inference that it might be
+intended for some future visitor. It turned out,
+however, that the address was inaccurate, and that
+the parcel was actually intended for a village some
+miles from Bristol, on the other side, having for its
+name Pucklechurch.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally there is very slow transmission in<!--[213.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+these speedy days. A rather remarkable case
+occurred here of a postcard having occupied nearly
+eight years in travelling between Horfield Barracks
+and the premises of a firm in Stokes Croft,&mdash;a
+distance of less than two miles. The missive was
+posted and stamped on the 10th July, 1890, and
+trace of it was lost until it turned up at Bournemouth
+and received the impression of the stamp of
+that office in April, 1898, whence it was sent to
+Bristol and delivered. There were no other marks
+to indicate its long detention.</p>
+
+<p>Not infrequently the Post Office has to contend
+with difficulties arising from want of thought on the
+part of the trading community. Recently there
+was a somewhat unusual occurrence at the Bristol
+Post Office. A sack containing samples of biscuits
+in small tin boxes was received. Around the tins
+flimsy paper was tied, on which the addresses were
+written. The paper had become so frayed in
+transit that scarcely a single wrapper was complete,
+and when the tins were turned out of the sack there
+were showers of small pieces of paper like a snowstorm.
+In order that the samples might reach
+their destinations, the addresses were, as far as<!--[214.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+practicable, re-copied, and the samples sent out.
+Nearly every one of the 500 packets received was
+then sent out for delivery without delay, no doubt
+to the astonishment of those who received the
+biscuits in envelopes from the Returned Letter
+Office.</p>
+
+<p>In the sorting office all through the twenty-four
+hours there is work going on. As one batch of
+officials goes off duty another comes on, and these
+relays never cease&mdash;not even on Sundays, Christmas
+Days, or Bank Holidays. The sorting office is at
+its busiest from 5.15 to 6.45 in the evening, and
+from 8.30 p.m. till midnight. Then postmen enter
+hastily, one after another, with bags from the
+branch offices and pillar-boxes, which are immediately
+taken charge of, opened, and the contents
+shot out. The postmen rapidly arrange the small
+letters face upwards, pack them in "trays" of 400,
+pass them over to the stamping department; the
+stampers obliterate Her Majesty's head, and record
+the hour, date, and place of departure, with one
+and the same stroke of the stamp, at the rate of a
+hundred a minute. The stamped letters are placed
+on sorting tables, where the first division takes<!--[215.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+place. Those for Bristol and neighbourhood are
+assigned to a compartment for further sortation,
+and the outward correspondence is sorted out into
+the different "roads" by which it will travel.
+Letters for small places are sent to the mail trains,
+where they are sorted to their respective stations
+as the locomotive is whirling them along at the
+rate of fifty miles an hour. Many of the larger
+towns, such as Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool,
+Leeds, Exeter, Plymouth, Reading, Bath and
+Swindon, have their own bags made up at Bristol.
+Newspapers, packages, and book packets are sorted
+separately, and subsequently put into their respective
+bags. By-and-by the country postbags come
+pouring in, and no sooner are they opened than
+the letters they contain are subjected to the same
+analytical treatment.</p>
+
+<p>In a week 2,600 separate bags (or sacks containing
+several bags) are sent away from the Bristol
+Post Office over the Great Western and Midland
+Railway systems. The weight is 21 tons, or an
+average of over 18 lbs. per bag or sack. Of the
+total number, 500 of the bags, with an average
+weight of nearly 14 lbs. each, are for places within<!--[216.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+the Bristol district, and 300 of them are sent to
+London, with a total weight of 4 tons 33 lbs., or an
+average of 30 lbs. per bag or sack. The bags and
+sacks received in Bristol from all quarters are about
+equal in number and weight to those going outwards.
+Those from London weigh 6 tons 3 cwt.
+44 lbs.&mdash;an average of 51 lbs each.</p>
+
+<p>In order to simplify the disposal of the letters in
+London, they are not sent up unsorted from Bristol,
+but are divided into thirty-seven labelled bundles
+or separate bags, a bundle or bag being made up
+for each London district, for each great railway
+out of London, for several foreign divisions, for
+seventeen large provincial towns, and even in such
+detail as for Paternoster Row and Wood Street.</p>
+
+<p>It is not often that ships of war appear in Bristol
+waters. Indeed, the old inhabitant saith that it
+is fifty years since a warship anchored in the
+vicinity. The recent visit of a squadron calls
+therefore for a passing mention. Such an event
+took place during the British Association Meeting
+in September, 1898. The ironclads composing the
+squadron were H.M.S. <i>Nile</i>, <i>Thunderer</i>, <i>Trafalgar</i>,
+<i>Sans Pareil</i>, and the gunboat <i>Spanker</i>. The vessels<!--[217.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+anchored in Walton Bay, midway between Clevedon
+and Portishead. In these pages the interest attaching
+to them must necessarily be centred in their mail
+arrangements. Nearly a thousand letters a day
+were received at Clevedon for delivery to the fleet.
+The ships' postman from each ship came ashore by
+launch three times a day to fetch the letters.
+Launches were specially employed to fetch telegrams
+on signal being given by flag from the end of
+Clevedon Pier.</p>
+
+<p>A first aid class in connection with the St. John's
+Ambulance Society was formed by members of the
+Bristol Post Office staff in 1894, and there was an
+average attendance of twenty members, under the
+skilled direction of Dr. Bertram Rogers, of Clifton.
+Of the members who presented themselves for
+examination at the termination of the course of
+lectures, eight were successful, and were presented
+with certificates at the Society's Annual Meeting,
+held at the Merchant Venturers' Technical College;
+and in the following year they qualified for the
+Society's much-prized medallion of efficiency. At
+the conclusion of the course, Dr. Bertram Rogers
+was presented with an ivory-handled and silver-mounted<!--[218.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+malacca cane, subscribed for by members
+of the class. A writing-case was also presented to
+Mr. Blake for organising the class.</p>
+
+<p>The want of a gymnasium in or near the Post
+Office premises is greatly felt, but the staff do not
+neglect opportunities of improving their health in
+other ways. Cycle Clubs have been in active
+operation; the Cricket Clubs come off victorious
+in many matches; and the Electric Swimming Club
+has been attended with great success.<!--[219.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+<h5>CHRISTMAS AND ST. VALENTINE SEASONS.</h5>
+
+
+<p>A century ago the Christmas card was unthought
+of; whether it will be a thing of the
+past in the year 2000 cannot be foretold. The
+preparations made to meet the annually recurring
+pressure involve much forethought and considerable
+labour, and have to be in progress for a long time
+prior to Christmas. The time occupied in getting
+the instructions ready for the staff and making all
+arrangements incidental to the season is equivalent
+to more than the entire duty of a clerk for a whole
+year. Nothing whatever is left to chance; for
+unless the arrangements are organised in full
+detail, the work could not go on with the clock-like
+smoothness which is necessary to ensure a
+successful issue. At Christmas many people find a
+difficulty in deciding what to give their friends.
+The difficulty in the Post Office is how to convey
+Christmas gifts from friend to friend, from relative<!--[220.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+to relative, and the solution is found in the extensive
+preparations alluded to. They consist of many
+and various ways of affording means of rapid
+circulation and facilitating the traffic. Thus arrangements
+are made as regards London for direct
+bags to be made up at Bristol for each of the
+eight principal district offices, and separate bags
+for the inclusion of all the London sub-district
+letters throughout the day. At normal times such
+bags are made up only for the night mail and
+heaviest despatches. All foreign letters are sent
+in separate bags, so as to keep them apart on
+arrival in London from the inland Christmas
+missives. Then, in the reverse direction, London
+relieves the Bristol office by making a direct
+bag for the tributary office of Clifton by every
+mail, instead of by two mails only. To further
+facilitate matters, the parcels and letters for the
+environs of Bristol are kept separate from those
+for town delivery at all the large offices sending
+parcel baskets and mail bags here, and Bristol
+reciprocates by adopting the same plan for towns
+with which it exchanges mails. Even the expedient
+of putting specially-lettered neck-labels on the bags<!--[221.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+to indicate their contents is adopted. Where, ordinarily,
+bundles of letters are made up for particular
+towns, direct bags take their places, and where,
+ordinarily, letters are sent in bulk from many
+towns separate bundles are made up for each
+town: thus, letters from Bristol for Brighton,
+which are usually dealt with in London, are
+forwarded in a direct bag to pass through the
+metropolis unopened. The individual attendances
+of the ordinary staff are increased from eight hours
+to twelve, fourteen, and sixteen hours per day. All
+holidays are suspended for the time being, which
+enables some telegraphists to undertake postal duty;
+clerical labour is stopped, outside help is obtained,
+and altogether additional labour provided for to
+the extent of 50 per cent. over the normal staff.
+Although there is such a large augmentation
+numerically, the value of it cannot be judged in
+that way, as it takes a long time to make a
+really efficient postal officer, and the novices who
+are engaged, although willing enough, can do little
+more than undertake manual labour. Many army
+reserve men and army and navy pensioners are
+engaged to assist on the occasion. The weather is<!--[222.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+always a potent factor. The ordinary types of mail
+vehicles, contracted for by the Bristol Tramways
+Company, and always well turned out by Mr. G.
+Matthews, have to be supplemented at the Christmas
+season by the employment of large pair-horse
+trolleys, which, are used not only for the conveyance
+of mails between office and railway station, but are
+also sent round the town to pick up the heavy
+parcel collections from the numerous sub-offices.</p>
+
+<p>The great unpunctuality of the mail trains which
+invariably sets in early in the Christmas week
+causes no little inconvenience, particularly as
+regards the mails from the North of England,
+and the merchants are therefore not slow to avail
+themselves of the Post Office new system, under
+which, for a small fee, they can get their letters
+brought by delayed trains delivered by special
+messenger promptly on their arrival at the Head
+Post Office. The extra posting of letters and
+parcels for places abroad, intended for delivery
+about Christmas Day, begins to manifest itself
+early in November.</p>
+
+<p>A great number of people appear to think that
+Christmas cards and other printed matter may be<!--[223.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+sent by book-post in covers which are entirely
+closed, except for small slits cut at the sides.
+These packets are liable to charge at letter postage
+rates unless they are made up in such a manner as
+will admit of the contents being easily withdrawn for
+examination. To educate the public in the matter
+of full prepayment, it has become necessary for the
+Department to be particularly vigilant in surcharging
+the Christmas missives which contravene
+the regulations, and the Bristol clerks have the
+unpleasant task of raising an impost on letters
+during the Christmas season which infringe the
+Postmaster-General's not severe regulations. The
+custom of sending Christmas cards in open envelopes
+is increasing.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to telegrams, the public have
+recently received at the hands of His Grace the
+Duke of Norfolk the great benefit of being allowed
+to have their telegraphic messages delivered up to
+distances of three miles without payment of any
+charge whatever for porterage. In this neighbourhood,
+the concession has resulted in an increase
+in the number of messages for delivery over a mile,
+especially at Christmas. During the Christmas<!--[224.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+season there is always a decrease in the number
+of business telegrams, but that is in some measure
+made up for by a large number of telegrams being
+sent by the public who are travelling to keep
+holiday, and in this connection more use is made
+of the telegraph than the telephone service. The
+decrease in the volume of work admits of telegraphists
+aiding their brother officers on the postal
+side.</p>
+
+<p>The inflow of Christmas cards is pretty evenly
+dispersed over the earlier days of the season, but
+the great rush comes on the night of the 23rd and
+the morning of the 24th of the month. Letters up
+to four ounces in weight are now conveyed at the
+small cost to the public of a penny. So far as this
+city is concerned, letters and book-packets over two
+ounces in weight, which are now blended in one post,
+are quadrupled in number at the Christmas season.
+This increase in the letter packets has the effect of
+retarding the postmen in effecting their deliveries,
+inasmuch as they have to search in their bags for
+the packages which they cannot carry tied up in
+consecutive order. The trouble arising therefrom
+is somewhat mitigated, however, by the circumstance<!--[225.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+that the charged letters are less numerous than
+heretofore, owing to the large increase in the weight
+which is now carried for a penny. The Christmas
+season is departmentally regarded as consisting of
+the days from the 20th of the month to Christmas
+Day, the 25th, inclusive. From the most reliable
+calculations that the officials are capable of making,
+it would appear that during the Christmas period
+no fewer than 2,000,000 letters are dropped by the
+residents into the 500 receptacles dotted here and
+there over Bristol's large postal area. The letters
+distributed by Bristol's regular postmen, with their
+250 followers, are a million and a half, in each
+case about an extra week's work to be got through
+in three days.</p>
+
+<p>Some 20,000 letters and parcels find their way to
+the Bristol Returned Letter Office as the flotsam
+and jetsam of the Christmas postings. They consist
+of letters without addresses, letters addressed
+in undecipherable caligraphy, letters for people
+dead, gone away, and not known; parcels of poultry
+and game without name of sender or addressee.
+Certainly handwriting does not improve, hence all
+these failures and embarrassments to the Post Office.<!--[226.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>The articles for transmission by parcel post
+handed in at the head Post Office, branch, offices,
+sub-offices in town, suburbs, and villages, reach
+the total of 40,000, being about four times as
+numerous as at ordinary periods. The rural
+districts alone produce 8,000 parcels. The parcels
+delivered number 35,000, being treble ordinary
+numbers. Ten thousand of these parcels are
+delivered in the villages. Nearly a thousand large
+hampers of parcels are exchanged between London
+and Bristol, and of these some forty contain foreign
+parcels alone.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the vastly increased numbers,
+it becomes noticeable at Bristol, year by year, that
+there is a diminution of parcels conveyed by parcel
+post containing articles of good cheer: the geese,
+the fowls, and the game having decreased, plum
+pudding's, however, being as much in evidence as
+ever. The reduction in the parcel post rates which
+took place in 1897 has had a very marked effect
+upon the parcel post traffic, and the increase,
+particularly in the heavy weights, has been very
+great. On the other hand, the reduction in the
+rates of charge for the conveyance of post parcels<!--[227.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+has had the effect of bringing about a decrease in
+the number of parcels weighing under 2 lb.</p>
+
+<p>As showing that the postal deliveries at the
+Christmas season are arranged as well as the extraordinary
+circumstances will admit, and that the
+public on its part can appreciate the difficulties to
+be contended with, it may be worthy of mention
+that complaints of delay are rarely made.</p>
+
+<p>The Postmaster-General is not unmindful of his
+duty in providing sustenance for his legions at the
+busy season, and refreshments are supplied for the
+permanent staff without stint. There are no trams
+running on Christmas Day, so that the postmen with
+their heavy loads are much worse off than on ordinary
+days, when, with lighter loads, they can ride to and
+fro on the tramcars. There are some pleasing social
+features which are worthy of record. For instance,
+the ladies of the Clifton Letter Mission have for
+some years past sent "A Christmas Letter" and
+Christmas card to each of the 150 telegraph
+messengers employed in the Bristol district. The
+ladies who manage the society known as the Postal
+and Telegraph Christian Association invariably send
+to every postman in the Bristol district a sympathetic<!--[228.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+and seasonable letter, accompanied by a pretty
+Christmas card and the best of all good wishes.
+The staff of the Bristol Post Office usually pay the
+compliments of the Christmas season to their postal
+friends elsewhere in the form of a prettily-designed
+card.</p>
+
+<p>Christmas Day of 1898 is rendered memorable in
+postal annals from the circumstance that on that
+day the postage on letters to and from many of our
+colonies and foreign possessions was reduced from
+the modest sum of 2½d. per half-ounce to the still
+more modest sum of 1d. per half-ounce. Bristol
+has a not inconsiderable colonial and foreign correspondence.
+British India takes 550 letters, etc., on
+the average weekly; the Dominion of Canada, 450;
+Newfoundland, 110; and Gibraltar, 100; the other
+countries to which the reduced rate of postage has
+been applied take 500 in the week.</p>
+
+<p>One of the many changes that have taken place
+in the manners and customs of the people as
+affecting the Post Office is very noticeable as
+regards the observance of St. Valentine's Day.
+Thirty years ago the votaries of the patron saint,
+in their thousands, vied with each other, year after<!--[229.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+year, to honour his memory, and make the Post Office
+the medium of sending to every close friend some
+kind of love token, ranging from the artistic production
+at one guinea, down to the humble penny
+fly-leaf which contained the simple but expressive
+pleading, at the bottom of a neat woodcut, "O come,
+true love, be mine." Only too often, however, the
+day was made the occasion to strike a blow at the
+fickle lover by means of some gross caricature.
+On the eve of St. Valentine the energies of the staff,
+which was limited as compared with now, were
+formerly greatly taxed to get rid of the enormous
+piles of packets which flooded the various receptacles
+in the city. All this is, however, changed;
+the occasion now passes by almost unnoticed in the
+sorting office and by the postmen.<!--[230.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+<h5>PUBLIC OFFICE: ITS BUSINESS&mdash;THE SAVINGS BANK&mdash;PUBLIC
+COMMUNICATIONS.</h5>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/i231.jpg" width="500" height="310" alt="The Public Hall, Bristol.
+From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol." title="The Public Hall, Bristol.
+From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol." />
+<span class="caption">The Public Hall, Bristol.</span><br />
+<i style='font-size: small'>From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>The public office of the Bristol Post Office is
+very commodious (50 ft. by 44 ft.), and affords
+ample counter accommodation to the citizens for
+properly conducting their Post Office business. It
+is markedly superior as regards size and fitting-up
+to almost any other provincial office, and indeed its
+equal in those respects is scarcely to be found in
+all London. In contrast to the spacious public
+hall of the Bristol Post Office and the civility
+of its clerks, the writer's first impressions of the
+postal service of his country were by no means of
+a pleasant character. When quite a small child,
+he was entrusted by his mother with the mission of
+conveying a small rose-coloured and delicately-perfumed
+letter to the Post Office in a world-famed
+Warwickshire town&mdash;an errand of which he was
+"no end" proud. Timidly he knocked at a little
+wicket in the window of the house to which he<!--[233.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+<!--[232.png]-->
+was directed. Almost immediately the wicket was
+thrown open, and a very red visage appeared.
+"What do you want?" "Will you put a stamp
+on this letter, sir, please?" "No! What the
+devil do you mean by bringing letters like this?
+'Tisn't big enough. It'll get lost in some hole or
+corner." Frightened at this "Giant Grim," a
+hasty retreat was made, and the irascible old postmaster
+was left to do as he liked with letter and
+penny.</p>
+
+<p>The penny combined postage and Inland Revenue
+stamp was introduced in 1881. A new series of
+postage stamps was issued in 1884, and the present
+series in January, 1887.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1833 the value of the postage
+stamps obtained from London for distribution
+in the Bristol district was &pound;33,844; in 1862 it
+had only grown to &pound;35,720; but in 1898 it
+had reached the more prodigious proportions of
+&pound;171,000, of which sum those stamps of the halfpenny
+denomination were of the value of &pound;30,700,
+and in number 14,735,000; and the penny stamps
+in value &pound;85,775 and in number 20,586,000.
+Stamps of other denominations were issued<!--[234.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+thus:&mdash;1½d., 207,360; 2d., 205,920; 2½d., 207,000;
+3d., 364,320; 4d., 277,680; 4½d., 16,000; 5d.,
+147,120; 6d., 534,600; 9d., 51,200; 10d., 27,840;
+1s., 82,320; 2s. 6d., 2,800; 5s., 2,588; 10s.,
+688; 20s., 550 and &pound;5, 4. Post-cards, embossed
+envelopes, newspaper wrappers, telegraph forms
+and other articles of the kind were of the value of
+&pound;14,334. At the earlier period the postmaster of
+the day was allowed 1 per cent. on the value
+of the stamps sold, in addition to his salary. It is
+not so now!</p>
+
+<p>Under the system inaugurated in 1880 the postal
+orders issued and paid at the Bristol public office
+counter number nearly half a million in the year.
+The money orders paid at the counter preponderate
+over those issued&mdash;the amounts respectively being
+&pound;237,000 and &pound;34,000. These sums include the
+amounts received in respect of telegraph money
+orders&mdash;the Department's new departure of 1890.
+The Government insurance and annuity business
+commenced by the Post Office in 1865 is making
+progress in Bristol, and the same may be said
+of the system started in 1880 of investments in
+Government stock through Post Office medium.<!--[235.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>The first Post Office Savings Bank in the district
+was established at the Clifton Branch Post Office on
+the 16th September, 1861, the year in which savings
+bank business was commenced throughout the
+country generally. Several accounts were opened
+on that day, and the amount deposited was &pound;35 4s.
+A similar institution was opened in the city in March,
+1862, at the Money Order Office, then located in the
+corner shop in Albion Chambers, Small Street,
+opposite the present Head Post Office. From such
+small beginnings a vast savings bank business has
+grown up. The sum standing to the credit of
+depositors in the Post Office Savings Bank in the
+Bristol postal area at the end of 1895, when the last
+account was published, was nearly &pound;2,000,000,
+deposited by some 100,000 separate individuals.
+The deposits made at the head office in Small Street
+reached close upon &pound;400,000, and the other part of
+the amount is made up thus: Gloucestershire side&mdash;Town
+Post Offices, &pound;659,085; rural Post Offices,
+&pound;192,934. Somersetshire side&mdash;Town Post Offices,
+&pound;215,295; rural Post Offices, &pound;91,944. The estimated
+amount due to depositors in the Post Office Savings
+Banks throughout the whole country on the 21st<!--[236.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+December, 1898, was &pound;123,155,000, and the amount
+due to trustees of Savings Banks on November 20th,
+1898,&mdash;the latest date on which the figures were
+made up&mdash;was &pound;50,634,655. The Bristol Savings
+Bank was closed in 1888, and its 12,814 accounts
+were transferred to the Post Office Savings Bank.
+The amount of money involved was a little over
+half a million.</p>
+
+<p>During Mr. Fawcett's administration at the Post
+Office, thrift on the part of the nation was encouraged
+in every possible way. Then was inaugurated the
+now familiar system for facilitating the placing of
+small sums in the Post Office Savings Bank by
+means of postage stamps affixed to a Post Office
+form as penny after penny is saved until an amount
+of one shilling is reached, the minimum for a Post
+Office Savings Bank deposit.</p>
+
+<p>A case occurred at a Bristol Post Office fifteen
+years since, in which a young servant girl, in her
+desire to be thrifty under the system alluded to,
+craftily obtained the key of the letter box from
+the secret place in which the sub-postmaster kept
+it, and abstracted a number of circular letters on
+School Board business, and took off the stamps for<!--[237.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+attachment to the Savings Bank slips. She was
+sentenced to a term of imprisonment, which, on
+account of her youth, was limited to six months.</p>
+
+<p>Amusing incidents sometimes occur to break the
+monotony of counter work. For instance, a woman
+applied for a postal order, and when it was handed
+to her, the clerk, acting upon the official instructions,
+recommended the good lady to take the number
+before sending the order away. A few days afterwards
+she appeared at the Post Office with the order
+and complained that payment had been refused
+because the order had been mutilated. The clerk
+on examining the order found that the direction to
+"take the number of the order" had been acted on
+literally. The number had been carefully cut out,
+and retained in the possession of the applicant. It
+was some time before she could be made to realize
+her mistake. In another instance early one fine
+autumn morn a young couple presented themselves
+at the public office of the Bristol Post Office and
+begged in earnest language that they might be
+supplied with a marriage license. The request could
+not, of course, be complied with, but the applicants,
+much to their satisfaction, were informed where they<!--[238.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+could obtain the needed document. On another
+occasion some money was observed on the counter,
+and on the very small child near it being asked
+what was required, "Two ounces of tea and a
+pound of sugar" were at once demanded. This
+mistake no doubt arose from the fact that the
+business carried on in the late Post Office building
+in Exchange Avenue is that of a tea dealer. It
+is a rule of the Service that letters should not be
+delivered from the <i>Poste Restante</i> except to the
+actual addressees or to other persons bearing
+authority to receive the letters on behalf of the
+addressees. A request was made at the Bristol Head
+Post Office for the delivery of letters to a person
+other than the addressee, which person could not
+produce the necessary authority to act as recipient.
+The excuse given for non-production of authority
+was that the addressee was asleep. The enquirer
+having been advised to get authority when the
+addressee awoke, rather astonished the counter clerk
+by saying that such awaking would not take place
+until Saturday, the day of application being
+Tuesday. It transpired that the application was
+made in respect of letters for a person who was<!--[239.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+undergoing a state of hypnotism at a Bristol music
+hall. The touching incident occurred at the Bristol
+Post Office of a poor woman&mdash;pressing want having
+come upon her at last&mdash;who had to withdraw a
+shilling which she had thirty years previously
+deposited in a trustee savings bank which was
+taken over by the Post Office. She had to receive
+one penny by way of interest for the use of her
+mite for thirty years. Some years since a collector
+of old issues of crown-pieces presented seventy of
+such coins, in a good state of preservation, at the
+Bristol Post Office counter as a Savings Bank deposit.
+The depositor, after taking the trouble to accumulate
+these old coins, had come to the conclusion that an
+annual interest of eight shillings and sixpence would
+be more useful to him than an occasional inspection
+of the coins. Few people know so little about Post
+Office matters as an individual from over the Severn
+who recently asked for a postage stamp. "Do you
+want a penny or a halfpenny stamp?" asked the
+clerk. "I want a South Wales stamp," was the
+reply of Taffy. Then the surprise of the counter
+officer must have been great when, on counting up
+his money, he found that on one of the shillings<!--[240.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+the legend "Baby" boldly appeared impressed
+where the Queen's head is usually found, the coin
+having evidently been used as a brooch.</p>
+
+<p>The Department, in communicating with the
+public, prescribes that its officers should subscribe
+themselves as the public's most obedient servants,
+and on some of the printed forms which have to
+be returned in answer to queries raised by the
+Department the same style is adopted for the
+public to use. One dignified gentleman returned
+his form, from which he had erased "Your
+obedient servant" and substituted "Yours respectfully,"
+adding a marginal note to the effect that
+he was not the servant of the Department, but that
+the Department was his servant.</p>
+
+<p>The postmaster of Bristol is addressed by the
+public in various ways, as for instance: "Postmaster
+General," "General Postmaster," "Bristol
+Postmaster," "H.M. Chief Postmaster," "To the
+Postmaster in State, Small Street, Bristol," "Head
+Post-Master and Surveyor of the Bristol District,"
+"Head Master, Post Office," "Post Office Master,"
+"Postmaster-in-General," "Master General, Post-Office,"
+"Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, Esq., Post M.G.," "Mr. &mdash;&mdash;,<!--[241.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+Esq., Post Office General," "To the Reverend Sir
+Postmaster, Bristol, England."</p>
+
+<p>It is astonishing how many Foreigners and
+Colonists apply to the Bristol Post Office respecting
+their relations, or for information as regards trading
+matters. The former questions are sometimes
+answered, but the latter are handed over to the
+courteous secretary of the Chamber of Commerce
+to deal with.</p>
+
+<p>Very unusual was the circumstance of the receipt
+at the Bristol Post Office in 1895, anonymously, of
+a sum of ten shillings in postage stamps as conscience
+money, and, oddly enough, the next day
+threepence in stamps was received in the same
+anonymous manner and for the same purpose.
+These two instances were the first and the last.</p>
+
+<p>The difference between romance and fact is
+exemplified by an article which appeared in a
+monthly magazine as follows, viz.:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class='Title'><br />
+"A PUBLIC SERVANT."<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Her Majesty possesses one more faithful public
+servant than she is aware of, though its name does
+not transpire in the list of the Ministry. Every<!--[242.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+night at the General Post Office, Bristol, a spirited
+mare attached to the red mail-cart is brought, at a
+quarter before midnight, to fetch the bags of letters,
+&amp;c. She stands perfectly still, waiting while the
+mails are sealed and tossed one by one into the
+vehicle. At the five minutes before twelve, however,
+should all not be ready for departure, her
+driver sings out 'Any more for the down train?' by
+way of hurrying the officials. No sooner does the
+mare hear those words than she begins to dance
+and curvet, showing in every possible way her
+anxiety to start and her sense of the importance of
+her duties. But if by any chance the first stroke of
+midnight should sound before they are ready to
+proceed to the station, she takes matters into her
+own hands, and nothing will then hold her in.
+Those who have to do with this clever and beautiful
+creature are very proud of her, on account of
+the example she sets of punctuality and attention
+to the affairs of the nation."</p>
+
+<p>The real facts on which this incident is founded
+were, that the horse (not mare) remained in the
+Post Office yard quietly from 11.10 p.m. until<!--[243.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+midnight on one particular night only, and not
+generally, and when the loading of the van commenced
+the horse became restive, the final slamming
+of the van doors causing it to start off for the street.
+In consequence of a repetition of this restlessness on
+another night, and "kicking-in" the front of the
+van, the horse was taken off the Royal Mail
+Service.<!--[244.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+<h5>TELEGRAPHS, TELEPHONES, EXPRESS DELIVERY.</h5>
+
+
+<p>The Saxon King, Edmund I., doubtless never
+conceived, when he held court (<span class="smcap">A.D.</span> 940-946)
+at his palace in the village of Pucklechurch, seven
+miles from Bristol, that in generations to come
+there would exist, as there does now, a telegraph
+office within a few yards of the site of his castle,
+whence a question could be wired to the ends of
+the earth, and a reply obtained in the short space
+of a few hours. Probably at that remote period
+a journey from Pucklechurch to the north of
+Scotland would have been considered as great an
+achievement as that in recent days of Dr. Nansen
+in his endeavour to get to the North Pole.</p>
+
+<p>The first actual working telegraph was erected
+in 1838 between Paddington and West Drayton on
+the Great Western Railway, and in the following
+year Wheatstone and Cook constructed a telegraph
+line from Paddington to Slough. Mr. Brunel then<!--[245.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+wished to extend the line to this city, but the
+shareholders would not support him to that extent.
+In 1852, however, the Great Western
+Railway Board had the line constructed through
+to Bristol. By means of it messages could, at that
+later date, be forwarded to and from most parts
+of the kingdom from the office at the Bristol
+Railway Station. Arrangements were put in progress
+for extending the wires into the centre of
+the city, in order that greater facilities might be
+afforded to those parties who might wish to
+avail themselves of the means of inter-communication,
+and before the end of the year the wires
+were laid from the railway station to the Commercial
+Rooms, and subsequently three telegraph offices
+were opened in the city, viz.: the Electric and
+International, on the Exchange; the Magnetic, in
+Exchange Avenue; and the United Kingdom, in
+Corn Street. A telegraph line was laid to Shirehampton,
+and the committee of the Commercial
+Rooms subscribed &pound;30 a year towards its maintenance.</p>
+
+<p>It is recorded that in 1859 the firm of Messrs.
+W. D. and H. O. Wills, tobacconists and snuff<!--[246.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+manufacturers of this city, laid down an electric
+telegraph wire between their warehouse in Maryport
+Street and their manufactory in Redcliff Street,
+whereby the partners and employ&eacute;s, although
+engaged in different parts of the city, were enabled
+to converse with each other as readily as if occupying
+the same counting-house. The wire was used
+solely for their own business.</p>
+
+<p>In 1862 a turnpike road telegraph was spoken
+of as being in course of construction between
+Bristol and Birmingham.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. James Robertson, the senior assistant superintendent
+o&pound; the Bristol Telegraph Office, during
+his forty-two years' service, thirteen of which were
+passed in the employment of the Electric and
+International Telegraph Company, has had many
+experiences. He has culled from his "ancient
+history" the fact that the amount of telegraph
+business transacted by the E. and I. T. Co. at
+Falmouth, Plymouth, Bristol, and London (Lothbury,
+head office) on March 10th, 1858, at the
+respective times of day stated, was:&mdash;Falmouth,
+8 messages, handed in by 10.20 a.m.; Plymouth
+at 10.36 had managed to transmit 7; Bristol, at<!--[247.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+noon, 39; and Lothbury had received 116 by 12.17
+p.m. Plymouth transmitted for Falmouth, and
+Bristol for Plymouth. Bain's chemical recorder
+was the system used on the Falmouth wire, the
+double needle on the Plymouth and Bristol, and
+"Bains" and needles on Bristol-London circuits.
+The average delay on messages at Plymouth was
+eighty-three minutes and at Bristol fourteen minutes.
+The charge at the time from Falmouth to London
+was four shillings for twenty words, addresses
+free. The present proprietor of <i>Lloyd's Newspaper</i>,
+Mr. Thomas Catling, records an incident in which
+Mr. Robertson was concerned. Mr. Catling was
+the only London newspaper reporter who visited
+Windsor on the eventful night when the deeply
+lamented Prince Consort breathed his last on
+14th December, 1861. On reaching Windsor by
+the last train from London he learned that His
+Royal Highness had passed away about twenty
+minutes previously. Having obtained at the Castle
+particulars of the sad event, Mr. Catling hunted
+out the residence of the clerk of the Electric and
+International Telegraph Company. On ringing him
+up, the clerk pleaded that before going to bed he<!--[248.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+had been taking gruel and hot water to get rid
+of a bad cold. He, however, got up and proceeded
+with Mr. Catling to the telegraph office in High
+Street, whence intelligence was wired to London.
+Mr. Catling preserved the receipt of that message
+as a souvenir of the occasion. Mr. Robertson
+was the telegraph clerk who arose from his bed
+to perform the service in the dead of night.</p>
+
+<p>On the transfer of the telegraph business from
+the companies to the State early in 1870, the
+Post Office, Bristol, engaged sixteen clerks from
+the Electric and International Telegraph Company,
+five from the United Kingdom Company, and six
+from the Magnetic Company. Additional clerks
+were employed by the Post Office as soon as the
+volume of work could be gauged, but in the meantime
+the transferred clerks had to do practically
+double duty. The officials taken over from the
+companies were located in the Small Street Post
+Office, but it was not until January, 1872, that
+room could be found there for the entire staff,
+which had then grown to be ninety clerks and fifty
+messengers. The telegraphic system soon after the
+Government took to it was extended in this district<!--[249.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+to twenty of the principal villages. In the first year
+of Post Office working there were 450,000 messages
+dealt with here, and now the yearly number is
+3,500,000. The sixpenny telegram was introduced
+in 1885. The local telegraph service now has a
+staff consisting of a superintendent, 23 superintending
+officers, 140 male and 44 female telegraphists,
+eight telephonists, and 155 telegraph messengers.
+Telegrams are delivered from the head office, two
+branch offices, fifteen town sub-offices, forty rural
+sub-offices, and four railway stations. The head
+office has 600,000 messages delivered from it
+annually, the branch and town sub-offices 220,000,
+and the rural districts 74,000. Of the latter
+(74,000), about 8,000 are delivered at distances of
+from one to three miles, and 350 at distances over
+three miles. After 8.0 p.m. all the messages in
+the town area are delivered from the head office.
+The Duke of Norfolk's 1897 concession of free
+delivery of telegrams for all distances under three
+miles has been appreciated by all those concerned.</p>
+
+<p>The telegraph gallery has direct telegraphic
+connection with the undermentioned towns: Bath,
+Birmingham, Bridgwater, Cardiff, Cheltenham,<!--[250.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+Chippenham, Clevedon, Cork, Exeter, Glasgow,
+Gloucester, Guernsey, Jersey, Leeds, Liverpool,
+London, Manchester, Newport (Mon.), Oxford,
+Plymouth, Reading, Southampton, Swansea,
+Swindon, Taunton, and Weston-super-Mare, and
+thirty-two smaller towns.</p>
+
+<p>Bristol plays a not unimportant part in the Post
+Office telephone trunk line system, commenced in
+1896. It has direct trunk lines to Bath, Birmingham,
+Cardiff, Exeter, Gloucester, London, Newport,
+Sharpness, Taunton, and Weston-super-Mare. The
+conversations held by the public through the
+medium of these lines number 4,000 weekly.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/i251.jpg" width="500" height="314" alt="The Telegraph Instrument Room, Bristol Post Office.
+From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol." title="The Telegraph Instrument Room, Bristol Post Office.
+From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol." />
+<span class="caption">The Telegraph Instrument Room, Bristol Post Office.</span><br />
+<i style='font-size: small'>From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>The well-ventilated and well-lighted telegraph
+instrument room is on the upper floor, and extends
+from end to end of the building. In it there are
+102 telegraph instruments of various kinds in use,
+viz.: 5 A.B.C.'s, 19 double-plate sounders, 30
+sounders, 28 duplexes, 5 quadruplexes, 5 Wheatstone
+sets, 7 repeaters or relays, 2 concentrators
+and 1 hexode. Divested of technicalities, it may be
+said that telegraphing on the A.B.C. instruments
+is effected by alphabetic manipulative keys, which
+are depressed by the fingers of the left hand of the<!--[253.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+<!--[252.png]-->
+sender at the same time that a handle is turned
+with the right hand, and a corresponding effect is
+produced on the dial plate of the receiver. The
+double-plate sounder is read by sound from two
+small metal hands striking right and left against
+two pieces of metal. In sending, the working is
+by means of keys manipulated by the hand. The
+sending upon the sounder instrument, which is that
+chiefly used, is done by a small key with handle
+being depressed and released according to the dots
+and dashes of the Morse alphabet. The signals by
+which messages are received and read by the ear
+are produced by a bar of soft iron striking upon a
+steel point placed between two coils of wire. With
+the A.B.C., double-plate sounder, and sounder, only
+one message can be sent or received on the wire at
+one time; but the duplex sounder instruments are so
+constructed that two messages can be sent on the
+wire&mdash;one in each direction&mdash;at the same time.
+Double-current duplex instruments are in use for
+telegraphing to busy towns such as Plymouth,
+Exeter, Cardiff, Swansea, &amp;c., &amp;c. The quadruplex
+consists of two duplex sets upon one wire. Upon
+these circuits two distinct messages may be sent<!--[254.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+simultaneously from each end. The hexode has six
+instruments at each end of a single wire, enabling
+twelve clerks to operate at the same time&mdash;six at
+each end,&mdash;and thus admits of a single wire doing
+so much work as six wires worked with the ordinary
+sounder instrument.</p>
+
+<p>At times of pressure when race meetings are
+going on, or during the cricket and football seasons,
+the ordinary methods of working are supplemented
+by extraordinary means, thus: the duplex working
+between Bristol and Manchester is augmented by
+Manchester connecting there a Bristol wire with a
+Newcastle wire: Newcastle in like manner further
+connecting the line with Glasgow, Glasgow with
+Edinburgh, Edinburgh with Dundee, and Dundee
+with Aberdeen. Then at the Bristol end, instead
+of working by means of the ordinary keys, Wheatstone
+working is resorted to, viz.: the messages
+instead of being "keyed" are "punched," the
+punching process being performed by means of
+iron punching sticks upon an apparatus called the
+"perforator." The sticks are rapidly worked by
+skilful operators upon three steel keys, which, when
+struck, mechanically draw a strip of white paper tape,<!--[255.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+at the same time perforating holes which indicate
+signs in accordance with the Morse alphabet system.
+These slips thus "punched"&mdash;which, by-the-by,
+very much resemble the perforated slips used in
+connection with the organette instrument&mdash;are
+passed through a Wheatstone "transmitter," and
+buzzed through so rapidly that 400 or 500 words
+can be sent in a minute. The signals are simultaneously
+reproduced upon blue slips in the form
+of dots and dashes at Manchester, at Newcastle,
+at Glasgow, at Edinburgh, at Dundee, and at
+Aberdeen. The message recorded on the slips is
+broken off at about every hundred words to form
+a "press" page at the receiving offices for writing
+up by the telegraphists, a large number of whom
+can be employed on the work at the same time.
+When this process is resorted to the battery power
+for the wire has to be greatly increased. The
+repeater instruments are worked in like manner,
+except that the system is permanent instead of
+occasional. The concentrator is a recent invention,
+and is used for the purpose of economising
+force and apparatus, and of minimising delay and
+table space. By its means the wires for eighteen<!--[256.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+to twenty offices, which use the same form of
+telegraphic instrument, are led into a special
+switch-board, and each wire as it is required is
+"switched" through to a telegraph instrument,
+at which a clerk is ready to send or receive the
+message. Thus the telegraphist is "fed" by the
+operator at the concentrator, and has to send a
+message to any one of the thirty towns instead of,
+under ordinary working, to only three or four towns.</p>
+
+<p>In place of over 700 batteries with 3,500 cells of
+the Bichromate, Daniel and Leclanche type in use at
+the Bristol telegraph office for many years, a system
+of accumulators or storage batteries has been
+brought into operation. The power for charging
+the accumulators is generated on the spot by a
+Crossley's gas engine driving a dynamo. The
+accumulators number 250, and each has seven
+divisions. The hexode instrument between Bristol
+and London requires a voltage of 400 dry cells.
+There are two complete sets of accumulators, each
+with separate connecting wires to the instrument
+room. One set is in use at a time. The system
+of accumulators has been introduced for the
+purposes of economy and saving of space.<!--[257.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>It may be interesting to the uninitiated to learn
+that in telegraphy the earth plays the part
+of a return wire; thus the circuit between Bristol
+and Birmingham is rendered complete by earth.
+The wires connected with the two towns indicated
+are brought into the test boxes at the respective
+places, and there connected to a single wire at
+each town which finds earth by means of a zinc
+plate buried some twelve feet in the soil near or
+under the Post Office buildings.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally when people have been out for a
+drive or a cycle ride, and their eyes have been
+delighted with the grand scenery to be found
+around Bristol, they look, as they journey homewards,
+to the Government poles and to the many
+wires therefrom suspended, and wonder which are
+telegraph wires, which are telephone wires, where
+they all lead to, and between what points messages
+are sent and conversations held. Such travellers
+returning to Bristol by way of Almondsbury would
+see the wires on the one side (telegraphs), which run
+from Bristol to Falfield, Newport, Cardiff, Swansea,
+Gloucester, Liverpool; London to Swansea, Newport,
+and Cardiff; Birmingham to Exeter; Plymouth to<!--[258.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+Liverpool; and (telephones) Bristol to Birmingham,
+Gloucester, Cardiff; and on the other side of the
+road (telephones) Horfield, Fylton, Almondsbury,
+Newport, Cardiff, Gloucester and Birmingham. In
+some instances there are two or three wires for the
+same place. The telegraph, and telephone wires
+cross and recross each other at frequent intervals
+along the road, and the whole sets of wires cross
+from side to side of the road between Fylton and
+Almondsbury.</p>
+
+<p>Alternative routes for the wires are adopted where
+practicable, so that in case of a break-down on one
+line communication may be kept up on the other.</p>
+
+<p>By way of illustration of such alternate routes, it
+may be mentioned that the two wires from the Head
+Post Office in Small Street for Swansea run underground
+to Stapleton Road, at which point they are
+brought above ground and diverge, one running to
+Wee Lane, thence to Ashley Hill, Horfield, Almondsbury,
+Alveston Ship, Falfield and Berkeley, up to
+the Severn Bridge; and the other branching off at
+the end of Stapleton Road, and carried along the
+Fishponds and Chipping Sodbury roads nearly to
+Yate, and down the Tortworth road to just beyond<!--[259.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+Falfield, where it joins the other Swansea and South
+Wales wires, and passes over the Severn Bridge into
+Wales.</p>
+
+<p>The telegraph and telephone wires in this district
+are chiefly erected and maintained by soldiers of the
+Royal Engineers. Sixteen military telegraphists,
+members of the Royal Engineers, are attached to the
+Bristol Post Office, and kept in training for telegraph
+service with the army. Twelve of them are now&mdash;November,
+1899&mdash;in South Africa on active service,
+in connection with the troubles in the Transvaal.</p>
+
+<p>In the great hurricane which occurred in January,
+1899, the telephone and telegraph wires radiating
+from Bristol were blown down in all directions. In
+consequence Bristol was entirely cut off from direct
+telephonic communication with Birmingham for 21
+hours, and had only one wire instead of two for 9¼
+hours; from Bath for 18 hours, and had only one
+wire instead of two for 5½ hours; from Cardiff for
+18 hours, and had only two wires instead of three
+for 10½ hours; from Weston-super-Mare entirely
+for 24½ hours; from Taunton for 28½ hours; from
+Exeter for 27 hours; from Sharpness for 26 hours.
+There was only one wire instead of two to Gloucester<!--[260.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+for 26¼ hours, to London for 6 hours, and to Newport
+for 20¾ hours.</p>
+
+<p>The trunk telephone lines were more or less
+interrupted for a week, caused by the working
+parties engaged on repairs.</p>
+
+<p>The telegraph wires for the counties of Gloucester,
+Somerset, Monmouth, Warwick, Shropshire, Worcester,
+Wilts, Devon, Cornwall and Lancashire were
+those chiefly deranged.</p>
+
+<p>It is believed that there is only one telegraph
+cable in the Bristol district, and that cable does not
+belong to the Postmaster-General. It crosses the
+river Avon at a point adjacent to Pill and Shirehampton,
+and was used by the Commercial Rooms
+in connection with reports of the arrival of vessels.
+Up to the time of its introduction, as already stated,
+"warners" were employed. The last of the old
+running "warners" were Gerrish and Case. These
+men lived at Pill, and on hearing news from pilots-men
+of the arrival of a ship in the Bristol Channel
+they started off on foot to Bristol and <i>warned</i> the
+merchants and wives of sailors of the vessel's arrival
+in the Channel, getting, of course, fees for their
+trouble,&mdash;a guinea from the merchants, and so on,<!--[261.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+down to the shillings of the sailors' wives,&mdash;and fifty
+years ago these fees were willingly paid, and the
+heavy postages too. The runners were men of some
+little mark.</p>
+
+<p>The Post Office at Avonmouth, a Bristol sub-office,
+is much used for telegraph purposes by persons on
+board vessels passing up and down the Kingroad in
+the Bristol Channel. The Bristol Corporation placed
+outside the port a large white notice board with
+"<span class="smcap">TELEGRAPH OFFICE</span>" painted upon it in black letters,
+to attract the attention of mariners. The messages
+are chiefly received from vessels with cargoes consigned
+to Sharpness, which in neap tides have often
+to lie in the roads for days.</p>
+
+<p>Telegrams for vessels lying in Kingroad are often
+taken out by boat at midnight or in the early hours
+of the morning. This is often in consequence of
+the tide not serving, or being too strong for the
+boatman to go out at seasonable hours.</p>
+
+<p>Lundy Island, in the Bristol Channel, is connected
+with the mainland by a submarine cable, which is
+considered to be one of the most perfect of its kind.
+Letters for Lundy, from Bristol and elsewhere, are
+carried across by boat from Instow once a week. The<!--[262.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+nearer small islands of Flat Holm and Steep Holm
+have cable telephonic communication with Weston-super-Mare.
+The telephone, which is carried into
+the Weston Post Office, is rented by the War Office
+Authorities, who allow the islanders the use of it.
+Letters from Bristol for the Flat Holm are conveyed
+by way of Cardiff. The island is rented from the
+Cardiff Corporation by a farmer who resides upon it.
+His son, who lives in Cardiff, daily visits the island
+in a yacht, and conveys the letters for the Trinity
+House officials and residents. For the Steep Holm,
+Bristol letters are sent from Weston-super-Mare; the
+services to the island being tri-weekly&mdash;Tuesday,
+Thursday and Saturday,&mdash;and are performed by a
+contractor, who goes across on behalf of the War
+Office. The Steep Holm is inhabited by military
+men only. In a manuscript of 30th March, 1825,
+it is described as "Stipe Holme." One of the first
+serious efforts in connection with the plan of telegraphing
+through space without connecting wires
+was conducted between the diminutive island of
+Flat Holm and the shore, a distance of about five
+miles; and between Penarth and Brean Down, a
+distance of nine miles. An interesting illustration<!--[263.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+of the system of wireless telegraphy was given,
+under the direction of Mr. W. H. Preece, C.B.,
+F.R.S. (now Sir W. H. Preece, K.C.B., F.R.S.),
+at the Clifton College conversazione, held in honour
+of the learned British Associates during the meeting
+of the Association at Bristol in 1898.</p>
+
+<p>The telegraph staff have seldom had their skill
+and smartness more thoroughly tested than on the
+memorable Monday evening in February, 1893,
+when press messages of great length relating to the
+introduction of the Home Rule Bill were sent over
+the wires. Twenty minutes after Mr. Gladstone
+rose to speak in the House of Commons the first
+instalment of the special summary of his speech
+reached this city. The conclusion of the summary
+was received at two minutes to 7. The verbatim
+report commenced to arrive at 4.49, and the last
+instalment reached the Bristol Office at 8 o'clock.
+The total number of words in the messages sent to
+Bristol was nearly 40,000.</p>
+
+<p>During the early potato season telegraphing is
+very brisk with Jersey. Bristol is the only large
+office besides London which has direct communication
+with the island. Some idea may be gathered<!--[264.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+of the extra labour entailed on the telegraph service
+from the fact that in the month of June, 1899, no
+fewer than 20,904 telegrams passed between Bristol
+and Jersey, the normal number being only 5,800
+monthly. Five or six telegraph operators are
+usually sent during the season to Jersey from
+Bristol.</p>
+
+<p>In Bristol about 700 firms use abbreviated
+telegraphic addresses.</p>
+
+<p>The telegraph money order system, started in
+1889, is exhibiting marvellous developments in the
+local service.</p>
+
+<p>The express letter delivery service, which came
+into operation in 1891, is very useful to the public.
+By means of this agency the Post Office distributes
+by express messenger 300,000 letters and parcels
+annually. Of that number Bristol contributes
+7,000 services. Bicycles and tricycles are now
+delivered for the public from any telegraph office
+in Bristol and district by special messenger at a fee
+of 3d. per mile, without any charge for weight.
+The messengers are not permitted to ride upon the
+cycles, except by the permission of the senders,
+but will wheel them up to a distance of three miles.<!--[265.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>An express delivery messenger has been used,
+ere now, for the convoy of a traveller from point
+to point in a town unknown to him or her. The
+Post Office is often required to assist even more
+closely in the domestic relations of life. Recently a
+gentleman from America wrote to the Clifton Post
+Office to enquire whether a certain near relative
+of his could be found, as he was very anxious to
+see her before return to America. He enclosed a
+shilling stamp for a reply by telegraph, and begged
+for urgency. The relative was found and her
+address given. The applicant's ardour to see his
+relative cooled, or his stay in the country was
+abridged, for instead of paying the proposed visit,
+he begged the Post Office officials to expend five
+shillings, which he sent, in the purchase of cut
+roses for his relative. Of course, this was outside the
+round of Post Office duties, but the clerks obligingly
+attended to it, with the aid of a telegraph
+messenger who was off duty at the moment.</p>
+
+<p>Occasional mistakes are not to be wondered at
+when people write illegibly. Through the improper
+formation of the capital letter, D, in the proper
+name Dyster, has in telegraphing been turned into<!--[266.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+O, and the name made Oyster, with the result of
+misdelivery of the telegram to a firm of fishmongers
+having "Oyster" as an abbreviated address. It
+must have been extremely painful to an anxious
+parent to receive a telegram summoning him to a
+nursing home far distant, in terms that his "sow
+was worse," and begging him to come at once;
+the telegraphist having made the slight mistake of
+transcribing "w" for "n." The gentleman who sent
+a telegram to his town house in the West End of
+London asking that his covert coat might be
+forwarded to him was no doubt considerably
+astonished when his butler returned the telegram
+to him by post asking for an explanation, and
+he found that the text of it was "Pigs, <sup>9</sup>&frasl;<sub>3</sub>, <sup>8</sup>&frasl;<sub>9</sub>,
+and 8/-." The error was occasioned in connection
+with the use of multiple addresses for a bacon-trading
+firm's telegrams. In another instance a
+curious complication resulted through imperfect
+spacing on the part of the signalling telegraphist,
+thus:&mdash;A telegram written by the sender as "To
+----, Fore St., Northam, Bideford. Be in
+attendance Public Offices," was transcribed thus:&mdash;"To &mdash;&mdash; forest,
+Northam, Bideford. Be in at<!--[267.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+ten dance Public Offices," and, owing to the
+number of words counting the same as the number
+signalled, the inaccuracy was not discovered until
+a repetition had been obtained from the office of
+origin on application of the addressee. It was
+printed in a Midland newspaper that at the
+presentation of a sword of honour to the Sirdar
+the Common Councilmen attended in their "margarine
+gowns," and, of course, the error of using
+"margarine" for "mazarine" was put down to
+the carelessness of the telegraph clerk. A telegram
+was sent indicating arrival at 8 Mostyn Crescent,
+in a favourite North Wales town. At one stage
+in transmission "Mostyn" became converted into
+"mostly," and at the next office of transmission
+"Crescent" became "pleasant," and the telegram
+when delivered read "Arrived 8 mostly pleasant."
+The Prime Minister who had informed his audience
+that "there was no prospect of an immediate
+general election, that they had a working majority,
+and the Government was of good cheer," would not
+have been pleased had he seen that the last word in
+the telegram posted up in the Bristol Commercial
+Rooms had been transcribed as "of good cheek."<!--[268.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>A telegram, "Have arranged for Sunday. Dening,"
+with the first two words struck out, and "arrangement
+complete" substituted underneath, was handed
+in at a telegraph office by a well-known and
+much respected Bristol clergyman. At the forwarding
+office the message was unfortunately read
+"For Sunday Dinning arrangement complete," the
+erasure and addition not having been properly
+understood and the proper name misspelt. At
+the delivering office the message again suffered
+alteration, and became "For Sunday dining
+arrangements complete." It may readily be supposed
+that the addressee was somewhat astonished
+at the peculiar text of the message.</p>
+
+<p>The following is from the Bristol <i>Times and
+Mirror</i> of February, 1893, and has reference to
+a little inaccuracy on the part of a telegraph
+assistant employed at a Bristol sub-post office.
+The incident itself is correctly reported:&mdash;"Garraways,
+12 o'clock. Dear Mrs. B.&mdash;Chops and
+tomato sauce. Yours Pickwick," settled the hash
+of a well-known character; and a wire, "Going to
+Bath to meet girl. Not back to dinner," had,
+very nearly, a similar effect on the domestic<!--[269.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+relations of one of the smartest solicitors in our
+city. The telegraph has had, in its time, much
+to answer for, "but never aught like this."
+When Puck said: "I'll put a girdle round about
+the earth in forty minutes," he little thought
+what mischief he might do. It was only the
+other day we read how a stray dropped line
+destroyed a horse, killed a cow, and cut off the
+head of a nigger; but these accidents were a
+trifle compared with what might have happened
+if the message first quoted could not have been
+explained. The learned gentleman it appears has
+a brother, by name Gilbert, familiarly known in
+the circle as "Gil." The latter, having business
+in Bath, wrote asking his relative to dine with
+him at the "Christopher." The learned advocate
+at once accepted; but, being a thoroughly domesticated
+man, telegraphed to his better-half: "Going
+to Bath to meet Gil; not back to dinner." Then
+came in the "cussedness" of the wire which substituted
+"girl" for "Gil," and hence the temporary
+ructions when the happy husband, having succeeded
+with his latchkey, sought repose.<!--[270.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+<h5>TELEGRAPH MESSENGERS.</h5>
+
+
+<p>The telegraph messengers in uniform employed
+in the Bristol district number about 160. They
+have a literary institute, a drum and fife band,
+hold swimming classes, etc. That there is need
+of night classes may be inferred from the following
+specimens of telegraph messengers' orthography and
+syntax:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>(1) "Supt, Sir, I will try to be more careful in
+the pass. Yours obed, H. P&mdash;&mdash;."</p>
+
+<p>(2) "Supt, Sir, I having asked where the message
+was ment for and they told me to go up the road
+where I should see a chemist shop where I should
+find it about there and I having could not find it I
+asked, a gentleman which he said it was farther up
+the road and I left it with cotton the undertaker
+which he said it was quite right.&mdash;G. H&mdash;&mdash;."</p>
+
+<p>(3) "Supt, sir, I will try to be more extint in the
+future as this is the truth.&mdash;M. T&mdash;&mdash;."<!--[271.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>(4) "Supt, Sir, I much regret not returning my
+report But I left it home in my other Pocket in
+my overcoat which is home drying which was wet
+through on Saturday last. Yours obed H. E&mdash;&mdash;."</p>
+
+<p>The institute was inaugurated at a public meeting
+at the Colston Hall on the 1st December, 1892,
+which was attended by a large and influential
+gathering of citizens. Upon the platform were the
+Mayor of Bristol (Mr. W. R. Barker), who presided,
+the Very Rev. the Dean of Bristol (Dr. Pigou), Mr.
+Charles Townsend, M.P., Rev. R. Cornall, Mr. R. C.
+Tombs (the postmaster), Mrs. R. C. Tombs, Dr.
+Lansdown, jun., Miss Synge, Miss Pollock, Messrs.
+John Harvey, Arthur Baker, E. G. Clarke, H. Lewis,
+C. H. Tucker, R. L. Leighton, W. H. Lindrea, J. R.
+Bennett, E. Sampson; also Messrs. A. J. Flewell
+(superintendent of the telegraph department),
+W. H. Gange, J. Robertson, J. S. Gover, J. J.
+Mackay, H. T. Carter (superintendent of the postal
+department).</p>
+
+<p>It was explained that the telegraph messengers
+were engaged at from thirteen to fourteen years of
+age, and the lessons they had learned at school
+had chiefly been supplemented by a knowledge<!--[272.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
+acquired in the streets. The object was to counteract
+street influences by providing elementary
+instruction, recreation, and interesting literature.
+There was no desire to educate the boys to such
+a pitch that Jack would think himself better than
+his master, but to take care that they should not
+degenerate. It was announced that the hours of
+labour had just been reduced from sixty-two to
+fifty per week, which would be a great boon to
+the boys. It was further stated that a private
+appeal had been made, not in vain, to a few of
+Bristol's most generous citizens, and that through
+their kindly aid, with subscriptions from the
+members of the staff and the grant which it was
+hoped to earn from the Education Department, the
+institute would be carried on without pecuniary
+embarrassment. The description of the institute's
+work was as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. The institute would be open to the telegraph
+messengers and to junior officers of the postal and
+telegraph service, the charge to each member to be
+one penny per week.</p>
+
+<p>2. The institute would be carried on in a room
+at the General Post Office.<!--[273.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>3. In connection with the institute an evening
+school would be held, the educational session to
+last from October to May. An annual examination
+of the members of the classes would be held.</p>
+
+<p>4. In addition to the three elementary subjects,&mdash;reading,
+writing, and arithmetic,&mdash;classes would
+be arranged for the study of Scripture, geography,
+drawing, composition, and shorthand.</p>
+
+<p>5. For the purpose of recreation certain games
+would be provided.</p>
+
+<p>6. In connection with the institute there would be
+a library, which had been formed by means of books
+generously given by the citizens of Bristol.</p>
+
+<p>7. The library would be open to any established
+or unestablished officer of the postal and telegraph
+service at a slight subscription per month.</p>
+
+<p>8. A penny savings bank would also be started.</p>
+
+<p>The Chairman said he gladly consented, to preside
+that evening, because the object of the meeting was
+one in which he took deep interest, and one which
+he felt sure would commend itself to a very large
+number of his fellow-citizens. He thought he
+might say that everything connected with the postal
+service was peculiarly interesting to them all, and<!--[274.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+anything they could do to ameliorate the lot of
+those who daily rendered them such important
+service they would be very glad to do. He thought
+it would not be well to make the movement too
+"goody" in its character, or too educational, so he
+was glad to see that there was a lighter side to the
+scheme.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Charles Townsend, M.P., Mr. Arthur Baker,
+Mr. Harold Lewis, Miss Synge, and members of
+the postal and telegraph, staff, also spoke.</p>
+
+<p>Then, the Dean of Bristol addressed the telegraph
+messengers, and said he really should have been
+disappointed if he had not been invited to attend
+the meeting. It was a pleasant part of his
+privilege in ministering in Bristol to be asked to
+take a share in such an interesting gathering as
+they were holding that evening. One of the best
+features of this institute was that it would assist
+them to put their leisure to the most profitable
+use.</p>
+
+<p>The educational work has been progressing
+steadily ever since its inauguration, and much
+good has resulted from it to the messengers.</p>
+
+<p>Ever ready to give their countenance to entertainments<!--[275.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+for the benefit of the community, their
+Graces the late lamented Duke, and the Dowager
+Duchess, of Beaufort, as their first public act after
+coming to reside at Stoke Park, near our city,
+attended a concert at the Redland Park Hall,
+which was held for the purpose of benefiting the
+funds of the Telegraph Messengers' Institute.
+Later on, May 21st, 1898, they were kind enough
+to attend an annual meeting and a prize distribution
+at the Colston Hall. The late Duke,
+who presided on the occasion, said it was a
+great pleasure to him to be present. He had
+witnessed a good deal of the care and discipline
+with which the Post Office messengers were looked
+after. Like everybody who had a great deal of
+correspondence, he had the privilege of having
+the services of the best regulated Post Office in
+the world. They also had in this country the
+privilege of being able to use the best regulated
+telegraph service. They might be perfectly sure
+that if a man wanted to send a telegram, when once
+he put it into the hands of the postal officials,
+however ill-written or badly addressed it might be,
+it was very probable that the telegram would reach<!--[276.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
+its destination. Those who had a good deal of
+correspondence were deeply indebted for the splendid
+organisation of the Bristol Department. They were
+also very much indebted to the telegraph clerks,
+who deciphered the scrawls handed them, and who
+transmitted the messages. They were deeply
+indebted also to the boys for the way in which
+they refrained from stopping to play marbles, and
+did their duties with great zeal, and delivered their
+messages at the proper places and to the proper
+persons. They would understand that they were
+Government officers, and that they had to discharge
+important duties. He could personally say that
+those duties were thoroughly well carried out in
+the city of Bristol and its neighbourhood.</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess of Beaufort then distributed the
+prizes, after which a telegraph messenger presented
+Her Grace with a basket of choice flowers.</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop of Bristol addressed the lads, and
+urged them to do their duty thoroughly when on
+duty, and to enter heartily into healthy play when
+off duty. In doing their duty they should remember
+one or two things. They might be charged with
+the delivery of a message which was a matter of<!--[277.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+life or death; it might be one regarding which
+thousands of pounds depended; or it might be
+one of little importance. But, whatever it was,
+it was not for them to enquire, but to deliver the
+message with punctuality and promptness. Having
+spoken of the discipline and training telegraph
+boys received, he observed that of all telegraph
+boys, for punctuality, steadiness, courtesy, and
+politeness, the Bristol boys were about the best.
+He urged them also to live pure lives and observe
+complete honesty, that they might become worthy
+citizens of whom the country might be proud.
+He was glad to hear the name of the lady (Miss
+Pollock) who conducted the scriptural class so
+cordially received, which showed that the lady and
+her work had taken hold of the hearts of the boys.
+The excellence of their work as boys, and as men,
+and the enjoyment of their lives, in the best sense,
+depended upon their becoming God-fearing. He
+should be pleased to give a prize in connection
+with the Scripture class.</p>
+
+<p>The letters of the Bishop, written with reference
+to the occasion, should not be left unchronicled.
+They ran as follows, viz.:<!--[278.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+"Church House,<br />
+Dean's Yard, S.W.,<br />
+<i>May 10th, 1898</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">My dear Postmaster</span>,&mdash;I am speaking at Bath
+on the afternoon of the 20th, and am engaged to
+stay the night. But I think your proposal so
+important that I am writing to my host, Mr. S., to
+ask if he has engaged friends to meet me. If he
+can excuse me, I will, if all be well, come to you
+and say something.</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yours very truly,<br />
+<span class="smcap">G. F. Bristol</span>."<br />
+</p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+"The Athen&aelig;um,<br />
+<i>May 12th, 1898</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">My dear Postmaster</span>,&mdash;I have arranged to
+return to Bristol on the evening of May 20, and
+if all be well can be with you. Send me a card
+of place and hour.</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yours very truly,<br />
+<span class="smcap">G. F. Bristol</span>."<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The following extract from a letter in which His
+Grace wrote concerning the meeting, is indicative<!--[279.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+of the interest which he took in matters affecting
+the postal and telegraph services of Bristol, viz.:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+"Stoke Park,<br />
+Stapleton, near Bristol,<br />
+<i>21st May, 1898</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Dear Mr. Tombs</span>,&mdash;I must write you a few lines
+of thanks for the very pleasant evening you gave
+us last night. Both the Duchess and I enjoyed it
+very much. I was remarkably struck with the
+appearance of your boys: such nice, clean, smart-looking
+youths. What a difference drill makes to
+lads! They have already a smart&mdash;soldierlike, I
+should call it&mdash;appearance, and I am sure it
+tends to sharpen their minds as well as to
+straighten their bodies.</p>
+
+<p>
+"Believe me to remain,<br />
+Yours truly,<br />
+<span class="smcap">Beaufort</span>."<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The messengers little thought as they listened to
+the Duke's encouraging words, addressed to them
+on the occasion of the meeting, that they would<!--[280.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+before a year had passed away be sending a modest,
+humble, but loving tribute, in the form of a wreath,
+which was thought worthy to be suspended over the
+pulpit in Badminton Church at the Duke's obsequies,
+in juxtaposition with a wreath of mammoth
+proportions sent by the officers of the 7th Dragoons
+(the Duke's old Regiment).</p>
+
+<p>The Bristol telegraph messengers have cause to
+remember that bright Saturday afternoon in 1895
+when, preceded by their drum and fife band, they
+marched out to Burfield, Westbury-on-Trym, the
+country residence of Sir (then Mr.) R. H. Symes,
+the Mayor of Bristol. They were there enabled to
+have a few hours of recreation and pleasure, and
+to forget the busy hum of the city with its turmoil
+and heat. Following the excellent example, Mr.
+Arthur Baker, of Henbury, and other country
+gentlemen have invited the boys out on Saturday
+afternoons, to encourage them to keep banded
+together for good purposes, and to maintain that
+<i>esprit de corps</i> which is so necessary in a body of
+youths drawn together after the manner of the
+Telegraph Messengers' Class.</p>
+
+<p>A most memorable occasion was that in 1897,<!--[281.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
+when the messengers were inspected by Lieutenant-Colonel
+MacGregor, of the 24th Middlesex R.V.C.,
+London. They mustered at the Post Office, and,
+under the direction of Inspectors Mawditt, Appleby
+(late 29th Regiment and sergeant-major Scinde
+Volunteers), and Cook (late Royal Marines), and
+headed by their drum and fife band, marched to
+the Artillery Drill Ground in Whiteladies Road
+where, in presence of many visitors, military and
+civilian, they were put through manual exercises,
+physical drill to music, and then reviewed on the
+parade ground. In the speeches which followed
+the boys were complimented on their efficiency and
+smart appearance. It was on this occasion that it
+was announced the Postmaster-General had obtained
+the sanction of the Treasury for a grant of money
+in order to encourage telegraph messengers' institutes
+and drill in the large towns. Under this
+scheme, prizes for proficiency in drill and general
+good conduct are awarded&mdash;a system which has
+since been found to work admirably.<!--[282.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+
+<h5>LETTER DELIVERY SYSTEM.<br /><br />
+POSTMEN: THEIR DUTIES AND RECREATIONS.</h5>
+
+
+<p>The extent of the Bristol postal establishment
+in 1775 may be gleaned from the reply given
+by the Postmasters-General to a memorial complaining
+that there was only one letter carrier for
+the delivery of all the letters received in Liverpool.
+The answer was that only one letter carrier was
+maintained in any provincial town, including the
+premier city of Bristol, and that they did not think
+themselves justified in incurring for Liverpool the
+expense of another. An additional Bristol postman
+was, however, appointed between then and January,
+1778. In 1792 there were four letter carriers at
+Bristol, but only two appear to have been allowed
+by the Department, the other two being employed
+as extras, and provided for, probably, by an extra
+charge on the letters delivered. The Bristol letter
+carriers were not supplied with uniform clothing
+until 1858. Then, a hat and coat once yearly,<!--[283.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+and a waterproof cape once in two years, were
+given to them. The uniform clothing was not
+supplied to the auxiliary letter carriers. Bags or
+pouches for the men to carry for the protection of
+the letters were at that time provided.</p>
+
+<p>In 1859 the postmen wore scarlet uniform and
+issued out from the Post Office three times daily
+to traverse the length and breadth of the city in
+the distribution of letters. In 1899 the "men in
+blue" sally forth six times every day.</p>
+
+<p>In the postmen's department there are now seven
+inspectors and three hundred and seventy postmen.
+The delivery of letters in the town district is made
+from the head office. There is a branch delivering
+office at Clifton, but those at North Street and
+Phippen Street were long since abandoned. In
+the Bristol postal district, sixty years ago, there
+were fewer than 20,000 letters delivered in a week,
+or about 1,000,000 in a year&mdash;a number now nearly
+reached in a week. The letters delivered annually
+from the Central Post Office number 31,000,000;
+from the Clifton Post Office, 6,250,000; from the
+suburban offices and rural offices, 7,300,000. It
+is a noteworthy fact that the letters posted in Bristol<!--[284.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+for delivery within its own limit form 27 per cent.
+of the total number, which percentage is only surpassed
+at two or three of the large cities of the
+Kingdom. Six deliveries of letters and five
+deliveries of parcels are made in the city, with
+ten collections. The average number of persons
+to whom letters are delivered by each postman in
+Bristol (city) is 1,800. There are 666,536 parcels
+delivered annually. To each of two firms are
+delivered more than one quarter of a million
+letters annually, equal to one hundredth part of
+the total number of letters delivered.</p>
+
+<p>The distances from the head office to the extreme
+outward terminal City and Clifton delivery points
+are as follows:&mdash;Westbury Park, 2½ miles; Horfield
+Barracks, 3 miles; Ridgeway, 2½ miles; Barton
+Hill, 1¾ miles; Arno's Vale, 1¾ miles; Totterdown,
+2 miles; Bedminster Down, 2 miles; Ashton Gate,
+2 miles; and Clifton Suspension Bridge, 1½ miles.
+The trams are used by the postmen, and the
+Department pays the Tramways Company a lump
+sum in respect thereof. The convenience in this
+respect will be enhanced when the electric traction
+system is fully introduced.<!--[285.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>In the sorting office the letters are sorted to
+the various rounds by postmen dividers, and the
+general body of postmen then have to arrange
+them at their desks seated on little revolving stools.
+The process adopted by the postmen in setting in
+their letters for delivery may be explained by the
+following example relating to what is technically
+known as the "Cotham Brow Walk." The letters
+are first primarily divided (upright) into streets,
+roads, squares, courts, etc., taken thus&mdash;viz.:
+(<i>a</i>) Sydenham Road, 1 to 18 (one side only);
+(<i>b</i>) Sydenham Hill, 45 to 11, odd numbers (one
+side only); (<i>c</i>) Tamworth Place 13 to 1 (one side
+only); (<i>d</i>) Arley Hill, 2 to 34 and 5 to 27 (cross);
+(<i>e</i>) Arley Park (cross); (<i>f</i>) Arley Hill, 36 and 38
+and 29 to 41 (cross); (<i>g</i>) Cotham Brow, 124 to 88
+and 125 to 27 (cross); (<i>h</i>) Southfield Road, 2 to 28
+and 1 to 27 (cross); (<i>i</i>) Upper Sydenham Road,
+38 to 19 (one side only); (<i>j</i>) Springfield Road, 47
+to 85, odd numbers (one side only). Then the
+letters for one of the above-named ten divisions or
+streets are taken one by one and placed in order of
+actual delivery flat on the table; then all are
+gathered together and stood upright, the letters for<!--[286.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+each division being treated in like manner. When
+the letters for any one street or road, etc., have
+been set in order, fresh batches of letters of, say,
+thirty or so, are fully sub-divided by the same
+process before being set in with the accumulated
+and finished letters. This course is necessary in
+order to obviate the postman having to go through
+a set of fifty or a hundred letters time after time
+as he gets a fresh batch of letters. Two hours
+are allowed for the morning delivery and one and
+a half hours for other deliveries. As those who
+have the longest rounds have the lightest burdens,
+they all contrive to finish at about the same time.</p>
+
+<p>The Clifton Suspension Bridge, which was erected
+in 1864 at a cost of &pound;100,000, plays a very unimportant
+part in postal affairs, as it serves for the
+passage over the Avon of three postmen only, who
+cross with letters for the Leigh Woods and Failand
+districts. Long Ashton, which has a carriage road
+approached by the bridge from the Clifton side,
+receives its letters by a postman who crosses by a
+ferry lower down the river and reaches his destination
+more expeditiously than by crossing over the
+bridge.<!--[287.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>A Bristol postman, who was well acquainted with
+the locality which he had to serve, met with an
+ugly accident through colliding with a lamp-post,
+recently erected and not supplied with gas for
+lighting up. It had been put up during the
+man's interval of duty, so that he came upon it for
+the first time when it was shrouded in darkness.
+The postmen, having in the discharge of their duties
+to be early birds and to be first out and about in the
+morning, often pick up articles lost or deposited
+overnight. Thus it was that a postman found on
+one winter's morn in a Bristol suburb a parcel containing
+the dead body of a child, and had to constitute
+himself a corpse-carrier for the nonce. It was in this
+city of Bristol that the following somewhat amusing
+and certainly interesting incident took place. Two
+rats were found in combat over a letter, which, delivered
+in due course by the postman, had fallen upon
+the floor at the entrance to a warehouse, and had been
+dragged thence to the spot where the rodents were
+engaged in their fierce encounter, the gum on the
+flap probably being the attraction. The letter
+contained a cheque for &pound;300, and its loss for some
+days caused no small amount of consternation and<!--[288.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+anxiety to the gentleman who should have received
+it, and who, it need scarcely be said, at once gave
+orders for a letter-box to be attached to his warehouse
+door.</p>
+
+<p>It was well for the Magistrates' Clerk for
+the Gloucestershire Division of Bristol that he was
+well known to the postman, or assuredly he would
+never have received the letter addressed thus: "Mr.
+Latchem Laforegat pleace stashun," the proper
+address being: "Mr. Latcham, Lawford's Gate
+Police Station, Stapleton Road, Bristol."</p>
+
+<p>Recently many valuable dogs were poisoned in
+different parts of the city, and a suggestion
+appeared in the newspapers that the postmen
+might be urged to constitute themselves amateur
+detectives for the discovery of the miscreants, on
+the ground that they enter every garden and knock
+at every door throughout the length and breadth
+of Bristol, and that at early morn and late at
+night as well as by day. The postmen are public
+spirited, but it is hardly likely that they would go
+considerably out of their way for the purpose, considering
+the risks which they run from dogs and the
+annoyances to which they are subjected to by<!--[289.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+them. The postmen have to face the snappish
+terrier and the ferocious-looking bulldog. Not
+infrequently they get bitten, and more frequently
+get soundly abused if, for their own protection,
+they belabour a dog occasionally, or give it a taste
+of their belt for want of a better weapon of
+defence or offence. Reciprocity would demand
+that if the postmen look out for dog poisoners,
+the owners of dogs on their part should take the
+utmost care to keep their dogs properly secured
+when known to be dangerous or to have a
+special dislike to the public servants in blue.
+The bold announcement given on the pillar of a
+gateway of a residence in a fashionable suburb
+of Bristol, "Beware of the bulldog," is not calculated
+to give confidence to the postmen who have to
+deliver the letters. One poor dog, well known in
+the city, fell dead in Small Street; and as the dog
+had just been seen to visit the Post Office, and
+even to drink from a Bristol Dogs' Home trough
+standing in the portico, it was assumed by the
+many spectators of the poodle's sad death that he
+had come to an untimely end through drinking
+poisoned water from the Post Office trough. The<!--[290.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+vessel was therefore confiscated by an over-zealous
+supporter of the Dogs' Home, and the water was
+subjected to analysis, but investigation proved that
+it was innocuous, although from an examination
+it transpired that the dog really had died from
+poison, which had, however, been taken in meat.</p>
+
+<p>A London firm made indignant enquiry as to why
+a letter had been returned to them through the
+Returned Letter Office, seeing that it was addressed
+to a well-known and distinguished baronet living
+near Bristol. It turned out that the right hon.
+gentleman was himself the cause of the return of
+the letter, as he read the contracted words "Rt.
+Honb.," in a line preceding his own name, as the
+name of "Robt. Hunt," a person who lived near
+his mansion, and he gave the letter back to the
+postman with the foregoing result. In 1847 a letter
+indicative of the times, with the following superscription,
+as noticed in the post:&mdash;"To the Post
+Office, Bristol, Somersetshire, England, 115 miles west
+of London, this letter is to be delivered to the Ladey
+that transported Jobe Smith and 2 others with him
+near Bristol." Members of the public complain
+from time to time in indignant terms respecting<!--[291.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+the loss of letters in the post, but in very many
+instances they afterwards write in meeker strain
+to say they have discovered the missing letters&mdash;in
+most unlikely places in their homes.</p>
+
+<p>At a dinner given by officials of the Bristol Post
+Office, the Dean of Bristol bestowed praise on the
+postmen for success in conveying ill-addressed
+letters to their destination. Dr. Pigou cited their
+performances in his own case. He had been
+addressed as Pigue, Picken, Pigon, Pigour,
+Pickles, Peggue, Puegon, Ragou, and Pagan.
+That "Ragou"&mdash;not being a name beginning
+with "P"&mdash;should have reached him, he thought
+could only be explained as the result either of a
+flash of inspiration or of the recollection of previous
+"hashes" of his name; but "Pickles" evidently
+got home on the mere strength of its initial letter,
+and though, as he complained, it is hard lines to be
+addressed as "Dr. Pagan" after having been thirty
+or forty years in orders, the written word would
+much more nearly resemble his real name than
+several of the other addresses which did find him.
+"The Head Gamekeeper, the Deanery, Bristol,"
+was, of course, mysterious. The letter contained<!--[292.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+a circular advertising wire netting for pheasants,
+rabbits, and hares; and when the Dean replied,
+pointing out that the only space available on his
+premises&mdash;an area of 30 ft. by 40 ft.&mdash;was too
+small to rear pheasants in, he received, a further
+circular recommending a trial of "our dog biscuits."
+Occasionally, also, the local postmen meet with
+letters so peculiarly addressed as that for "Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, Oction
+her and Countent, Corn Street, Bristol," and
+another for "Chowl, near Temple," intended for
+"Cholwell, near Temple Cloud." The postmen
+collect, too, letters peculiarly addressed to other
+places.</p>
+
+<p>There are still a few postmen veterans in the
+Bristol Post Office who are toiling on long after
+having exceeded their "three score years." Doubtless
+these aged men excite sympathy as they are
+seen on their daily rounds, and the thought
+presents itself to the public mind that the Post
+Office is harsh to make them labour when so
+far advanced in years. Such is not the case,
+however, as the men, unfortunately not being
+entitled to pensions, have been allowed to continue
+to perform their duties long after pensionable<!--[293.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+established men would have been retired, either
+willingly or compulsorily, under the regulations
+which now call for a Civil servant's retirement
+to be considered his reaching the age of sixty
+years. These old worthies are not Post Office
+short-service men; but, as their good conduct
+stripes testify, they have for long years served
+their Queen and country.</p>
+
+<p>J. S., one of these life-long toilers, who
+worked as an uncovenanted postman for many
+years, commenced his career in the navy. When
+fifteen years of age (1844) he joined the gunnery
+ship <i>Excellent</i> at Portsmouth, Captain (afterwards
+Admiral) Chade being then in command. After
+serving two years, he was transferred to the old
+<i>Conway</i>, then engaged in putting down the slave trade
+in East African waters; and after three years on board
+that vessel he went to the brig <i>Helena</i>, and was with
+her in the West Indies for several years. In about
+1854 he was passed to the <i>Britannia</i> for Mediterranean
+service. While sailing from Gibraltar to
+Malta, S. met with a serious accident. Being considered
+a smart young man, he was ordered by
+the captain to assist another "A.B." to rig the<!--[294.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+topgallant yard-arm. While thus at work he fell
+from the maintopmast cross-trees into the main
+rigging, again to the main chains, and then
+overboard&mdash;a drop in all of 120 feet. A boat
+was lowered promptly, and he was soon picked
+up, but he was in an insensible condition. It was
+found on examination by the ship's surgeon that
+his skull was fractured. He went into hospital
+on arrival at Malta, and there he remained six
+months. Shortly after the accident, the <i>Britannia</i>,
+which was the Admiral's flagship, was ordered to
+the Crimea (1855), and not only did the seaman who
+took over S.'s gun meet with his death by the
+shells from the fortifications at Sebastopol, but the
+whole of the gallant tars fighting on the starboard
+side of the ship were killed. S. was taken to
+London on board the <i>Growler</i> (Sir Charles Wood),
+the first steamer he had ever seen, and was
+incapacitated for two or three years, but fortunately
+he obtained a pension on having to leave the navy.
+He was engaged in private life till 1878, when, at
+the age of 49 years, he was given Post Office work,
+on which he was employed for twenty years, and,
+indeed, until he again came to grief through an<!--[295.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
+accident when on duty at Christmas, 1898. On
+this occasion he was knocked over by a cart in
+Victoria Street, which ran into the parcel handcart
+S. was wheeling, and which sent him flying
+into the mud and his parcels all about in the
+road. This put an end to his Post Office career,
+and the old man, with disabled body from his first
+accident and somewhat impaired faculty from the
+latter, has now sunk back into seclusion, and it is
+hoped that he may end his days in peace. Except
+for three weeks' illness caused by influenza, he was
+never away on sick leave out of his twenty years of
+Post Office service. Not once was S. late at work.
+He was, he says, always out of bed at 3 a.m.,
+and so punctual was he known to be that the remark
+was often made when he entered the office, that
+"We know what time it is without looking at the
+clock." On leaving the Post Office service this year
+(1899) a small gratuity was awarded him.</p>
+
+<p>S. T., although in his 71st year, managed up till
+quite recently to perform Post Office work for a few
+hours daily. From early boyhood up to his 22nd
+year, T. was engaged at shoemaking in this city;
+then he enlisted and served as gunner and driver in<!--[296.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
+the Royal Horse Artillery for three years. Having
+obtained his discharge from the army, he acted as
+policeman on the Great Western Railway for a
+few months. At the time of the Crimean War,
+T. again enlisted, this time as a seaman and
+gunner in Her Majesty's Navy. He was disabled
+in action and discharged with a life pension. For
+the next twenty-seven years he followed his former
+occupation of shoemaking and rounding, working
+for about twenty years for one firm in this city.
+When 53 years of age, he first obtained employment
+in the Post Office, working for a few hours daily,
+and receiving 10s. per-week. He is a member of
+the Crimean and Indian Veterans' Association.</p>
+
+<p>A Bristol Post Office benefit society was established
+in March, 1861. It became the Bristol
+Letter Carriers' Sick Benefit Society in 1862, and
+was carried on under that title up to 1890 when
+it ceased.</p>
+
+<p>Early in the year of 1896, the remains of the
+late Thomas Rutley, one of the oldest of Bristol
+postmen, were interred at Greenbank Cemetery.
+About one hundred postmen, headed by the Post
+Office band, were in attendance to mark their<!--[297.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+sympathy, and respect to his memory. The Rev.
+Moffat Logan conducted the service. Such a mark
+of respect is not always accorded to deceased
+Post Office servants. The writer recollects on a
+bright summer day having attended the funeral at
+Highgate Cemetery of one of the oldest and most
+respected superintendents in the Post Office, London.
+The good man was so much liked by those who
+served under him that he had gained for himself
+the name of "Honest John," yet there was only
+one other official besides the writer to stand by
+his graveside.</p>
+
+<p>The postmen have a military band, composed of
+thirty members of their own staff. The primary
+object is to advance the art of music in the Post
+Office, and, secondarily, to provide concerts in the
+open spaces in Bristol for the benefit of the public.
+A grand concert is given by the band every year,
+which is usually attended by some 3,000 of the
+inhabitants, attracted chiefly by the popularity of
+the Post Office and by the fame of artistes so eminent
+as Madame Ella Russell, Madame Fanny Moody,
+Mr. Plunkett Greene, and others, who have from
+time to time been engaged.<!--[298.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>The "D" Company of the 1st Volunteer Battalion
+Gloucester Regiment is composed almost exclusively
+of members of the Bristol Post Office. For three
+years in succession, (1894-5-6), this company won
+the first prize in the drill competition and also first
+prize and challenge vase in the volley firing competition.
+The company challenge bowl and first
+prize, and the brigadier's cup and third prize
+in the Western District of England, were also won
+by the company during the same period. For many
+years the Bristol Post Office has had two out of
+the nine representatives of the battalion competing
+for the Queen's Prize. The company has also been
+well represented in all the battalion and county
+shooting matches. Of the eight battalion signallers,
+five are Post Office men, who have on several occasions
+held first place in the Volunteer service annual
+examinations.</p>
+
+<p>The postmen of Bristol maintain for the winter
+months two of the old veterans who are under
+the auspices of the Crimean and Indian Mutiny
+Veterans' Association.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Goodenough Taylor, one of the proprietors
+of the <i>Times and Mirror</i> newspaper, has kindly<!--[299.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+given a Ten Guinea Challenge Cup, to be raced for
+by Bristol postmen who use bicycles in connection
+with their Post Office business of delivering and
+collecting letters. The cup has to be won three
+years, not necessarily in succession, before it
+becomes the postman's sole property. The terms
+under which the competition for the cup is held are
+as follows, viz.:&mdash;"Competitors to be postmen of
+any age or rank; appointed, unestablished,
+auxiliary, or sub-postmaster's assistant, of not less
+than two years' service, who have never won a
+prize in public competition. Competitors to be
+certified as having in the course of the preceding
+twelve months, under official sanction or direction,
+ridden 150 miles in the execution of their official
+duties, or to and from the office when attending
+duty. The race to be a handicap race of two
+miles, to take place on the Gloucestershire County
+Ground or other enclosure during each year.
+The post-master, assisted by experts in the Post
+Office service, to be the handicapper. The handicap
+to be framed on points of age, physical ability,
+and regard to be had to the weight or kind of
+bicycle to be used in competition." Postman<!--[300.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+Newman, of Coalpit Heath, was the winner this
+year (1899).</p>
+
+<p>The postmen have a library, consisting now of
+some 700 volumes. It was started in 1892. The
+writer made an appeal through the local press for
+gifts of books to form the nucleus of a library
+for the postmen and telegraph messengers attached
+to the Bristol Post Office. This appeal was liberally
+and promptly responded to by the residents of
+Bristol and Clifton. Warmest thanks are due to
+the newspaper proprietors for their kindness in
+inserting paragraphs relating to the subject, as,
+but for their powerful co-operation in the matter,
+the movement could not have been brought to a
+successful issue. A well-known literary gentleman
+at Clifton gave eighty volumes, Mr. Harold Lewis,
+B.A., showed his interest in the movement by the
+donation of 200 copies; and Mr. J. W. Arrowsmith
+has frequently given fifty volumes at a time. The
+postmen themselves manage the library, and contribute
+small sums weekly towards its maintenance
+and further development.<!--[301.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+<h5>POST LETTER BOXES: POSITION, VIOLATION,
+PECULIAR USES.</h5>
+
+
+<p>The three hundred and fifty pillar and wall
+letter boxes are placed at convenient points,
+regard being had to the wants of the immediate
+neighbourhood that each has to serve&mdash;to approach
+by paved crossings, to contiguity to a public lamp,
+to being out of the way of pedestrians and as far
+removed from mud-splashing as possible. At the
+same time, the inspectors endeavour to place the
+boxes so that they may be an attraction, rather
+than an eyesore, to the spot where erected.</p>
+
+<p>The sign of "The Pillar Box" has been given
+to a public-house before which a Post Office
+box stands. Occasionally the Post Office letter
+boxes are greatly misused. Some little time since
+a woman in Bristol was savage enough to drop
+oil of vitriol, nitric acid, and other dangerous
+fluids into the boxes. She even poured paraffin
+into the letter box at a post office, and dropped an<!--[302.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+ignited match in after it. A conflagration was only
+averted by the fortunate circumstance of the postman
+clearing the box just in time to extinguish the
+commencing fire. The woman's determination is
+evidenced from the fact that her hands were severely
+burned by the strong acid she used; but, notwithstanding
+this, she continued night after night to
+carry on her dastardly work. She was found out
+after much anxious watching, and having, on trial,
+been found guilty, she was sentenced by a lenient
+judge to six months' imprisonment. She would assign
+no reason for her incomprehensible behaviour even
+when asked by the judge in court. Not infrequently,
+mischievous children place lighted matches, rubbish,
+etc., in the Post Office letter boxes, and in the letter
+boxes of private houses and warehouses. The Post
+Office officials are always on the alert to discover the
+delinquents. It is desirable also that the public,
+in their own interests, should call the attention of
+postmen and the police at once to any case in which
+they may observe letter boxes being tampered with.
+It may not be generally known that offences of this
+kind are punishable by imprisonment under the
+Post Office Protection Act.<!--[303.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>A remarkable case was that of a servant who
+was a somnambulist, and who for some time wrote
+letters in her sleep, night after night, and took
+them to adjacent letter boxes to post. Sometimes
+she was fully attired, and at other times only
+partially so. As a rule, the letters were properly
+addressed, but the girl did not always place postage
+stamps upon them.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally the postmen have to encounter the
+difficulties arising from a frost-bound letter box.
+Such a case occurred with a box situated on the
+summit of the Mendip Hills. The letter box and
+the wall in which the box is built were found by
+the postman to be covered with ice, caused by rain
+and snow having frozen on them. The door resisted
+all his efforts to open it, and he had to leave it for
+the night. On making another effort when morning
+came, it taxed his ingenuity and that of other
+interested and willing helpers to get the box
+open. Hot water was tried, paraffin was poured
+into the lock, and it was only after a hammer had
+been used and a fire in a movable grate had been
+applied for a time that the lid could be opened.</p>
+
+<p>A letter box erected in a brick pillar in a secluded<!--[304.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+spot on the East Harptree road, about a mile
+distant from any habitation, was, late one night,
+damaged to the extent of having its iron door
+completely smashed off, apparently either by means
+of a large stone which lay at its base when the
+violation was discovered, or by means of a hammer
+and jemmy. Although the adjacent ground, ditches,
+and hedges were searched, no trace of the iron door
+could be found. As three roysterers were known
+to have passed the box on the night in question,
+it was assumed that the damage was done by them
+out of pure mischief and not from any desire to
+rob Her Majesty's mails. Whether such were the
+case or not, they had the unpleasant experience of
+being locked up over the Sunday on suspicion.<!--[305.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+
+<h5>RURAL DISTRICT SUB-POSTMASTERS.<br />
+RURAL POSTMEN. INCIDENTS.</h5>
+
+
+<p>The Bristol postal area is an extensive one, the
+distance from point to point being thirty miles,
+with width ranging from five to twelve miles. It is
+bounded on one side by the river Severn, from a
+point about five miles below Sharpness to a point
+close to Portishead; thence the boundary stretches
+across country to the Mendip Hills, up to Cheddar
+Cliffs; then from a point four miles north-east of
+Wells to Newton-St.-Loe, near Bath; across the
+river Avon, under Lansdown, thence in a line by
+Pucklechurch, Iron Acton, and Thornbury across to
+the starting-point on the Severn. The large rural
+area is for the greater part agricultural in character,
+but there are collieries and stone quarries in some
+few districts.</p>
+
+<p>At the Bristol town and rural sub-Post Offices
+there are 554 assistants of all kinds employed.<!--[306.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
+Many rural sub-postmasters act as postmen; in the
+main it is a healthy occupation, and proves a very
+good antidote to sedentary employment, although
+there are hardships to be borne, as the toil has to be
+undergone in all weathers&mdash;the scorching sun of
+summer, the pitiless cold of winter&mdash;in rain, hail,
+and snow. In connection With the Early Closing
+Movement, at some of the outer Post Offices business
+is suspended at 5.0 on one day in the week&mdash;usually
+Wednesday.</p>
+
+<p>In the suburban and rural districts there are 105
+sub-Post Offices, and 78 of them are letter delivery
+offices, served by an aggregate number of 226 postmen.
+Of the 78 districts, 42 have two daily deliveries
+28 three, and 6 four, with about a corresponding
+number of collections.</p>
+
+<p>The sorting clerks and telegraphists at head-quarters
+gain some sort of acquaintance with
+sub-postmasters through daily communication by
+mail bag and wire; also in the passage of reports
+and counter-reports; but occasionally people performing
+postal work throughout the extensive
+Bristol district are brought into closer harmony
+and touch with each other by means of social<!--[307.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+functions, such as "outings" and Bristol Channel
+steamer trips, when town and country officials
+take their pastime in company, and the sub-postmasters
+and sub-postmistresses of the Somersetshire
+portion of the district get acquainted with those
+of the Gloucestershire side, and all with the head
+office officials. By these means of friendly intercourse
+and interchange of kindly feeling, the
+service is much benefited. As an indication of
+this exchange of courtesy, the felicitations exchanged
+by telegram when the first annual trip by steamer
+to Ilfracombe was taken ran thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"From Postmaster, Bristol.&mdash;Pleasant journey
+to you. Long may Sub-Postmasterly friendship
+continue."</p>
+
+<p>"From Sub-Postmasters at Ilfracombe.&mdash;Telegram
+received. Thanks for good wishes. Have
+just drank your good health. Pleasant trip.
+Regret your absence extremely.&mdash;Sub-Postmasters."</p>
+
+<p>The Bristol Post Office has only recently had
+electric light introduced, but the squire of East
+Harptree had long before set the good example
+of progress by having the Post Office in his village
+illuminated by electricity. In the Bristol area very<!--[308.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+many villages have their little counterpart of the
+huge combination shops in London, where the
+villager is enabled to procure everything that his
+modest income will allow him to purchase. It is
+at these village "Whiteleys" that the Post Office
+is generally to be found, and a surveying officer
+may soon become well versed in the qualities of
+bacon, cheese, bread, flour, candles, and get a
+knowledge of rakes, prongs, and besoms, without
+much difficulty. In other instances no business
+except that of Post Office work is carried on.</p>
+
+<p>The picture of the sub-Post Office at Cribbs
+Causeway, five miles from Bristol, may give our
+readers who are "in cities pent" an idea of a
+delightful place for the sale of postage stamps
+and postal orders and the distribution of letters.
+This unique Post Office has few houses anywhere
+near it, but it serves a large, albeit very sparsely
+populated, area. Some of its interest rests in the
+fact that it was formerly the half-way inn on the
+once important highway from Bristol to New
+Passage, for the ferry over the Severn into South
+Wales. Some of our elderly readers may probably
+recollect it as the stopping stage of the coaches which<!--[309.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+ran prior to the introduction of the railway system.
+The sub-Post Office, which stands on high ground,
+is held by two sisters, who went to it as a health
+resort from a farm in the low-lying Severn marsh.
+They act as postwomen, and brisk exercise and the
+early morning dew has brought such roses to their
+cheeks as would be envied by their Post Office
+sisters whose fate it is to reside in smoke-begrimed
+regions.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 455px;">
+<img src="images/i309.jpg" width="455" height="350" alt="Cribbs Causeway Post Office." title="Cribbs Causeway Post Office." />
+<span class="caption">Cribbs Causeway Post Office.</span>
+</div>
+<p><!--[310.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>Although some of the Bristol district villages are
+situated at a long distance from town and remote
+from main roads, yet only one of the Post Offices
+presents the primitive condition of having a thatched
+roof. None of the rural postmen now avail themselves
+on their journeys of the services of that
+faithful creature, the donkey; but the last animal
+so used was on the road until 1890, when its master,
+poor Sims, the Congresbury to Shipham postman,
+shuffled off this mortal coil. Times change, and our
+manners change with them; so also do our tests
+for gold coins. At the Wrington Post Office there
+are brass testing weights, for sovereigns and half-sovereigns,
+inscribed "Royal Mint, 1843," such as
+have not been observed by the writer at any other
+Post Office, either in the Bristol district or in
+London. A certain sub-postmistress in the district
+has for many years been in the habit of keeping
+her sheets of reserve postage stamps in a large
+Family Bible. Not that she is irreverent&mdash;indeed,
+she is a pious woman,&mdash;but, being a lone widow,
+she has kept them in that manner for safety, as
+she imagines that no burglar would look for them
+in such a depository.<!--[311.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 158px;">
+<img src="images/i311.jpg" width="158" height="251" alt="Mr. Edward Biddle.
+(Sub-Postmaster of Rudgeway.)
+Photographed by Mr. Protheroe, Narrow Wine Street,
+Bristol, from an oil painting." title="Mr. Edward Biddle.
+(Sub-Postmaster of Rudgeway.)
+Photographed by Mr. Protheroe, Narrow Wine Street,
+Bristol, from an oil painting." />
+<span class="caption">Mr. Edward Biddle.</span><br />
+<i>(Sub-Postmaster of Rudgeway.)</i><br />
+<i style='font-size: small'>Photographed by Mr. Protheroe, Narrow Wine Street,
+Bristol, from an oil painting.</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>A notable man in his day was Edward Biddle,
+on the Thornbury side of Bristol. Mr. Biddle was
+sub-postmaster of Rudgeway for over forty years,
+and occupied the post until his death in 1889, at
+the ripe age
+of 91 years,
+when he was
+succeeded by
+his daughter,
+and she, in
+turn, was succeeded
+by his
+son, William
+Biddle, who
+still holds the
+appointment.
+Prior to becoming
+sub-postmaster,
+Mr. Edward
+Biddle was
+"Pike" keeper
+at Stone, and used to pay &pound;752 per annum
+for his post. There he had to open his gate<!--[312.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+to no fewer than twenty mail coaches daily,
+on their way between Bristol and Gloucester.
+At Rudgeway he carried on the joint occupation
+of sub-postmaster and innkeeper, at a tavern
+where the Post Office business had been conducted
+for many years before he succeeded to it; but
+the innkeeping business had in course of time
+to be given up, under Post Office regulations.
+Mr. Elstone, of Alveston House, wrote expressing
+his satisfaction that the Post Office was to be carried
+on at a private house, and not as previously at a
+"roadside pothouse," which all the district considered
+a very improper place. At that time
+John Blann and other stage carriers drove their
+unwieldy waggons, drawn by four strong cart-horses
+at a walking pace, along the Gloucester
+turnpike road. The waggons were indeed the
+goods trains of olden times. The present sub-postmaster,
+the son of Edward Biddle, who has
+had for many years to use "Shanks's" pony in
+the delivery of letters, was engaged in olden
+times in going on horseback down to the Passage
+to take, in saddlebags, the mails for South Wales
+and receive them therefrom. As late as 1850,<!--[313.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+letters from Rudgeway for Bristol were impressed
+with a stamp thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class='Title'>
+BRISTOL<br />
+4 JA 50.<br />
+BY POST.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Mr. James Tiley, the village blacksmith of
+Clutton, now an octogenarian, calls to mind that
+sixty years ago the letters for Clutton, Temple
+Cloud, Stowey, Bishop Sutton and adjacent districts
+were delivered from Old Down, a hamlet on the
+main coach road from Bath to Wells, distant from
+Tyburn Turnpike, London, 121 miles. Mr. Tiley
+has had the luxury of paying 10d. for a letter
+brought from London by the above means; and as it
+was dear to him at the time, it is dear to him now in
+another sense as a reminiscence of the past. Mr.
+Tiley recalls the sending of letters of the district by
+waggoners to Bristol or Bath to save the postage,
+and slyly remarks: "So stupid were the waggoners
+that as often as not they brought the letters back
+again, having forgotten to&mdash;what Post Office people
+now term&mdash;'properly dispose of them.'" Also that
+Joseph Tippett, a postman of the olden time, was
+brutally assaulted on Stowey Hill, and nearly lost<!--[314.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
+his life and his letters. His assailants were discovered
+and were transported for life. The Old
+Down postman was timed to reach Temple Cloud
+Bridge at 12.0, and always blew horn or whistle to
+let the village schoolmaster know the time of day.
+During the Bristol riots the arrival of the mail
+every morning was eagerly awaited by persons far
+and near, anxious to hear the latest news.</p>
+
+<p>So recently as the year 1867, a postman had to
+trudge right away from Bristol to the distant village
+of Chew Stoke, having to breast the steep hill of
+Dundry and pass through Chew Magna on his way.
+All the letters and newspapers then delivered at
+Bishopsworth, Dundry, Chew Magna and Chew
+Stoke were carried by this man. Now, with the
+introduction of the parcel post and a cheaper letter
+post, and consequently increased weight, the morning
+mail is carried in a mail cart, and that service
+is supplemented by two or three other despatches to
+Chew Magna and Chew Stoke by train <i>vi&acirc;</i> Pensford.
+The hamlets of Breach Hill, Moreton and Herons
+Green were at that time unserved by the postman
+officially, and if delivered privately by him he
+charged for them at the rate of an extra penny each.<!--[315.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+The residents in those outlying districts who did
+not get their letters delivered in that way, and
+who did not call for them at the Chew Stoke Post
+Office, usually obtained them&mdash;two, three, or four
+days old&mdash;from the postman on Sundays, who
+stationed himself at the church door to oblige such
+worshippers. Some of the older country postmen
+say that in by-gone days the poor people, unable to
+read themselves, considered it part of a postman's
+duty to read their letters for them, and they looked
+for sympathy from the postmen in case of receipt of
+bad news. The Chew Stoke postman had a walk,
+in and out, of over twenty miles, and had to carry
+whatever load there was for the route. The pay
+attached to the post was small. This was in the
+good (?) days of not so long ago, but the postman
+who then had to take the journey is by no means
+anxious for a return to them, for now he receives
+double the amount of pay then allowed. He was
+out from five o'clock in the morning till seven or
+eight o'clock at night; but now he performs his
+eight hours' duty straight off, and has, therefore,
+more time at home for his private purposes.</p>
+
+<p>When, about eight years since, there was a<!--[316.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+deep fall of snow in this district, the West Town
+postman, who is likewise sub-postmaster, very
+considerably added to his labours by carrying tea,
+sugar, medicine, and even bread to the people on
+the Mendips, who were snowed up and deserted by
+baker, butcher, grocer, and indeed by everyone
+except the faithful Queen's messenger. The floods
+of November, 1894, which proved very disastrous
+in the West of England, interfered in no small
+degree with Post Office arrangements in the rural
+districts around Bristol. In some villages the
+roads were submerged from three to four feet,
+and it was impossible for the public to get to the
+letter boxes, the postmen and postwomen being,
+perhaps, the greatest sufferers. In order to avoid
+flooded roads, it was necessary to change routes and
+make long detours. Many postmen were compelled
+to wade through the water waist deep, whilst others
+had to be driven through in horse and cart. The
+inhabitants and farmers in many places kindly
+lent their horses and carts for the purpose, and
+but for these kindnesses the letters would have
+been delayed for many hours. In spite of all
+difficulties, the letters were generally delivered<!--[317.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+without much delay, and only in a few cases had
+the letters to be held over for any length of time
+until the waters had subsided.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 440px;">
+<img src="images/i317.jpg" width="440" height="358" alt="Letter Box at Winterbourne." title="Letter Box at Winterbourne." />
+<span class="caption">Letter Box at Winterbourne.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>A tit made her nest in the bottom of a Post
+Office letter box at Winterbourne, near Bristol, laid
+her eggs, and notwithstanding that letters were
+posted in the box and that the box was cleared by
+the postman everyday, the bird tenaciously held to
+her nest and brought up five young tits, two of
+which perished in their attempts to get out of the
+box by means of the small posting aperture through<!--[318.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+which their mother had squeezed so frequently,
+carrying with her all the materials for the nest.
+The three survivors flew off one day when the door
+of the box was purposely left open for a time by
+the obliging postman portrayed in the picture.</p>
+
+<p>That all is not gold that glitters has been recently
+brought home to three or four of the sub-postmasters
+in the Bristol district, a "sharper" having presented
+coins gilded to represent sovereigns and half-sovereigns,
+and obtained Postal Orders in exchange
+for them. Through the vigilance of the Bristol
+police the offender was eventually taken into
+custody, and, having been sentenced at the Assizes
+to six months' imprisonment, he had plenty of
+time to reflect on his offences. A bright,
+shining new farthing was received at the Bristol
+head office, sent inadvertently in a remittance from
+a sub-office as a half-sovereign, and mixed up with
+coins of that value, only to be detected, however,
+by the vigilant check clerk. The sub-postmaster
+who accepted it in error for a coin of more precious
+metal, and did not discover the mistake even in
+preparing the remittance, had to bear the loss.</p>
+
+<p>One sub-postmaster, who has now departed this<!--[319.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+life, was wont to furnish his explanations and
+reports in rhyme, a course which was tolerated
+on account of its singularity and of the writer's
+zeal and known devotion to his duty. The
+following is an example:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>To the <span class="smcap">Postmaster of Bristol</span>:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"I willingly answer the question<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Respecting the length of the track<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From Shirehampton P.O. to Kingsweston<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">House front door, or lodge at the back;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But respecting the relative merits<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Of back door, or door at the front,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As delivery door, I aver it's<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">A question I cannot but shunt.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To return to the question of distance:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Suppose that the birds of the air,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sworn in as Post Office assistants,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To Kingsweston would messages bear:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As straight through their skiey dominions<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">They flew from front door to front door,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The length of the track of their pinions<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">In yards would be 1224.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When a featherless biped is bearer,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And through the lone woods his path picks,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The feet of this weary wayfarer<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Cover yards quite 1466.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Should the wight have a key, there's a second<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Way thro' the sunk fence's locked gate,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And then his poor feet must be reckoned<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To make yards 1388.<!--[320.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As regards the back door, I pass by it;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The back lodge itself is much less<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Than a mile, howsomdever you try it,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">By Shirehampton Post Office Express.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I do not pretend to correctness,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To one yard or even a dozen;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No need for extreme circumspectness,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The margin's too ample to cozen.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I'm obliged by your flattering reference,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And when you've another dispute on,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I shall still be, with all proper deference,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Your obedient Servant,&mdash;<span class="smcap">G. Newton</span>."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The turnpike gates in the neighbourhood of
+Bristol were abolished in October, 1867, and the
+consequence was that the proprietors of the various
+omnibuses by which day mail bags were conveyed
+to and from several of the districts around Bristol
+applied for, and obtained, a money payment in lieu
+of the tolls, the exemption, from which had formed
+the sole remuneration for the services performed.</p>
+
+<p>The Bristol mail carts running to the rural
+districts, by permission of the Post Office, carry
+for the newspaper proprietors bundles of papers,
+weighing on an average on ordinary days 40 lbs.,
+and on Saturdays 80 lbs. The enterprise of the
+Bristol newspaper proprietors in circulating by<!--[321.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
+private means the many thousands of the newspapers
+which they daily print is evidenced, from
+the circumstance that they find it necessary to
+commit to the agency of the Post Office only about
+160 copies for distribution, and that chiefly in
+remote rural districts.</p>
+
+<p>Sub-postmasters in the rural districts of Bristol
+attain to great ages. The sub-postmaster of
+Mangotsfield, who had long since passed three-score
+years and ten, had his cross to bear, having
+at 60 entirely lost his eyesight. Although blind,
+and unable to work in consequence, he quaintly
+appeared in his apron to the end, and said that
+having worn it for so many years he did not feel
+happy without it. A daughter acted as his deputy,
+and mitigated, as far as possible, his hard lot. At
+his funeral some hundreds of people, representing
+various religious and other bodies, attended to pay
+their last tribute of respect to him.</p>
+
+<p>At Bitton, a village midway between Bristol and
+Bath, there died Sub-postmaster James Brewer, in
+the 87th year of his age, and in the fifty-seventh
+year of his Post Office service. It was more
+pleasant to enter this Post Office and find the old<!--[322.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
+man calmly smoking his churchwarden pipe before
+the fire, cheery and chatty, than to have such a
+welcome as that afforded at another office by the
+exhibition on the Post Office counter of a miniature
+coffin and artificial wreaths for graves. Another
+worthy of local Post Office fame has lately
+passed away in the person of Join Warburton,
+aged 84, who for thirty years was the sub-postmaster
+of Henbury, and who for five years
+was his daughter's adviser after her succession to
+the appointment. The sub-postmaster of the village
+of High Littleton lost an arm some fifty years ago,
+but notwithstanding that affliction he manages with
+adroitness to sell postage stamps and issue postal
+orders to the public. This will not be considered a
+very great feat, considering that he has been for
+years a crack one-handed shot, and even now, at
+the age of 70, can bowl over a pheasant or a rabbit
+quite as readily as many of our sportsmen who have
+the use of both arms.</p>
+
+<p>Sub-postmistresses of great longevity are also to
+be found. One dame (Martha Pike), now in her
+93rd year, represented the Department until quite
+recently in the charming little village of Wraxall.<!--[323.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
+When nearly 90 years old she had a three hour
+letter round every morning up hill and down dale,
+and she even trudged a mile and a half to fetch a
+letter and parcel mail from the railway station.
+The sub-postmistress of Stoke Bishop died at the
+age of 84; she and her father had held the Post
+Office in the village for over fifty years. An equally
+remarkable case was that of Hannah Vowles, the sub-postmistress
+of Frenchay, who, after performing the
+active duties of that position in the village of Frenchay
+for forty-seven years, resigned when within five
+years of 100 years old. In her youth she lived for
+some time in the West Indies; but she gave up her
+employment there in order to return home to support
+her mother, who was 90 years of age when she died.
+Mrs. Hannah was succeeded in the office of sub-postmistress
+by Miss Kate Vowdes, a relation, who
+had already been postwoman in the same district
+forty-two years!</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 154px;">
+<img src="images/i324.jpg" width="154" height="245" alt="Hannah Brewer. (Postwoman.)" title="Hannah Brewer. (Postwoman.)" />
+<span class="caption">Hannah Brewer.</span><br /><i>(Postwoman.)</i>
+</div>
+
+<p>Hannah Brewer is one of the Bristol Post Office
+worthies. Her father was the sub-postmaster of the
+village of Bitton alluded to herein. Hannah commenced
+to deliver letters in the hamlets and at the
+farmhouses near Bitton when a mere child, and<!--[324.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
+continued to do so during all the years our gracious
+Sovereign has sat on the throne. Recently, however,
+she had to give up the work, as, having
+attained the advanced age of 72 years and walked<!--[325.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
+her quarter of a million of miles, she felt that she
+ought to take life more easily than hitherto. In
+distance her round was eleven miles daily, and
+the route was a very trying one on account of
+the steep hills she had to traverse, and of great
+exposure to the sun in summer, and to the wind,
+frost, and snow in winter. It may be interesting
+to record that Hannah Brewer, although she
+had to serve a district sparsely populated, was
+never robbed, stopped, nor molested in any way.
+She was the recipient of the first official waterproof
+clothing issued to postwomen in England, and
+in her picture she is represented as wearing it.
+She only occasionally made visits even to places
+so near as Bath or Bristol, and was, as a rule,
+a stay at home.</p>
+
+<p>She was not a great reader of the newspapers,
+but persons on her round looked to her as an
+oracle, and derived information from her as to
+passing events. Hannah naively says that, as
+regards Christmas boxes, she fared very well in
+olden times, but they were not so plentiful in her
+later years. Hannah, through her devotion to
+her father when he was alive, and through her<!--[326.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+assiduous attention to her duties as a humble
+servant of the Crown, had gained the respect of
+all those who knew her, both in her native village
+and on the long round she daily had to traverse.
+As she served the Post Office throughout her long
+life (her memory carrying her back to the days
+when the letters reached Bitton by mail coach and
+a "single" letter from London cost 10d.), it is
+gratifying that in her old age, when unable to
+continue to do her daily round, the Lords of
+the Treasury, under her exceptional circumstances,
+granted her half-pay pension, a sum which, with
+her savings, will serve to maintain her until the
+end of her days. The writer has had few more
+pleasurable duties than that which he undertook
+of presenting Hannah, in her neat and trim
+cottage, with her first pension warrant.</p>
+
+<p>At the celebration of the Queen's Diamond Jubilee
+in the village, the opportunity was taken, in the
+midst of the festivities, to make a presentation of
+an elegant marble clock and purse to Miss Brewer.
+The inscription ran: "Presented during Her
+Majesty's Diamond Jubilee, together with a
+purse of money, by the inhabitants of the postal<!--[327.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+district of Bitton, Gloucestershire, to Miss Hannah
+Brewer, postwoman, upon her retirement, having
+served this office from the commencement of
+Queen Victoria's reign."</p>
+
+<p>Even Post Office surveyors are sometimes the
+subject of little jokes on the part of their subordinates.
+An assistant surveyor, when testing a
+rural postman's walk, said that if he had arranged
+the round originally, he should have taken a shortcut
+across the fields to a certain little hamlet so
+as to serve it before instead of after a more distant
+place, when the postman drily said that he should
+not have done anything of the kind, as there was a
+rhine about 18 ft. wide and very deep, which could
+not well be got over or through, and, turning to
+the surveyor, he remarked: "Evidently you never
+were a postman." The humour of this incident
+lies in the fact that the surveyors have always
+been drawn from the &eacute;lite of the Service. A
+certain imperious surveyor visited a sub-office for
+the purpose of reprimanding the sub-postmaster
+for some delinquency, and after soundly rating the
+individual he addressed, and refusing to hear a single
+word in explanation, he, when his harangue was<!--[328.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+over, was coolly informed that he had made a slight
+mistake, as the circumstance referred to another
+sub-office altogether.</p>
+
+<p>On a certain occasion recently, on entering a
+Post Office the writer heard proceeding from a
+back room a voice, recognisable as that of the
+sub-postmaster, shouting out a greeting in his
+(the writer's) Christian name: "Come in, Robert."
+Well, the sub-postmaster thought he saw through
+the partly-curtained glass in the door a friend of
+that name, and meant no disrespect to his surveyor-postmaster.</p>
+
+<p>On calling at another little Post Office on a
+Saturday, the aged sub-postmistress was washing
+her stone floor&mdash;down on her knees in business-like
+attitude. Without looking up, her greeting to
+the writer was: "Halloa! I thought you had
+been to Jericho. You have not been to see
+me for such a long time!" That salutation
+was rather embarrassing; but on getting to the
+perpendicular the old lady was the confused party,
+as she had thought her visitor was a local resident
+who occasionally looked in to have a cheery word
+with her.<!--[329.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>It would seem that postal improvements in the
+Bristol district have been carried almost as far as
+is needful; indeed, in one district, not seven miles
+from the city, contemplated improvements whereby
+letters would be delivered an hour earlier in the
+morning and might be posted two hours later at
+night, and a day mail in and out be afforded, were
+declined by the parish authorities in council and by
+memorial from the villagers generally. In this
+rural hollow the people are very clannish, and
+rather than let their postwoman suffer a loss of
+two shillings a week, which the change involved,
+they were content to forego improved postal
+facilities, and were not greatly stirred by the
+"lasinesse of posts" as, according to history, was
+King James of old.</p>
+
+<p>While Bristol is ever expanding and while
+splendid buildings are being erected, there are
+not wanting places within a short distance of the
+ancient city where there are signs of decadence,
+as indicated by houses unoccupied and cottages
+in ruins, and by shrinkage in the number of
+letters. At Stanton Drew, where some thirty large
+stones alone remain to mark a site where there<!--[330.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+probably stood a splendid Druidical Temple, the
+postal arrangements a few years since were not in a
+satisfactory condition. Not unlike the story which
+has recently been going the round of the newspapers,
+that a sub-postmaster of an Oxfordshire
+village fixed this notice up: "Have gone fishing.
+Will be back in time to sell stamps," the sub-postmistress
+of this Somersetshire hamlet went
+away for days without putting up any notice
+whatever, and left her son to supply the inhabitants
+with postage stamps when he got home in the
+evening from his work as an agricultural labourer.
+Still, people did not complain, so that they may be
+regarded as accessories to the sub-postmistress's
+delinquencies. There was, however, a postal super-session
+in that village!</p>
+
+<p>There is still in the rural service a postman
+who labours under the disabilities of having only
+one arm and of being unable to read or write.
+He has not a very extensive delivery, and so his
+pockets are made to do duty in the place of
+the faculty of reading. The left breast pocket
+indicates that letters placed in it are for Cliff
+Farm, those in the right breast pocket for Rush<!--[331.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
+Hill Farm, several other pockets serving in like
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>From very old official books sent into store on the
+change of holders of sub-offices, it is noticeable that
+the writing of fifty years ago was much superior to
+that of the present day, indicating that sub-postmasters
+of olden time either took more interest
+in caligraphy than their successors, or possibly had
+more leisure in which to make the necessary entries
+than is afforded in the present period of high
+pressure.</p>
+
+<p>'Tis strange that it was so, as at the time the steel
+pen had not ousted the quill. Even so short a time
+as forty years since a new intrant to the Post
+Office, hailing from the Emerald Isle, had, like all
+other new-comers, to enter his name and address in
+the Order Book on his first introduction to St.
+Martin's-le-Grand. A steel pen was handed to him,
+with which he dallied for a time, and when asked
+why he did not proceed, said: "Sure, I was waiting
+for a feather."</p>
+
+<p>The institution for the care of consumption
+started in this country, and known as Nordrach-upon-Mendip,
+is in the Bristol postal district at<!--[332.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+one of its most distant points on the range of the
+Mendip Hills, at an altitude of 850 feet above sea
+level. It has already played an important part as
+regards the Bristol Post Office, inasmuch as a consumptive
+telegraph clerk has benefited considerably
+from the new treatment, and has indeed left the
+institution as cured. It is not generally known that
+until recently there existed a small Convalescent
+Home on the Mendips, but "Cosy Corner," founded
+and maintained by Sir Edward Hill, K.C.B., stood
+there as such, and it served a good part as regards a
+postal servant. A postman employed at the Bristol
+railway station as mail porter, who had suffered
+from a serious attack of typhoid fever, and who had
+been verily at death's door, passed several weeks at
+this rural retreat, and derived such benefit from the
+kind treatment he received and from the bracing air
+of the district that he quite recovered from his ailment
+and is now in robust health. "Cosy Corner"
+has now been affiliated to Nordrach-upon-Mendip.</p>
+
+<p>The rule of the Service is that coins, postage
+stamps, and other articles of value picked up in a
+sorting office are regarded as treasure trove and
+have to be handed over to the authorities for<!--[333.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+disposal; but a letter carrier's round can hardly be
+regarded in the light of a Post Office, and so a
+postman of the Thornbury district who at Aust
+Cliff, picked up a well-preserved bronze coin with
+the image and superscription of Claudius C&aelig;sar
+(<span class="smcap">A.D.</span> 41-54) did not consider himself called upon
+to give it up to the sub-postmaster, but disposed of
+it for the sum of 15s. 6d. The purchaser presented
+it to the Leicester Museum.</p>
+
+<p>Tradition hath it that Miss Hannah More, the
+celebrated authoress and philanthropist, when residing
+(1770) at Wrington, near Bristol, in the churchyard
+of which place her remains now repose, made an
+arrangement with the postman of the period whereby
+on passing along the road near her residence he was
+to signal to her when any event of importance had
+occurred. Her sitting and bedroom windows commanded
+a view of the walk near which the postman
+had to pass, so that she could see him coming, and
+she always hurried down to the wicket-gate in
+readiness to meet him when he put up his flag. A
+son of the postman, now alive, remembers well that
+his father told him that he had given the signal on
+the death of Queen, Caroline. It was outside the<!--[334.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+postman's function, to wave the red flag with which
+Mistress Hannah, had provided him, but Post Office
+matters were not carried on so strictly in those days
+as under the present regime. The Wrington postman
+obtained the news about important passing
+events from the mail-man who rode through the
+village on his way from Bristol to Axbridge.
+George Vowles, who died twenty-six years ago, at
+the ripe age of 88 years, was the mail-man who
+conveyed to the villages on his way the news of the
+battle of Waterloo, brought down from London by
+the mail coach, which had been decorated with
+laurels and flowers in honour of the great event.<!--[335.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
+
+<h5>GENERAL FREE DELIVERY OF LETTERS.</h5>
+
+
+<p>No stone has been left unturned in the endeavour
+to afford a free delivery of letters at the door of
+every house in the district; and at last all houses
+and cottages, even in the remotest localities, have
+been reached, and the woodman, the gamekeeper,
+and the lone cottager now receive a daily visit from
+the postman. In visiting out of the way places of
+the kind with a view to arranging a delivery,
+the surveyor has to look out for dogs. A certain
+warren house in this district affords a typical
+case. It is far from the ordinary haunts of man,
+and was without an official delivery on account of
+its extreme inaccessibility. The approach is through
+a deep gorge, known as Goblin Combe, and the
+path to the house is precipitous. The gamekeeper
+residing there had to send to a farmhouse a mile
+and a quarter distant for his letters, which the
+obliging farmer had consented to take in for him.
+The attempts of the staff to arrange a method of<!--[336.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
+delivery by postmen had long been baffled. At the
+time when the writer went to view the place there
+was a rumour in the neighbourhood that, owing to
+serious depredations by poachers, fierce dogs roamed
+the enclosed warren; and on passing out on to the
+warren from the wood corner, there was observed
+standing on a wall near the house what in the
+distance and misty morn, appeared to be a large
+bloodhound, and so the advance had to be made
+warily. The attendant rural postman was armed
+with a riding whip, on which his grip tightened,
+for he had already been four times bitten by dogs,
+as the scars on his hand testified, and he desired to
+guard himself against another attack. At last, as the
+place was neared, the object of distrust was found to
+be&mdash;a large goat! Another out-of-the-way place in
+the same neighbourhood, also unserved by the postman,
+was a woodman's house in a dense wood, which,
+with its bowling-green, is said once to have been
+used by "Bristol bloods" of old time as a safe
+retreat where they could indulge in a little business
+connected with the prize ring and cock fighting.
+That the Duke of Norfolk's liberal policy in Her
+Majesty's Diamond Jubilee year has proved a boon<!--[337.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+and a blessing to many residents in isolated spots
+is indicated, for instance, by what a poor woman
+living in a wild district stated. She had recently
+to trudge the whole way from her house to Bristol,
+a distance of eight miles out and eight miles back,
+while a letter which would have obviated her
+journey had been lying undelivered for days at a
+Post Office only two miles off.</p>
+
+<p>Blaize Castle, which is within four miles of the
+Head Post Office, was singularly enough almost the
+last habitation in the Bristol district which was
+granted a free delivery of letters daily, for until 1898
+the postman in his official capacity had never
+penetrated to that rock-elevated and remote part
+of the Blaize Woods where the castle stands.
+That reproach to the Bristol district has now been
+removed, and the custodians of the castle have
+obtained their rights as citizens of the great kingdom
+in having their letters delivered at the door daily
+by the Postmaster-General's representative. It
+was a difficult matter to find out all the houses at
+which the postman did not call, and this particular
+castle, which is now only occupied by caretakers,
+was not notified by the rural postman, as the<!--[338.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
+occupiers had signified to him that they did not
+care for a delivery and were quite satisfied if the
+letters were left in the village till called for. The
+circumstance may be of interest to Bristolians,
+from the fact that Blaize Castle is spoken of by
+many but is seen by very few. Its flagstaff is
+visible from some little distance, but the castle
+itself can scarcely be discerned through its wooded
+surroundings, even from the far-famed Arbutus
+Walk, which is separated from it by a deep gorge.
+The castle is situated on a lofty plateau in the
+midst of the large woods. Close to it is a
+sheer perpendicular rock, three hundred feet
+high, known as "The Giant's leap." The castle
+is said to have derived its name from St. Blaisius,
+the Spanish patron of wool-combers, to whom a
+chapel was dedicated on a hill in the grounds
+where the castle now stands, and where there was
+once a Roman encampment. The interest attaching
+to this castle is enhanced from a postal point of
+view by the circumstance that the son of the lady
+who owns the property married a daughter of the
+late Postmaster-General, the Right Hon. H. C.
+Raikes.<!--[339.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>Mr. Raikes was one of the hardest working of
+Postmasters-General. So diligent indeed was he,
+that almost nightly, when the House of Commons
+was sitting, the right hon. gentleman, after all
+other Members had gone home, retired to his
+official room and went through the papers which
+had been sent up from the Post Office for his
+consideration. So absorbed would he become in the
+documents, which he read carefully through from
+end to end, so that he might judge from his own
+standpoint and not from that of his official advisers,
+that he would sit well into the small hours of the
+morning, whilst that patient and most obliging of
+officials, the postmaster of the House, Mr. Pike,
+kept weary vigil, waiting to take the despatch-bag
+to the Post Office in the City before he went home
+to his well-earned rest. Mr. Raikes's invariably
+clear and even writing betokened that, long past
+the hour for bed as the time might be, he never
+had any idea of doing his work in a hurry. He
+was probably known to many of the citizens of
+Bristol, through his frequent visits to a mansion
+on the Westbury side of the Downs.<!--[340.png]-->
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class='Null'><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span></p>
+<h2 class='ChapterTitle'><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+
+<h5>LOCAL RETURNED LETTER OFFICE.</h5>
+
+
+<p>The Bristol Post Office has its returned letter
+branch, with which almost all the towns in the
+West of England, and South Wales are affiliated
+for "dead letter" work. Through its agency over
+a million letters and postal packets are returned to
+senders annually. Book packets and circulars form
+50 per cent. of the total number, and of these only
+75 per cent. can be restored to the persons who
+posted them. Over 10,000 letters containing
+property are recorded in the ledgers, and they
+represent a total value in cash, bank-notes, bills,
+cheques, postage stamps, etc., of about &pound;36,000
+per annum, nearly the whole of which reaches the
+hands of the senders. About 400 letters containing
+money orders, and 1,700 letters containing value,
+compulsorily registered, are returned in the course of
+the year. Amongst the curiosities of returned letter<!--[341.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
+office experience may be mentioned the following.
+A letter was received thus peculiarly addressed:&mdash;"Miss
+----, 4, Pleasant View, in that beautiful city
+which charms even eyes familiar with the masterpieces
+of Bramanto and Palladio, and which the
+genius of Anstey and of Smollett, of Frances
+Burney and of Jane Austen has made classic
+ground." The pundits in the returned letter office
+who deal with derelict letters properly divined that
+the place so glowingly described was Bath, and
+issuing the letter accordingly, it was duly delivered
+in the fair city.</p>
+
+<p>A packet was received simply addressed "Post
+Office, Bristol, to be called for." The contents were
+an army reserve man's discharge papers and pension
+application forms. The application bore evidence
+that it referred to Lichfield, and the packet was
+accordingly sent to that military dep&ocirc;t. Two or
+three days afterwards an old soldier called at the
+Bristol office for his letter, and could not possibly
+understand why it had been opened in the returned
+letter branch, and the contents sent to Lichfield.
+His fury was unbounded, and he consigned all and
+sundry to Hades. His papers were soon obtained<!--[342.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
+for him from Lichfield, and his gratitude at getting
+them, was as effusively manifested as his disappointment
+had been in not finding the papers awaiting
+him on first application. His thanks were conveyed
+in the following terse communication:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Dear Boss,&mdash;A thousand pardons, everything
+comes right to those who wait. Patience is a virtue.</p>
+
+<p>
+"Obt servt,<br />
+W. H. &mdash;&mdash;."<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," wrote a Bristol citizen on a postcard, "I
+have lost a ingine off 3 gine oneing to the delay
+of a post care wich Mr. &mdash;&mdash; send of wine ts plaa
+to ingury and abould youre turly I &mdash;&mdash;, 10, &mdash;&mdash; lane
+rielence Bristol." It was not at first apparent what
+the writer of the card actually required, but by
+degrees it was made out that what he meant was:&mdash;"I
+have lost an engagement of 3 guineas owing
+to the delay of a postcard which Mr. &mdash;&mdash; sent, of
+Wine Street. Please to enquire and oblige, yours
+truly, I. &mdash;&mdash;, 10, &mdash;&mdash; Lane, Residence, Bristol."</p>
+
+<p>Danger lurks in unexpected places, even for Post
+Office cleaners. Packages which have remained in
+the returned letter office for the prescribed period<!--[343.png]-->
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>
+have to be destroyed from time to time. Sometimes
+they contain chemicals. It chanced that at Bristol
+one of the charwomen, when pouring out hot water
+into a large waste bucket, was startled by the
+emission from the bucket of a fierce, bright, flame
+which badly burned her hand and caused her
+no small fright. The flame lasted for a minute.
+The fumes were overpowering, and unpleasantly
+pervaded the whole telegraph gallery above.
+Upon investigation, it appeared that another charwoman
+who had been instructed to "dispose" of a
+bottle of sodium amalgam, had carelessly emptied
+it into the waste bucket with the startling result
+narrated.<br /></p>
+
+
+<p>The Post Office is ever progressing, and in course
+of time there will be further particulars for a future
+writer to relate concerning the "Bristol Royal Mail."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 100%' />
+
+<pre>
+Transcriber's Note: Discovered publisher's punctuation errors have been
+corrected. In addition, the following errors have been corrected:
+
+p. 22: 6th instant intead[instead] of on the first of the month. The
+
+p. 136: in the chair, the Post Office is again roproved[reproved]
+
+p. 163: about 30,000 letters. Birminghan[Birmingham] comes next in
+
+p. 229: spoken of the disclipine[discipline] and training telegraph
+
+p. 283: Office, hailng[hailing] from the Emerald Isle, had, like all
+
+p. 164: pension or gratuity is given. The apppointment[appointment]
+
+p. 112: Post Office now was was[delete second 'was'] the centre of commerce,
+
+p. 153: not [been] offered, would most likely have been sent
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bristol Royal Mail, by R. C. Tombs
+
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+</body>
+</html>
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@@ -0,0 +1,6139 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bristol Royal Mail, by R. C. Tombs
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Bristol Royal Mail
+ Post, Telegraph, and Telephone
+
+Author: R. C. Tombs
+
+Release Date: November 2, 2010 [EBook #34197]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRISTOL ROYAL MAIL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Adrian Mastronardi, Henry Gardiner, The
+Philatelic Digital Library Project at http://www.tpdlp.net
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+No copyright date is indicated in the source material, but the last date
+mentioned is November, 1899.
+
+Found at the end of the text is a list of corrections of discovered
+publisher's typographic errors.
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ BRISTOL ROYAL MAIL.
+
+
+[Illustration: THE POSTMASTER'S OFFICE, BRISTOL.
+
+_From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine St., Bristol._]
+
+
+
+ _All rights reserved._
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ BRISTOL ROYAL MAIL.
+
+ POST, TELEGRAPH, AND
+ TELEPHONE.
+
+ BY
+
+ R. C. TOMBS,
+
+ _Postmaster of Bristol,
+ Ex-Controller of the London Postal Service._
+
+ BRISTOL:
+ J. W. ARROWSMITH, 11 QUAY STREET.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I. _Page_
+ DEVELOPMENT OF THE MAIL SERVICES. RALPH ALLEN.
+ 1532-1764 1
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+ MAIL COACH ERA. JOHN PALMER. 1770-1818 17
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+ 1818 ONWARDS. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE. OLD MAIL
+ GUARDS 35
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ VICTORIAN ERA, 1837-1899. MAIL TRANSPORT BY
+ RAILWAY. TRAVELLING POST OFFICES 49
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+ BRISTOL POSTMASTERS. 1678-1899 68
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ NOTABLE POST OFFICE SERVANTS OF BRISTOL ORIGIN 82
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ POST OFFICE BUILDINGS 89
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ THE LOCAL POST OFFICE IN EARLY DAYS. SIR ROWLAND
+ HILL. RECENT PROGRESS 121
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ BRISTOL AS A MAIL PORT 141
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+ POSTAL SERVICE. STAFF: ITS COMPOSITION, DUTIES,
+ RESPONSIBILITIES. VOLUME OF WORK 160
+
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ CHRISTMAS AND ST. VALENTINE SEASONS 175
+
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ PUBLIC OFFICE: ITS BUSINESS. THE SAVINGS BANK.
+ PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS 186
+
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ TELEGRAPHS. TELEPHONES. EXPRESS DELIVERY 198
+
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ TELEGRAPH MESSENGERS 222
+
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ LETTER DELIVERY SYSTEM. POSTMEN: THEIR DUTIES
+ AND RECREATIONS 234
+
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ POST LETTER BOXES: POSITION, VIOLATION, PECULIAR
+ USES 253
+
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ RURAL DISTRICT SUB-POSTMASTERS. RURAL POSTMEN.
+ INCIDENTS 257
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ GENERAL FREE DELIVERY OF LETTERS 287
+
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ RETURNED LETTER OFFICE 292
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+
+ THE POSTMASTER'S OFFICE, BRISTOL Preface iv
+
+ RALPH ALLEN OF CROSS POST FAME _Page_ 8
+
+ " HIS RESIDENCE AT PRIOR PARK, BATH 10
+
+ " HIS TOWN HOUSE IN BATH 12
+
+ " HIS TOMB AT CLAVERTON 16
+
+ JOHN PALMER, INTRODUCER OF MAIL COACHES 20
+
+ OLD ENGLISH "FLYING" MAIL COACH 22
+
+ MAIL COACH. PLATE DEDICATED TO PALMER 34
+
+ THE WEST COUNTRY MAIL COACHES ABOUT TO LEAVE
+ PICCADILLY 36
+
+ THE LAST OF THE MAIL GUARDS 44
+
+ ARRIVAL OF THE BATH AND BRISTOL MAIL COACH AT
+ ROADSIDE INN 48
+
+ START OF MAIL COACHES FROM BUSH INN, BRISTOL 52
+
+ THE OLD PASSAGE, AUST 56
+
+ JOHN GARDINER 70
+
+ THOMAS TODD WALTON, SENIOR 72
+
+ THOMAS TODD WALTON, JUNIOR 74
+
+ EDWARD CHADDOCK SAMPSON 80
+
+ SIR FRANCIS FREELING, BART 82
+
+ THE BRISTOL HEAD POST OFFICE IN 1899 118
+
+ THE "GREAT WESTERN" 152
+
+ R.M.S. "MONTEREY" 158
+
+ THE PUBLIC HALL OF THE BRISTOL POST OFFICE 186
+
+ THE TELEGRAPH INSTRUMENT ROOM, BRISTOL 204
+
+ CRIBBS CAUSEWAY POST OFFICE 261
+
+ MR. EDWARD BIDDLE 263
+
+ LETTER BOX AT WINTERBOURNE 269
+
+ HANNAH BREWER, THE BITTON POSTWOMAN 276
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+In these days when books on every conceivable subject are written in
+their thousands annually; when monthly journals are produced by scores,
+and daily newspapers in hundreds, to supply the public with a record of
+the world's doings; and when readers are found for them all, it may not
+be thought unfitting that each large mail centre in the United Kingdom
+which contributes by its postal and telegraph organisation to the
+dissemination of much of this literature, should in its turn have some
+record of its own doings. This present compilation has, therefore, been
+undertaken with that object in view, as regards the Bristol Post Office,
+and in the hope that the facts, figures, and incidents contained in it
+relating to past doings and present days and present ways may prove of
+interest to the inhabitants of the County and City, and its surrounding
+districts, and in an unpretentious way commence, or add to, local
+Post Office history, and demonstrate that though Bristol is not,
+unfortunately, the leading provincial seaport, as of yore, she has not
+lagged one step behind her competitors in respect of postal progress.
+
+The profit which may accrue from the publication of _The Bristol Royal
+Mail_ will be devoted exclusively to the Rowland Hill Memorial and
+Benevolent Fund, the chief patron of which is Her Most Gracious Majesty
+the Queen-Empress, who is about to show her great interest in works of
+the kind by visiting our ancient city to open the new Convalescent Home.
+The object of the fund is the relief of all Post Office servants
+throughout the United Kingdom, who, through no fault of their own, have
+fallen into necessitous circumstances. It also affords assistance to
+their widows and orphans, for whom no provision is made under the
+Superannuation Acts. The fund is managed by a body of trustees, who are
+assisted by a committee of recommendation composed of officers of the
+Post Office. The trustees are well-known gentlemen of high standing and
+repute in the city of London, to whose benevolent efforts on behalf of
+the department the fund owes its origin. The Superannuation Acts afford
+pensions to those who have been in the Post Office not less than ten
+years. Sometimes a deserving and distressed Post Office servant has not
+served long enough to qualify for a pension, and sometimes help is
+needed by persons whose time has been partly spent in the postal
+service, but who, because they have been permitted to carry on some
+other occupation, are not entitled by law to any pension at all. A
+pension, even if it should prove to be sufficient for the pensioner's
+own support, ceases at death, and the widow and orphans are often left
+destitute. There are more than eighty-one thousand, and, counting those
+employed only a portion of their time, nearly one hundred and fifty
+thousand servants in the Post Office; and in comparison with the number
+of persons amongst whom cases needing relief may arise, the assured
+income at the disposal of the trustees of the fund is still inadequate.
+In the period since 1893 the trustees have granted to necessitous cases
+in the Bristol district L120, so that any proceeds from the sale of this
+book will be bestowed where such bestowal is certainly due.
+
+It is right to state that some of the information in these pages has
+been derived from _The History of the Post Office_, by the late Mr.
+Herbert Joyce, C.B.; _Forty Years at the Post Office_, by Mr. F. E.
+Baines, C.B.; _The Royal Mail_, by Mr. J. Wilson Hyde; and from _St.
+Martin's-le-Grand Magazine_, also Latimer's _Annals of Bristol_. Thanks
+are due also to Mr. Norris Mathews, the Bristol City Librarian, for his
+courtesy in permitting and facilitating access to old records in the
+Public Library; to Mr. H. J. Spear, Secretary to the Chamber of
+Commerce; to the proprietors of the _Times and Mirror_, for allowing
+inspection of their old files; and for illustrations to Mr. A. F.
+Walbrook, of the _Bath Chronicle_; to the proprietor, _Black and White_,
+and many others whose kindness is hereby acknowledged.
+
+
+
+
+The Bristol Royal Mail.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+1532-1764.
+
+DEVELOPMENT OF THE MAIL SERVICES.
+
+RALPH ALLEN.
+
+
+It appears that before Post Offices were established special messengers
+were employed to carry letters. It is recorded that such a special
+messenger was paid the sum of one penny for carrying a letter from
+Bristol to London in the year 1532, but the record affords no further
+particulars as to the service, and the assumption is that the special
+messenger was, in his own person, a rough-and-ready "post." Later on, a
+post would be suddenly established for a particular purpose, and as soon
+abandoned when no longer specially required. Thus in the year 1621 a
+post to Ireland--Irish firms being then considered to require "oftener
+despatches and more expedition"--was set up by way of Bristol, only to
+be discontinued in a few years.
+
+There was in 1660 a direct but irregular post between London and some of
+the larger provincial towns, but there were no cross posts between two
+towns not being on the same post road. Letters could only circulate from
+one post road to another through London, and such circulation through
+London involved additional rates of postage. Bristol and Exeter are less
+than eighty miles apart, but, not being on the same post road, letters
+from one place to the other passed through London, and were charged, if
+single, 6d., thus:--one rate of 3d. from Exeter to London, and another
+rate of 3d. from London to Bristol. This was in conformity with a system
+established in the reign of Charles II. That system went on until 1696
+when a post was established between Bristol and Exeter, that being the
+first cross post in the kingdom authorised by the Monarch's own personal
+assent. From Bristol the posts went on Mondays and Fridays, starting at
+10.0 in the morning. The posts left Exeter on Wednesdays and Saturdays
+at 4.0 in the afternoon, and arrived at Bristol at the same hour on the
+following days. Under this cross post plan, the two towns being less
+than eighty miles apart, the charge was reduced to 2d. for a single
+letter. In three or four years the new post produced a profit of L250 a
+year. In 1678 Provost Campbell established a coach to run from Glasgow
+to Edinburgh, "drawn by sax able horses, to leave Edinboro' ilk Monday
+morning, and return again (God willing) ilk Saturday night." In 1700 the
+service between Bristol and London became fixed, and on alternate days
+at irregular hours, depending upon the state of the weather and the
+roads, the extent of the journey and the caprices of the postboys and
+the sorry nags that carried them, the mail arrived in Bristol. There
+were, however, only a mere handful of letters and newspapers. At the end
+of the same year, the Post Office authorities in London, after being
+earnestly petitioned by local merchants, counselled the Government to
+establish a "cross post" from this city to Chester. Up to that time the
+Bristol letters to Chester, Shrewsbury, Worcester, and Gloucester had
+been carried round by London under the system already described,
+involving double postage and great delay. The effect of this system, as
+on the Bristol and Exeter road, had been to throw nearly all the letters
+into the hands of public carriers, by whose wagons they were conveyed
+more quickly than by the postboys through London, and at a cheaper rate.
+Moved by the success of the new cross posts from Bristol to Exeter, the
+Treasury consented to the starting of the Chester service. The Post
+Office reported to the Treasury in March, 1702, that the profit for the
+first eighteen months of the Chester service had been about L156. The
+accounts of Henry Pyne, the Bristol postmaster, appended to the report
+in the State papers, show that so far as this part of the service was
+concerned, he had received L168 for letters by this post, whilst his
+expenses had been L60.
+
+The people of Cirencester and Exeter, hearing of the Chester concession,
+hastened to complain of shortcomings affecting themselves. The
+Devon clothiers had a considerable trade with the wool dealers of
+the district of Cirencester, which town was served by the postboys
+riding between Gloucester and London, with a branch postboy mail to
+Wotton-under-Edge. By there being no direct postal service of any kind
+between Bristol and Wotton-under-Edge, correspondence between Exeter and
+Cirencester had to be sent _via_ London, and a fortnight elapsed between
+the despatch of a letter and the receipt of an answer, the result being
+that not one letter in twenty was sent through the post. All that was
+needed to shorten the transit from fourteen days to four was to put
+Bristol in direct communication with Wotton, the expense being estimated
+at only L30 a year. The Government declined to comply with this
+reasonable request, and nothing was done!
+
+[Illustration: RALPH ALLEN.
+
+_By permission of the Proprietor of "The Bath and County Graphic."_]
+
+Soon after this time a Post Office reformer arose in our immediate
+district in the person of Ralph Allen. He, unlike later reformers,
+passed all his working days in the Post Office service. Born at the
+"Duke William Inn," at St. Blazey Highway, in Cornwall in about 1693, he
+went as a boy to help his grandmother, who was postmistress at St.
+Columb. In 1710 he was transferred as a clerk to Bath, and on the 26th
+March, 1712, he became postmaster of that city, in succession to one
+Mary Collins, and in that year appears to have taken over the management
+of the Bristol and Exeter Cross Road Post, previously farmed by Joseph
+Quash, postmaster of Exeter. In 1720 Ralph Allen contracted to farm the
+cross-country posts throughout the country generally, and to carry the
+mails by what were subsequently known as "Allen's Postboys," who were
+supposed to travel on horseback at a pace averaging five miles an hour.
+A robbery from these postboys carrying the mails between London and
+Bristol was a common occurrence. Two men were executed in April, 1720,
+for having twice committed that crime, yet the letter bags were again
+stolen seven times during the following twelve months. The _London
+Journal_ of August 27th remarked: "It is computed that the traders of
+Bristol have received L60,000 damages by the late robberies of the
+mail." In 1722 the postboys were robbed twice in a single week, and for
+the crimes three men were executed in London. Another incident of the
+kind worthy of mentioning occurred in September, 1738. The bag then
+carried off by three highwaymen contained a reprieve for a man lying
+under sentence of death in Newgate, and a second reprieve despatched
+after the robbery became known would have arrived too late to save the
+man's life, had not the magistrates postponed the execution for a day
+or two in order that it might not clash with the festivities of a new
+Mayor's inauguration.
+
+[Illustration: PRIOR PARK, BATH.
+
+(_Formerly residence of Ralph Allen._)
+
+_By permission of the Proprietor of "The Bath and County Graphic."_]
+
+About 1732 the Bristol riding boys were deprived of their perquisite of
+1d. a letter for "dropping of letters" at the towns and villages through
+which they passed. This was done because the postboys not only carried
+letters which they picked up on the road and did not account for at the
+next post office of call, but even went to the length of taking out
+letters from the mail bags when those bags were, as was the case
+sometimes, not properly chained and sealed. In connection with Ralph
+Allen's "By-Posts," in the year 1735 arrangements were made so that the
+mails sent from Manchester, Liverpool, or any other place in Lancashire,
+to Worcestershire, Gloucestershire, Somerset, Devon, etc., might be
+answered four days sooner than they could possibly have been answered
+before. In 1740 a new branch by-post was established from Bristol and
+Bath to Salisbury, through Bradford, Trowbridge, Devizes, Lavington,
+Tinhead, Westbury, Warminster, Heytesbury, and Wilton. In 1741 the
+growth of trade and population encouraged the Bristol citizens to
+appeal to the Ministry for an improvement in the postal communication
+with London, which was still limited to three days per week. Yielding to
+this pressure, Allen converted the tri-weekly posts into six-day posts
+in June, 1741. The post began to run every day of the week, except
+Sunday, between London and Bristol, and all intervening towns
+participated in the benefit. In 1746 a further extension took place,
+whereby letters were conveyed six days in every week, instead of three
+days, at Mr. Allen's expense, between London and Wells, Bridgwater,
+Taunton, Wellington, Tiverton, and Exeter, through Bristol. The mail
+service is not in further evidence in local history until 1753, when the
+Bristol merchants again showed themselves tenacious of their rights, and
+waged a bitter war against the Postmasters-General in respect of the
+imposition of a double rate of postage on letters which, although under
+an ounce in weight, contained patterns of silk or cotton or samples of
+grain. There was a lawsuit, and the Bristol merchants won it.
+
+A Government notification in the local newspapers of the 4th September,
+1752, announced an acceleration of the mails between the Southern
+Counties and Bristol. In future a postboy was to leave Salisbury on
+Mondays at six o'clock in the morning, to arrive at Bath (a distance of
+about thirty-nine miles) at eight or nine at night, and to leave Bath
+for Bristol at six next morning. On Wednesdays and Fridays the departure
+from Salisbury was in the evening, the journey occupying about nineteen
+hours. By this arrangement letters from Portsmouth were received in this
+city two days earlier than before.
+
+[Illustration: RALPH ALLEN'S TOWN HOUSE IN BATH.
+
+_By kind permission of the Proprietor of the "Bath and County
+Graphic."_]
+
+Ralph Allen's improvements had great influence in the Post Office
+services in this western city. The profits on the contracts enabled
+Allen to take up his residence at Prior Park, Bath, one of the finest
+Italian houses in England, in addition to having a grand house in the
+City. It is said that the profits which accrued to him from his long
+contracts amounted to about half a million of money.
+
+Mansions so lordly are not for the hardest and best workers in the Post
+Office field of present times, for the nation does not reward its great
+men so liberally as then. Nowadays an introducer of the inland parcel
+post service, the foreign parcel post service, an improver of the
+telegraph service, and leader in bringing about vastly accelerated mail
+services throughout the country,--works of great moment, even if not
+comparable with Ralph Allen, John Palmer, or Rowland Hill's great
+achievements,--has, after forty years at the Post Office, to be
+contented on retirement with no more than the modest pension due to him,
+which will not even be continued to his nearest and dearest relative.
+
+Allen benefited the Bristol postal district in another way than by his
+improved Post Office services when he built the bridge over the Avon at
+Newton-St.-Loe at a cost of L4,000. He was buried in Claverton
+Churchyard, near Bath. The inscription on his tomb runs thus:--"Beneath
+this Monument lieth entombed the Body of Ralph Allen, Esqr., of Prior
+Park, who departed this life y^e 29th day of June, 1764, in the 71st
+year of his Age. In full hope of everlasting happiness in another state
+thro' the infinite merit and mediation of our blessed Redeemer, Jesus
+Christ."
+
+Ralph Allen did not hoard up his money or spend it on riotous living,
+but bestowed a considerable portion of his income in works of charity,
+especially in supporting needy men of letters. He was a great friend and
+benefactor of Fielding, and in _Tom Jones_ the novelist has gratefully
+drawn Mr. Allen's character in the person of Squire Alworthy. He enjoyed
+the friendship of Chatham and Pitt; and Pope, Warburton, and other men
+of literary distinction were his familiar companions. Pope has
+celebrated one of his principal virtues--unassuming benevolence--in the
+well-known lines:
+
+ "Let humble Allen, with an awkward shame,
+ Do good by stealth, and blush to find it fame."
+
+Derrick has thus described Allen's personal appearance shortly before
+his death: "He is a very grave, well-looking man, plain in his dress,
+resembling that of a Quaker, and courteous in his behaviour. I suppose
+he cannot be much under seventy. His wife is low, with grey hair, and of
+a very pleasing address." Kilvert says that he was rather above the
+middle size and stoutly built, and that he was not altogether averse to
+a little state, as he often used to drive into Bath in a coach and four.
+His handwriting was very curious; he evidently wrote quickly and
+fluently, but it was so overloaded with curls and flourishes as to be
+sometimes scarcely legible.
+
+The lack of all show about his garb seems to have somewhat annoyed
+Philip Thicknesse, the well-known author of one of the Bath Guides, for
+he speaks of Allen's "plain linen shirt-sleeves, with only a chitterling
+up the slit."
+
+Allen's son Philip became Comptroller of the "By-Letter" Department in
+the London Post Office.
+
+[Illustration: RALPH ALLEN'S TOMB IN CLAVERTON CHURCHYARD, NEAR BATH.
+
+_By kind permission of the Proprietor of the "Bath and County
+Graphic."_]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+1770-1818.
+
+MAIL COACH ERA.--JOHN PALMER.
+
+
+Notwithstanding Ralph Allen's innovations, the conveyance of letters
+between the principal towns was carried on in a more or less desultory
+fashion. Speaking of the want of improvement in 1770, and the haphazard
+system under which Post Office business was conducted, a local newspaper
+gave this instance of unpunctuality: "The London Mail did not arrive so
+soon by several hours as usual on Monday, owing to the mailman getting a
+little intoxicated on his way between Newbury and Marlborough, and
+falling from his horse into a hedge, where he was found asleep, by means
+of his dog." Mr. Weeks, who entered upon "The Bush," Bristol, in 1772,
+after ineffectually urging the proprietors to quicken their speed,
+started a one day coach to Birmingham himself, and carried it on against
+a bitter opposition, charging the passengers only 10s. 6d. and 8s. 6d.
+for inside and outside seats respectively, and giving each one of them a
+dinner and a pint of wine at Gloucester into the bargain. After two
+years' struggle his opponents gave in, and one day journeys to
+Birmingham became the established rule.
+
+The mail service was carried on chiefly by means of postboys (generally
+wizened old men), who continued to travel on worn-out horses not able to
+get along at a speed of more than four miles an hour on the bad roads.
+On the London and Bristol route, indeed, it had been found necessary to
+provide the postboys with light carts, but that method of conveyance of
+the mail bags brought about no acceleration in time of transit,--from
+thirty to forty hours, according to the state of the roads. A letter
+despatched from Bristol or Bath on Monday was not delivered in London
+until Wednesday morning. On the other hand a letter confided to the
+stage coach of Monday reached its destination on Tuesday morning, and
+the consequence was that Bristol traders and others sent letters of
+value or urgency by the stage coach, although the proprietors charged
+2s. for each missive.
+
+At this period John Palmer, of Bath, came on the scene. He had learnt
+from the merchants of Bristol what a boon it would be if they could get
+their letters conveyed to London in fourteen or fifteen hours, instead
+of three days. It is said, however, that it was the sight of Ralph
+Allen's grand place at Prior Park, and the knowledge of how Allen's
+money had been made, which first suggested to Palmer the attempt to
+bring a scheme for a mail coach system to the notice of the postal
+authorities. John Palmer was lessee and manager of the Bath and Bristol
+theatres, and went about beating up actors, actresses and companies in
+postchaises, and he thought letters should be carried at the same pace
+at which it was possible to travel in a chaise. He devised a scheme, and
+Pitt, the Prime Minister of the day, who warmly approved the idea,
+decided that the plan should have a trial and that the first mail coach
+should run between London and Bristol. On Saturday, the 31st July, 1784,
+an agreement was signed in connection with Palmer's scheme under which,
+in consideration of payment of 3d. a mile, five inn-holders--one
+belonging to London, one to Thatcham, one to Marlborough, and two to
+Bath--undertook to provide the horses, and on Monday, the 2nd August,
+1784, the first "mail coach" started. On its first journey it ran from
+Bristol,--not from London as generally supposed,--and Palmer was present
+to see it off. A well-armed mail guard in uniform was in charge of the
+vehicle, which was timed to perform the journey from Bristol to London
+in sixteen hours. Only four passengers were at first carried by each
+"machine," and the fare was L1 8s. The immediate effect was to
+accelerate the delivery of letters by a day. The coaches were small,
+light vehicles, drawn by a pair of horses only, but leaders were
+subsequently added, and four-horse coaches soon became the order of the
+day, and more passengers were carried. An old painting represents the
+Bath and Bristol mail trotting along close to a wall, the guard
+receiving one bag and handing another to the postmaster without the
+coachman pulling up. One coach left Bristol at 4.0 in the afternoon,
+reached Bath a couple of hours later, and arrived at the General Post
+Office, London, before 8.0 the next morning. The down coach started from
+London at 8.0 in the evening, was at the "Three Tuns," Bath, at a few
+minutes before 10.0 the next morning, and pulled up at the "Rummer
+Tavern," Bristol, at noon. Palmer gave up his theatrical enterprises and
+entered the service of the Post Office as Comptroller at a salary of
+L1,500 a year, and certain emoluments, which, after a year or two,
+brought him in an annual sum of more than L3,000. Before Palmer's mail
+coaches were at work the post left London at all hours of the night, but
+it was part of his scheme that the mails should all leave at the same
+time, 8.0; and as the number of mails increased so there was more and
+more bustle in the vicinity of the General Post Office at that hour. In
+London the arrival of all the mails was awaited before any one of them
+was delivered; and this led to the delivery sometimes not taking place
+until 3.0 or 4.0 in the afternoon, or even later. Palmer, with his
+regard for the Bristol coach, occasionally had the Bristol mails
+distributed immediately on reaching St. Martin's-le-Grand, but all other
+mails if behind were kept waiting as before.
+
+[Illustration: JOHN PALMER.
+
+THE FOUNDER OF THE MAIL COACH SYSTEM.
+
+_By kind permission of the Proprietor of the "Bath and County
+Graphic."_]
+
+Upon the beginning of Palmer's system on the Bristol road a marvellous
+superstructure was raised. Coaches were at once applied for by the
+municipalities of the largest towns, Liverpool being the first to aim
+at equality with Bristol, and York claiming what was due to the great
+highway to the North. Palmer's plan made rapid progress and was attended
+with complete success. A splendid mail service was eventually set up all
+over the country. One result was that the "expresses" to Bristol, which
+before had been as many as two hundred in the year, ceased altogether.
+In July, 1787, the mails from Bristol to Birmingham and the North,
+previously three per week, were ordered to be run daily. The London to
+Bristol coach was stopped by other means than those employed by
+highwaymen, the service having at one time in 1790 been suspended for
+several days by Palmer, in defiance of the Postmaster-General.
+
+In Bonner and Middleton's (weekly) _Journal_ for the 11th February,
+1792, is an announcement to the effect that the Irish mails arrived in
+Bristol on the 6th instant instead of on the first of the month. The
+bare fact was stated, and the assumption is, therefore, that it was not
+an unusual circumstance. Five days' delay would be thought intolerable
+now, as, indeed, is the present length of time occupied by the Irish
+night mails on their journey to Bristol. After being conveyed by fast
+boat to Holyhead and express train to Birmingham, they come on from that
+city by a "crawler" and do not reach Bristol until nearly the mid-day
+hour.
+
+[Illustration: OLD ENGLISH "FLYING" MAIL COACH.]
+
+In the same year (1792) sixteen mail coaches worked in and out of London
+every day. There were fifteen cross-country mail coaches, as, for
+instance, the coach between Bristol and Oxford, or, as it was commonly
+called, Mr. Pickwick's coach. During winter, in frosty weather, at this
+period, some of the mail coaches did not run at all, but were laid up
+for the season, like ships during Arctic frosts.
+
+There is a model of an old mail coach at the General Post Office, St.
+Martin's-le-Grand, London, popularly supposed to be the model of the
+first mail coach which was built, but such is not the case, for, as
+already stated, the first mail coach ran between Bristol and London, and
+the model has upon it the inscription "Royal Mail from London to
+Liverpool."
+
+The expense of horsing a four-horsed coach running at the speed of from
+nine to ten miles an hour was reckoned at L3 a double mile. Mails were
+exempt from turnpike tolls.
+
+With the introduction of the mail coaches with well-armed, resolute
+guards, there was a cessation of mail robberies on the main roads.
+Pilfering, however, was occasionally carried on; for instance, in the
+early winter of 1794 one Thomas Thomas travelled day after day up and
+down on the London and Bristol coach. At last his opportunity came when
+the guard temporarily left his coach with the mailbox unlocked, and then
+Thomas Thomas looted the mails. On the cross roads the saddle horse and
+cart posts were frequently stopped and robbed (1796). One of the worst
+roads in this respect was that between Bristol and Portsmouth. Proposals
+for the postboys to be furnished with pistols, cutlasses, and caps lined
+with metal, like hunting caps, for the defence of the head, fell through
+on account of the expense which their supply would have entailed.
+
+There exists a popular belief that the mail coaches were driven up and
+down the steep Queen Street in Bristol now known as Christmas Steps. The
+belief is erroneous, for an inscription over the recessed seats at the
+top of the passage tells us that--
+
+ "This STREETE WAS STEPPERED DONE
+ & Finished, September, 1669.
+ The Right Worpfl Thomas Stevens,
+ Esqr. Mayor.
+
+ Named QVEENE STREETE."
+
+Probably, however, the postboys who carried the mails in earlier days
+rode up the steep incline.
+
+A gentleman now writing in the _Bristol Times and Mirror_ under the
+_nom-de-plume_ of "Old File," delving in the historical garden of _Felix
+Farley's Journal_, has unearthed the following very interesting
+announcements and advertisements, which throw light on the mail services
+of the time:--
+
+ "MILFORD AND BRECKNOCK MAIL COACH.
+
+"A coach sets out from the 'White Hart,' Broad Street, Bristol, over the
+Old Passage (Aust), every Sunday, Wednesday, and Friday, at noon, and
+joins the above coach at Ragland the same day; and a corresponding coach
+returns from Milford on certain days." The chief point in the
+advertisement was in the paragraph: "N.B.--This road is nineteen miles
+nearer to Carmarthen and Milford than the lower one," that is, by the
+New Passage.
+
+This was replied to by another advertisement, as follows:
+
+"A CAUTION.--The public will please to observe that no other mail coach
+whatever does now, or ever has, run from Bristol to Milford Haven,
+excepting the Royal London, Bath, Bristol, and Milford Haven mail coach,
+which sets out from the 'Bush Inn and Tavern,' Corn Street, every
+Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, and the mail coach to Swansea
+every day from the same inn, notwithstanding the flaming advertisement
+of a certain set of men to deceive and mislead the public, by their
+asserting that the road over the Old Passage is nineteen miles nearer
+than that over the New Passage, which is so far from being a fact that
+the road of the New Passage is seven and three-quarters nearer, as was
+proved by admeasurement by orders of the office, making a difference of
+twenty-six miles and three-quarters nearer the lower (that is, the New
+Passage) than the upper road."
+
+On August 4th the proprietors of the New Passage coach came out with a
+larger announcement, and produced figures to prove their assertion--
+
+"N.B.--This road is nineteen miles nearer to Milford than the lower one,
+viz:--
+
+ UPPER ROAD. | LOWER ROAD.
+ Miles. | Miles.
+ Old Passage 11 | New Passage 10
+ Across the Water 1 | Across the Water 3
+ Ragland 14 | Newport 15
+ Abergavenny 9 | Cardiff 12
+ Brecknock 19 | Cowbridge 12
+ Trecastle 10 | Pill 12
+ Llandovery 9 | Neath 13
+ Llandilo 12 | Ponterdilas 10
+ Carmarthen 15 | Kidwelly 14
+ St. Clare's 9 | Carmarthen 9
+ Narberth 13 | St. Clare's 9
+ Haverford-West 10 | Narberth 13
+ Milford 10 | Haverford-West 10
+ | Milford 10
+ --- | ---
+ Total 142 | Total 161
+
+In favour of the Upper Road, 19 miles."
+
+
+ "BRISTOL, _4th January, 1799_.
+
+"Lost, on Monday morning, small letter-bag, marked on it 'Worcester and
+Bristol.' Whoever has found the same shall, on delivering it at the Post
+Office, receive five guineas reward; and whoever detains it after this
+notice will be prosecuted."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "GENERAL POST OFFICE,
+ _Friday, 15th February, 1799_.
+
+"George Evans, of Steep Street, St. Michael's, in the City of Bristol,
+Grocer, having been committed to the Gaol of Newgate, in the said City,
+charged with feloniously negotiating two Bills of Exchange contained in
+the bag of letters from Worcester for Bristol of the 30th December last,
+which was lost or stolen, and there being great reason to believe that
+one or more person or persons is or are privy to or concerned with him
+in the said felony: Whoever will give information at the Council Chamber
+in Bristol within one month from the date hereof, so that the said
+George Evans may be convicted of the offence with which he is charged,
+shall be entitled to a reward of fifty pounds. And if an accomplice
+shall make discovery he will also receive His Majesty's most gracious
+pardon.
+
+ "By command of the Postmaster-General.
+ "FRANCIS FREELING, Secretary."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _June 29th, 1799._
+
+"We understand that a bill for L50, drawn by the Worcester Bank on
+Messrs. Harfords, Davis and Co., of this City, and which was one of the
+bills contained in the Worcester bag lost on the 31st December last, has
+been presented within these few days for payment--a circumstance which
+may probably lead to the discovery of the party who found the said bag."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _August 10th._
+
+"Last week George Evans, who was tried at the Old Bailey in June last on
+a charge of forging endorsements on two bills (which, with many others,
+were contained in the Worcester bag destined for this City that was lost
+on the 21st December last, and of which intelligence has since been
+obtained), but who was acquitted for want of sufficient evidence, was
+again apprehended, and was committed to gaol on a charge of having
+stolen a promissory note, drawn by Messrs. Harfords, Davis and Co., of
+this City, value fifty pounds, which note was likewise sent by the same
+conveyance from Worcester, and being attempted to be negotiated, was
+stopped and traced back into the hands of the said Evans, against whom a
+detainer was lodged on account of a similar charge for another bill of
+the same value, and precisely under all the circumstances attending the
+former."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "GENERAL POST OFFICE,
+ "_October 11th, 1798_.
+
+"The postboy carrying the mail from Bristol to Salisbury on the 9th
+instant was stopped between the hours of eleven and twelve o'clock at
+night by two men on foot within six miles of Salisbury, who robbed him
+of seven shillings in money, but did not offer to take the mail. Whoever
+shall apprehend the convict, or cause to be apprehended and convicted
+both or either of the persons who committed this robbery, will be
+entitled to a reward of fifty pounds over and above the reward given by
+Act of Parliament for apprehending highwaymen. If either party will
+surrender himself and discover his accomplice he will be admitted as
+evidence for the Crown, receive His Majesty's most gracious pardon, and
+be entitled to the said reward.
+
+ "By command of the Postmaster-General.
+ "FRANCIS FREELING, Secretary."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There is no record that anyone claimed the reward.
+
+This, so far, is the end of "Old File's" researches.
+
+As the Bristol mail coach was going through Reading on the night of
+Thursday, the 18th January, 1799, the coachman was shook off the box,
+and, through his hands having been so benumbed by the cold, was unable
+to save himself. The guard jumped down and endeavoured to stop the
+horses, but without effect. They ran as far as Hare Hatch (four miles),
+where the coach changed horses, and then stopped, having met with no
+accident whatever, though they passed two wagons. The passengers in the
+coach did not know anything of it at the time.
+
+According to the _Bristol Directory_ for 1811, the "Bush Tavern" office
+in Corn Street, conducted by John Townsend, played an important part in
+the mail coach system of the country. Its announcement ran thus: "Royal
+mail coach to London at 4.0 every afternoon; comes in at half-past 11
+every morning. 'Loyal Volunteer' to London at 12.0 every day. Royal mail
+coach to Newport, Cardiff, Cowbridge, Neath, Swansea, and Carmarthen
+every day on the arrival of the London mail. Royal mail coach through
+Newport, Cardiff, Cowbridge, Swansea, Carmarthen, to Haverford-west and
+Milford Haven every Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday on the
+arrival of the London mail. The 'Cambrian,' a light post coach, the same
+route as the mail, to Swansea every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday
+morning at 6 o'clock; returns every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday
+evenings.
+
+"Royal mail coach to Birmingham through Gloster, Tewkesbury, Worcester
+and Bromsgrove every evening at 7.0; comes in every morning at 6.0. A
+post coach to Birmingham every day. Royal mail coach through Bath to
+Tetbury, Cirencester, and Oxford, every morning at quarter-past 7, comes
+in at 6.0 every evening. Royal mail coach through Bath, Warminster, and
+Salisbury to Southampton and Portsmouth at 3.0 every day; comes in at
+10.0 in the morning. Coach to Salisbury, Romsey, Southampton, and
+Gosport every day at 5.0 (Saturdays excepted), comes in at half-past
+10.0 at night. Exeter, _Original_ 'Duke of York' coach, through
+Bridgwater, Taunton, Wellington, and Cullompton every Tuesday,
+Thursday."
+
+In 1813 the London to Bristol mail coach was robbed of the Bankers'
+parcel, value L2,000 or upwards. This was made known in the form of a
+warning to the mail guards who travelled in charge of the Post Office
+bags. When in 1813-14 the great frost occurred, the Bristol mail coaches
+were obstructed by the heavy snowdrifts on the roads, and they came in
+day after day drawn by six horses each when they could struggle into the
+City.
+
+The literature of the period yields nothing of interest again for some
+time.
+
+The "Bristol Guide" in 1815 stated that--"Bristow is the richest city of
+almost all the cities of this country, receiving merchandize from
+neighbouring and foreign places with the ships under sail." And again,
+"Bristow is full of ships from Ireland, Norway and every part of Europe,
+which brought hither great commerce and large foreign wealth." There was
+no mention of their carrying mails.
+
+The year 1818 is memorable in postal annals as that in which John Palmer
+died. His decease took place at Brighton, but not before he had lived
+long enough to see mail coaches splendidly turned out. Palmer, on the
+conclusion of his connection with the Post Office, was awarded a pension
+of L3,000 a year, equal to his full salary, which sum he declared did
+not represent the amount of his salary and emoluments. Further
+difficulties ensued, and his son, Colonel Palmer, fought his father's
+battles right manfully in the House, and eventually, in 1813, the
+Government gave John Palmer a sum of L50,000.
+
+In recognition of Palmer's great invention, the Chamber of Commerce of
+Glasgow not only made him an honorary member, but voted him fifty
+guineas for a piece of plate. The fifty guineas was spent on a silver
+cup, which bore the following inscription:--
+
+ TO
+ JOHN PALMER, ESQ.,
+ SURVEYOR AND COMPTROLLER-GENERAL
+ OF THE POSTS OF GREAT BRITAIN,
+ FROM
+ THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
+ AND MANUFACTURERS
+ IN THE CITY OF GLASGOW,
+ AS AN ACKNOWLEDGMENT
+ OF THE BENEFITS
+ RESULTING FROM HIS PLAN
+ TO THE
+ TRADE AND COMMERCE
+ OF THIS KINGDOM,
+ 1789.
+
+[Illustration: TO JOHN PALMER, ESQ., SURVEYOR AND COMPTROLLER-GENERAL OF
+THE POST OFFICE THIS PLATE OF THE MAIL COACH IS RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED
+BY HIS OBEDIENT HUMBLE SERVANT, JAMES FITTLER.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+1819 ONWARDS.
+
+CHAMBER OF COMMERCE INTERVENES IN MAIL AFFAIRS. OLD MAIL GUARDS.
+
+
+A new coach, from "The Bush Hotel" to Exeter, was put on the road on the
+6th of April, 1819, the time allowed for the journey--74-3/4
+miles--being fourteen hours--less than 5-1/2 miles an hour. In June,
+1820 a new coach started for Manchester, performing the journey in two
+days, the intervening night being spent at Birmingham. To accomplish the
+first half of the task, the vehicle left Bristol at half-past 8 in the
+morning and reached Birmingham--85-1/2 miles--in thirteen hours. An
+advertisement, published in December, 1821, headed "Speed Increased,"
+informed the public that the "Regulator" coach left London daily at 5
+a.m. and arrived at the "White Hart," Bristol, at five minutes before 9
+at night, the speed being barely seven miles an hour.
+
+No fewer than twenty-two coaches were by this time utilised daily
+between this city and London. The start of the West Country mail coaches
+from Piccadilly at this period was an interesting sight. The continued
+wretched condition of the highways was not conducive to quick
+travelling; but in about 1825 matters were improved in that respect in
+our district by Mr. John Loudon MacAdam, who studied and practised
+road-making. Mr. MacAdam was general surveyor of Bristol turnpike roads,
+and although he found the trustees' funds only one remove from
+bankruptcy and their roads almost impassable, he succeeded so well that
+the finances flourished, and his highways became an object lesson to the
+world. Mr. Latimer, the Bristol historian, mentions that although
+MacAdam was shabbily treated by members of the old unreformed
+Corporation, and had many opponents, Bristol deserves the credit of
+being the first to appreciate the value of his labours, which were
+recognised later by a Parliamentary grant. He left Bristol for London,
+and died in 1836; but his son became surveyor of the Bristol roads, and
+continued to hold the appointment till his death in 1857.
+
+[Illustration: THE WEST COUNTRY MAIL COACHES ABOUT TO LEAVE PICCADILLY
+WITH "GO CART," BRINGING UP LATE MAILS FROM THE G.P.O.]
+
+The _Gentlemen's Magazine_, November, 1827, announced: "A Steam Coach
+Company are now making arrangements for stopping places on the line of
+road, between London, Bath and Bristol, which will occur every six or
+seven miles, where fresh fuel and water are to be supplied. There are
+fifteen coaches built." The Turnpike Trustees, who imposed extraordinary
+tolls on steam carriages, frustrated this scheme; but the threatened
+competition stirred up the coach proprietors, who increased the speed of
+their vehicles from the jog-trot of six or seven miles an hour, although
+not to such an extent as desired by the Bristol Chamber of Commerce,
+which in this year made a suggestion to the Post Office for bringing the
+London mail to the city in twelve hours. The Postmaster-General was also
+memorialised to accelerate the arrival of the West mail, so as to effect
+its delivery before the departure of the London mail,--a convenience of
+no little moment to the West India trade of the port, since it was
+thought that it would save one day in the conduct of business with the
+metropolis. At a general meeting in January, 1828, it was announced that
+the president had a conference on the subject with the leading officer
+of the Post Office Department, with the result that the latter proposed
+alterations which were carried out, and were held to be proofs of the
+Postmaster-General's disposition to consult the accommodation of the
+Bristol public. The former proposal was not adopted at the time, for at
+the Accession of his late Majesty King William IV. (1830) the London
+mail coach took 13 hours 37 minutes on its journey _via_ Reading. It
+departed at 8 p.m., reached Bath 8.11 a.m., and arrived in Bristol at
+9.37 a.m., leaving again at 5.50 p.m. for the G.P.O. The Bristol and
+Brighton coach (138 miles) was bound to a speed of 10.4 miles per hour.
+
+In January, 1830, there were further Post Office matters on the agenda
+of the Chamber of Commerce, for it was resolved--"That this meeting
+recommends to the Board the instituting an enquiry into the exact
+distance between the Post Office of London and Bristol, with a view to
+ascertain whether the rate of postage at present demanded is correct."
+The enquiry was prosecuted with vigour, for at the January annual
+meeting in the following year reference was made to the Turnpike
+Commissioners for the several districts on the line of road between
+London and Bristol having supplied a statement of the precise extent of
+ground over which the mail coach travelled, comprised in their
+respective trusts. In several instances measurements were expressly
+made. In the result it appeared that the route exceeded in distance 120
+miles, and the Post Office Department was therefore entitled legally to
+obtain the rate of 10d. per letter as the amount fixed by the provisions
+of the Act of Parliament. It was thought by taking the route from
+Chippenham through Marshfield instead of Bath the distance would be
+considerably shorter, and consequently bring about a reduced rate of
+postage. It was reported in the next year (January, 1832) that the
+requisition for changing the route had been pursued, and the president
+held a conference with Sir F. Freeling on the subject; but though every
+due consideration was promised, the alteration had not yet been acceded
+to. There was the significant addition that the application would
+nevertheless be renewed. A new royal mail direct from Bristol to
+Liverpool was established in 1831, leaving the "White Lion," Broad
+Street, Bristol, at 5.0 p.m., reaching Liverpool at twenty minutes past
+12 a.m. The new service was notified to Mr. Samuel Harford, the
+President of the Commerce Chamber, by Sir Francis Freeling, in the
+following terms:--
+
+ "G.P.O., _27th August, 1831_.
+
+"SIR,--Having brought under consideration the memorial from the Board of
+Directors of the Chamber of Commerce of Bristol, and from the bankers,
+merchants, and other inhabitants of Liverpool, transmitted in your
+letter of the 2nd May last, I have the satisfaction to acquaint you that
+His Grace the Postmaster General (Duke of Richmond) has consented to try
+the experiment of a mail coach between those towns, through Chepstow,
+Hereford, and Monmouth, and I flatter myself that it may commence about
+the middle of next month.
+
+ "I have the honour to be, Sir,
+ Your most obedient Servant,
+ F. FREELING, Secretary.
+
+ "Samuel Harford, Esq."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the next year the Chamber learnt with satisfaction that the direct
+Liverpool mail through Chepstow, Monmouth, Hereford, Shrewsbury and
+Chester, which was started as an experiment, had been continued, to the
+decided advantage of the public, particularly to all connected with the
+line of country through which it passed. As compared with the former
+route, the saving of time was equal to one day; the rate of postage was
+likewise reduced. The starting and arriving were at the most convenient
+hours the distance and circumstances, with reference to the passage of
+the two rivers, Severn and Medway, would permit. The coach had to run
+over the flat parts of the ground at a great pace, to make up for time
+lost at the hills. The contract time was 9 miles 2 furlongs in the hour.
+
+One of the chief mail coaches in the kingdom in 1837 was the Bristol,
+Carmarthen and Milford (150 miles _via_ Passage, one hour allowed for
+ferry), Cardiff and Swansea. Its down journey occupied 19 hours 38
+minutes, and its up journey 20 hours.
+
+The Liverpool and Milford mails were conveyed across the Severn at Aust
+Passage, where the ferry had been located since the Lord Protector's
+time. A moderate expenditure on the piers at Aust Passage, though little
+regarded by the citizens at the time the work was in progress, with the
+introduction there of a steam vessel, was one of the principal means of
+bringing about the establishment of the additional communication with
+the districts over the Severn, the uncertainty and inconvenience of
+crossing its estuary being then to a large extent removed.
+
+Mr. Oliver Norris, now nearly 80 years of age, and who has lived in the
+district adjoining the Severn Tunnel from his boyhood, can call to mind
+the time when the Liverpool and Milford coaches were running. They had
+to make their way from Pilning through Northwick, up to the Old Passage
+at Aust, and in rough weather the passengers must have had a cold ride
+on the bleak river banks over which they had to journey. When the
+Bristol and South Wales Railway was opened in 1863, the Aust Passage was
+abandoned, and the ferry steamers commenced to cross from the revived
+New (or Pilning) Passage, to connect with the new train services at
+Portskewet. When the penny post was introduced, Mr. Morris says that as
+the coaches passed through the villages the inhabitants in his district
+adopted a primitive way of posting their letters, which was to place
+the letter and penny in a cleft stick, and so hand up to the mail guard
+as the coach was driven by, and who, if the penny was not forthcoming,
+promptly threw the letter to the ground.
+
+The mail coach system was attended with many adventures. Mr. Moses James
+Nobbs, the last of the mail coach guards, recounted in the history of
+his career how, in the winter of 1836, when guard of the Bristol to
+Portsmouth coach, there were terrible snow-storms towards Christmas
+time, and many parts of the country were completely blocked. After
+leaving Bristol one night at 7 p.m. all went well until the coach was
+nearing Salisbury, at about midnight. Snow had been falling gently for
+some time before, but after leaving Salisbury it came down so thick and
+lay so deep that the coach had to be brought to a standstill, and could
+proceed no further. Consequently Nobbs had to leave the coach and go on
+horseback to the next changing place, where he took a fresh horse and
+started for Southampton. There he procured a chaise and pair, and
+continued his journey to Portsmouth, arriving there about 6 p.m. the
+next day. He was then ordered to go back to Bristol. On reaching
+Southampton on his return journey the snow had got much deeper, and at
+Salisbury he found that the London mails had arrived, but could not go
+any further, the snow being so very deep. Not to be beaten, he took a
+horse out of the stable, slung the mail bags over his back, and pushed
+on for Bristol, where he arrived next day, after much wandering through
+fields, up and down lanes, and across country--all one dreary expanse of
+snow. By this time he was about ready for a rest. But there was no rest
+for him in Bristol, for he was ordered by the mail inspector to take the
+mails on to Birmingham, as there was no other mail guard available. At
+last he arrived at Birmingham, having been on duty for two nights and
+days continuously without taking his clothes off. For his exertions and
+perseverance in getting the mails through Mr. Nobbs received a special
+commendation from the Postmaster-General.
+
+[Illustration: MOSES NOBBS.
+
+THE LAST OF THE MAIL GUARDS.]
+
+Mr. Nobbs tells that one night when the Bristol coach was between Bath
+and Warminster, two men jumped out of the hedge; one caught hold of the
+leaders, and the other the wheelers, and tried to stop the coach. The
+coachman, immediately whipped up the horses, and called out, "Look out!
+we are going to be robbed!" Mr. Nobbs took the blunderbuss out of the
+arms case (which was a box just in front of the guard's seat); but, just
+as he did so, he saw the fellows making towards the hedge, and then lost
+sight of them altogether. To let them know that he was prepared, he
+fired off into the hedge. He didn't know whether he hit anything, but he
+heard no cries or groans. The recoil of the blunderbuss, however, nearly
+knocked him off his seat. The blunderbuss, he said, kicked like a mule.
+It had no doubt been loaded to the muzzle, as was usual with those
+weapons. In the memorable storm of Christmas, 1836, alluded to by Mr.
+Nobbs, the Bath and Bristol mail coach, due in London on Tuesday
+morning, was abandoned eighty miles from the metropolis, and the mails
+taken up in a post-chaise and four by the two guards, who reached St.
+Martin's-le-Grand at 6.0 on the Wednesday morning. For seventeen miles
+of the distance the guards had from time to time to go across the fields
+to get past the deep snowdrifts.
+
+In the annual procession of mail coaches round London, at the head
+thereof was "the oldest established mail,"--the Bristol mail, probably
+with Guard Nobbs in charge. Some twenty-seven to thirty coaches took
+part in the procession thus headed. The old mail guards had a literature
+of their own. As an example, one report on a guard's way-bill ran as
+follows (it was a note to account for loss of time on North Road):--"As
+we wos comin' over Brumsgroove Lickey won of the leaders fell, and wen
+we com to him he was ded."
+
+One old fellow used to laugh, as the men said, down in his boots, or
+like a pump losing its water. Another used facetiously to say that he
+had better than a dozen children. "Oh, Mr. ----," said a barmaid to him
+one day, "what can you do with so many?" "Well, my dear," he replied,
+"you see I've got but two, and they be, you must confess, a good deal
+better than a dozen."
+
+It is said that, with the exception of a single instance, no guard was
+ever convicted of a breach of trust while performing his duties.
+
+In the year of Her Majesty's accession (1837) there were no fewer than
+twenty-seven coaches running daily between Bristol and London, and
+twenty-seven others passed between this city and Bath every twenty-four
+hours. The times of the London coach were as follow: London depart 8.0
+p.m., Bath 7.21 a.m., Bristol arrive 8.43 a.m., depart 6.15 p.m., arrive
+G.P.O. 6.58 a.m.,--a slight acceleration over 1830.
+
+Where now is the fashionable roadside "Ostrich Inn" on Durdham Down of a
+century ago, approached by a rough and winding track from Black Boy
+Hill? At this inn the coaches called on their way to the Passage. Where
+now are the old four-horsed coaches rattling up to "The Bush," "White
+Hart," and "White Lion" hostelries, and the old jolly dozen-caped
+coachmen and scarlet-liveried mail guards, with blunderbuss and horn?
+Where now the Bath and Bristol mail pulling up at the roadside "King's
+Head Inn"? The inns are gone, the coaches gone, the jolly guards all
+gone too. What happiness their smiling faces brought to many who watched
+for their arrival by the mail coach from the West of England, and how
+gladdening the sight of their colonial mail bags to the merchants of the
+city and to the sailors' wives looking out anxiously for the monthly
+mail of those days! Though single-sheet letters cost 2s. 1d. each, what
+of that? Did they not contain accounts of sugar and rum cargoes, and of
+good news from absent ones. Letters were letters in those days, and not
+the notes and cards and "flimsies" of to-day.
+
+[Illustration: ARRIVAL OF THE BATH AND BRISTOL MAIL COACH AT A ROADSIDE
+INN.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+VICTORIAN ERA, 1837-1899.
+
+MAIL TRANSPORT BY RAILWAY.--TRAVELLING POST OFFICES.
+
+
+Although the world's railway system was inaugurated by the opening of
+the Stockton and Darlington Railway in 1825, it was not until 1838 that
+any attempt was made by a great railway to open up the traffic to the
+West from the Metropolis. It was in that year that the Great Western
+Company made a line between Paddington and Maidenhead, and mails were
+sent by it. The section from Bristol to Bath was opened in the same
+year. _Woolmer's Gazette_ of January, 1840, speaks of the 9.0 a.m.
+"Exquisite" coach for Bristol, Cheltenham, Birmingham, Manchester, and
+Liverpool, with part of the service by rail. Intermediate sections of
+the railway were completed from time to time, and, finally, on the 30th
+January, 1841, the Western line was opened throughout, and the coaches
+which had formed so striking a feature both of town and country life
+generally disappeared. One coach, however, obstinately held its ground
+in spite of the railway, and continued to carry passengers from and to
+London and Bristol at the rate of 1d. per mile until October, 1843.
+
+In consequence of the completion of the Great Western Railway to
+Bristol, extensive mail alterations had to be made, and they were
+commenced on the 30th July, 1841, affecting the whole district right
+through Somersetshire and Devonshire into Cornwall. Some towns were made
+post towns and others were reduced from the rank of post towns to that
+of sub-post offices. To meet the altered circumstances, revised sacking
+of bags had to be resorted to. The instructions given by the President
+to the staff in St. Martin's-le-Grand ended thus:
+
+".... Any bags in addition to the ordinary number must be reported to
+the road officers by the clerks of the divisions, that they may be
+entered under the head of 'extra,' also any agents or portmanteaus for
+Falmouth; and they must instruct the men carrying out the sacks and bags
+first to report them to the check clerk, and then take them through the
+letter carriers' office to the Devonport or Gloucester omnibus, as the
+case may be, as the guards will not for the future come into the
+office."
+
+It was at this time that the villages of Hallatrow, High Littleton,
+Paulton, Harptree (East and West), Farrington Gurney, Temple Cloud,
+Cameley, and Hinton Blewett were transferred from the postal control of
+Bath to that of Bristol, under which they still remain.
+
+For several years the only trains carrying third-class passengers from
+Bristol started at 4.0 o'clock in the morning and 9.0 o'clock at night,
+offering the travellers, who were wholly unprotected from the weather,
+an alternative of miseries, and at first travellers were not much better
+off in point of speed when travelling by railway, as third-class
+passengers were 9-1/2 hours on the railway between Bristol and London.
+The coach at the time of its being taken off performed the journey under
+12 hours.
+
+The "Bush" coach office was closed in March, 1844.
+
+The Bristol and Gloucester Railway was opened to the public on the 8th
+July, 1844. Of the seven coaches which had been running between the two
+cities six were immediately withdrawn, and on the 22nd July the
+time-honoured "North Mail" left Bristol for the last time, the horses'
+heads surmounted with funereal plumes and the coachman and guard in
+equally lugubrious array.
+
+As late as 1845 Her Majesty's mails were conveyed between Bristol and
+Southampton in a closed covered cart, "proper for the purpose," as set
+forth in an advertisement inviting tenders for a new contract. The whole
+journey had to be performed at the rate of eight miles within the hour,
+stoppages included. The hours of despatch were: From Bristol at about
+6.0 p.m., and from Southampton about 9.0 p.m.
+
+[Illustration: "THE OLD BUSH HOTEL," CORN STREET, BRISTOL.
+
+_From a picture in the possession of E. G. Clarke, Esq._]
+
+In 1849 a great mail robbery took place, which was committed with very
+much daring. The robbers, who booked from Starcross station on the 1st
+January, left a compartment of the up night mail train (which left
+Bridgwater at 10.30 p.m. and reached Bristol at midnight); they crept
+along the ledge, only 1-1/2 inch wide, to the mail-brake at the rear of
+the post office sorting carriage, and effected an entrance, having
+previously possessed themselves of a key of the lock. After having
+rifled the mail bags they crept back to their compartment, and
+alighted from the train at the Bristol station, giving up their tickets
+to the Great Western Railway policeman. Not contented with robbing the
+up mail, they got into the night mail train from London to the West,
+which left Bristol at 1.15 a.m., and actually had the daring to pursue
+the same tactics with regard to the mail bags in the locked brake. This
+further audacity brought about their capture, for the news of the
+robbery of the up mail reached the ears of the officers at Bristol who
+were in the down mail, and so they were on the alert. On arrival,
+therefore, at Bridgwater the second robbery was at once detected, all
+exit from the station was stopped, and the train searched. Two men were
+discovered in a first-class compartment near the travelling post office,
+and registered letters and money letters were found upon them. In
+addition to the letters, masks, and false moustache found, a
+woolstapler's hook, which it is supposed was used by the thieves to hang
+on to the tender when leaving the first-class carriage, was also
+discovered. One of the registered letters stolen, it was stated,
+contained L4,000, and the loss, as far as it was known, unquestionably
+amounted to _fifty times_ that sum. The robbers turned out to be Henry
+Poole, a discharged Great Western guard, and Edward Nightingale, a
+London horse dealer. The case excited a great deal of interest in the
+West of England, and when the trial took place at Exeter the court was
+crowded to excess, and the avenues and approaches thereto were very
+inconveniently crowded. Mr. Rogers, Q.C., and Mr. Poulden appeared for
+the prosecution, and Mr. Slade, Mr. Cockburn, Q.C., and Mr. Stone
+defended.
+
+Evidence was given by clerks in the Lombard Street Post Office,
+messengers and letter-carriers in the G.P.O., "register" clerks, clerk
+at Charing Cross Post Office, the clerk of the Devonport Road, guard of
+the mail from St. Martin's-le-Grand to Paddington, and by letter-sorters
+in the travelling Post Office. Jane Crabbe, barmaid at the "Talbot Inn,"
+Bath Street, Bristol, recollected the two men entering the bar and
+calling for two small glasses of brandy-and-water. They were shown to an
+adjoining room, where they remained until 1 o'clock, and then went to
+the bar to pay. They appeared impatient, and looked at the clock. It was
+suspected that all the property which, had been abstracted from the up
+mail was secreted somewhere in Bristol, and a most rigid search was
+instituted, but without success. Mr. Cockburn's speech to the jury for
+the defence occupied over two hours. Lord Justice Denman, the Judge of
+the Spring Assize, sentenced the culprits to fifteen years'
+transportation.
+
+A Select Committee was appointed in 1854 to inquire into the causes of
+irregularity in the conveyance of mails by railways, and to consider the
+best means of securing speed and punctuality; also to consider the best
+mode of fixing the remuneration of the various Railway Companies for
+their services. The local witnesses, Mr. James Creswell Wall and Mr. J.
+B. Badham, Secretary and Superintendent respectively of the late Bristol
+and Exeter Railway Company, and Bristol residents, gave evidence before
+the Committee, composed of Mr. Wilson Patten (chairman), Mr. James
+MacGregor, Mr. H. G. Liddell, Mr. H. Herbert, Mr. C. Fortescue, Mr.
+Cowan, Mr. Thompson, Mr. Philipps, and Mr. Milner.
+
+Replying to questions, witnesses considered two hours forty minutes, as
+fixed by the Post Office Department, insufficient time for the down
+night mail to travel from Bristol to Exeter, including six stoppages.
+The delivery of mail bags at certain stations by apparatus without
+stopping the train was suggested, but witnesses considered the plan
+dangerous and that it could not with safety be adopted.
+
+The Secretary of the South Wales Railway Company, Mr. F. G. Saunders,
+gave evidence as to the frequent loss of time sustained by the South
+Wales night mail through the late receipt of the Bristol and West of
+England mails at Chepstow. At that time the bags for South Wales were
+still conveyed from Bristol to the Aust Passage, thence by ferry to the
+opposite bank of the Severn and on to Chepstow. The conveyance of mails
+for South Wales _via_ Gloucester was subsequently adopted.
+
+All the witnesses complained of the reduction of railway parcel traffic
+through the then recent establishment of book postage and consequent
+falling off of receipts, also that the remuneration awarded for the
+carriage of mails was insufficient, although decided by
+mutually-appointed umpires.
+
+[Illustration: THE OLD PASSAGE, AUST.]
+
+For many years the night mails were conveyed between Paddington and
+Bristol by a special train, which did not carry passengers. It was the
+only train of its kind in the kingdom, but so useful was it held to
+be in securing a regular delivery of letters that the Government
+introduced a clause in a Postal Bill in 1857 rendering it compulsory for
+all railways to provide similar trains. On the 1st June, 1869, the Post
+Office special Great Western train commenced to be a mail train limited
+to carry a certain number of passengers, so that opinion had by that
+time become altered as regards the value in relation to cost of a train
+exclusively for Post Office purposes.
+
+The travelling Post Office service assists greatly in the speedy
+distribution of letters, and by its agency remote places are put on an
+equality with the country generally in respect of deliveries and
+despatches. Two of the most important travelling Post Office systems in
+the kingdom are conducted through, or to, Bristol--the gate to the
+Western country--viz.: The Great Western Railway, with a travelling Post
+Office annual mileage of 500,000; and the Midland and North-Eastern
+lines from Newcastle, with a mileage of 220,000. Travelling Post
+Offices, with a combined coach length of from 48 feet on the day mails
+to 158 feet on the night mails, are attached to the Great Western down
+trains which arrive at Bristol at 12.13 a.m. and 8.48 a.m.; to the up
+trains, at 12.45 a.m. and 3.0 p.m.; to the trains leaving Bristol for
+the West at 6.15 a.m. and 12.9 p.m., and for the North at 7.40 p.m. The
+Midland travelling Post Office carriages are attached to the 5.40 a.m.
+inward train and to the 7.0 p.m. outward train.
+
+There is living at Midford, about fifteen miles distant from Bristol, a
+gentleman (Mr. Coulcher) who--now pensioned from the Post Office--was
+the clerk in charge of the Midland Travelling Post Office on its first
+run from Bristol to Derby in 1857. He well recollects the night, and
+what impressed it upon his memory more than anything else was the fact
+that on reaching Bristol, after he and his two subordinate clerks and
+his mail-guard (Samuel Bennett) had made almost superhuman efforts to
+get the work completed, he had to send 13,000 letters unsorted into the
+Bristol Post Office, there to await despatch by day mails to towns in
+the West of England, instead of going at once in direct travelling Post
+Office bags by the connecting early morning train.
+
+Samuel Bennett, the old mail guard mentioned, and contemporary of Moses
+Nobbs, was frequently injured on road and rail. In 1847 he was much
+shaken when a Birmingham-to-Bath train by which he was travelling ran
+off the line. A few years later he nearly came to an untimely end,
+having been regarded as dead after being much knocked about when two
+trains between Bristol and Birmingham collided. On that occasion, after
+he recovered consciousness, he got together some of his mail bags and
+carried them on to Bristol.
+
+The _Gloucester Journal_ said of the occurrence:--"Samuel Bennett, the
+guard of the mail bags, appeared dead when found, and was dreadfully
+cut; but on recovering, he manifested great anxiety for the bags. When
+the special train arrived in which the wounded passengers were conveyed
+onward, Bennett, with great courage, determined to take the bags by this
+train, which was done."
+
+And the _Bristol Mercury_ wrote of him as follows:--"The mail guard,
+Samuel Bennett, was very much cut over the face and head, and bled
+profusely. Happily, he was not rendered long unconscious or disabled,
+and with a conscientious and self-denying attention to duty not often
+met with, he refused any attention to his hurts until he had gathered up
+the mutilated letter bags and their contents, and made provision for
+bringing them on to this city."
+
+In the Bristol district there is a railway Post Office apparatus station
+at Fishponds, on the Midland Railway, bags being deposited thereat by
+the train due at Bristol at 5.40 a.m., and taken up by the train ex
+Bristol at 7.0 p.m. On the Great Western Railway, the apparatus
+arrangement is in operation at Flax Bourton, Nailsea, Yatton, and
+Hewish, chiefly in connection with the 6.15 a.m. train ex Bristol. It
+rarely happens that any failures occur at Fishponds or Hewish, but
+vagaries of the apparatus are more frequent at Yatton. About once a year
+something or other goes wrong, the pouch usually being dropped and
+carried along by the train, with mutilation of the mail bags and a
+general scattering of the letters. On the last occasion, after the line
+had been searched up and down, the embankment closely looked over, and
+the ground on the other side of the hedge on the down side closely
+scrutinized, all unavailingly, some two or three days after the
+accident a bundle of letters was picked up which, such was the force of
+the impact, had been "skied" into a field over two hedges of an
+intervening lane.
+
+On another similar mishap, a Post Office remittance letter containing
+L20 in gold was burst open and the coins scattered over the line. After
+diligent search in every direction, L18 10s. was recovered. One half
+sovereign, bent in an extraordinary manner, was found between the metals
+three-quarters of a mile from the apparatus standard. The apparatus has
+to be adjusted with mathematical nicety, and if not so arranged failures
+are liable to occur. It is well that the public should bear in mind that
+packets sent by mails which are exchanged by apparatus are in more or
+less danger, and any article of a fragile or costly nature should, if
+possible, be forwarded by mails carried by stopping-trains. The places
+so affected in this neighbourhood are:--Alveston, Bitton, Blagdon,
+Burrington, Clevedon, Congresbury, Downend, Fishponds, Flax Bourton,
+Frampton Cotterell, Frenchay, Glastonbury, Hambrook, Hewish, Iron Acton,
+Langford, Mangotsfield, Nailsea, Oldlands Common, Portishead,
+Pucklechurch, Rudgeway, Sandford, Staple Hill, Thornbury, Tockington,
+Warmley, West Town, Willsbridge, Winterbourne, Wrington, and Yatton.
+
+Until lately mails for Bristol were forwarded by the midnight train from
+Euston (L. & N. W. R.) and reached this city by way of Birmingham in
+time for the North mail delivery. It was on that railway that in 1890 a
+sad occurrence happened at Watford, when a young man whilst in the
+discharge of his duties as fireman lost his life. The deceased was
+leaning over the side of his engine, which was stationary, watching for
+the signals to be turned, when the day mail train from London dashed by.
+The travelling Post Office apparatus net which had picked up a pouch at
+a point a few score yards away was still extended and it struck the
+unfortunate young man on the head, completely severing it from the body.
+The poor fellow's cap was torn from his head by the apparatus net and
+fell into the travelling Post Office carriages with the mail pouches
+much to the consternation of the travelling sorters, who found evidence
+of the mutilation on the apparatus framework. The net was only down for
+the short space of ten seconds. The travelling officials first heard
+full details of the accident on their arrival at Tring, where the train
+next stopped.
+
+"Once upon a time," writes Mr. A. W. Blake in the _St. Martin's-le-Grand
+Magazine_, "the London afternoon mail was made up at a provincial office
+down West (Chippenham), and despatched to be taken off by apparatus. All
+proceeded as usual up to the actual point of transfer, when a strange
+thing happened. Instead of falling soberly into the net, the man in
+charge was astonished to see the pouch leap high into the air and
+descend he knew not whither. Search was carefully made along the track
+of the departed train, but not a vestige of the missing pouch could be
+seen, and a local inspector who was travelling up the line promised to
+keep a look-out for it. Just at this time an 'S.G.' was received from
+the officer in charge of the sorting tender notifying the non-receipt of
+the pouch. As the mystery seemed to deepen, word was received that a
+signalman at a level crossing two miles away had noticed the missing
+article on the top of the train. Quoth the worthy apparatus man: 'If
+it'll ride two miles, it'll ride two hundred'; and accordingly a wire
+was sent to the sorting-tender people asking them to search the top of
+the train, and soon came the reply that the pouch had been found on the
+roof of the guard's van at Didcot. The train had stopped the regulation
+time at that hub of the Great Way Round, Swindon, and proceeded on its
+way without the extraordinary position of Her Majesty's mails being
+discovered."
+
+The occurrence was attributed to the swaying of the carriage, and to the
+apparatus-net not working quite steadily in consequence.
+
+At a later period than the mishap narrated by Mr. Blake, the bags for
+Oxford and Abingdon, due to be picked up at Wantage by the up night mail
+travelling Post Office apparatus, and to have been delivered by the same
+process at Steventon, were not found when the net was drawn in, and it
+was thought they had been missed; but at Didcot it was discovered they
+had been thrown over the end of the net and were hanging outside it.
+
+Since the opening of the Severn Tunnel in 1883 it has not often been
+found an absolute necessity to make use of it for the conveyance of
+mails diverted from the route from South Wales through Gloucester to
+London; but such was the case in February of the present year (1899),
+when a tidal wave of forty feet was experienced in the Bristol Channel,
+which caused serious damage by displacing the railway line between
+Lydney and Wollaston. The effects of the high tide were disastrous. A
+wave dashed on to the Great Western Railway with huge force, and so
+disintegrated the ballasting of the permanent way that the lines were
+twisted into all manner of shapes. The mails to and from Paddington to
+South Wales were circulated _via_ Bristol and the Tunnel for some time.
+
+Bristol is at a disadvantage as compared with London in respect of its
+Continental correspondence, but is far better situated than many other
+provincial towns. The letters from the Continent by night mails reach
+Bristol by the train leaving London at 9.0 a.m. and, arriving at Temple
+Meads at 11.57 a.m., are on delivery in the private box renters' office
+at about 12.30 p.m. The postmen start out with the letters at 1.10 p.m.
+As the hour of posting for the outward Continental night mails is 2.10
+p.m., it is only the private box renters who have time, brief though it
+be, to reply to their correspondence on the day of receiving it.
+
+An appeal to the Hon. Member for Bristol East was made by the writer at
+a Chamber of Commerce dinner to exercise his influence as a director of
+the Great Western Railway in the direction of obtaining the use of a
+goods train for the conveyance to Bristol of a midnight mail from
+London. In the end the Railway Company afforded the Post Office the
+means of bringing down a midnight mail, not by goods train as was
+originally contemplated, but by new and fast passenger train, with the
+result that half a million letters a year now fall into the first
+delivery throughout the town, instead of into the second delivery as
+heretofore. The letters posted in London up to 9.0 p.m. reach the head
+office in Small Street in time to be delivered throughout the city and
+suburbs by the postmen on their first round. Under the old system, when
+"routed" _via_ Birmingham, the arrival was often so late and irregular
+that the letters missed even the second delivery. The letters for the
+rural districts having no day mail deliveries had to lie at Bristol for
+twenty-four hours, while now they are delivered on the morning of
+receipt from London. The advantages oL the new system apply to parcels
+as well as letters, and the acceleration in delivery is particularly
+serviceable as regards parcels containing perishable articles.
+
+The Railway Company recently gave the Department another opportunity of
+improving the mail services by establishing a merchandise train from
+Cornwall and the West to London, reaching the Metropolis in time for the
+letters sent by it to be delivered some three or four hours earlier than
+when conveyed by the first passenger train in the morning. Strangely
+enough, the establishment of this new mail service was the means of
+enabling the hon. baronet (Sir W. H. Wills), the Member for Bristol
+East, to take his seat in the House of Commons on the day of his last
+election, for the writ and return were sent by that mail to London in
+time to reach the Crown Office for all formalities to be gone through in
+connection with the seat being taken at once.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+1678-1899.
+
+BRISTOL POSTMASTERS.
+
+
+Official records at St. Martin's-le-Grand show that postmasters of
+Bristol were appointed as follows; viz., Thomas Gale, 1678; Wm.
+Dickinson, 1690; Daniel Parker, 1693; Henry Pine, September, 1694;
+Thomas Pine, senior, 1740; Thomas Pine, junior, 16th January, 1760;
+William Fenn, 1778; Mrs. Fenn, 1788; Mr. Fry managed the office for Mrs.
+Penn from 1797 to December, 1805, when he died, and Mrs. Fenn retired on
+an allowance in 1806; Mr. Cole, March, 1806, died whilst holding office;
+John Gardiner, 9th June, 1825; Thomas Todd Walton, senior, 21st
+February, 1832; Thomas Todd Walton, junior, 23rd May, 1842, succeeded
+his father; Edward Chaddock Sampson, 21st June, 1871; Robert Charles
+Tombs, 19th April, 1892, after having been invalided from Controllership
+of the London postal service.
+
+In his history of the Post Office, Mr. Joyce tells us that in 1686 the
+Postmaster-General himself settled applications for salary. Thus when
+Thomas Gale, postmaster of Bristol, applies for an increase of salary,
+Frowde the governor satisfies the Earl of Rochester, the
+Postmaster-General, that the increase will be proper. Forthwith issues a
+document, of which the operative part is as follows:--
+
+"You are therefore of opinion that the said salary (L50) is very small
+considering the expense the petitioner is att, and his extraordinary
+trouble, Bristoll being a greate Citty, but you say that you doe not
+think all the things he setts downe in the aforesaid accompt ought to be
+allowed him, the example being of very ill consequence, for (as you
+informe me) you doe not allow either candles, pack-thread, wax, ink,
+penns or paper to any of the postmasters, nor office-rent, nor returns
+of mony, you are therefore of opinion that tenn ponnds per annum to his
+former salary of L50 will be a reasonable allowance, and the petitioner
+will be therewith satisfied, these are therefore to pray and require you
+'to raise his salary from L50 to L60 accordingly.'
+
+ "ROCHESTER.
+ Whitehall Treasury Chambers,
+ _December 13th, 1686_."
+
+The office of postmaster was in the hands of the Pine family,
+grandfather, father, and son, from 1694 till 1778. In an old manuscript
+in the public library it is stated that there was a portrait in the
+possession of a descendant of the family, then residing on Kingsdown,
+representing the older Pine in the midst of his official duties, a
+bracket supporting a bust of Mercury, and in his hand a letter thus
+addressed:--"On His Majesty's Service. To Mr. Pine, Postmaster of
+Bristol," and in the corner, "P. Express. T. Strickland." Endeavours to
+trace the descendants and the portrait have proved fruitless.
+
+[Illustration: MR. JOHN GARDINER.
+
+_Postmaster of Bristol, 1827-1832._]
+
+There is little history obtainable of the postmasters until the time of
+Mr. John Gardiner, of whom it is related that, born October 15th, 1777,
+he held the office of postmaster of Bristol from 1825 till his death in
+1832. It is believed that he obtained his appointment in a great measure
+through friendship with Mr. Francis Freeling. Mr. Gardiner had to bear
+the brunt of the Bristol Riots (1831), in so far as they affected the
+Post Office administration of the city. In order to save the mails and
+belongings which were portable, such as the books, post dating stamps,
+etc., he set off with them in a coach and four for Bath Post Office. He
+got safely through the mob and reached Bath, where the Bristol Post
+Office business was carried on until the riots had been quelled. Mr.
+Gardiner, in addition to being postmaster, was also an exporter of
+woollen and Manchester goods, chiefly to the West Indies until the slave
+trade was abolished. He then traded with Newfoundland. He was High
+Sheriff of the city in the year 1820, residing at that time in Berkeley
+Square. Later, however, he was enabled to live quietly at the Old Manor
+House, Easton-in-Gordano. He was buried at St. Peter's Church, Bristol.
+
+[Illustration: MR. THOMAS TODD WALTON.
+
+_Postmaster of Bristol, 1832-1842._]
+
+Mr. Anthony Todd, the Secretary to the Post Office, 1762-65 and 1768-98,
+seems to have been attracted to Todd Walton, of Cheshunt, Herts, either
+by relationship or from his name, and took him in hand. Born in 1772,
+Mr. Todd Walton entered the Post Office in 1786 (fourteen years old). He
+had the long spell of service of forty-six years in the foreign Post
+Office and ten years as postmaster of Bristol. He was five times
+selected for foreign missions, which compelled his residence in Holland,
+Sweden, Spain, and Portugal during the most disturbed state of those
+countries. Mr. Walton is described as having been a fine old English
+gentleman, one of the olden time, who wore hair powder, blue coat with
+gilt buttons, and shoes and gaiters; one who used to express his meaning
+distinctly, and mean what he said too. This description is borne out by
+his appearance in his portrait. He used to visit the Bristol Post Office
+after his retirement, especially to have a morning glass of water from
+the old well on the premises. He died in July, 1857, at his residence,
+King's Parade, Clifton, in his eighty-fifth year, and was buried in the
+adjacent church of St. John's. On his tombstone is this inscription:
+"Here rests the body of Thomas Todd Walton, late of Cheshunt, Herts, and
+of the foreign post, London, Esquire. A quarter of a century an
+inhabitant of this parish, and for some years head postmaster of the
+Bristol district. Deceased 13th July, 1857. Aged 85. Also of Catherine
+Elizabeth, his wife, elder daughter of Thomas Todd, of Durham, Esquire.
+She died April 11th, 1860, aged 77 years."
+
+On Mr. Walton's retirement, in 1842, in view of his services, Lord
+Viscount Lowther, the Postmaster-General of the day, conferred the
+appointment of postmaster of Bristol on his son, Thomas Todd Walton, who
+had been employed as chief clerk in the Bristol Post Office for ten
+years. Mr. Todd Walton, it seems, was properly initiated into the
+mysteries of the Post Office art by his father, who decreed that he
+should commence at the bottom of the ladder and work his way up thence,
+so that young Todd Walton was in his day to be found at mail-bag
+opening, letter sorting and other routine work of the kind, which will
+account for the thorough knowledge of his business which he is said to
+have possessed when called upon to take the reins of office handed over
+to him by his popular parent.
+
+[Illustration: MR. THOMAS TODD WALTON (JUNIOR).
+
+_Postmaster of Bristol, 1842-1871._]
+
+In connection with the recent selection of the port of Bristol as a mail
+station, alluded to in later pages, it may be mentioned that Mrs. Todd
+Walton well remembers how, when the _Great Western_ steamship, which
+carried the American mails between Bristol and New York for several
+years, was first due (1838) to reach this port, her husband organised
+his small staff for a night encounter with the pressure of work which
+the heavy mail would inevitably occasion, and obtained auxiliary aid.
+The little staff was at "attention" for two or three days, and when the
+news came by means of the runner from Pill that the ship was coming up
+the Avon, Mr. Walton turned out at 2 a.m., rallied his little band, and
+went manfully to the work, which lasted for many hours before the
+letters were fully sorted and sent off to their respective destinations
+or delivered through the streets and lanes of the old city. In the
+autumn of 1841 the _Great Western_ happened to arrive on the same day
+that a large ship mail from Australia by the _Ruby_ was received, and
+the whole staff available--then only ten men for all duties--had to work
+night and day continuously to get off the letters by the mails to other
+towns. As many as 20,000 letters and newspapers were brought by these
+two vessels on that occasion. It is recorded that every available space
+in the premises was filled with letters piled as high as they could be
+got to stand, and great was the joy of the sorters when the flood of
+letters subsided.
+
+Mr. Todd Walton had many other night reminders of the mail services
+besides those respecting the arrival of direct mails from America, as
+the rattling of the horses' hoofs, the clang of the pole-chains and the
+twang of the mail guard's horn as the coaches dashed past his house on
+their way to the passages must have frequently reminded him of his
+responsibilities as "mail master" of Bristol. He would have blessed
+Bristol's very able General Manager of the Tramways Company had he been
+to the fore in those days to procure the benefit of freedom from the
+noise of traffic by the use of wood paving in our principal
+thoroughfares.
+
+Mr. Todd Walton had the interests of the staff of the Post Office at
+heart, and, as an exemplification of his sympathy with them, it may be
+mentioned that when a promising officer in the heyday of youth met with
+an accident which eventually necessitated the amputation of his right
+leg, Mr. Walton did not allow the misfortune to stand in the way of the
+young man's continuing in remunerative employment in the Post Office,
+but found for him a suitable sedentary duty which he performed for
+fourteen years.
+
+Mr. Todd Walton the second counted amongst his contemporaries and
+personal friends those Post Office literary stars, Anthony Trollope and
+Edmund Yates.
+
+Mr. Walton retired from the Post Office in 1871. His death occurred at
+the Clifton Down Hotel on the morning of Christmas day, 1885. He was in
+the act of dressing to attend the early morning service at All Saints'
+Church, when he fell into a fit of apoplexy, from which he did not
+rally. The _Times and Mirror_ of January 2nd, 1886, gives the following
+memoir of him:--"The death of this estimable gentleman calls for more
+particular notice than the necessarily brief one given in last
+Saturday's impression; for although Mr. Walton had for some time past
+ceased to be a citizen of Bristol, he continued to feel an interest in
+the old city and its surroundings, and was remembered by many
+Bristolians as one who had obtained, as he deserved, their affectionate
+esteem. Succeeding his father--a gentleman of the 'old school'--as
+postmaster of Bristol, Mr. Todd Walton, through the long series of years
+in which he occupied that public position, evinced unwearied industry,
+keen intelligence, and singular courtesy in discharging the
+multifarious duties connected with it, and when on his retirement
+(carrying with him into private life the respect of his fellow-citizens)
+he was called upon to fulfil the duties of High Sheriff of Bristol,
+those duties were discharged by him for two years successively in a
+manner distinguished by great public spirit and generous hospitality. He
+was a man of considerable culture and taste, an extensive reader, and a
+reader who, happily, remembered what he had read. He possessed also a
+sense of humour and a ready wit which made him an agreeable and
+intelligent companion; whilst to those who enjoyed his friendship he was
+ever a friend, courteous and kind. Blessed with abundant means, he
+helped without ostentation the poor and needy, many of whom in our own
+city will share in the general regret his loss has occasioned."
+
+In the centre of the church garden at All Saints', Clifton, stands a
+cross, which Mrs. Walton erected in 1888 to the memory of her husband.
+It was designed by Mr. J. L. Pearson, R.A. It is of granite, and stands
+on three steps. In the centre of the shaft is a figure of the Good
+Shepherd, and at the top are four sculptures, beautifully executed, of
+the Annunciation, the Crucifixion, the Resurrection, and the Ascension.
+Over these rises a crocketed finial, and the whole is surmounted by a
+cross. At the base are inscribed the words: "In loving memory of Thomas
+Todd Walton, sometime churchwarden of the Church of All Saints, and a
+most generous benefactor to that church."
+
+By the death of Edward Chadwick Sampson, the next postmaster, which
+occurred at Clevedon, December 7th, 1895, the Post Office lost one of
+its most gentlemanly and genial pensioners.
+
+For many years postmaster of Bristol, Mr. Sampson was well known
+throughout the city, and held in high esteem by all with whom he was
+brought into contact. He had a long service in the postal department,
+dating, as it did, from 1837 to the last day of 1891. In 1837 he began
+his connection with the Bristol Post Office. He went to Manchester as
+chief clerk in 1865, but was away only six years, and returned in 1871
+to assume the postmastership of his native city. It is interesting, as
+showing the enormous increase in the postal traffic, to recall the fact
+that when Mr. Sampson joined the Corn Street office in 1837 the
+premises were only twenty feet square, there were only fifteen clerks
+and postmen all told, and no one was allowed to have his letters from
+the boxes whilst a mail was being sorted.
+
+For his wide experience, his ability, and high integrity his work was
+greatly valued by leading officials in the postal service; whilst his
+sincerity and kindliness of disposition endeared him to employes of
+every grade over whom he had control.
+
+As the postman came to Mr. Sampson's door one morning, it was seen that
+the man was too ill to discharge his duties. Mr. Sampson thereupon
+begged the man to come into his house and rest, and he himself, with the
+aid of his son, delivered every one of the letters at its destination,
+afterwards seeing the poor man safely home. That kind act was indicative
+of Mr. Sampson's general consideration for those over whom he ruled.
+
+[Illustration: EDWARD CHADDOCK SAMPSON.
+
+_Postmaster of Bristol, 1871-1891._
+
+_From a photograph by Mr. Abel Lewis, Bristol._]
+
+On the resignation of Mr. Sampson, it was generally felt that he should
+not be allowed to retire into private life without taking with him
+tangible evidence of the goodwill and respect of those with whom he
+had been associated. This feeling found expression in a gratifying
+manner, and the services he had rendered the commercial community during
+his postmastership were gracefully recognised by the Chamber of Commerce
+presenting him with an address illuminated and engrossed on vellum.
+
+Exactly at midnight on the last night of 1891 he was invited, as his
+last official act, to seal what is known to Post Office employes as the
+"London and Exeter T.P.O., going west"--that is, the mail bag of the
+travelling Post Office bound for Exeter. Mr. Sampson discharged the
+slight duty devolving upon him, and received the new year greetings of
+his former colleagues, "Auld Lang Syne" being afterwards sung.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+NOTABLE POST OFFICE SERVANTS OF BRISTOL ORIGIN.
+
+
+Probably the most illustrious man of the Post Office service who had
+Bristol for a birthplace was Sir Francis Freeling. Sir Francis was born
+in Redcliffe parish, Bristol, in 1764, and was educated partly at
+Colston School and in part by the Master of Queen Elizabeth's Grammar
+School. In an ancient city record it is stated that he commenced his
+official career as "an apprentice" at the Bristol Post Office, where the
+combined results of his education, probity, and talents were soon
+discovered. On the establishment of the new system of mail coaches in
+1784, he was appointed to aid the inventor, Palmer, in carrying his
+improvements into effect. Two years later he was transferred to the
+General Post Office, London, where, in course of time, he successively
+filled the offices of Surveyor, Principal and Resident Surveyor,
+Joint-Secretary, and Secretary from 1798-1836. In a debate in the
+House of Lords, in 1836, the Duke of Wellington stated that the English
+Post Office under Freeling's management had been better administered
+than any Post Office in Europe, or in any other part of the world. He
+possessed "a clear and vigorous understanding ... and the power of
+expressing his thoughts and opinions, both verbally and in writing, with
+force and precision." For his public services a baronetcy was conferred
+upon him on March 11th, 1828, a meet reward for his long, arduous, and
+valuable services. He was a warm supporter of Pitt, but he suffered no
+political partisanship to affect his administration of the Post Office.
+Freeling's leisure was devoted to the formation of a curious and
+valuable library. He was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries
+in 1801, and was one of the original members of the Roxburgh Club,
+founded in 1812. He died while still at his post on the business of the
+country which he had so faithfully served, and was buried in the church
+of St. Mary Redcliffe, Bristol.
+
+[Illustration: SIR FRANCIS FREELING, BART.
+
+_Secretary to the G.P.O., 1798-1836._]
+
+The inscription on the memorial tablet runs thus: "To the memory of Sir
+Francis Freeling, Baronet, who was born in this parish the 25th August,
+1764, and who died in Bryanston Square, in the county of Middlesex, the
+10th July, 1836. For more than half a century his life was devoted to
+the public service in the General Post Office, in which for thirty-eight
+years he discharged the arduous duties of Secretary. By unwearied
+industry in the employment of great talents, and by unblemished
+integrity, grounded upon Christian principles, he acquired and retained
+the favour of three successive Sovereigns, and the approbation of the
+public. He has left a name which will be remembered with honour in his
+birthplace, and which is cherished with affection and veneration by his
+children, who have raised this monument."
+
+Sir Francis Freeling was thrice married. By his first wife, Jane,
+daughter of John Christian Kurstadt, he had two sons. He was succeeded
+in the baronetcy by the elder, Sir George Henry Freeling, born in 1789,
+who matriculated at New College, Oxford, 17th March, 1807, and was for
+some time Assistant-Secretary at the Post Office, and subsequently
+Commissioner of Customs (1836-1841). There is a descendant of Sir
+Francis in the service, and the name may again be read of in Post
+Office history.
+
+The editor of _Felix Farley's Journal_ (Mr. J. M. Gutch), of 15 Small
+Street, Bristol, wrote many letters on "the impediments which obstruct
+the trade and commerce of the city and port of Bristol," under the
+signature of "Cosmo," in the years 1822-3. The letters were afterwards
+published in book form, and the dedication was--"To Francis Freeling,
+Esq., Secretary to the General Post Office, F.A.S., etc., a native of
+Bristol, than whom, whenever opportunity has occurred, no citizen has
+exerted himself more in the promotion of the public and private welfare
+of this city, the following letters are dedicated, and this humble
+opportunity gladly embraced of testifying the obligations and sincere
+respect of his obedient servant, THE AUTHOR."
+
+A Postmaster-General has not emanated from our western city, but Mr.
+Arnold Morley, late General-in-Chief, is the son of one who worthily
+represented Bristol in Parliament for many years, the late
+highly-respected Mr. Samuel Morley, the legend on whose statue near
+Bristol Bridge tells us--"Samuel Morley, Member of Parliament for this
+city from 1868 to 1885. To preserve for their children the memory of the
+face and form of one who was an example of justice, generosity, and
+public spirit, this statue was given by more than 5,000 citizens of
+Bristol."--"I believe that the power of England is to be reckoned not by
+her wealth or armies, but by the purity and virtue of the great men of
+her population."--S. MORLEY.
+
+Although Sir Francis stands out pre-eminently, there is a long list of
+Bristol officers who have gone forth and gained Post Office laurels.
+First on that honourable roll may be mentioned J. D. Rich, who, over
+half a century ago, first hung up his hat in the Bristol Post Office, a
+"furry" hat of the old stovepipe kind, as he tells the story. Mr. Rich
+showed so much ability in meeting the requirements of the times at
+Bristol that he rose to the position of president clerk. In 1848, on the
+recommendation of the Surveyor General, he was removed to Bath, as
+peculiarly fitted to assist Mr. Musgrave, who from his advanced age was
+unequal to the duties, and the result was apparent in a great
+improvement of the local service. That Mr. Rich won golden opinions was
+proved by a memorial for his appointment to succeed Mr. Musgrave,
+addressed to the Postmaster-General, and signed in a short time by more
+than a thousand citizens. The memorial was, however, unavailing. Mr.
+Rich, after performing various services under five other provincial
+postmasters, found himself at last in the enviable position of lord of
+postal matters in Liverpool, and Surveyor of the Isle of Man. On
+retiring from the Service recently, he was made a Justice of the Peace
+in recognition of his distinguished services to the city. Mr. Kerry,
+telegraph superintendent, became postmaster of Warrington, Mr. Harwood
+of Southport, Mr. Carter (chief clerk) of Southampton, Mr. Brown
+(telegraph assistant-superintendent) of King's Lynn, Mr. Rogers (postal
+assistant-superintendent) of Newton Abbot, Mr. Walton of Teignmouth, Mr.
+Righton of Penzance, and Mr. Barnett (chief clerk for twenty years) of
+Swansea.
+
+Several officers of the Bristol Post Office have entered telegraph
+services abroad. Mr. J. Wilcox is in the service of the Western
+Australian Government at Perth, and Mr. W. A. Devine in that of the
+British South Africa Chartered Company at Fort Salisbury. Mr. C.
+Harrison is employed at Pretoria, and was carrying on his vocation of
+telegraph operator at that town at the time of the Jameson raid. Mr.
+Keyte has become assistant storekeeper under the British Government in
+Chinde, on the East Coast of Africa.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+POST OFFICE BUILDINGS.
+
+
+There is record of a Post Office having been established in Bristol by
+the Convention Parliament in 1670, but the site is unknown, and probably
+the postmaster had post horses--not letters--to attend to. In the year
+1700 Mr. Henry Pine, the postmaster of the day, was one of the parties
+to an agreement for leasing a piece of land "with liberty to build upon
+the same for the conveniency of a Post Office." The wording of the said
+agreement shows that the old-fashioned form of building was not in every
+instance (as it now seems to us to have been) so grotesquely shaped from
+fancy, or, perhaps, from a desire to economise ground space, for it is
+therein expressly stated that the building to be used for a Post Office
+was to have the second storey extended to a truss of eighteen inches
+over the lane, for the purpose of enabling people to stand in the dry;
+for there was no indoor accommodation for the public provided in those
+days. "Let the imaginative reader," wrote an imaginative writer years
+ago, "picture to himself our great-great-grandfathers in doublet and
+ruff, standing in a row under the eighteen-inch truss, while the worthy
+postmaster, Pine himself, with perhaps one assistant, was sorting the
+contents of the mail bag. Doubtless," wrote he, "they grumbled when it
+rained that the said truss was not half a dozen inches wider, and many a
+person as he became saturated in his time of waiting for his letters
+growled out his intention of doing something very desperate to the
+powers that were."
+
+In the "Bargain" books of the Corporation is the following memorandum
+relating to the foregoing:--
+
+"_22nd June, 1700._ Then agreed by the Surveyors of the city lands with
+Henry Pine, deputy postmaster, that he, the said Henry Pine, shall have,
+hold, and enjoy the ground whereon now stands a shedd having therein
+four severall shopp seituate in All Saints' Lane, and as much more
+ground at the lower end of the same shedd as that the whole ground shall
+contain in length twenty-seven foot, and to contain in breadth from the
+outside to the churchyard wall five foot and a half outward into the
+lane, with liberty to build upon the same for conveniency of a Post
+Office (namely) The first storey to go forth into the said lane to the
+extent of that ground and no farther, and the second storey to have a
+truss of eighteen inches over the lane or more as the said Surveyors
+shall think fitt that persons coming to the Post Office may have shelter
+from the rain and stand in the dry. To hold the same from Michaelmas
+next for fifty years absolute in the yearly rent of 30s. clear of
+taxes...."
+
+This agreement must have been afterwards modified. For some reason or
+other, Pine paid no rent until Michaelmas, 1705, when a sum of 25s. was
+received by the Chamberlain, and "The post house produced the same
+yearly sum until 1742 when the rent was raised to L3."
+
+The site of the little Post Office alluded to was required in 1742 in
+connection with the building of the Exchange, and the Post Office was
+transferred to a house in Small Street, in later days occupied as the
+printing office of the _Times and Mirror_ newspaper.
+
+There seems to have been some informal understanding that when the
+Exchange was finished a suitable site would be provided by the
+Corporation for postal business, and in August, 1746, a Committee
+reported to the Council that they had contracted for the erection of "a
+house intended to be made use of as a Post Office, certain workmen
+having agreed to build and find all the materials at the rate of L60 per
+square (_sic_); while Mr. Thomas Pine (nephew to Henry, the former
+postmaster) had offered to become the tenant at L40 a year, which he
+alleged is the highest rent he is able at present to pay." The Council
+approved of the proposal, recommending the Committee to get as much rent
+as was practicable. The house, which was of scanty dimensions, cost L700
+exclusive of a ground rent of L15 a year given for the site. Only the
+ground floor was set apart for postal business, Mr. Pine residing on the
+premises. The first year's rent (L43) was paid in 1750. Between 1750 and
+1815 the building must have been considerably enlarged, for in the
+latter year the Post Office is spoken of as a handsome and convenient
+building of freestone, near to the western end of the Exchange, to which
+it has a wing projecting forward into the street; and there is another
+building, exactly similar to it, at the eastern end, which is occupied
+for a stamp office. In 1827 there was a contemplated removal of the Post
+Office, and it was deemed proper by the Chamber of Commerce to come on
+the scene by presenting a memorial to the Postmaster-General; it is
+stated that the timely remonstrance no doubt contributed to relieve the
+public of the inconvenience of such removal. Colonel Maberly, the
+Secretary to the Post Office, advised Lord Lichfield in 1838 that as the
+ground-floor portion of the Post Office premises occupied by the
+solicitors was necessary for the extension and improved accommodation of
+the office, no time should be lost in giving the several sub-tenants
+notice to quit, and Mr. Hall or the postmaster should be instructed to
+communicate with the Corporation as to the means of effecting such
+alterations as might be requisite. His lordship gave authority to that
+effect. In 1839 the Corporation granted the Government a new lease of
+the premises and of additional ground behind for the purpose of having
+the Post Office enlarged. The annual rent previous to this new
+arrangement had risen to L100.
+
+The building alluded to is that now rented by Messrs. Corner and Co. as
+a tea warehouse. Few indeed, even of the oldest citizens will remember
+the Bristol Post Office as located there, and the old square open public
+lobby where the letters were given out through barred windows. Only the
+ground floor was utilised, and the area, of the site was but 21 ft. by
+20 ft. A door opened from the passage by the Exchange into a very small
+public lobby. In this lobby was the letter-box, and here all business
+with the public--viz., giving out private letters, taking in letters
+prepaid in money, and the issuing and paying of money orders--was
+transacted by clerks standing in the office behind a glass partition.
+The prepayment of letters by means of postage stamps was not introduced
+till some months after penny postage was established. There was not at
+the time a continuous attendance of clerks at the glass partition. At
+two of the slides in the partition there were small brass door-knockers,
+and on the public knocking a clerk appeared; from the inside office and
+attended to the wants of the applicants. When letters for the private
+box renters were being sorted a blind was drawn down. When the mail was
+ready the blind was drawn up, and three clerks attended to disperse the
+crowd which had gathered during the half-hour or so while the office was
+closed. The small space behind the public lobby sufficed for the
+stamping, sorting, and other necessary duties. One man, history saith,
+amongst the crowd generally got to the front without difficulty; he was
+a flour-dusted messenger from the Welsh Back!
+
+In 1847 the Money Order Department had grown amazingly, and a separate
+room had to be provided for its accommodation. This caused the removal
+of certain solicitors from the first floor to make room for the
+postmaster's office, the one formerly held by him on the ground floor
+being converted into a money order office. In 1855 the shop on the north
+side of the entrance to Albion Chambers from Small Street was taken by
+the Post Office and converted into a money order office, it being found
+that the department devoted to this purpose at the general office in
+Exchange Buildings was not sufficiently commodious or convenient.
+
+It is on record that in 1863 the Post Office authorities offered L10,000
+towards erecting a new Post Office if the citizens would consent to
+contribute L2,000 more. A meeting of some gentlemen took place in the
+committee-room of the Council House to take the proposition into
+consideration, but owing to the small number of persons that attended
+further deliberation was postponed to a day not named. Some of the
+leading citizens were of opinion that it would be wise to defer any
+decision on the subject until the intention of the Government as to
+granting a criminal assize for Bristol was known; for should the answer
+from head-quarters be in the affirmative, it would be necessary to build
+a new court somewhere, in which case the Guildhall would perhaps suit as
+a Post Office. Nothing appears to have come of the negotiations, and the
+business of the Post Office was removed on the 25th of March, 1868, to
+the new office erected in Small Street on the site where it is now
+carried on. This original portion of the structure covers 11,000 square
+feet. The purchase of the site was completed on the 21st December, 1865.
+It is stated in a legal document that the bricks, stones, and material
+on part of the site belonged to the Bristol Chambers Co. Limited. Where
+the sorting office stands there formerly flourished a fine mulberry
+tree. There appears to have been no ceremonial in the way of laying a
+foundation stone, and the antiquarian of the distant future may be
+disappointed in not discovering the usual coins deposited on such
+occasions.
+
+In fifteen years the need arose for more space, and that then the
+Bristol public manifested a keen interest in the position of the Bristol
+Post Office was indicated by an animated debate which took place in our
+Council Chamber; and as this book affects to be in part a history as
+well as a narrative, it is thought well to give the report of the
+proceedings a full record herein, under permission from the proprietors
+of the _Bristol Times and Mirror_:--
+
+ _Friday, January 2nd, 1885._
+ "THE SITE FOR THE POST OFFICE.
+
+"The TOWN CLERK said that as the next part of the report referred to the
+site for the Post Office, he would read a letter he had received from
+Mr. Lewis Fry, M. P., which was as under:--
+
+ "'Goldney House, Clifton Hill,
+ _30th December, 1884_.
+
+"'My dear Sir,--As I observe that the question of the site of the new
+Post Office will come before the Council on Thursday, I think it best,
+in order to avoid any misunderstanding, to ask you to state to the
+Council that the matter is not to be considered as a proposal made by
+the Postmaster-General or the first Commissioner of Works. The exact
+position of the matter is this, that Mr. Shaw-Lefevre, soon after his
+visit to Bristol, requested me to intimate to the Corporation that in
+case they desire the change of situation to Baldwin Street, he is ready
+to entertain any proposal which they may make to him with that object,
+provided it be upon the basis of an exchange of properties as mentioned
+in the report of the Finance Committee.
+
+ "'I am, yours truly,
+ LEWIS FRY.
+ The Town Clerk of Bristol.'
+
+"Mr. ROBINSON said he would like to say a word or two on the subject of
+a new Post Office, as the wording in Mr. Fry's letter referred to the
+subject of the proposed change in the position of the Post Office. They
+did not want change for change's sake (applause), and if they could do
+without it they would be glad to do so, but sometimes change became a
+necessity (applause). He would wish to say a word or two with reference
+to the provisions for the postal arrangements in Bristol, as to the
+inconvenience that the officials and the public were subject to, and a
+word as to the great increase in postal matters in the city and in the
+country generally. He wished to convey to them the magnitude of the
+question and the very growing character of the communications by
+letters, parcels, and newspapers, which were being circulated through
+the medium of the Government and through the Post Office. He the
+previous day called upon Mr. Sampson, the head official of the Bristol
+Post Office, and he might say that his ability was only exceeded by his
+courtesy (applause). He gave him all the information he had asked for,
+and he showed him over a considerable part of the building. In the
+course of the interview he gave him no opinion as to the site, and he
+did not think it wise to ask him. All he asked him, was as to facts--as
+to the present accommodation. He described the condition of the office
+as being one of congestion, and that they were put to all kinds of
+shifts, and that the sorting and minor offices were inadequate for their
+respective purposes (hear, hear). He saw a room where eighty postmen
+were engaged in partial sorting. It was upstairs and was approached by
+winding stairs with only a 21-inch tread, and the room was utterly
+inadequate for the purpose. Letters had to be sent to Clifton to be
+sorted because of the want of space in the Post Office. Mr. Sampson said
+more particularly that a large hall was necessary on the ground floor
+for an entrance, from which the various subsidiary offices should be
+entered. Then he said that a good frontage was desirable. Some people
+had suggested tunnelling and going to the other side of the street, and
+others had suggested a viaduct. Offers of property had come from
+different people, so that the want of further accommodation seemed to be
+recognised not only by the Post Office itself, but outside. The present
+office was erected in 1868, and had the officials been sanguine, or
+known that the business would have increased as it had, they probably
+would not have selected the present site. The work of the office had
+perfectly outgrown the capacity of the place. Since 1868 new departments
+had been opened, and new duties had been created, and they wanted more
+room. The telegraph work was added in February, 1870, and the sale of
+revenue stamps and payment of stamps as money had also been added. The
+parcel post came into operation in 1883. They did not desire an
+extravagant outlay. The increase of the population was 1 per cent., and
+the letters increased 3 per cent. They were not asked to buy a whole
+street. He felt it would be admitted that the telegraphic despatches
+formed the essential, if not the primary, part of the arrangements of
+the Post Office. He was informed that the site in Baldwin Street was
+more convenient and closer to the warehouses and offices which greatly
+used the present telegraphic advantages than the present site in Small
+Street (a voice: 'No'). Well, he gave his word for what he had heard. He
+maintained that the Council had a supreme moment at the present time.
+They had a gentleman at the head of the Post Office who had viewed the
+new site, and now they found that the Post Office authorities were in
+the humour to make the outlay they had better embrace the opportunity.
+His resolution was: 'That, considering the want of adequate space in
+Small Street for postal and telegraphic arrangements, it is desirable
+that a new Post Office be erected in Baldwin Street, on the site
+recently viewed by the Postmaster-General, if equitable arrangements
+can be made with the Government for the transfer of the property.' If
+the Government were not prepared to lay out money for the site, they
+could let them have the property on a ground-rent, without an outlay
+being made. It would not cost less than L20,000 to L25,000 to enlarge
+and improve the present Post Office, and he maintained that that sum
+would go a great way towards erecting a new Post Office in Baldwin
+Street. They would not always be able to get sites; and they could not
+always buy sites as they could oranges and nuts (laughter). In America
+people ran after him and asked him to buy land. Not so here. He repeated
+that they had Mr. Shaw-Lefevre looking favourably upon the new site, and
+he thought it desirable that they should take a bold step--such a step
+as indicated in the resolution--and put up a building which not alone
+should be noble, but commodious (applause).
+
+"Mr. Alderman EDWARDS seconded the resolution. He was glad that the
+matter had been laid before the Postmaster-General. A great deal had
+been said about the present site being more useful and convenient than
+the proposed, but he felt that the difference was very small indeed. The
+sites were within a minute or two of each other. In Baldwin Street they
+had a road 60 ft. wide, and if Small Street were altered, however much,
+they would not widen it half as much as that. As to the positions of the
+banks, some of the important ones were nearer Baldwin Street than the
+other street. At any rate, the Old Bank, Stuckey's, and the National
+Provincial Banks were nearer Baldwin Street than Small Street. The
+speaker then named several large warehouses which were, he urged, closer
+to the proposed site than Small Street. At Baldwin Street they had an
+acre of ground for the present or future. He would not give the land to
+the Post Office authorities, but he suggested that they should be
+liberal towards them in their offer. If the Post Office authorities
+wished to give them the old office in exchange for the site, it might be
+utilised by the Corporation.
+
+"Mr. C. WILLS supported the resolution. He would advance one or two
+reasons why they should make the best terms they could with the
+Postmaster-General. That the present Post Office was inconveniently
+small was generally admitted, and he maintained that if the proposed
+additions were made to the existing building, the extra facilities would
+not meet the ever-increasing demands on the Post Office for more than
+six or eight years. The various departments of the present building were
+too small for development and carrying on the important work of a Post
+Office. Personally, he would as soon for the Post Office to be in one
+street as the other, but he felt it would redound to the credit of the
+city to see a fine building erected in Baldwin Street. If they had the
+Post Office there it would enhance the value of the other sites in the
+thoroughfare. Very shortly they would have the sixpenny telegrams, and
+then the increase in telegraphic communication would be very great
+indeed, and the present building would soon become inadequate to the
+demand. Then, again, they saw that the present Postmaster-General did
+not intend to give up the parcels post, and the development of this
+branch of the Post Office work would be very great indeed. Then, again,
+there would be increased vehicular traffic to the Post Office; and could
+this, he asked, be carried out to the comfort of the citizens in Small
+Street? The turning point arose from Mr. Shaw-Lefevre visiting the
+Chamber of Commerce recently. That gentleman visited the site in Baldwin
+Street, and he, no doubt, saw that the site would be better and superior
+to the one in Small Street.
+
+"Mr. PETHICK said that they had come to a turning point in the history
+of the city of Bristol. The question was whether they should continue
+the system of compression that they had suffered from for so many years.
+Small Street was a narrow thoroughfare; it was only a back lane to Broad
+Street. ('Oh! oh!') It was called Small Street and had a carriage way of
+only 9 ft. ('No, no.') He must repeat that at one point in Small Street
+the carriage way was only 9 ft. wide.
+
+"Mr. DANIEL protested against Mr. Pethick saying that Small Street was
+the back lane to Broad Street, and that the carriage road was only 9 ft.
+(hear, hear). The narrow part of Small Street would come down when the
+improvements to the Post Office took place.
+
+"Mr. PETHICK: I state facts--what the street is to-day.
+
+"Mr. DANIEL: But is the narrow part you speak of the entrance to Small
+Street?
+
+"Mr. PETHICK: It is the approach from Bristol Bridge, _via_ the
+Exchange, for mail carriages and other traffic, and all must pass
+through the narrow part, which is only 9 ft. wide. Even if this were
+taken away, Mr. Pethick continued, they would still have a narrow space
+to pass through. The whole would not be 14,000 superficial feet; and
+above all, with so bad an access, they proposed to enlarge the present
+building.
+
+"Mr. Alderman PROCTOR BAKER: It is not proposed.
+
+"Mr. PETHICK observed that in Baldwin Street they had a good carriage
+way, and they would have a front and back entrance to a new building. He
+hoped no little or narrow parochial spirit would be put forward in this
+matter. The difference of the distance of the two sites was so small as
+to be insignificant, and he trusted they would endeavour to get a
+handsome and commodious building erected on the Baldwin Street side of
+the city.
+
+"Mr. Alderman PROCTOR BAKER said they were indebted to Mr. Robinson for
+his interesting details, but he did not think they were details for the
+Council to study, but for the study of the Government. The Post Office
+was a Government undertaking, and carried on for profit by the
+Government, and it was on their shoulders, and theirs alone, to provide
+proper premises. There were two questions involved in the resolution
+before them, and if it could be so arranged he should like a separate
+opinion being taken. One question was the actual position of the future
+Post Office--whether it was to be in Small Street or Baldwin Street. The
+other question was whether the Council was prepared to sell to the Post
+Office the land in Baldwin Street and receive in exchange the building
+in Small Street. As regarded the question of convenience there was very
+little to be said on either side; but with regard to the other matter he
+thought they should not agree to exchange the land for the present Post
+Office building. If they took over the existing building, it could only
+he pulled or used for public offices. Already they had a population of
+200,000 persons, and the area of the city was to be extended; and if
+they believed in the progress of the city they must expect it by-and-by
+to be the centre of a quarter of a million of people. It would be
+impossible, as it would be discreditable, for them to attempt to carry
+on that great municipality in such buildings as they now had. The
+chamber in which they were assembled was in a bad condition; the air at
+that moment was as foul as it could be; and if they took over the
+present Post Office and applied it for the purposes of the municipality,
+they would perpetuate the present discomfort, inconvenience, etc., of
+having divided offices, and postpone for half a century the erection of
+a large municipal building, in which all their offices would be. As to
+Baldwin Street and Small Street sites, there was much to be said on both
+sides; but if it was proposed to take in exchange the Post Office
+building for their land the Council should vote against it (hear, hear).
+He sincerely trusted they would not take over a building which would
+keep up the inconvenience they now suffered from (hear, hear).
+
+"Mr. LANE said it seemed to him that they were simply asked the question
+whether the Council were desirous that there should be such a change in
+the position of the Post Office. Every argument for the change was a
+thoroughly good one which should weigh with them. Selfish considerations
+and every consideration should be banished (applause), and they should
+consider it in the interest of the city and in the interest of the
+development of the trade of the future. The opinion of the postmaster
+was a great argument in favour of larger premises.
+
+"Mr. INSKIP argued that the representatives of the ratepayers were not
+there to carry out the bidding of the postmaster. It might be wise and
+proper for him to communicate his views to the department with which he
+was connected, but it seemed unreasonable to ask members of the Council
+to vote for what he was in favour of. He ventured to suggest that the
+arrangement proposed by the report would be unlawful, and to enter into
+the exchange would be an unlawful proceeding. They acquired land in
+Baldwin Street under the Public Health Act for carrying out
+improvements, and he could not see how it could be said that the
+buildings in Small Street would be required for the purpose of
+improvements. Before they entered into the exchange they ought to obtain
+power by Act of Parliament. If they entered into a speculation of that
+sort they would be transgressing the law of the land. With regard to the
+matter of convenience, if they took the outlying districts of the city
+they would see that the people who lived there went to the Post Office
+after the branch offices were closed, and they would see that Small
+Street was appreciably more convenient for the outlying population than
+the Baldwin Street site could possibly be (applause). Then as to the
+piece of land which would be obtained, the argument of Mr. Pethick was a
+strong one to retain it. The Guildhall was there, and it had been
+promised for years that Small Street should be improved, and that
+improvement would be accomplished if the Government had No. 3, Small
+Street, which would be set back, and they would have done a great deal
+to redeem the promise made some years ago (applause).
+
+"Mr. DIX said he was very much obliged to Mr. Robinson for his figures.
+They all felt that there had been a great growth in the postal
+arrangements of the country, and that there would be a great growth in
+the future; and if it had been shown to him that they could not have a
+good building in Small Street by having the one there altered by the
+authorities, and that they could have a proper one in Baldwin Street, he
+would say let them go to Baldwin Street; but it did not come before them
+in that light. They were anticipating that the postal authorities could
+not make a proper building in Small Street; but he could not see how Mr.
+Robinson and those who advocated the Baldwin Street site came to such a
+conclusion. If they had the buildings in Small Street, that street would
+be improved, which had been anticipated for years, and they would have
+the Post Office close to the Guildhall and that great place of
+commerce--the Commercial Rooms (applause). He argued that the city did
+not want the property in Small Street--it would be useless to them; and
+he hoped they would pronounce against it going forth to the
+Postmaster-General that it was the wish of the Council to alter the site
+(applause).
+
+"Mr. S. G. JAMES said he did not think that they should be saddled with
+a building that would not be any good to them. He suggested that it
+should be represented to the Government that the building would be a
+good one for a Stamp and Excise Office, and that it would be convenient
+to have those offices moved from Queen Square to the building in Small
+Street. He thought that would be a very wise suggestion to make to the
+Government.
+
+"Mr. DANIEL said he viewed the proposition to shift the Post Office as
+one of the most solemn and weighty that had been considered by the Town
+Council for years (hear, hear). By common consent, and by the
+development of the city trade, where the Post Office now was the centre
+of commerce, and they should hesitate very much before they changed it
+(hear, hear); and the Council, being trustees of the property owned by
+the city, and looking at the extent of that property in the
+neighbourhood of the Post Office, and the outlay made on it by the city,
+he could not understand why they made the suggestion to run away from
+Small Street (applause). They had under arbitration paid to the bank
+L9,600 for a piece of land, and that was surely not to keep the street
+as a narrow lane. If the present Post Office were retained, the
+authorities would take the houses that would be put in a line with the
+Post Office, and two-thirds of Small Street would be converted into a
+wide street--and it was only to shave off the Water Works offices and
+adjoining building, and then they would have a good wide street (hear,
+hear). The Corporation during the last twenty years had spent in the
+neighbourhood not less than L50,000, and if by establishing the Post
+Office in Baldwin Street they would enhance the value of the adjoining
+property, so taking it away from the centre of the city would depreciate
+the property there. It would not be doing justice to the citizens to
+take it away from Small Street and remove it to a remote spot like
+Baldwin Street. ('Oh, oh!' and laughter.) It was a remote spot, and he
+did not know that a street through which were a tram line and continual
+cab traffic was the best place for a Post Office. He believed a quiet
+street would be the better place. He farther argued that the proper
+place for the Post Office was where it was--in the neighbourhood of the
+Assize Courts, where the County Court was held all the year round, and
+the assizes and sessions were held, and at the back of the Commercial
+Rooms, to which there were upwards of 600 subscribers.
+
+"Mr. Alderman NAISH said that what weighed with him was that the
+Government had not applied for a better site. He apprehended that Mr.
+Shaw-Lefevre was perfectly satisfied with the accommodation he could get
+on the present site. He had seen the draft of the Bill promoted by the
+Government for taking possession of a building under the compulsory
+powers at a fair valuation. Someone in Bristol wished them to go
+somewhere else. All Mr. Shaw-Lefevre said was that if the citizens
+wanted to go elsewhere they must take the old building. The
+Postmaster-General did not suggest the removal, but somebody else did
+(hear, hear). The Postmaster-General knew his business, and he probably
+considered that the present office could be enlarged so as to provide
+all the accommodation necessary. They could thus have a good public
+improvement in the centre of the city, and at the same time provide for
+the postal requirements. They were simply asked to go to a street in
+which certain people were interested, which, although a large
+thoroughfare, had two lines of tramways running through it. He hoped the
+Council would not agree to the proposal.
+
+"Mr. MATTHEWS said if the question was put to them simply, did they
+require more postal accommodation?--they would unhesitatingly say that
+they did; but the question of site was a totally different matter. They
+had not gone into the question whether another site would not be a
+better one than the Baldwin Street one. He moved that the question of a
+site be remitted to a committee, with instructions to report to the
+Council, and that the committee consist of the Mayor, Aldermen Spark,
+Harvey, and Naish, and Messrs. Townsend, C. F. Hare, Barker, and Inskip.
+
+"Mr. LEVY considered that the city was indebted to those who suggested
+the Baldwin Street site. There could be no two opinions about the matter
+(cries of 'Oh,' and laughter). They had seen an amusing correspondence
+in the papers about it. He would not do anything to injure the _Times
+and Mirror_ for a moment (laughter). In Baldwin Street a Constitutional
+Club had been established, and the _Times and Mirror_ might consider
+that institution (laughter).
+
+"Mr. WHITWILL thought they should simply confine themselves to an
+expression of opinion as to the desirability of Baldwin Street site, for
+he should be strongly opposed to the exchange (hear, hear).
+
+"Mr. H. G. GARDNER said the position in Small Street was preferable to
+him, but they ought to sink personal convenience. The Chamber of
+Commerce suggested the matter, and he looked on that body as young
+Bristol.
+
+"Mr. ROBINSON said he only meant that the property should be taken over
+if an equitable arrangement could be come to. He would drop the last
+part of his resolution, and it would now read as follows:--'That,
+considering the want of adequate space in Small Street for the postal
+telegram arrangements, it is desirable that a new Post Office
+be erected in Baldwin Street on the site recently viewed by the
+Postmaster-General.'
+
+"The motion was then put with the following result:--_For_: Aldermen
+Lucas, Edwards, Jose, Spark; Messrs. Moore, Robinson, James, Pethick,
+Wills, Bartlett, Fear, Bush, Townsend, C. Gardner, Jefferies, H. G.
+Gardner, Low, Lane, Levy, Garton, Derham, Whitwill, Barker--23.
+_Against_: The Mayor; Aldermen Morgan, Smith, Naish, Fox, Jones,
+Hathway, Harvey, Cope-Proctor; Messrs. Terrett, Dix, Gibson, Alsop,
+Francis, Bastow, A. Baker, C. F. Hare, C. B. Hare, Harvey, C. Nash,
+Hall, Lockley, Daniel, Matthews, Follwoll, Sibly, Inskip--27. Aldermen
+Proctor Baker and George and Mr. Dole did not vote.
+
+"Mr. LEVY asked if the Postmaster-General made an offer it would be
+entertained.
+
+"The TOWN CLERK said he supposed that any offer from the
+Postmaster-General or anybody else would be considered."
+
+The Council dropped the matter of removal, and an enlargement of the
+Post Office was commenced in 1886 on 5,500 square feet of ground on
+which the Rectory House of St. Mary Werburgh formerly stood. The
+enlargement was completed in 1889. The structure was designed by the
+Surveyor of Her Majesty's Office of Works. In making his plan in 1868 no
+doubt the Surveyor thought he was building for, at least, fifty years;
+and so he set back his building to form a square structure, instead of
+following the line of street as laid down by the city authorities in
+their Act of Parliament. The new part of the building had to conform to
+the city line, and had, therefore, to be built at an angle with the old
+office, which detracts from the general appearance. The Post Office
+building in Small Street stands on a site 17,300 square feet in extent;
+and now, thirty-one years from the opening of the new office and ten
+years from its enlargement, further extension is necessary, and the
+erection of a second or supplementary office larger in dimensions than
+the present structure is about to be proceeded with.
+
+As the work in the Post Office goes on through the whole day and night,
+the air in the working rooms became vitiated and over-heated when
+lighted with gas. In 1896 the effectual remedy of abandoning the use of
+gas and adopting electric light was carried out. The Corporation
+provides the current. The lamps used are 4 arc lamps, of approximately
+750 candle-power each, and 450 glow lamps of 8, 16, or 25 candle-power.
+
+Two million gallons of water a year are used to keep the buildings
+clean.
+
+[Illustration: THE BRISTOL HEAD POST OFFICE IN 1899.
+
+_From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol._]
+
+As the Post Office, from its size, if not from its architectural beauty,
+dominates Small Street in some measure it may be well here to introduce
+particulars from an ancient manuscript in the City Library, which show
+that Small Street has been a street ever since Anglo-Saxon times.
+About Small Street and St. Leonard's Lane lived some of Bristol's
+greatest merchants. For hundreds of years there was not within the walls
+of Bristol a more fashionable street than Small Street. Many of the
+mansions there had good gardens. In the reign of Charles II. there were
+only six houses on the west, or Post Office, side of the street. Amongst
+the worthies who resided there were the Colstons, the Creswicks, the
+Kitchens, the Seymours, the Esterfields, the Codringtons, the Haymans,
+the Kilkes; John Foster, the founder of the almshouse on St. Michael's
+Hill; Nicholas Thorne, one of the founders of our Grammar School; and
+Thomas Fenn, attorney, who in 1762 succeeded to the Earldom of
+Westmoreland. It is not indicated whether he was related in any way to
+William Fenn, who was postmaster, 1778-88, but it might have been so,
+for William Fenn must have been a person of some note or the appointment
+would not at his death have been conferred on his widow. In Small
+Street, too, more Royal and noble visitors have lodged and received
+hospitality than in any other street in Bristol. The Earl of Bedford and
+his son were received there in 1569, and Robert Dudley, Earl of
+Leicester, one of Queen Elizabeth's favourites, and the Earl of Warwick,
+in 1587; the latter lodged at Robert Kitchen's. In 1643 King Charles I.,
+with Prince Charles and the Duke of York, lodged there, so did Oliver
+Cromwell and his wife in 1649; and James II., with George, Prince of
+Denmark, and the Dukes of Grafton, Beaufort, and Somerset, in 1688.
+Queen Catherine was entertained at Sir Henry Creswick's house in 1677,
+where Sir Henry, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, the good and great Duke
+of Ormonde, lodged for several days in 1665. We learn that Small Street
+was selected for the reception of these illustrious visitors "by reason
+of the conveniency of the street for entertaining the nobility."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE LOCAL POST OFFICE IN EARLY DAYS. SIR ROWLAND HILL.--RECENT PROGRESS.
+
+
+It is pleasing to look back to the time, little more than one hundred
+years ago, when Bristol was the premier provincial post town. It had
+long ranked next to London in wealth, in population, and in its Post
+Office. Bristol has, however, in a postal sense, yielded place to other
+towns, and now ranks after Birmingham, Glasgow, Liverpool, and
+Manchester.
+
+Dipping into history, it is found that there was a Post Office at
+Clifton a hundred years since. At about the time of the Battle of
+Waterloo it was situated near Saville Place, in a small tenement. The
+post keeper was a knight of the shears, who sat cross-legged at his work
+on a shop-board in the window, whilst his better-half sold "goodies."
+The "Staff" consisted of this pigeon pair, and the work of carrying the
+bags to and from Bristol, and of delivering the missives, was
+undertaken by them conjointly.
+
+The year 1793 was signalised by the extension to Bristol of the penny
+post for local letters, that is, letters for Bristol city, its suburbs,
+and neighbouring villages. That post covered a wide area ranging from
+Thornbury and Wotton-under-Edge in the North, to Temple Cloud,
+Chewton-Mendip, and Oakhill in the South; eastward in the direction of
+Box, and westward to Portishead. This institution had until then been
+established nowhere else but in London and in Dublin; but Birmingham,
+Edinburgh, and Manchester were granted the privilege at the same time as
+Bristol. During the year 1794-95 the penny post brought a clear gain to
+the revenue:--in Bristol of L469, in Manchester of L586, and in
+Birmingham of L240. Notwithstanding these gains, the Post Office
+authorities concluded that neither at Liverpool nor at Leeds, nor at any
+other town in the Kingdom, would a penny post defray its own expenses.
+
+There is little more on record about local Post Office details for some
+years; but we learn that in April, 1825, an evening delivery of post
+letters was ordered to Kingsdown, Montpelier, Wellington Place, and
+Catherine Place, Stoke's Croft, all the year round; and to Lawrence
+Hill, West Street, Gloucester Lane, in the parish of St. Philip and
+Jacob, from 1st of March to 1st of November in each year. A receiving
+house for letters was established at the corner of West Street on May
+20th, 1825; and also one in Harford Street, New Cut. In December, 1827,
+the population of Bristol was estimated at 50,000 persons; and in
+August, 1831, the number of persons the Post Office had to serve was
+59,070.
+
+Evans's _New Guide; or, Pictures of Bristol_, published in 1828,
+furnishes the next record. It stated that "the London mail goes out
+every afternoon at twenty minutes past 5, and arrives every day at 9.0
+in the morning. Bath: Out every morning at 7.0 and 10.0, and at twenty
+minutes past 5 in the evening; arrives at 9.0 morning, and a quarter
+before 5 and a quarter before 7 in the evening. Sodbury, through
+Stapleton, Hambrook, Winterbourne, and Iron Acton: Goes out at twenty
+minutes before 10 in the morning; arrives at half-past 4 in the evening.
+Thornbury, through Filton, Almondsbury, and Rudgeway: Goes out twenty
+minutes before 10 in the morning; arrives at half-past 4 in the evening.
+Bitton, through New Church, Kingswood, Hanham, and Willsbridge: Goes out
+at 10.0 in the morning; arrives at half-past 4 in the evening. Exeter
+and Westward: Out every morning between 9.0 and 10.0; arrives every
+evening between 4.0 and 5.0. Portsmouth, Chichester, Salisbury, etc.:
+Out at half-past 5 in the afternoon; arrives every day previously to the
+London mail. Tetbury and Cirencester: Out every morning at half-past 9;
+arrives every evening at 5.0. Birmingham and Northward: Out every
+evening at 7.0; arrives every morning between 6.0 and 7.0. Milford and
+South Wales: Out every day at half-past 9; arrives at half-past 3 in the
+afternoon. The Irish mail is made up every day, and letters from Ireland
+may be expected to arrive every day at half-past 3. Jamaica and Leeward
+Islands, first and third Wednesday in the month; Lisbon, every week;
+Gibraltar and Mediterranean, every three weeks; Madeira and Brazils,
+first Tuesday in each month; Surinam, Berbice, and Demorara, second
+Wednesday in each month; France and Spain, Sundays, Mondays,
+Wednesdays, and Thursdays; Holland and Hamburgh, Mondays and Thursdays;
+Guernsey and Jersey, Sundays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays. Letters for all
+parts may be put into the Post Office at any time, but should be
+delivered half an hour before the mail is made up. Letters delivered
+later than half an hour previous to the departure of the respective
+mails to be accompanied with one penny. Payment of postage will not be
+received unless tendered full half an hour before the time fixed for
+closing the bags. Letters for Axbridge, Weston-super-Mare, and adjacent
+places are sent and received by the Western mail. Letter bags are made
+up daily, after the sorting of the London mail, for Bourton, Wrington,
+Langford, Churchill, Nailsea, Clevedon, and their respective deliveries.
+The letters must be put in by 9.0 o'clock. The return to Bristol is at
+4.0 in the afternoon. Letters may be put into the receiving offices for
+all parts of the kingdom, and the full postage, if desired, paid with
+them. Letter carriers are despatched regularly every day (Sundays not
+excepted) with letters to and from Durdham Down, Westbury, Stapleton,
+Frenchay, Downend, Hambrook, and Winterbourne; and also to Brislington,
+Keynsham, and other places. The delivery of letters at Clifton is each
+day at 10.0 and 6.0. Letters should be in the offices at Clifton and the
+Wells for the London and the North mails by 4.0."
+
+It may be interesting to state, what the rates of postage from this city
+were in 1830. Thus: Australia, 11d.; Buenos Ayres, 3s. 5d.; Canary
+Islands, 2s. 6d.; Cape de Verde Islands, 2s. 6d.; Chili, 3s. 5d.; China,
+11d.; Colombo, 3s.; Cuba, 3s.; East Indies, 11d.; Havana, 3s.; St.
+Helena, 11d.; South America, 3s. 5d.; Van Dieman's Land, 11d.; whilst
+for the Continent the rates were considerably higher, thus: Austria, 2s.
+2d.; Belgium, 1s. 11d.; Corsica, 2s. 2d.; Denmark, 2s. 3d.; Flanders,
+2s. 2d.; France--Calais, 1s. 5d.; Germany, 2s. 3d.; Gibraltar, 2s. 6d.;
+Holland, 1s. 11d.; Italy, 2s. 2d.; Malta, 2s. 6d.; Poland, 2s. 3d.;
+Prussia, 2s. 3d.; Russia, 2s. 3d.; Spain, 2s. 2d.; Turkey, 2s. 2d. At
+that period the Inland Rates were very high, and the cost was regulated
+thus: From any Post Office in England or Wales, to any place not
+exceeding 15 miles from such office, 4d.; above 15 to 20 miles, 5d.; 20
+to 30 miles, 6d.; 30 to 50 miles, 7d.; 50 to 80 miles, 8d.; 80 to 120
+miles, 9d.; 120 to 170 miles, 10d.; 170 to 230 miles, 11d.; 230 to 300
+miles, 12d. And one penny in addition on each letter for every 100 miles
+beyond 300. Thus a letter from Bristol to Cirencester cost 7d.;
+Cheltenham, 8d.; Banbury, 10d.; Leeds, 11d.; Hull; 12d., and so on. Now
+a letter four ounces in weight can be sent from one end of the land to
+the other for a penny, and a parcel one pound in weight for threepence.
+
+The Bristol ex-Postal Superintendent, Mr. H. T. Carter, carrying his
+mind back over his forty years of diligent and zealous service, recalls
+the time when the mails for the not far-distant village of Shirehampton
+were conveyed in a cart drawn by a dog, the property of rural postman
+Ham. The cart was not large, but of sufficient size to carry postman and
+mail bags. The dog, of Newfoundland breed, got over the ground at a
+rapid pace. Ham was addicted to drink, but nevertheless, whether he was
+drunk or sober, asleep or awake, in stormy or fine weather, the dog took
+him and the mails to their proper destination.
+
+A venerable man now living at Earthcott Green, a hamlet within ten
+miles of our great city, well recollects the time when he received his
+letters through Iron Acton, at a special cost to him of 2d. each, with a
+delivery only every other day. The plan was for an additional penny to
+be charged on all letters sent out by rural posts for delivery, and in
+addition to this penny an extra charge was levied on all letters
+delivered from sub-Post Offices to bye houses or places beyond the
+several village deliveries. In some cases recognised men or women
+attended at the Head Office, Bristol, once or twice a week to take out
+letters for delivery in the remote country regions--of course for a
+"consideration."
+
+The Bristol district shared in the representations in 1838 of the
+hardships borne by poor people in respect of the heavy charges for the
+conveyance of letters. The postmaster at Congresbury deposed thus:--"The
+price of a letter is a great tax on poor people. I sent one, charged
+eightpence, to a poor labouring man about a week ago; it came from his
+daughter. He first refused it, saying it would take a loaf of bread from
+his other children; but, after hesitating a little time, he paid the
+money, and opened the letter. I seldom return letters of this kind to
+Bristol, because I let the poor people have them, and take the chance of
+being paid; sometimes I lose the postage, but generally the poor people
+pay me by degrees." Then the postmaster of Yatton stated as follows:--"I
+have had a letter waiting lately for a poor woman, from her husband who
+is at work in Wales; the charge was 9d.,--it lay many days, in
+consequence of her not being able to pay the postage. I at last trusted
+her with it." Of the desire of the poor to correspond, a Mr. Emery gave
+evidence, stating "that the poor near Bristol have signed a petition to
+Parliament for the reduction of the postage. He never saw greater
+enthusiasm in any public thing that was ever got up in the shape of a
+petition; they seemed all to enter into the thing as fully and with as
+much feeling as it was possible, as a boon or godsend to them, that they
+should be able to correspond with their distant friends."
+
+Uniform penny postage came in 1840. The Bristol citizens, of course,
+found it no cheaper than before to send a single letter to places in
+their own neighbourhood, but a light enclosure could be put in without
+extra charge, though the weight had to be brought down from four ounces
+to half an ounce.
+
+It may not be out of place to mention in these pages that one of the
+penny postage stamps of the very earliest issue after the penny postage
+system came into operation in 1840 was made use of for the prepayment of
+a letter sent by His Grace the Duke of Wellington to H. Nuttall Tomlins,
+Esq., of the Hotwells, Bristol. It was sent six days before stamps and
+stamped covers were first used by the general public, the Duke, as Prime
+Minister, having no doubt been supplied in advance with stamps, one of
+which he attached to his letter, to give a surprise to his friend
+Nuttall Tomlins. The envelope, with the stamp still upon it, is now in
+the possession of a well-known philatelist in London.
+
+The allusion to the "Penny Post" naturally calls to mind its originator.
+On the hill slope of the still pleasant rural village of Stapleton, four
+miles from Bristol Post Office,--once a Roman settlement, and in later
+days the head-quarters of Oliver Cromwell during the siege of
+Bristol,--the great postal reformer, Sir Rowland Hill, frequently spent
+some of his leisure time with his brother, the late Recorder of Bristol,
+Mr. Matthew Davenport Hill. There is in the Bristol postal service at
+the present time a mail officer who recalls that, in his very young
+days, it was his mission to set out from Heath House to fetch the
+morning letters for Sir Rowland from the Stapleton Post Office. He tells
+how he had to ride the old pony at a rapid rate, as, even in those days,
+Sir Rowland's time was valuable, and if his letters were late he had to
+curtail his "constitutional," which usually consisted of a three-mile
+sharp walk, with cap in hand instead of on head, over Purdown, past
+Stoke House, returning through Frenchay.
+
+In December, 1844, Sir Rowland Hill, in connection with the National
+Testimonial to him as the author of Penny Postage, recorded the
+circumstance that he had received a letter from Mr. Estlin, an eminent
+surgeon of Bristol, giving an account of proceedings in that important
+city anterior to any movement in London. Sir Rowland believed it was in
+Bristol, and from Mr. Estlin, that the testimonial had its origin. The
+sum presented from Bristol to the national collection amounted to about
+L300.
+
+The celebration of the Jubilee of Penny Postage in 1890 took the
+practical turn in one respect of increasing the Rowland Hill Benevolent
+Fund. Bristol contributed its quota of L72 14s. 6d., made up in great
+measure of public subscriptions. When the grand celebration took place
+on July 2nd, at the South Kensington Museum, with the Duke and Duchess
+of Edinburgh present at the conversazione, Bristol took its part, and
+immediately after a signal from South Kensington was received over the
+telegraph wire at 10 o'clock three hearty cheers for Her Majesty were
+given, the postmaster leading. The Post Office band then struck up the
+National Anthem, and cheers for the Queen were at once taken up by a
+body of about 200 postmen who had assembled in the Post Office yard.
+
+As in 1847 the state of things at the provincial offices generally was
+not regarded as satisfactory, Sir Rowland Hill, in accordance with the
+wish of the Postmaster-General, visited Bristol on April 1st in that
+year. He found that the first delivery of the day, by far the most
+important of all, was not completed until 12 o'clock; the
+letter-carriers, as he was informed, often staying after departure from
+the office to take their breakfast before commencing their rounds. He
+was able to show how at a small cost (only L125 a year) it might be
+completed by 9.0. The office itself he found small, badly lighted, and
+ill ventilated. The day mail bag to London was nearly useless, its
+contents for London delivery being on the morning of his inquiry only
+sixty-four letters, thirty-seven of which might have been sent by the
+previous mail on the mere payment of the extra penny. His impression
+regarding this mail, both in and out of the office, agreed exactly with
+his evidence in 1843; viz., that all day mails, to be efficient for
+their purpose, should start as late as was consistent with their
+reaching London in time for their letters to be forwarded by the
+outgoing evening mails. The satisfaction Sir Rowland felt in such
+improvements as he had been able to make on the spot was much enhanced
+by his receiving at the termination of his visit the thanks of both
+clerks and letter-carriers for the new arrangements. It should be said
+that Sir Rowland Hill did not by his action cast any reflection upon Mr.
+Todd Walton, junior, as he was at pains to say that, regarded as a
+specimen of the administration of provincial Post Offices at the time
+the Bristol specimen was by no means an unfavourable one. At that time
+there were only about 20,000 letters, etc., delivered in a week.
+
+The Bristol Chamber of Commerce took no notice of the Post Office for
+nearly twenty years (1835-1855), but in the latter year it did so, for
+its records of the annual meeting of 31st January, 1855, with John
+Salmon, President, in the chair, shew the following, viz.:--
+
+"The Post Office questions of salaries, internal arrangements, and local
+inquiry, are still in the same position as they were six months ago,
+except that, after repeated further applications to the
+Postmaster-General, your Committee extracted, on the 10th December last,
+a renewed promise from his lordship that 'no time should be lost in
+making the enquiry at the Bristol Post Office.' As the inefficiency of
+the public service arises from the unjust treatment of the employes and
+defective internal arrangements of the local office, your Committee
+cannot desist, notwithstanding the tedious and disagreeable nature of
+the task which they have undertaken, from insisting on these repeated
+promises being redeemed."
+
+Then, under the same presidency, at the next half-yearly meeting in the
+same year, it was stated that "Subsequent to the date of the last
+report, your Committee discovered that the Postmaster-General had caused
+a private local enquiry to be made with respect to the classification
+and salaries of the officers of the Bristol Post Office."
+
+There was this further remonstrance:--
+
+".... It would have been more satisfactory to your Committee if the
+Postmaster-General had fulfilled his promise to the deputation who
+waited upon him on the 30th of January, 1854, to hold a local enquiry at
+which they should be present, as there were several other matters
+connected with the internal arrangements of the Bristol Post Office
+(particularly the money order department, which is still very defective)
+with respect to which they were desirous of making some suggestions."
+
+Then followed a copy of the report made to the Postmaster-General by Mr.
+Tilley, who conducted the enquiry, also a statement of the proposed
+Establishment.
+
+At the Chamber's next annual meeting on 30th January, 1856, with James
+Hassell, the president, in the chair, the Post Office is again reproved
+thus:--
+
+"No further reply than the official printed acknowledgment and promise
+of attention has yet reached your Committee respecting the memorial on
+the subject of the Welsh mail, the West India mails, etc.; but past
+experience and general repute do not lead them to anticipate prompt
+redress from the Post Office authorities. It required repeated
+applications, extending over a period of about eighteen months, to
+obtain a remedy for the grievances set forth in our former memorial; and
+even now the Money Order Department is not completed, and probably
+similar perseverance will again be required, as it is now more than a
+month ago the memorial relating to the West India mail was presented."
+
+It was thought worthy of note in the _Bristol Mirror_ of November 5th,
+1831, that "500 letters were brought yesterday from Clifton for the
+general post." In demonstration of the strides which the Post Office has
+made, it may be mentioned that in the "fifties," in addition to the Post
+Office at Clifton, the only offices were the branches at Haberfield
+Crescent and Phippen Street, with four collections a day, and the
+receiving houses at Ashley Road, Bedminster, Hotwells, and Redland, with
+three collections a day. The city only boasted at that time of pillar
+letter boxes at Arley Chapel, Armoury Square, Bedminster Bridge, Bristol
+Bridge, Castle Street, Christmas Steps, College Green, Freemantle
+Square, Kingsdown, Milk Street, Railway Station, St. Philip's Police
+Station, Kingsland Road, Whiteladies Road, and Woodwell Crescent, with
+three collections daily. Now there are 167 Post Offices in the district.
+On the Gloucestershire side there are 99, at 41 of which telegraph
+business is carried on; and on the Somersetshire side 68, 27 of which
+are telegraph offices. In addition telegraph business is carried on for
+the Postmaster-General at five railway stations on the Gloucestershire
+side and five on the Somersetshire side. Licenses to sell postage stamps
+are held by over a hundred shopkeepers.
+
+There are now 350 pillar and wall letter boxes provided for public
+convenience.
+
+It may be mentioned in passing that during the strike amongst the
+deal-runners in Bristol, when men were brought from other towns and
+housed and fed at "Huntersholm" (a large wooden building erected
+specially in one of the timber yards), and allowed out under police
+supervision, a stamp license was applied for and granted, to meet a
+large demand for postage stamps which these men made in consequence of
+having to send their wages home weekly to their families.
+
+In detail, but without complication by mention of the names of all the
+districts, the local improvements for the seven years from March, 1892,
+to February, 1899, inclusive, were as follows:--New post offices
+established, 33; telegraph offices opened, 18; money order and savings
+bank business extended to 17 offices; postal orders sold at 6 additional
+offices; new pillar and wall boxes erected, 142; new or additional day
+mails from 34 districts; and out to 44 districts; new extra deliveries
+established in 65 districts, and two extra deliveries in 7 districts.
+Free delivery extended in 35 rural districts, and the ordinary second or
+third delivery extended in 44 rural districts; morning delivery
+accelerated in 63, and the day delivery in 8, rural districts. A later
+posting for North mail in 6, and for the night mail in 58, rural
+districts. New collections established in 73, and a later collection in
+30, rural districts.
+
+Increased facilities in the postal world are almost invariably followed
+by augmentation of business. It certainly has been so in the Bristol
+district, for there has been a marvellous development in the last seven
+years. The letters delivered have increased by 60 per cent., and those
+posted have grown at the rate of 55 per cent. Parcels have increased by
+25 per cent. There has been a similar marked increase in all branches of
+business. The three preceding periods of seven years were comparatively
+"lean" periods, for the increase in the number of letters during the
+whole twenty-one years was actually less than during the seven last
+years. The increase is altogether out of proportion to the growth of
+population, and it is far in excess of the general increase of letter
+correspondence throughout the country generally, which has been only at
+the rate of 22 per cent. during the period as against Bristol's 60 per
+cent. It is hoped that this may be taken as a sure indication of the
+well-being of the trade of Bristol, and as a sign that there is
+quickened life in the commerce of the good old city. At all events, it
+shows that the local Post Office organization is quite abreast of the
+times, and that the facilities afforded are appreciated and are fully
+taken advantage of.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+BRISTOL AS A MAIL STEAMER STATION FOR IRELAND, WEST INDIES, AMERICA, AND
+CANADA.
+
+
+From the archives of the Bristol Chamber of Commerce it transpires that
+from the very first constitution of the Chamber in 1823, it had before
+it a scheme for the conveyance of mails between this port and the South
+of Ireland by direct steam packet. It was considered that such a service
+would be highly advantageous to the city, and correspondence on the
+subject from time to time took place with the Post Office Department.
+Allusion is made to it in the Chamber's Annual Report in January, 1824;
+again in 1828, when the President of the Chamber, Mr. Joseph Cookson,
+had a conference with the leading officer of the Post Office; and once
+more in 1829. The case is so fully and ably set forth in the Board's
+Annual Report of the 26th January, 1829, that its reproduction _in
+extenso_ cannot fail to be of deep interest to the citizens of the
+present day as their attention is often drawn to the steamship traffic.
+It ran thus:--
+
+"The transmission of the mails direct from Bristol was earnestly pressed
+upon the attention of the Postmaster-General in the year 1823, on which
+occasion the Chamber minutely investigated the practicability, safety,
+and general advantages of the measure, the material points of which were
+embodied in a memorial, accompanied by a list of queries and replies.
+The Civic Corporation, the Society of Merchant Venturers, and the
+Bristol Dock Company each presented similar memorials.
+
+"In resuming the enquiry, the Board have resorted to the channels best
+calculated to convey accurate information. The managing proprietor of
+the steam packet establishments at this port, Captain Dungey, an
+individual on whose experience and judgment reliance may be placed, and
+other persons of practical knowledge, have been consulted on the
+subject. All concur in establishing the fact that the voyage to and from
+Dunmore may, with general certainty, be accomplished by efficient
+steamboats in from 24 to 26 hours during the eight summer months, and in
+from 26 to 30 hours in the four months of winter; that the instances of
+exceeding this scale would not be more frequent than at the present
+station, the navigation of the Bristol Channel being protected by the
+coast on either side, and consequently less influenced by severe weather
+than the Irish Sea.
+
+"The earlier arrival of the London mail and its later departure, as
+altered some time since, accords materially with the proposition for
+making Bristol a packet station. By the present regulations, the London
+mail arrives in Bristol at five minutes past 9 in the morning; and
+leaves at half-past 5 in the evening; it is capable of being still
+further accelerated by taking the two last stages in the direct line
+through Marshfield, instead of passing through Bath. According to the
+present arrangements, the Irish mails may with ease and convenience to
+passengers be despatched from the mouth of the Bristol river, five miles
+from the Post Office, every day at half-past 10, and those from Ireland,
+if arriving by 4.0, be forwarded to London the same evening. The time
+saved by this route as compared with that of Milford would be, at least
+during the summer months, equal to one whole day for the purposes of
+business, since the arrival at Dunmore would be in the morning instead
+of evening, and the departure at noon instead of at an early hour of the
+morning as at present.
+
+"The present slips at Lamplighter's Hall and Broad Pill now serve for
+landing passengers from the packets on special occasions; with very
+trifling expense they may be made efficient for passengers, and not more
+objectionable than the present accommodation for crossing the estuary of
+the Severn--carriages, horses, baggage, and heavy goods might at an
+earlier hour be put on board at the Bristol Docks, which the boat would
+leave at the height of tide in order to be in waiting for the mails at
+the place appointed for receiving them. At Lamplighter's Hall an hotel
+is established, which, with the contiguity to the city, would ensure to
+the public a supply of all the accommodation a packet station would
+require. These are the facilities which can at present be afforded. At
+no very distant date the accommodation will, in all probability, be yet
+further increased, first, by the erection of a pier with hotel and
+establishment at Portishead on the Somersetshire side of the Avon,
+which the Corporation of the City have for some time had under
+consideration with a view to promote the convenience of passengers by
+the steam vessels and thus encourage the intercourse between this city
+and the South of Ireland. In aid of the present enquiry they have
+directed a survey and report by Mr. Milne, the engineer, on the
+practicability and probable cost of the proposed pier. Secondly, and
+arising also from this scheme, is a plan for erecting a bridge across
+the Avon, by the application in part of a fund amounting to nearly
+L8,000, held by the Society of Merchant Venturers in trust under the
+will of William Vick, deceased, for the especial purpose; with the
+formation of an improved line of road by Mr. Gordon, Mr. Miles, and
+other landed proprietors on that side of the river, for the short
+distance to Portishead. These several improvements the respective
+parties interested are disposed to effect, and which any impelling
+motive, such as the establishment of a regular mail packet station, may
+induce them immediately to undertake. The accomplishment of these works
+would render Portishead a most eligible station. It is protected from
+weather, is a safe anchorage, would have ample depth of water at any
+state of the tide, the landing would be instant on arrival, and it would
+be supplied with every convenience and accommodation for passengers.
+
+"The Board believe an important saving of expense to Government would
+result from establishing Bristol as a mail packet station. The great
+deficiency on the Milford station in the receipts as compared with the
+expenditure arises from the very limited number of persons who avail
+themselves of that line of communication. The land journey of twenty
+hours at a fare of L3 10s., followed by a twelve hours' voyage by open
+sea at a further expense of L1 10s., with the inconvenience frequently
+sustained in crossing the estuary of the Severn, deters people from
+taking the Milford route by choice. The general introduction of steam
+packets, the degree of perfection in sailing to which they have been
+brought, the regularity and safety with which the voyages are performed,
+the accommodation to passengers, and the moderate scale of fares, have
+contributed to effect of late years a material change in the general
+opinion on steamboat conveyance. The long voyage by sea is now
+generally preferred to a long journey by land and the shorter one by
+sea. The number and efficiency of the Bristol boats, and the economy in
+the fares, induce a large proportion of travellers to take the direct
+course from Bristol. Indeed, to so great an extent has this preference
+operated that the contractors for conveying the mail throughout the
+whole line from Bristol to Milford are understood to have given notice
+of their intention to determine their engagement, on account of the
+gradual decrease in the number of passengers and the consequent loss
+they incur. A similar statement appears in the report of the
+Postmaster-General on the memorial of the innkeepers on the Holyhead
+route.
+
+"In favour of Bristol it may be fairly stated that, at a comparatively
+trifling expense, the port may be made commodious for a packet station;
+that the present strength of the establishment at Milford would serve,
+with some addition, for that of Bristol; that the difference in price of
+coal at Portishead would reduce the expense of sailing the packets from
+that station; that Bristol affords every prospect of increase of
+receipt, whilst at Milford it must, for the reasons before stated,
+necessarily decrease; that the demands of a large commercial city, with
+its populous adjoining and connected districts, will create a traffic
+for boats making quick and regular voyages, which Milford, from its
+position, never can acquire--the conveyance of fish and provisions alone
+could be made to yield a revenue of consequence. Numerous other sources
+of receipt would arise from the conveniency of its regularity and
+expedition. Indeed, so much are the Board impressed with the belief that
+the traffic would be extensive and productive that they venture to
+anticipate it may, at no very distant period, relieve the Government
+from any further charge than a comparatively nominal sum for the
+transport of the mails. The Board are induced also to put the
+proposition in a national point of view. They feel that the more closely
+Ireland can be brought into direct and active communication with this
+country, the more rapid will be its course of improvement. The
+introduction of steam navigation has, at this port, given an energy and
+extension to the Irish trade that far exceeds any previous expectations;
+each succeeding month brings a vast increase of import and a
+corresponding export, to the material benefit of each kingdom, and the
+more complete the intercourse can be established the more important will
+the trade become.
+
+"The port of Bristol, from its position, possesses numerous capabilities
+for a mail packet station. Its contiguity and means of land and water
+communication with the capital; its being the principal shipping port
+for the manufacturing districts of the South-west part of the kingdom;
+its close connection and water communication with Birmingham, Worcester,
+and other large towns in the centre of the kingdom; the convenience of
+its floating harbour; the reduced scale of its local tolls--all these
+circumstances combine to give Bristol a superiority over other places on
+the coast, whether the subject he viewed as regards the economy of the
+Post Office Department or the accommodation of the public.
+
+"The Board have placed the subject of the Commissioners' enquiry in the
+several points of view which appear to them fairly to arise upon the
+investigation and consideration it has received, and they shall feel
+sincere gratification if, on this or any future occasion, they should in
+the least degree prove of assistance to a department of Government, or
+should otherwise by their exertions conduce to the advancement of the
+public interests.
+
+ "THOMAS STOCK, President.
+ July 7th, 1828."
+
+A strong memorial (under the hand of Thomas Cookson, President) was
+forwarded to the Postmaster-General.
+
+Francis Freeling, Secretary, in his reply for the Postmaster-General,
+refused to admit that the port of Bristol did afford the requisite
+facilities for a station for His Majesty's packets. When the projected
+works were carried out the matter would be reconsidered by the
+Government.
+
+Replying further, Mr. Freeling, on the 2nd March, alluded to the
+impossibility of despatching the mails at a fixed time every day in the
+year, and said that that presented insurmountable objections to the
+choice of Bristol as a station for His Majesty's packets. He said that
+the first requisite for a packet station was that the port should afford
+the means for embarking and landing the mails at all times of tide and
+under all circumstances of weather.
+
+The Bristol Dock Directors and a Standing Committee of the Society of
+Merchants considered the matter, but did not see their way to press it
+under the chilling response received from the Postmaster-General.
+
+The Board did not give up the case, for in the Annual Report 28th
+January, 1833, it was stated that the proposition for establishing at
+this port a mail packet station by steam vessels to the South of Ireland
+was being diligently pursued, and that the House of Commons having
+appointed a Committee to enquire into the communications between England
+and Ireland, a favourable opportunity was presented of again urging the
+advantages Bristol port was calculated to afford.
+
+The numerous appeals, representations, and enquiries did not result in
+the manner desired, and to this day the mails from the South of Ireland
+for Bristol and its district follow the same route _via_ Waterford and
+Milford Haven, the only difference being that from the latter port to
+Bristol the service is carried on by rail instead of by road.
+
+Bristol became a mail packet station eventually, as steamships carried
+the American mails between this port and New York for several years,
+commencing in 1837, the year of Her Most Gracious Majesty's accession to
+the throne. The _Great Western_, constructed under the direction of
+Brunel, the famous engineer of the Great Western Railway, was chiefly
+used in the service.
+
+[Illustration: THE "GREAT WESTERN."
+
+THE FIRST STEAMER WHICH CARRIED MAILS FROM BRISTOL TO NEW YORK.]
+
+On the 31st May, 1838, writing from 19 Trinity Street, Bristol, Mr.
+Claxton, managing director to the _Great Western_--which was then,
+nearly due,--asked the Bristol postmaster whether a consignee at New
+York might charge the foreign postage on letters to parts on the
+Continent with which no arrangement, similar to that then existing
+between France and England, had been made. The idea was that such
+letters might be put into a separate bag, and the foreign postage from
+Bristol be handed over to the local Post Office. He wrote that notice
+had been given by the Chamber of Commerce of Liverpool that masters of
+ships need not send anything but letters to the Post Office on arrival.
+Mr. Todd Walton replied on the next day to the effect that the agent
+should only direct letters to Mr. Claxton's care to forward from such
+persons as he could refer to in case of errors. Then followed a long
+communication from Mr. Walton to Colonel Maberly, Secretary to the Post
+Office, the gist of which was that a difficulty existed in preventing
+illegal conveyance of ship letters; that the commanders of vessels did
+not receive money with letters to any great extent; that the public
+prints stated that 1,600 letters were received on board the _Great
+Western_ besides those sent from the Post Office; that an immense number
+of letters was collected at the Great Western office; and that as the
+_Great Western_ and _Syrius_ were regularly established, and other
+vessels of the same description were preparing, unless some means were
+taken to protect the revenue, it could not fail to suffer very
+considerably.
+
+The _Great Western_ brought to England 5,500 post letters and 1,770 post
+papers, which, had that conveyance not been offered, would most likely
+have been sent by private ships. Mr. Walton conceived it would be very
+advantageous to the revenue to contract with those superior vessels to
+carry mails, so as to render the latter chargeable with package rates;
+and he submitted that ship letter mails should be made up at Bristol,
+the same as at London and Liverpool, for all vessels leaving this port.
+About 5,500 ship letters were brought to the Bristol Post Office
+annually, and he had no doubt that vast numbers were carried from
+Bristol in the same manner; but with the exception of those by the
+_Great Western_, no mails had ever been made up here for foreign
+countries. The Secretary, replying for the Postmaster-General, said it
+did not appear to Lord Lichfield that cognizance need be taken of the
+suggestion conveyed in Mr. Claxton's letter of the 31st May, for the
+transmission through this country of letters from the United States
+addressed to those foreign countries upon which the postage must be paid
+here before they can be forwarded to their destination. The Post Office
+could have no objection to such letters being addressed to the care of
+Mr. Claxton or any other agent in this country who would pay the foreign
+postage and send them on to their destinations. The letters in question,
+would, of course, be subject, so far as the Post Office was concerned,
+to the ship letter rate to Bristol, and when re-posted, to the inland
+and foreign rates forward.
+
+The postmaster's proposition for making up mails to be forwarded by the
+steam vessels charged with packet rates of postage was out of the
+question; but with regard to making up ship letter bags for foreign
+countries, so strangely neglected at this great port, the postmaster was
+to embrace every opportunity in his power of despatching ship letter
+bags by sailing as well as by steam vessels. There is no official
+record, however, of any such ship letter mails having been forwarded
+from Bristol.
+
+In the year 1841 a Royal Commission was appointed to enquire into the
+question of the most suitable port for the embarkation and debarkation
+of the West Indian Mails. The committee consisted of Mr. Freshfield,
+Lord Dalmeny, Lord Viscount Ingestre, Captain Pechell, Captain Duncombe,
+Mr. Chas. Wood, Sir Thomas Cochrane, Mr. John O'Connell, Mr. Cresswell,
+Lord Worsley, Mr. Gibson Craig, Mr. De Horsey, Mr. Oswold, Mr. Richard
+Hodgson, and Mr. Philip Miles, who was prominent as representing
+Bristol. Much evidence was given in favour of the ports of Bristol,
+Dartmouth, Devonport, Falmouth, Plymouth, Portsmouth, and Southampton
+respectively. The case of Bristol was strongly supported by Lieut. J.
+Hosken, R.N., commander of the _Great Western_ screw steamer from
+Bristol to New York, and Lieut. C. Claxton, R.N., the Bristol Harbour
+Master.
+
+The principal reasons put forward in favour of our old port were: that
+the Bristol Channel was navigable at all states of the tide and in all
+weathers; that there was good anchorage in the Kingroad; and that
+although Bristol was not quite so near to Barbadoes, the first island of
+call, as some of her rival ports, yet it admitted of quicker
+transmission of mails between London and the northern towns than any
+other English port. The arguments in favour of the Bristol port were not
+strong enough to induce the committee to report in its favour.
+
+From the "forties," when the American mail service was withdrawn from
+Bristol, no foreign or colonial mails left the port until the autumn of
+1898, when Mr. Alfred Jones, the enterprising managing director of the
+firm of Messrs. Elder, Dempster & Co., made arrangements for carrying
+private ship mails from Avonmouth to Montreal by a weekly service of
+steamers. The Bristol merchants found it convenient to make use of this
+ship mail system for the conveyance of their invoices, bills of lading,
+and advices, as, by travelling in the same ship as the goods which they
+related to, their delivery in time to be of use in connection with the
+ship's load was ensured. The first vessel to carry such a ship mail was
+the s.s. _Montcalm_.
+
+When it was in anticipation at the Bristol Post Office that the ship
+mail service might be resumed in 1899 on the breaking up of the ice in
+the Gulf of St. Lawrence, there came a cablegram from the Canadian
+Government intimating that a contract had been entered into with Messrs.
+Elder, Dempster and Co.; and, heigh presto! Avonmouth at once became the
+port of departure and arrival of the steamers carrying the direct
+Canadian mails. The suddenness of the event naturally created quite a
+stir after Bristol had been so long waiting, and the mail services
+outwards and inwards were watched with close attention by the public.
+The first steamer to run under the new contract was the s.s. _Monterey_.
+She left Avonmouth on the 23rd July, but time had not admitted of
+arrangements being made for her to carry the mails from Avonmouth, which
+were therefore picked up at Queenstown. The s.s. _Ikbal_ took the next
+trip, leaving Avonmouth on the 30th July. The parcels from the whole of
+the kingdom, including Ireland, were circulated on Bristol, and made up
+here in direct mails for Montreal, Quebec, Hamilton, Kingston, Toronto,
+Winnipeg, Prince Edward Island, Hawaii, St. Pierre and Miquelon, Nova
+Scotia, British Columbia, Kobe, Nagasaki, and Yokohama. The notice to
+the Bristol Post Office was very short, but the necessary arrangements
+were smartly made to meet the emergency. Mr. Kislingbury, the divisional
+superintendent of the Great Western Railway, ever ready to heartily
+co-operate with the local Post Office, had a special tender placed in
+readiness for the reception of the mails at Temple Meads and they were
+despatched by the 9.50 a.m. train to Avonmouth. On the part of the Dock
+authorities, the general manager, Mr. F. B. Girdlestone, had provided an
+engine to take the brake-vans containing the parcel mails direct from
+the Docks junction to the pier head. The system was fully tried, for the
+mails had to be taken from the train to the steam-tug _Sea Prince_ to be
+conveyed to the steamer, which was moored in Kingroad, having arrived
+too late to enter the dock. The mails weighed close upon three tons, and
+were contained in fifty-five large hampers. In the following week the
+s.s. _Arawa_ (a sixteen-knot boat, 440 feet long) carried the mails,
+which were taken by train alongside the ship in dock; and which
+consequently, although five tons in weight, were put on board under much
+more favourable circumstances than in the preceding week, when the
+steamer had to lie out in the Kingroad. It is noteworthy that the
+_Arawa_ took out 400 emigrants.
+
+[Illustration: R.M.S. "MONTEREY."
+
+FIRST LINER IN THE NEW CANADIAN MAIL SERVICE.
+
+_From a photograph by G. M. Roche, Esq., Dublin._]
+
+Subsequent steamers used for carrying on the mail service were the
+_Montfort_, _Monteagle_, and _Montrose_.
+
+The arrangements for the new service worked very smoothly from the
+outset, thanks in no small measure to Mr. Flinn, the local general
+manager for Messrs. Elder, Dempster & Co., who facilitated in every way
+the Post Office and Customs operations. The trial so far has proved that
+the use of Avonmouth as a port for the Canadian mail traffic is attended
+with advantages on this side of the ocean, but greater facilities for
+embarking and disembarking the mails at Avonmouth are absolutely
+necessary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+POSTAL SERVICE STAFF; ITS COMPOSITION, DUTIES, RESPONSIBILITIES.--VOLUME
+OF WORK.
+
+
+In 1855 the Bristol Post Office staff consisted of a postmaster and
+fifteen clerks, with sixty-four letter carriers. Over 1,500 people of
+all grades, including sub-postmasters and their assistants, are now
+employed; and the annual bill for salaries, wages, and allowances of
+men, women, and boys amounts to little short of L100,000. It will thus
+be seen that the Post Office ranks as one of the largest employers of
+labour in the western city.
+
+The head office is centrally situated both for the receipt and despatch
+of the letter correspondence. It is not very far from a point known as
+"Tramway Centre," upon which the tram services of the city converge. It
+plays an important part with regard to the Bristol postal system, as out
+of a total of 833,000 letters posted weekly in the city delivery
+area--exclusive of 55,300 Clifton posted letters--221,000 letters are
+posted at the head office itself, and the total posted within a radius
+of a mile is 652,290, or more than three-fourths of the whole. In
+addition to the 888,000 letters posted weekly in Bristol city and
+Clifton, there are 108,000 letters posted in the suburban and rural
+districts. The posting every Sunday consists of 35,000 letters.
+
+The greater extent to which the well-to-do classes in Bristol use the
+post than their less fortunate brethren may be gathered from the fact
+that the average yield of letters, newspapers, etc., per day per box in
+the Clifton district is 128 per cent. higher than in Redland and Cotham,
+and 179 per cent. higher than in Redcliffe; and in the Redland and
+Cotham district 22 per cent. higher than in Redcliffe.
+
+The mails are chiefly conveyed between the head office and the principal
+railway station by horsed carts.
+
+About 7,000,000 "forward" letters--that is, letters neither posted nor
+delivered locally, but passing through the Bristol Post Office--are
+dealt with annually.
+
+The parcel post, started in 1883, has done well in Bristol. Nearly
+three-quarters of a million of parcels are posted in the district
+annually. The greater part of the parcel despatching duties is performed
+at a separate parcel office on the Temple Meads Railway Station
+premises. People often avail themselves of the parcel post for obtaining
+a regular weekly supply of produce. A joint of beef from Scotland,
+weighing just under eleven pounds, invariably reaches Bristol at the
+week end, and a package of butter from Dublin is observed every Friday
+in the Bristol parcel depot on its way to Weston-super-Mare.
+
+The London mail is, naturally, the most important mail which leaves
+Bristol. In the course of the day fifty-five mail bags are forwarded,
+containing about 20,000 letters; the trains used being those leaving at
+3.10 a.m., 7.50 a.m., 9.35 a.m., 11.40 a.m., 12.13 p.m., 1.54 p.m., 3.0
+p.m., 3.43 p.m., 4.45 p.m., 7.22 p.m., and 12.45 a.m. So numerous are
+the London and "London forward" letters in the evening, that three
+clerks are engaged from 5.0 p.m. to midnight in sorting them. In the
+opposite direction fifty mail bags are received from London daily,
+containing about 30,000 letters. Birmingham comes next in the
+importance of exchange, thus: twelve mail bags go out daily, containing
+5,500 letters, and ten bags come in, with 4,500 letters. The
+neighbouring city of Bath figures next, with ten outward mail bags
+daily, containing 4,200 letters, and ten inward bags, containing 2,700
+letters. The same three cities also stand in the forefront in respect of
+the import and export of parcels, 870 parcels being received from London
+and 550 parcels sent thereto daily. Birmingham sends 190 parcels and
+takes a like number; whilst Bath sends 160 and takes in return 250
+parcels daily.
+
+The members of the permanent staff have fallen on better days than their
+predecessors of old times. They are granted holidays varying in periods
+according to rank, from the twelve working days allowed to the telegraph
+messengers to the month enjoyed by the superintending officers. Medical
+attendance is afforded gratuitously, and full pay is, as a rule, given
+during sick absence, and under special circumstances sick leave on full
+pay is allowed for six months, and a further six months on half-pay.
+After that time, if there appears to be little or no chance of
+recovery, a pension or gratuity is given. The appointment of medical
+officer to the Post Office was in 1862 conferred upon Mr. F. Poole
+Lansdown, who has held the post ever since. For the last four years the
+average sick absence per year has been ten days for males and seventeen
+days for females per head; and during the last seven years the average
+mortality amongst the established officers of the Service has been two
+per annum.
+
+Uniform and boots are provided by the Department for the postmen and
+telegraph messengers, at an annual cost of about L2,000.
+
+Good-conduct stripes are the reward to all full-time postmen,
+established or unestablished, of unblemished conduct. A stripe is
+awarded after each five years' meritorious service, and each man is
+eligible for six stripes, each of which carry one shilling a week extra
+pay. The value of the stripes is taken into account in calculation of
+pensions.
+
+Of the 1,500 persons of all grades alluded to there are in the postal
+department a superintendent, 24 superintending officers, and 154 male
+and 8 female clerks.
+
+The selection of candidates for situations in the Bristol Post Office as
+sorting clerks and telegraphists, both male and female, was for many
+years vested entirely in the postmaster, and persons were given
+temporary employment without passing any educational test as to their
+special fitness for Post Office employment. It so happened that not
+infrequently a clerk would be employed in a temporary capacity for some
+years, and finally be rejected by the Civil Service Commissioners on
+educational or medical grounds. In 1892, however, a special preliminary
+educational examination was instituted. All candidates of respectable
+parentage, of good health and character, were allowed to sit at this
+examination, the successful ones being taken into the office and trained
+for appointment to the Establishment. The Civil Service Examination had,
+of course, to be undergone before an appointment could be obtained. In
+1896 a new system was introduced, whereby a Civil Service certificate
+had to be obtained before a person was taken into the office. This
+obviated the necessity of holding the preliminary educational
+examination, but the postmaster still exercised the privilege of
+nominating candidates to the situations. The open competitive system of
+examination was commenced last year, and the appointments are now open
+to general competition.
+
+There is a term of probation in the Post Office, and details of the
+duties devolving on postal clerks may not be without interest to the
+Bristol public. The business, with its multitudinous ramifications,
+takes a long time to learn thoroughly. To become a perfect all-round
+postal clerk a man must possess intelligence, must be cool, fertile in
+expedient, have a retentive memory, and withal be quick and active. He
+must know how to primarily sort, sub-divide, and despatch letters. He
+must have a good knowledge of Post Office circulation and be able to
+bear in mind the names of the smallest places--hamlets, etc.--in the
+kingdom, the varying circulations for different periods of the day, and
+the rates of postage of all articles sent through the post. Be must be
+able to detect the short-paid letter, and to deal with the ordinary
+letter, the large letter, the unpaid, the registered, the foreign, the
+"dead," insufficiently addressed, the official, the fragile, the
+insured, the postcard (single and reply), the letter card, the
+newspaper, the book-packet, and the circular (the definition of which is
+very difficult). He is responsible for the correct sortation of every
+letter that he deals with, and he has to be expert in tying letters in
+bundles. He has to cast the unpaid postage and enter the correct account
+on the letter bill; take charge of registered letter bags and loose
+registered letters, and advise them on the letter bill; see to the
+correct labelling, tying, and sealing of the mail bags he makes up;
+check the despatch of mails on the bag list; dispose of his letters by a
+given time, the hours of the despatch of mails being fixed. In
+consequence, he often has to work under great pressure in order to
+finish in time. The postal clerk has to surcharge unpaid and
+insufficiently prepaid correspondence; to see that all postage stamps
+are carefully obliterated, that the rules of the different posts are not
+infringed; to attend to the regulations relating to official
+correspondence. He has to decipher imperfectly and insufficiently
+addressed correspondence, search official and other directories to trace
+proper addresses. In addition to all this he has in turn to serve at the
+public counter, and there attend to money order, savings bank, postal
+order, and other items of business of the kind.
+
+As an illustration of the perspicacity of officers of the Post Office in
+the Western Division of the Kingdom and of the postmen of Bristol, may
+be cited the circulation through the post and prompt and safe delivery
+of a letter from Plymouth bearing as its only address the magic letters
+"W. G.," with cricket hat, stumps, and ball, so dear to the individual
+who bears the initials.
+
+Delay in delivery of articles sent by post, however, not infrequently
+takes place in consequence of misdirection. A parcel was addressed to a
+reverend gentleman at "Publow Church, near Bristol," and as it could not
+be presented at the fine old structure itself, the postman took it to
+the adjoining vicarage, where, in the absence of the vicar, it was taken
+in by a servant upon the inference that it might be intended for some
+future visitor. It turned out, however, that the address was inaccurate,
+and that the parcel was actually intended for a village some miles from
+Bristol, on the other side, having for its name Pucklechurch.
+
+Occasionally there is very slow transmission in these speedy days. A
+rather remarkable case occurred here of a postcard having occupied
+nearly eight years in travelling between Horfield Barracks and the
+premises of a firm in Stokes Croft,--a distance of less than two miles.
+The missive was posted and stamped on the 10th July, 1890, and trace of
+it was lost until it turned up at Bournemouth and received the
+impression of the stamp of that office in April, 1898, whence it was
+sent to Bristol and delivered. There were no other marks to indicate its
+long detention.
+
+Not infrequently the Post Office has to contend with difficulties
+arising from want of thought on the part of the trading community.
+Recently there was a somewhat unusual occurrence at the Bristol Post
+Office. A sack containing samples of biscuits in small tin boxes was
+received. Around the tins flimsy paper was tied, on which the addresses
+were written. The paper had become so frayed in transit that scarcely a
+single wrapper was complete, and when the tins were turned out of the
+sack there were showers of small pieces of paper like a snowstorm. In
+order that the samples might reach their destinations, the addresses
+were, as far as practicable, re-copied, and the samples sent out.
+Nearly every one of the 500 packets received was then sent out for
+delivery without delay, no doubt to the astonishment of those who
+received the biscuits in envelopes from the Returned Letter Office.
+
+In the sorting office all through the twenty-four hours there is work
+going on. As one batch of officials goes off duty another comes on, and
+these relays never cease--not even on Sundays, Christmas Days, or Bank
+Holidays. The sorting office is at its busiest from 5.15 to 6.45 in the
+evening, and from 8.30 p.m. till midnight. Then postmen enter hastily,
+one after another, with bags from the branch offices and pillar-boxes,
+which are immediately taken charge of, opened, and the contents shot
+out. The postmen rapidly arrange the small letters face upwards, pack
+them in "trays" of 400, pass them over to the stamping department; the
+stampers obliterate Her Majesty's head, and record the hour, date, and
+place of departure, with one and the same stroke of the stamp, at the
+rate of a hundred a minute. The stamped letters are placed on sorting
+tables, where the first division takes place. Those for Bristol and
+neighbourhood are assigned to a compartment for further sortation, and
+the outward correspondence is sorted out into the different "roads" by
+which it will travel. Letters for small places are sent to the mail
+trains, where they are sorted to their respective stations as the
+locomotive is whirling them along at the rate of fifty miles an hour.
+Many of the larger towns, such as Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool,
+Leeds, Exeter, Plymouth, Reading, Bath and Swindon, have their own bags
+made up at Bristol. Newspapers, packages, and book packets are sorted
+separately, and subsequently put into their respective bags. By-and-by
+the country postbags come pouring in, and no sooner are they opened than
+the letters they contain are subjected to the same analytical treatment.
+
+In a week 2,600 separate bags (or sacks containing several bags) are
+sent away from the Bristol Post Office over the Great Western and
+Midland Railway systems. The weight is 21 tons, or an average of over 18
+lbs. per bag or sack. Of the total number, 500 of the bags, with an
+average weight of nearly 14 lbs. each, are for places within the
+Bristol district, and 300 of them are sent to London, with a total
+weight of 4 tons 33 lbs., or an average of 30 lbs. per bag or sack. The
+bags and sacks received in Bristol from all quarters are about equal in
+number and weight to those going outwards. Those from London weigh 6
+tons 3 cwt. 44 lbs.--an average of 51 lbs each.
+
+In order to simplify the disposal of the letters in London, they are not
+sent up unsorted from Bristol, but are divided into thirty-seven
+labelled bundles or separate bags, a bundle or bag being made up for
+each London district, for each great railway out of London, for several
+foreign divisions, for seventeen large provincial towns, and even in
+such detail as for Paternoster Row and Wood Street.
+
+It is not often that ships of war appear in Bristol waters. Indeed, the
+old inhabitant saith that it is fifty years since a warship anchored in
+the vicinity. The recent visit of a squadron calls therefore for a
+passing mention. Such an event took place during the British Association
+Meeting in September, 1898. The ironclads composing the squadron were
+H.M.S. _Nile_, _Thunderer_, _Trafalgar_, _Sans Pareil_, and the gunboat
+_Spanker_. The vessels anchored in Walton Bay, midway between Clevedon
+and Portishead. In these pages the interest attaching to them must
+necessarily be centred in their mail arrangements. Nearly a thousand
+letters a day were received at Clevedon for delivery to the fleet. The
+ships' postman from each ship came ashore by launch three times a day to
+fetch the letters. Launches were specially employed to fetch telegrams
+on signal being given by flag from the end of Clevedon Pier.
+
+A first aid class in connection with the St. John's Ambulance Society
+was formed by members of the Bristol Post Office staff in 1894, and
+there was an average attendance of twenty members, under the skilled
+direction of Dr. Bertram Rogers, of Clifton. Of the members who
+presented themselves for examination at the termination of the course of
+lectures, eight were successful, and were presented with certificates at
+the Society's Annual Meeting, held at the Merchant Venturers' Technical
+College; and in the following year they qualified for the Society's
+much-prized medallion of efficiency. At the conclusion of the course,
+Dr. Bertram Rogers was presented with an ivory-handled and
+silver-mounted malacca cane, subscribed for by members of the class. A
+writing-case was also presented to Mr. Blake for organising the class.
+
+The want of a gymnasium in or near the Post Office premises is greatly
+felt, but the staff do not neglect opportunities of improving their
+health in other ways. Cycle Clubs have been in active operation; the
+Cricket Clubs come off victorious in many matches; and the Electric
+Swimming Club has been attended with great success.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+CHRISTMAS AND ST. VALENTINE SEASONS.
+
+
+A century ago the Christmas card was unthought of; whether it will be a
+thing of the past in the year 2000 cannot be foretold. The preparations
+made to meet the annually recurring pressure involve much forethought
+and considerable labour, and have to be in progress for a long time
+prior to Christmas. The time occupied in getting the instructions ready
+for the staff and making all arrangements incidental to the season is
+equivalent to more than the entire duty of a clerk for a whole year.
+Nothing whatever is left to chance; for unless the arrangements are
+organised in full detail, the work could not go on with the clock-like
+smoothness which is necessary to ensure a successful issue. At Christmas
+many people find a difficulty in deciding what to give their friends.
+The difficulty in the Post Office is how to convey Christmas gifts from
+friend to friend, from relative to relative, and the solution is found
+in the extensive preparations alluded to. They consist of many and
+various ways of affording means of rapid circulation and facilitating
+the traffic. Thus arrangements are made as regards London for direct
+bags to be made up at Bristol for each of the eight principal district
+offices, and separate bags for the inclusion of all the London
+sub-district letters throughout the day. At normal times such bags are
+made up only for the night mail and heaviest despatches. All foreign
+letters are sent in separate bags, so as to keep them apart on arrival
+in London from the inland Christmas missives. Then, in the reverse
+direction, London relieves the Bristol office by making a direct bag for
+the tributary office of Clifton by every mail, instead of by two mails
+only. To further facilitate matters, the parcels and letters for the
+environs of Bristol are kept separate from those for town delivery at
+all the large offices sending parcel baskets and mail bags here, and
+Bristol reciprocates by adopting the same plan for towns with which it
+exchanges mails. Even the expedient of putting specially-lettered
+neck-labels on the bags to indicate their contents is adopted. Where,
+ordinarily, bundles of letters are made up for particular towns, direct
+bags take their places, and where, ordinarily, letters are sent in bulk
+from many towns separate bundles are made up for each town: thus,
+letters from Bristol for Brighton, which are usually dealt with in
+London, are forwarded in a direct bag to pass through the metropolis
+unopened. The individual attendances of the ordinary staff are increased
+from eight hours to twelve, fourteen, and sixteen hours per day. All
+holidays are suspended for the time being, which enables some
+telegraphists to undertake postal duty; clerical labour is stopped,
+outside help is obtained, and altogether additional labour provided for
+to the extent of 50 per cent. over the normal staff. Although there is
+such a large augmentation numerically, the value of it cannot be judged
+in that way, as it takes a long time to make a really efficient postal
+officer, and the novices who are engaged, although willing enough, can
+do little more than undertake manual labour. Many army reserve men and
+army and navy pensioners are engaged to assist on the occasion. The
+weather is always a potent factor. The ordinary types of mail vehicles,
+contracted for by the Bristol Tramways Company, and always well turned
+out by Mr. G. Matthews, have to be supplemented at the Christmas season
+by the employment of large pair-horse trolleys, which, are used not only
+for the conveyance of mails between office and railway station, but are
+also sent round the town to pick up the heavy parcel collections from
+the numerous sub-offices.
+
+The great unpunctuality of the mail trains which invariably sets in
+early in the Christmas week causes no little inconvenience, particularly
+as regards the mails from the North of England, and the merchants are
+therefore not slow to avail themselves of the Post Office new system,
+under which, for a small fee, they can get their letters brought by
+delayed trains delivered by special messenger promptly on their arrival
+at the Head Post Office. The extra posting of letters and parcels for
+places abroad, intended for delivery about Christmas Day, begins to
+manifest itself early in November.
+
+A great number of people appear to think that Christmas cards and other
+printed matter may be sent by book-post in covers which are entirely
+closed, except for small slits cut at the sides. These packets are
+liable to charge at letter postage rates unless they are made up in such
+a manner as will admit of the contents being easily withdrawn for
+examination. To educate the public in the matter of full prepayment, it
+has become necessary for the Department to be particularly vigilant in
+surcharging the Christmas missives which contravene the regulations,
+and the Bristol clerks have the unpleasant task of raising an
+impost on letters during the Christmas season which infringe the
+Postmaster-General's not severe regulations. The custom of sending
+Christmas cards in open envelopes is increasing.
+
+With regard to telegrams, the public have recently received at the hands
+of His Grace the Duke of Norfolk the great benefit of being allowed to
+have their telegraphic messages delivered up to distances of three miles
+without payment of any charge whatever for porterage. In this
+neighbourhood, the concession has resulted in an increase in the number
+of messages for delivery over a mile, especially at Christmas. During
+the Christmas season there is always a decrease in the number of
+business telegrams, but that is in some measure made up for by a large
+number of telegrams being sent by the public who are travelling to keep
+holiday, and in this connection more use is made of the telegraph than
+the telephone service. The decrease in the volume of work admits of
+telegraphists aiding their brother officers on the postal side.
+
+The inflow of Christmas cards is pretty evenly dispersed over the
+earlier days of the season, but the great rush comes on the night of the
+23rd and the morning of the 24th of the month. Letters up to four ounces
+in weight are now conveyed at the small cost to the public of a penny.
+So far as this city is concerned, letters and book-packets over two
+ounces in weight, which are now blended in one post, are quadrupled in
+number at the Christmas season. This increase in the letter packets has
+the effect of retarding the postmen in effecting their deliveries,
+inasmuch as they have to search in their bags for the packages which
+they cannot carry tied up in consecutive order. The trouble arising
+therefrom is somewhat mitigated, however, by the circumstance that the
+charged letters are less numerous than heretofore, owing to the large
+increase in the weight which is now carried for a penny. The Christmas
+season is departmentally regarded as consisting of the days from the
+20th of the month to Christmas Day, the 25th, inclusive. From the most
+reliable calculations that the officials are capable of making, it would
+appear that during the Christmas period no fewer than 2,000,000 letters
+are dropped by the residents into the 500 receptacles dotted here and
+there over Bristol's large postal area. The letters distributed by
+Bristol's regular postmen, with their 250 followers, are a million and a
+half, in each case about an extra week's work to be got through in three
+days.
+
+Some 20,000 letters and parcels find their way to the Bristol Returned
+Letter Office as the flotsam and jetsam of the Christmas postings. They
+consist of letters without addresses, letters addressed in
+undecipherable caligraphy, letters for people dead, gone away, and not
+known; parcels of poultry and game without name of sender or addressee.
+Certainly handwriting does not improve, hence all these failures and
+embarrassments to the Post Office.
+
+The articles for transmission by parcel post handed in at the head Post
+Office, branch, offices, sub-offices in town, suburbs, and villages,
+reach the total of 40,000, being about four times as numerous as at
+ordinary periods. The rural districts alone produce 8,000 parcels. The
+parcels delivered number 35,000, being treble ordinary numbers. Ten
+thousand of these parcels are delivered in the villages. Nearly a
+thousand large hampers of parcels are exchanged between London and
+Bristol, and of these some forty contain foreign parcels alone.
+
+Notwithstanding the vastly increased numbers, it becomes noticeable at
+Bristol, year by year, that there is a diminution of parcels conveyed by
+parcel post containing articles of good cheer: the geese, the fowls, and
+the game having decreased, plum pudding's, however, being as much in
+evidence as ever. The reduction in the parcel post rates which took
+place in 1897 has had a very marked effect upon the parcel post traffic,
+and the increase, particularly in the heavy weights, has been very
+great. On the other hand, the reduction in the rates of charge for the
+conveyance of post parcels has had the effect of bringing about a
+decrease in the number of parcels weighing under 2 lb.
+
+As showing that the postal deliveries at the Christmas season are
+arranged as well as the extraordinary circumstances will admit, and that
+the public on its part can appreciate the difficulties to be contended
+with, it may be worthy of mention that complaints of delay are rarely
+made.
+
+The Postmaster-General is not unmindful of his duty in providing
+sustenance for his legions at the busy season, and refreshments are
+supplied for the permanent staff without stint. There are no trams
+running on Christmas Day, so that the postmen with their heavy loads are
+much worse off than on ordinary days, when, with lighter loads, they can
+ride to and fro on the tramcars. There are some pleasing social features
+which are worthy of record. For instance, the ladies of the Clifton
+Letter Mission have for some years past sent "A Christmas Letter" and
+Christmas card to each of the 150 telegraph messengers employed in the
+Bristol district. The ladies who manage the society known as the Postal
+and Telegraph Christian Association invariably send to every postman in
+the Bristol district a sympathetic and seasonable letter, accompanied
+by a pretty Christmas card and the best of all good wishes. The staff of
+the Bristol Post Office usually pay the compliments of the Christmas
+season to their postal friends elsewhere in the form of a
+prettily-designed card.
+
+Christmas Day of 1898 is rendered memorable in postal annals from the
+circumstance that on that day the postage on letters to and from many of
+our colonies and foreign possessions was reduced from the modest sum of
+2-1/2d. per half-ounce to the still more modest sum of 1d. per
+half-ounce. Bristol has a not inconsiderable colonial and foreign
+correspondence. British India takes 550 letters, etc., on the average
+weekly; the Dominion of Canada, 450; Newfoundland, 110; and Gibraltar,
+100; the other countries to which the reduced rate of postage has been
+applied take 500 in the week.
+
+One of the many changes that have taken place in the manners and customs
+of the people as affecting the Post Office is very noticeable as regards
+the observance of St. Valentine's Day. Thirty years ago the votaries of
+the patron saint, in their thousands, vied with each other, year after
+year, to honour his memory, and make the Post Office the medium of
+sending to every close friend some kind of love token, ranging from the
+artistic production at one guinea, down to the humble penny fly-leaf
+which contained the simple but expressive pleading, at the bottom of a
+neat woodcut, "O come, true love, be mine." Only too often, however, the
+day was made the occasion to strike a blow at the fickle lover by means
+of some gross caricature. On the eve of St. Valentine the energies of
+the staff, which was limited as compared with now, were formerly greatly
+taxed to get rid of the enormous piles of packets which flooded the
+various receptacles in the city. All this is, however, changed; the
+occasion now passes by almost unnoticed in the sorting office and by the
+postmen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+PUBLIC OFFICE: ITS BUSINESS--THE SAVINGS BANK--PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS.
+
+
+[Illustration: THE PUBLIC HALL, BRISTOL.
+
+_From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol._]
+
+The public office of the Bristol Post Office is very commodious (50 ft.
+by 44 ft.), and affords ample counter accommodation to the citizens for
+properly conducting their Post Office business. It is markedly superior
+as regards size and fitting-up to almost any other provincial office,
+and indeed its equal in those respects is scarcely to be found in all
+London. In contrast to the spacious public hall of the Bristol Post
+Office and the civility of its clerks, the writer's first impressions of
+the postal service of his country were by no means of a pleasant
+character. When quite a small child, he was entrusted by his mother with
+the mission of conveying a small rose-coloured and delicately-perfumed
+letter to the Post Office in a world-famed Warwickshire town--an errand
+of which he was "no end" proud. Timidly he knocked at a little wicket in
+the window of the house to which he was directed. Almost immediately
+the wicket was thrown open, and a very red visage appeared. "What do you
+want?" "Will you put a stamp on this letter, sir, please?" "No! What the
+devil do you mean by bringing letters like this? 'Tisn't big enough.
+It'll get lost in some hole or corner." Frightened at this "Giant Grim,"
+a hasty retreat was made, and the irascible old postmaster was left to
+do as he liked with letter and penny.
+
+The penny combined postage and Inland Revenue stamp was introduced in
+1881. A new series of postage stamps was issued in 1884, and the present
+series in January, 1887.
+
+In the year 1833 the value of the postage stamps obtained from London
+for distribution in the Bristol district was L33,844; in 1862 it had
+only grown to L35,720; but in 1898 it had reached the more prodigious
+proportions of L171,000, of which sum those stamps of the halfpenny
+denomination were of the value of L30,700, and in number 14,735,000; and
+the penny stamps in value L85,775 and in number 20,586,000. Stamps of
+other denominations were issued thus:--1-1/2d., 207,360; 2d., 205,920;
+2-1/2d., 207,000; 3d., 364,320; 4d., 277,680; 4-1/2d., 16,000; 5d.,
+147,120; 6d., 534,600; 9d., 51,200; 10d., 27,840; 1s., 82,320; 2s. 6d.,
+2,800; 5s., 2,588; 10s., 688; 20s., 550 and L5, 4. Post-cards, embossed
+envelopes, newspaper wrappers, telegraph forms and other articles of the
+kind were of the value of L14,334. At the earlier period the postmaster
+of the day was allowed 1 per cent. on the value of the stamps sold, in
+addition to his salary. It is not so now!
+
+Under the system inaugurated in 1880 the postal orders issued and paid
+at the Bristol public office counter number nearly half a million in the
+year. The money orders paid at the counter preponderate over those
+issued--the amounts respectively being L237,000 and L34,000. These sums
+include the amounts received in respect of telegraph money orders--the
+Department's new departure of 1890. The Government insurance and annuity
+business commenced by the Post Office in 1865 is making progress in
+Bristol, and the same may be said of the system started in 1880 of
+investments in Government stock through Post Office medium.
+
+The first Post Office Savings Bank in the district was established at
+the Clifton Branch Post Office on the 16th September, 1861, the year in
+which savings bank business was commenced throughout the country
+generally. Several accounts were opened on that day, and the amount
+deposited was L35 4s. A similar institution was opened in the city in
+March, 1862, at the Money Order Office, then located in the corner shop
+in Albion Chambers, Small Street, opposite the present Head Post Office.
+From such small beginnings a vast savings bank business has grown up.
+The sum standing to the credit of depositors in the Post Office Savings
+Bank in the Bristol postal area at the end of 1895, when the last
+account was published, was nearly L2,000,000, deposited by some 100,000
+separate individuals. The deposits made at the head office in Small
+Street reached close upon L400,000, and the other part of the amount is
+made up thus: Gloucestershire side--Town Post Offices, L659,085; rural
+Post Offices, L192,934. Somersetshire side--Town Post Offices, L215,295;
+rural Post Offices, L91,944. The estimated amount due to depositors in
+the Post Office Savings Banks throughout the whole country on the 21st
+December, 1898, was L123,155,000, and the amount due to trustees of
+Savings Banks on November 20th, 1898,--the latest date on which the
+figures were made up--was L50,634,655. The Bristol Savings Bank was
+closed in 1888, and its 12,814 accounts were transferred to the Post
+Office Savings Bank. The amount of money involved was a little over half
+a million.
+
+During Mr. Fawcett's administration at the Post Office, thrift on the
+part of the nation was encouraged in every possible way. Then was
+inaugurated the now familiar system for facilitating the placing of
+small sums in the Post Office Savings Bank by means of postage stamps
+affixed to a Post Office form as penny after penny is saved until an
+amount of one shilling is reached, the minimum for a Post Office Savings
+Bank deposit.
+
+A case occurred at a Bristol Post Office fifteen years since, in which a
+young servant girl, in her desire to be thrifty under the system alluded
+to, craftily obtained the key of the letter box from the secret place in
+which the sub-postmaster kept it, and abstracted a number of circular
+letters on School Board business, and took off the stamps for
+attachment to the Savings Bank slips. She was sentenced to a term of
+imprisonment, which, on account of her youth, was limited to six months.
+
+Amusing incidents sometimes occur to break the monotony of counter work.
+For instance, a woman applied for a postal order, and when it was handed
+to her, the clerk, acting upon the official instructions, recommended
+the good lady to take the number before sending the order away. A few
+days afterwards she appeared at the Post Office with the order and
+complained that payment had been refused because the order had been
+mutilated. The clerk on examining the order found that the direction to
+"take the number of the order" had been acted on literally. The number
+had been carefully cut out, and retained in the possession of the
+applicant. It was some time before she could be made to realize her
+mistake. In another instance early one fine autumn morn a young couple
+presented themselves at the public office of the Bristol Post Office and
+begged in earnest language that they might be supplied with a marriage
+license. The request could not, of course, be complied with, but the
+applicants, much to their satisfaction, were informed where they could
+obtain the needed document. On another occasion some money was observed
+on the counter, and on the very small child near it being asked what was
+required, "Two ounces of tea and a pound of sugar" were at once
+demanded. This mistake no doubt arose from the fact that the business
+carried on in the late Post Office building in Exchange Avenue is that
+of a tea dealer. It is a rule of the Service that letters should not be
+delivered from the _Poste Restante_ except to the actual addressees or
+to other persons bearing authority to receive the letters on behalf of
+the addressees. A request was made at the Bristol Head Post Office for
+the delivery of letters to a person other than the addressee, which
+person could not produce the necessary authority to act as recipient.
+The excuse given for non-production of authority was that the addressee
+was asleep. The enquirer having been advised to get authority when the
+addressee awoke, rather astonished the counter clerk by saying that such
+awaking would not take place until Saturday, the day of application
+being Tuesday. It transpired that the application was made in respect of
+letters for a person who was undergoing a state of hypnotism at a
+Bristol music hall. The touching incident occurred at the Bristol Post
+Office of a poor woman--pressing want having come upon her at last--who
+had to withdraw a shilling which she had thirty years previously
+deposited in a trustee savings bank which was taken over by the Post
+Office. She had to receive one penny by way of interest for the use of
+her mite for thirty years. Some years since a collector of old issues of
+crown-pieces presented seventy of such coins, in a good state of
+preservation, at the Bristol Post Office counter as a Savings Bank
+deposit. The depositor, after taking the trouble to accumulate these old
+coins, had come to the conclusion that an annual interest of eight
+shillings and sixpence would be more useful to him than an occasional
+inspection of the coins. Few people know so little about Post Office
+matters as an individual from over the Severn who recently asked for a
+postage stamp. "Do you want a penny or a halfpenny stamp?" asked the
+clerk. "I want a South Wales stamp," was the reply of Taffy. Then the
+surprise of the counter officer must have been great when, on counting
+up his money, he found that on one of the shillings the legend "Baby"
+boldly appeared impressed where the Queen's head is usually found, the
+coin having evidently been used as a brooch.
+
+The Department, in communicating with the public, prescribes that its
+officers should subscribe themselves as the public's most obedient
+servants, and on some of the printed forms which have to be returned in
+answer to queries raised by the Department the same style is adopted for
+the public to use. One dignified gentleman returned his form, from which
+he had erased "Your obedient servant" and substituted "Yours
+respectfully," adding a marginal note to the effect that he was not the
+servant of the Department, but that the Department was his servant.
+
+The postmaster of Bristol is addressed by the public in various ways, as
+for instance: "Postmaster General," "General Postmaster," "Bristol
+Postmaster," "H.M. Chief Postmaster," "To the Postmaster in State, Small
+Street, Bristol," "Head Post-Master and Surveyor of the Bristol
+District," "Head Master, Post Office," "Post Office Master,"
+"Postmaster-in-General," "Master General, Post-Office," "Mr. ----, Esq.,
+Post M.G.," "Mr. ----, Esq., Post Office General," "To the Reverend Sir
+Postmaster, Bristol, England."
+
+It is astonishing how many Foreigners and Colonists apply to the Bristol
+Post Office respecting their relations, or for information as regards
+trading matters. The former questions are sometimes answered, but the
+latter are handed over to the courteous secretary of the Chamber of
+Commerce to deal with.
+
+Very unusual was the circumstance of the receipt at the Bristol Post
+Office in 1895, anonymously, of a sum of ten shillings in postage stamps
+as conscience money, and, oddly enough, the next day threepence in
+stamps was received in the same anonymous manner and for the same
+purpose. These two instances were the first and the last.
+
+The difference between romance and fact is exemplified by an article
+which appeared in a monthly magazine as follows, viz.:--
+
+ "A PUBLIC SERVANT."
+
+"Her Majesty possesses one more faithful public servant than she is
+aware of, though its name does not transpire in the list of the
+Ministry. Every night at the General Post Office, Bristol, a spirited
+mare attached to the red mail-cart is brought, at a quarter before
+midnight, to fetch the bags of letters, &c. She stands perfectly still,
+waiting while the mails are sealed and tossed one by one into the
+vehicle. At the five minutes before twelve, however, should all not be
+ready for departure, her driver sings out 'Any more for the down train?'
+by way of hurrying the officials. No sooner does the mare hear those
+words than she begins to dance and curvet, showing in every possible way
+her anxiety to start and her sense of the importance of her duties. But
+if by any chance the first stroke of midnight should sound before they
+are ready to proceed to the station, she takes matters into her own
+hands, and nothing will then hold her in. Those who have to do with this
+clever and beautiful creature are very proud of her, on account of the
+example she sets of punctuality and attention to the affairs of the
+nation."
+
+The real facts on which this incident is founded were, that the horse
+(not mare) remained in the Post Office yard quietly from 11.10 p.m.
+until midnight on one particular night only, and not generally, and
+when the loading of the van commenced the horse became restive, the
+final slamming of the van doors causing it to start off for the street.
+In consequence of a repetition of this restlessness on another night,
+and "kicking-in" the front of the van, the horse was taken off the Royal
+Mail Service.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+TELEGRAPHS, TELEPHONES, EXPRESS DELIVERY.
+
+
+The Saxon King, Edmund I., doubtless never conceived, when he held court
+(A.D. 940-946) at his palace in the village of Pucklechurch, seven miles
+from Bristol, that in generations to come there would exist, as there
+does now, a telegraph office within a few yards of the site of his
+castle, whence a question could be wired to the ends of the earth, and a
+reply obtained in the short space of a few hours. Probably at that
+remote period a journey from Pucklechurch to the north of Scotland would
+have been considered as great an achievement as that in recent days of
+Dr. Nansen in his endeavour to get to the North Pole.
+
+The first actual working telegraph was erected in 1838 between
+Paddington and West Drayton on the Great Western Railway, and in the
+following year Wheatstone and Cook constructed a telegraph line from
+Paddington to Slough. Mr. Brunel then wished to extend the line to this
+city, but the shareholders would not support him to that extent. In
+1852, however, the Great Western Railway Board had the line constructed
+through to Bristol. By means of it messages could, at that later date,
+be forwarded to and from most parts of the kingdom from the office at
+the Bristol Railway Station. Arrangements were put in progress for
+extending the wires into the centre of the city, in order that greater
+facilities might be afforded to those parties who might wish to avail
+themselves of the means of inter-communication, and before the end of
+the year the wires were laid from the railway station to the Commercial
+Rooms, and subsequently three telegraph offices were opened in the city,
+viz.: the Electric and International, on the Exchange; the Magnetic, in
+Exchange Avenue; and the United Kingdom, in Corn Street. A telegraph
+line was laid to Shirehampton, and the committee of the Commercial Rooms
+subscribed L30 a year towards its maintenance.
+
+It is recorded that in 1859 the firm of Messrs. W. D. and H. O. Wills,
+tobacconists and snuff manufacturers of this city, laid down an
+electric telegraph wire between their warehouse in Maryport Street and
+their manufactory in Redcliff Street, whereby the partners and employes,
+although engaged in different parts of the city, were enabled to
+converse with each other as readily as if occupying the same
+counting-house. The wire was used solely for their own business.
+
+In 1862 a turnpike road telegraph was spoken of as being in course of
+construction between Bristol and Birmingham.
+
+Mr. James Robertson, the senior assistant superintendent oL the Bristol
+Telegraph Office, during his forty-two years' service, thirteen of which
+were passed in the employment of the Electric and International
+Telegraph Company, has had many experiences. He has culled from his
+"ancient history" the fact that the amount of telegraph business
+transacted by the E. and I. T. Co. at Falmouth, Plymouth, Bristol, and
+London (Lothbury, head office) on March 10th, 1858, at the respective
+times of day stated, was:--Falmouth, 8 messages, handed in by 10.20
+a.m.; Plymouth at 10.36 had managed to transmit 7; Bristol, at noon,
+39; and Lothbury had received 116 by 12.17 p.m. Plymouth transmitted for
+Falmouth, and Bristol for Plymouth. Bain's chemical recorder was the
+system used on the Falmouth wire, the double needle on the Plymouth and
+Bristol, and "Bains" and needles on Bristol-London circuits. The average
+delay on messages at Plymouth was eighty-three minutes and at Bristol
+fourteen minutes. The charge at the time from Falmouth to London was
+four shillings for twenty words, addresses free. The present proprietor
+of _Lloyd's Newspaper_, Mr. Thomas Catling, records an incident in which
+Mr. Robertson was concerned. Mr. Catling was the only London newspaper
+reporter who visited Windsor on the eventful night when the deeply
+lamented Prince Consort breathed his last on 14th December, 1861. On
+reaching Windsor by the last train from London he learned that His Royal
+Highness had passed away about twenty minutes previously. Having
+obtained at the Castle particulars of the sad event, Mr. Catling hunted
+out the residence of the clerk of the Electric and International
+Telegraph Company. On ringing him up, the clerk pleaded that before
+going to bed he had been taking gruel and hot water to get rid of a bad
+cold. He, however, got up and proceeded with Mr. Catling to the
+telegraph office in High Street, whence intelligence was wired to
+London. Mr. Catling preserved the receipt of that message as a souvenir
+of the occasion. Mr. Robertson was the telegraph clerk who arose from
+his bed to perform the service in the dead of night.
+
+On the transfer of the telegraph business from the companies to the
+State early in 1870, the Post Office, Bristol, engaged sixteen clerks
+from the Electric and International Telegraph Company, five from the
+United Kingdom Company, and six from the Magnetic Company. Additional
+clerks were employed by the Post Office as soon as the volume of work
+could be gauged, but in the meantime the transferred clerks had to do
+practically double duty. The officials taken over from the companies
+were located in the Small Street Post Office, but it was not until
+January, 1872, that room could be found there for the entire staff,
+which had then grown to be ninety clerks and fifty messengers. The
+telegraphic system soon after the Government took to it was extended in
+this district to twenty of the principal villages. In the first year of
+Post Office working there were 450,000 messages dealt with here, and now
+the yearly number is 3,500,000. The sixpenny telegram was introduced in
+1885. The local telegraph service now has a staff consisting of a
+superintendent, 23 superintending officers, 140 male and 44 female
+telegraphists, eight telephonists, and 155 telegraph messengers.
+Telegrams are delivered from the head office, two branch offices,
+fifteen town sub-offices, forty rural sub-offices, and four railway
+stations. The head office has 600,000 messages delivered from it
+annually, the branch and town sub-offices 220,000, and the rural
+districts 74,000. Of the latter (74,000), about 8,000 are delivered at
+distances of from one to three miles, and 350 at distances over three
+miles. After 8.0 p.m. all the messages in the town area are delivered
+from the head office. The Duke of Norfolk's 1897 concession of free
+delivery of telegrams for all distances under three miles has been
+appreciated by all those concerned.
+
+The telegraph gallery has direct telegraphic connection with the
+undermentioned towns: Bath, Birmingham, Bridgwater, Cardiff,
+Cheltenham, Chippenham, Clevedon, Cork, Exeter, Glasgow, Gloucester,
+Guernsey, Jersey, Leeds, Liverpool, London, Manchester, Newport (Mon.),
+Oxford, Plymouth, Reading, Southampton, Swansea, Swindon, Taunton, and
+Weston-super-Mare, and thirty-two smaller towns.
+
+Bristol plays a not unimportant part in the Post Office telephone trunk
+line system, commenced in 1896. It has direct trunk lines to Bath,
+Birmingham, Cardiff, Exeter, Gloucester, London, Newport, Sharpness,
+Taunton, and Weston-super-Mare. The conversations held by the public
+through the medium of these lines number 4,000 weekly.
+
+[Illustration: THE TELEGRAPH INSTRUMENT ROOM, BRISTOL POST OFFICE.
+
+_From a photograph by Mr. Protheroe, Wine Street, Bristol._]
+
+The well-ventilated and well-lighted telegraph instrument room is on the
+upper floor, and extends from end to end of the building. In it there
+are 102 telegraph instruments of various kinds in use, viz.: 5 A.B.C.'s,
+19 double-plate sounders, 30 sounders, 28 duplexes, 5 quadruplexes, 5
+Wheatstone sets, 7 repeaters or relays, 2 concentrators and 1 hexode.
+Divested of technicalities, it may be said that telegraphing on the
+A.B.C. instruments is effected by alphabetic manipulative keys, which
+are depressed by the fingers of the left hand of the sender at the
+same time that a handle is turned with the right hand, and a
+corresponding effect is produced on the dial plate of the receiver. The
+double-plate sounder is read by sound from two small metal hands
+striking right and left against two pieces of metal. In sending, the
+working is by means of keys manipulated by the hand. The sending upon
+the sounder instrument, which is that chiefly used, is done by a small
+key with handle being depressed and released according to the dots and
+dashes of the Morse alphabet. The signals by which messages are received
+and read by the ear are produced by a bar of soft iron striking upon a
+steel point placed between two coils of wire. With the A.B.C.,
+double-plate sounder, and sounder, only one message can be sent or
+received on the wire at one time; but the duplex sounder instruments are
+so constructed that two messages can be sent on the wire--one in each
+direction--at the same time. Double-current duplex instruments are in
+use for telegraphing to busy towns such as Plymouth, Exeter, Cardiff,
+Swansea, &c., &c. The quadruplex consists of two duplex sets upon one
+wire. Upon these circuits two distinct messages may be sent
+simultaneously from each end. The hexode has six instruments at each end
+of a single wire, enabling twelve clerks to operate at the same
+time--six at each end,--and thus admits of a single wire doing so much
+work as six wires worked with the ordinary sounder instrument.
+
+At times of pressure when race meetings are going on, or during the
+cricket and football seasons, the ordinary methods of working are
+supplemented by extraordinary means, thus: the duplex working between
+Bristol and Manchester is augmented by Manchester connecting there a
+Bristol wire with a Newcastle wire: Newcastle in like manner further
+connecting the line with Glasgow, Glasgow with Edinburgh, Edinburgh with
+Dundee, and Dundee with Aberdeen. Then at the Bristol end, instead of
+working by means of the ordinary keys, Wheatstone working is resorted
+to, viz.: the messages instead of being "keyed" are "punched," the
+punching process being performed by means of iron punching sticks upon
+an apparatus called the "perforator." The sticks are rapidly worked by
+skilful operators upon three steel keys, which, when struck,
+mechanically draw a strip of white paper tape, at the same time
+perforating holes which indicate signs in accordance with the Morse
+alphabet system. These slips thus "punched"--which, by-the-by, very much
+resemble the perforated slips used in connection with the organette
+instrument--are passed through a Wheatstone "transmitter," and buzzed
+through so rapidly that 400 or 500 words can be sent in a minute. The
+signals are simultaneously reproduced upon blue slips in the form of
+dots and dashes at Manchester, at Newcastle, at Glasgow, at Edinburgh,
+at Dundee, and at Aberdeen. The message recorded on the slips is broken
+off at about every hundred words to form a "press" page at the receiving
+offices for writing up by the telegraphists, a large number of whom can
+be employed on the work at the same time. When this process is resorted
+to the battery power for the wire has to be greatly increased. The
+repeater instruments are worked in like manner, except that the system
+is permanent instead of occasional. The concentrator is a recent
+invention, and is used for the purpose of economising force and
+apparatus, and of minimising delay and table space. By its means the
+wires for eighteen to twenty offices, which use the same form of
+telegraphic instrument, are led into a special switch-board, and each
+wire as it is required is "switched" through to a telegraph instrument,
+at which a clerk is ready to send or receive the message. Thus the
+telegraphist is "fed" by the operator at the concentrator, and has to
+send a message to any one of the thirty towns instead of, under ordinary
+working, to only three or four towns.
+
+In place of over 700 batteries with 3,500 cells of the Bichromate,
+Daniel and Leclanche type in use at the Bristol telegraph office for
+many years, a system of accumulators or storage batteries has been
+brought into operation. The power for charging the accumulators is
+generated on the spot by a Crossley's gas engine driving a dynamo. The
+accumulators number 250, and each has seven divisions. The hexode
+instrument between Bristol and London requires a voltage of 400 dry
+cells. There are two complete sets of accumulators, each with separate
+connecting wires to the instrument room. One set is in use at a time.
+The system of accumulators has been introduced for the purposes of
+economy and saving of space.
+
+It may be interesting to the uninitiated to learn that in telegraphy the
+earth plays the part of a return wire; thus the circuit between Bristol
+and Birmingham is rendered complete by earth. The wires connected with
+the two towns indicated are brought into the test boxes at the
+respective places, and there connected to a single wire at each town
+which finds earth by means of a zinc plate buried some twelve feet in
+the soil near or under the Post Office buildings.
+
+Occasionally when people have been out for a drive or a cycle ride, and
+their eyes have been delighted with the grand scenery to be found around
+Bristol, they look, as they journey homewards, to the Government poles
+and to the many wires therefrom suspended, and wonder which are
+telegraph wires, which are telephone wires, where they all lead to, and
+between what points messages are sent and conversations held. Such
+travellers returning to Bristol by way of Almondsbury would see the
+wires on the one side (telegraphs), which run from Bristol to Falfield,
+Newport, Cardiff, Swansea, Gloucester, Liverpool; London to Swansea,
+Newport, and Cardiff; Birmingham to Exeter; Plymouth to Liverpool; and
+(telephones) Bristol to Birmingham, Gloucester, Cardiff; and on the
+other side of the road (telephones) Horfield, Fylton, Almondsbury,
+Newport, Cardiff, Gloucester and Birmingham. In some instances there are
+two or three wires for the same place. The telegraph, and telephone
+wires cross and recross each other at frequent intervals along the road,
+and the whole sets of wires cross from side to side of the road between
+Fylton and Almondsbury.
+
+Alternative routes for the wires are adopted where practicable, so that
+in case of a break-down on one line communication may be kept up on the
+other.
+
+By way of illustration of such alternate routes, it may be mentioned
+that the two wires from the Head Post Office in Small Street for Swansea
+run underground to Stapleton Road, at which point they are brought above
+ground and diverge, one running to Wee Lane, thence to Ashley Hill,
+Horfield, Almondsbury, Alveston Ship, Falfield and Berkeley, up to the
+Severn Bridge; and the other branching off at the end of Stapleton Road,
+and carried along the Fishponds and Chipping Sodbury roads nearly to
+Yate, and down the Tortworth road to just beyond Falfield, where it
+joins the other Swansea and South Wales wires, and passes over the
+Severn Bridge into Wales.
+
+The telegraph and telephone wires in this district are chiefly erected
+and maintained by soldiers of the Royal Engineers. Sixteen military
+telegraphists, members of the Royal Engineers, are attached to the
+Bristol Post Office, and kept in training for telegraph service with the
+army. Twelve of them are now--November, 1899--in South Africa on active
+service, in connection with the troubles in the Transvaal.
+
+In the great hurricane which occurred in January, 1899, the telephone
+and telegraph wires radiating from Bristol were blown down in all
+directions. In consequence Bristol was entirely cut off from direct
+telephonic communication with Birmingham for 21 hours, and had only one
+wire instead of two for 9-1/4 hours; from Bath for 18 hours, and had
+only one wire instead of two for 5-1/2 hours; from Cardiff for 18 hours,
+and had only two wires instead of three for 10-1/2 hours; from
+Weston-super-Mare entirely for 24-1/2 hours; from Taunton for 28-1/2
+hours; from Exeter for 27 hours; from Sharpness for 26 hours. There was
+only one wire instead of two to Gloucester for 26-1/4 hours, to London
+for 6 hours, and to Newport for 20-3/4 hours.
+
+The trunk telephone lines were more or less interrupted for a week,
+caused by the working parties engaged on repairs.
+
+The telegraph wires for the counties of Gloucester, Somerset, Monmouth,
+Warwick, Shropshire, Worcester, Wilts, Devon, Cornwall and Lancashire
+were those chiefly deranged.
+
+It is believed that there is only one telegraph cable in the Bristol
+district, and that cable does not belong to the Postmaster-General. It
+crosses the river Avon at a point adjacent to Pill and Shirehampton, and
+was used by the Commercial Rooms in connection with reports of the
+arrival of vessels. Up to the time of its introduction, as already
+stated, "warners" were employed. The last of the old running "warners"
+were Gerrish and Case. These men lived at Pill, and on hearing news from
+pilots-men of the arrival of a ship in the Bristol Channel they started
+off on foot to Bristol and _warned_ the merchants and wives of sailors
+of the vessel's arrival in the Channel, getting, of course, fees for
+their trouble,--a guinea from the merchants, and so on, down to the
+shillings of the sailors' wives,--and fifty years ago these fees were
+willingly paid, and the heavy postages too. The runners were men of some
+little mark.
+
+The Post Office at Avonmouth, a Bristol sub-office, is much used for
+telegraph purposes by persons on board vessels passing up and down the
+Kingroad in the Bristol Channel. The Bristol Corporation placed outside
+the port a large white notice board with "TELEGRAPH OFFICE" painted upon
+it in black letters, to attract the attention of mariners. The messages
+are chiefly received from vessels with cargoes consigned to Sharpness,
+which in neap tides have often to lie in the roads for days.
+
+Telegrams for vessels lying in Kingroad are often taken out by boat at
+midnight or in the early hours of the morning. This is often in
+consequence of the tide not serving, or being too strong for the boatman
+to go out at seasonable hours.
+
+Lundy Island, in the Bristol Channel, is connected with the mainland by
+a submarine cable, which is considered to be one of the most perfect of
+its kind. Letters for Lundy, from Bristol and elsewhere, are carried
+across by boat from Instow once a week. The nearer small islands of
+Flat Holm and Steep Holm have cable telephonic communication with
+Weston-super-Mare. The telephone, which is carried into the Weston Post
+Office, is rented by the War Office Authorities, who allow the islanders
+the use of it. Letters from Bristol for the Flat Holm are conveyed by
+way of Cardiff. The island is rented from the Cardiff Corporation by a
+farmer who resides upon it. His son, who lives in Cardiff, daily visits
+the island in a yacht, and conveys the letters for the Trinity House
+officials and residents. For the Steep Holm, Bristol letters are sent
+from Weston-super-Mare; the services to the island being
+tri-weekly--Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday,--and are performed by a
+contractor, who goes across on behalf of the War Office. The Steep Holm
+is inhabited by military men only. In a manuscript of 30th March, 1825,
+it is described as "Stipe Holme." One of the first serious efforts in
+connection with the plan of telegraphing through space without
+connecting wires was conducted between the diminutive island of Flat
+Holm and the shore, a distance of about five miles; and between Penarth
+and Brean Down, a distance of nine miles. An interesting illustration
+of the system of wireless telegraphy was given, under the direction of
+Mr. W. H. Preece, C.B., F.R.S. (now Sir W. H. Preece, K.C.B., F.R.S.),
+at the Clifton College conversazione, held in honour of the learned
+British Associates during the meeting of the Association at Bristol in
+1898.
+
+The telegraph staff have seldom had their skill and smartness more
+thoroughly tested than on the memorable Monday evening in February,
+1893, when press messages of great length relating to the introduction
+of the Home Rule Bill were sent over the wires. Twenty minutes after Mr.
+Gladstone rose to speak in the House of Commons the first instalment of
+the special summary of his speech reached this city. The conclusion of
+the summary was received at two minutes to 7. The verbatim report
+commenced to arrive at 4.49, and the last instalment reached the Bristol
+Office at 8 o'clock. The total number of words in the messages sent to
+Bristol was nearly 40,000.
+
+During the early potato season telegraphing is very brisk with Jersey.
+Bristol is the only large office besides London which has direct
+communication with the island. Some idea may be gathered of the extra
+labour entailed on the telegraph service from the fact that in the month
+of June, 1899, no fewer than 20,904 telegrams passed between Bristol and
+Jersey, the normal number being only 5,800 monthly. Five or six
+telegraph operators are usually sent during the season to Jersey from
+Bristol.
+
+In Bristol about 700 firms use abbreviated telegraphic addresses.
+
+The telegraph money order system, started in 1889, is exhibiting
+marvellous developments in the local service.
+
+The express letter delivery service, which came into operation in 1891,
+is very useful to the public. By means of this agency the Post Office
+distributes by express messenger 300,000 letters and parcels annually.
+Of that number Bristol contributes 7,000 services. Bicycles and
+tricycles are now delivered for the public from any telegraph office in
+Bristol and district by special messenger at a fee of 3d. per mile,
+without any charge for weight. The messengers are not permitted to ride
+upon the cycles, except by the permission of the senders, but will wheel
+them up to a distance of three miles.
+
+An express delivery messenger has been used, ere now, for the convoy of
+a traveller from point to point in a town unknown to him or her. The
+Post Office is often required to assist even more closely in the
+domestic relations of life. Recently a gentleman from America wrote to
+the Clifton Post Office to enquire whether a certain near relative of
+his could be found, as he was very anxious to see her before return to
+America. He enclosed a shilling stamp for a reply by telegraph, and
+begged for urgency. The relative was found and her address given. The
+applicant's ardour to see his relative cooled, or his stay in the
+country was abridged, for instead of paying the proposed visit, he
+begged the Post Office officials to expend five shillings, which he
+sent, in the purchase of cut roses for his relative. Of course, this was
+outside the round of Post Office duties, but the clerks obligingly
+attended to it, with the aid of a telegraph messenger who was off duty
+at the moment.
+
+Occasional mistakes are not to be wondered at when people write
+illegibly. Through the improper formation of the capital letter, D, in
+the proper name Dyster, has in telegraphing been turned into O, and the
+name made Oyster, with the result of misdelivery of the telegram to a
+firm of fishmongers having "Oyster" as an abbreviated address. It must
+have been extremely painful to an anxious parent to receive a telegram
+summoning him to a nursing home far distant, in terms that his "sow was
+worse," and begging him to come at once; the telegraphist having made
+the slight mistake of transcribing "w" for "n." The gentleman who sent a
+telegram to his town house in the West End of London asking that his
+covert coat might be forwarded to him was no doubt considerably
+astonished when his butler returned the telegram to him by post asking
+for an explanation, and he found that the text of it was "Pigs, 9/3,
+8/9, and 8/-." The error was occasioned in connection with the use of
+multiple addresses for a bacon-trading firm's telegrams. In another
+instance a curious complication resulted through imperfect spacing on
+the part of the signalling telegraphist, thus:--A telegram written by
+the sender as "To ----, Fore St., Northam, Bideford. Be in attendance
+Public Offices," was transcribed thus:--"To ---- forest, Northam,
+Bideford. Be in at ten dance Public Offices," and, owing to the number
+of words counting the same as the number signalled, the inaccuracy was
+not discovered until a repetition had been obtained from the office of
+origin on application of the addressee. It was printed in a Midland
+newspaper that at the presentation of a sword of honour to the Sirdar
+the Common Councilmen attended in their "margarine gowns," and, of
+course, the error of using "margarine" for "mazarine" was put down to
+the carelessness of the telegraph clerk. A telegram was sent indicating
+arrival at 8 Mostyn Crescent, in a favourite North Wales town. At one
+stage in transmission "Mostyn" became converted into "mostly," and at
+the next office of transmission "Crescent" became "pleasant," and the
+telegram when delivered read "Arrived 8 mostly pleasant." The Prime
+Minister who had informed his audience that "there was no prospect of an
+immediate general election, that they had a working majority, and the
+Government was of good cheer," would not have been pleased had he seen
+that the last word in the telegram posted up in the Bristol Commercial
+Rooms had been transcribed as "of good cheek."
+
+A telegram, "Have arranged for Sunday. Dening," with the first two words
+struck out, and "arrangement complete" substituted underneath, was
+handed in at a telegraph office by a well-known and much respected
+Bristol clergyman. At the forwarding office the message was
+unfortunately read "For Sunday Dinning arrangement complete," the
+erasure and addition not having been properly understood and the proper
+name misspelt. At the delivering office the message again suffered
+alteration, and became "For Sunday dining arrangements complete." It may
+readily be supposed that the addressee was somewhat astonished at the
+peculiar text of the message.
+
+The following is from the Bristol _Times and Mirror_ of February, 1893,
+and has reference to a little inaccuracy on the part of a telegraph
+assistant employed at a Bristol sub-post office. The incident itself is
+correctly reported:--"Garraways, 12 o'clock. Dear Mrs. B.--Chops and
+tomato sauce. Yours Pickwick," settled the hash of a well-known
+character; and a wire, "Going to Bath to meet girl. Not back to dinner,"
+had, very nearly, a similar effect on the domestic relations of one of
+the smartest solicitors in our city. The telegraph has had, in its time,
+much to answer for, "but never aught like this." When Puck said: "I'll
+put a girdle round about the earth in forty minutes," he little thought
+what mischief he might do. It was only the other day we read how a stray
+dropped line destroyed a horse, killed a cow, and cut off the head of a
+nigger; but these accidents were a trifle compared with what might have
+happened if the message first quoted could not have been explained. The
+learned gentleman it appears has a brother, by name Gilbert, familiarly
+known in the circle as "Gil." The latter, having business in Bath, wrote
+asking his relative to dine with him at the "Christopher." The learned
+advocate at once accepted; but, being a thoroughly domesticated man,
+telegraphed to his better-half: "Going to Bath to meet Gil; not back to
+dinner." Then came in the "cussedness" of the wire which substituted
+"girl" for "Gil," and hence the temporary ructions when the happy
+husband, having succeeded with his latchkey, sought repose.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+TELEGRAPH MESSENGERS.
+
+
+The telegraph messengers in uniform employed in the Bristol district
+number about 160. They have a literary institute, a drum and fife band,
+hold swimming classes, etc. That there is need of night classes may be
+inferred from the following specimens of telegraph messengers'
+orthography and syntax:--
+
+(1) "Supt, Sir, I will try to be more careful in the pass. Yours obed,
+H. P----."
+
+(2) "Supt, Sir, I having asked where the message was ment for and they
+told me to go up the road where I should see a chemist shop where I
+should find it about there and I having could not find it I asked, a
+gentleman which he said it was farther up the road and I left it with
+cotton the undertaker which he said it was quite right.--G. H----."
+
+(3) "Supt, sir, I will try to be more extint in the future as this is
+the truth.--M. T----."
+
+(4) "Supt, Sir, I much regret not returning my report But I left it home
+in my other Pocket in my overcoat which is home drying which was wet
+through on Saturday last. Yours obed H. E----."
+
+The institute was inaugurated at a public meeting at the Colston Hall on
+the 1st December, 1892, which was attended by a large and influential
+gathering of citizens. Upon the platform were the Mayor of Bristol (Mr.
+W. R. Barker), who presided, the Very Rev. the Dean of Bristol (Dr.
+Pigou), Mr. Charles Townsend, M.P., Rev. R. Cornall, Mr. R. C. Tombs
+(the postmaster), Mrs. R. C. Tombs, Dr. Lansdown, jun., Miss Synge, Miss
+Pollock, Messrs. John Harvey, Arthur Baker, E. G. Clarke, H. Lewis, C.
+H. Tucker, R. L. Leighton, W. H. Lindrea, J. R. Bennett, E. Sampson;
+also Messrs. A. J. Flewell (superintendent of the telegraph department),
+W. H. Gange, J. Robertson, J. S. Gover, J. J. Mackay, H. T. Carter
+(superintendent of the postal department).
+
+It was explained that the telegraph messengers were engaged at from
+thirteen to fourteen years of age, and the lessons they had learned at
+school had chiefly been supplemented by a knowledge acquired in the
+streets. The object was to counteract street influences by providing
+elementary instruction, recreation, and interesting literature. There
+was no desire to educate the boys to such a pitch that Jack would think
+himself better than his master, but to take care that they should not
+degenerate. It was announced that the hours of labour had just been
+reduced from sixty-two to fifty per week, which would be a great boon to
+the boys. It was further stated that a private appeal had been made, not
+in vain, to a few of Bristol's most generous citizens, and that through
+their kindly aid, with subscriptions from the members of the staff and
+the grant which it was hoped to earn from the Education Department, the
+institute would be carried on without pecuniary embarrassment. The
+description of the institute's work was as follows:--
+
+1. The institute would be open to the telegraph messengers and to junior
+officers of the postal and telegraph service, the charge to each member
+to be one penny per week.
+
+2. The institute would be carried on in a room at the General Post
+Office.
+
+3. In connection with the institute an evening school would be held, the
+educational session to last from October to May. An annual examination
+of the members of the classes would be held.
+
+4. In addition to the three elementary subjects,--reading, writing, and
+arithmetic,--classes would be arranged for the study of Scripture,
+geography, drawing, composition, and shorthand.
+
+5. For the purpose of recreation certain games would be provided.
+
+6. In connection with the institute there would be a library, which had
+been formed by means of books generously given by the citizens of
+Bristol.
+
+7. The library would be open to any established or unestablished officer
+of the postal and telegraph service at a slight subscription per month.
+
+8. A penny savings bank would also be started.
+
+The Chairman said he gladly consented, to preside that evening, because
+the object of the meeting was one in which he took deep interest, and
+one which he felt sure would commend itself to a very large number of
+his fellow-citizens. He thought he might say that everything connected
+with the postal service was peculiarly interesting to them all, and
+anything they could do to ameliorate the lot of those who daily rendered
+them such important service they would be very glad to do. He thought it
+would not be well to make the movement too "goody" in its character, or
+too educational, so he was glad to see that there was a lighter side to
+the scheme.
+
+Mr. Charles Townsend, M.P., Mr. Arthur Baker, Mr. Harold Lewis, Miss
+Synge, and members of the postal and telegraph, staff, also spoke.
+
+Then, the Dean of Bristol addressed the telegraph messengers, and said
+he really should have been disappointed if he had not been invited to
+attend the meeting. It was a pleasant part of his privilege in
+ministering in Bristol to be asked to take a share in such an
+interesting gathering as they were holding that evening. One of the best
+features of this institute was that it would assist them to put their
+leisure to the most profitable use.
+
+The educational work has been progressing steadily ever since its
+inauguration, and much good has resulted from it to the messengers.
+
+Ever ready to give their countenance to entertainments for the benefit
+of the community, their Graces the late lamented Duke, and the Dowager
+Duchess, of Beaufort, as their first public act after coming to reside
+at Stoke Park, near our city, attended a concert at the Redland Park
+Hall, which was held for the purpose of benefiting the funds of the
+Telegraph Messengers' Institute. Later on, May 21st, 1898, they were
+kind enough to attend an annual meeting and a prize distribution at the
+Colston Hall. The late Duke, who presided on the occasion, said it was a
+great pleasure to him to be present. He had witnessed a good deal of the
+care and discipline with which the Post Office messengers were looked
+after. Like everybody who had a great deal of correspondence, he had the
+privilege of having the services of the best regulated Post Office in
+the world. They also had in this country the privilege of being able to
+use the best regulated telegraph service. They might be perfectly sure
+that if a man wanted to send a telegram, when once he put it into the
+hands of the postal officials, however ill-written or badly addressed it
+might be, it was very probable that the telegram would reach its
+destination. Those who had a good deal of correspondence were deeply
+indebted for the splendid organisation of the Bristol Department. They
+were also very much indebted to the telegraph clerks, who deciphered the
+scrawls handed them, and who transmitted the messages. They were deeply
+indebted also to the boys for the way in which they refrained from
+stopping to play marbles, and did their duties with great zeal, and
+delivered their messages at the proper places and to the proper persons.
+They would understand that they were Government officers, and that they
+had to discharge important duties. He could personally say that those
+duties were thoroughly well carried out in the city of Bristol and its
+neighbourhood.
+
+The Duchess of Beaufort then distributed the prizes, after which a
+telegraph messenger presented Her Grace with a basket of choice flowers.
+
+The Bishop of Bristol addressed the lads, and urged them to do their
+duty thoroughly when on duty, and to enter heartily into healthy play
+when off duty. In doing their duty they should remember one or two
+things. They might be charged with the delivery of a message which was a
+matter of life or death; it might be one regarding which thousands of
+pounds depended; or it might be one of little importance. But, whatever
+it was, it was not for them to enquire, but to deliver the message with
+punctuality and promptness. Having spoken of the discipline and training
+telegraph boys received, he observed that of all telegraph boys, for
+punctuality, steadiness, courtesy, and politeness, the Bristol boys were
+about the best. He urged them also to live pure lives and observe
+complete honesty, that they might become worthy citizens of whom the
+country might be proud. He was glad to hear the name of the lady (Miss
+Pollock) who conducted the scriptural class so cordially received, which
+showed that the lady and her work had taken hold of the hearts of the
+boys. The excellence of their work as boys, and as men, and the
+enjoyment of their lives, in the best sense, depended upon their
+becoming God-fearing. He should be pleased to give a prize in connection
+with the Scripture class.
+
+The letters of the Bishop, written with reference to the occasion,
+should not be left unchronicled. They ran as follows, viz.:--
+
+ "Church House,
+ Dean's Yard, S.W.,
+ _May 10th, 1898_.
+
+"MY DEAR POSTMASTER,--I am speaking at Bath on the afternoon of the
+20th, and am engaged to stay the night. But I think your proposal so
+important that I am writing to my host, Mr. S., to ask if he has engaged
+friends to meet me. If he can excuse me, I will, if all be well, come to
+you and say something.
+
+ "Yours very truly,
+ G. F. BRISTOL."
+
+ "The Athenaeum,
+ _May 12th, 1898_.
+
+"MY DEAR POSTMASTER,--I have arranged to return to Bristol on the
+evening of May 20, and if all be well can be with you. Send me a card of
+place and hour.
+
+ "Yours very truly,
+ G. F. BRISTOL."
+
+The following extract from a letter in which His Grace wrote concerning
+the meeting, is indicative of the interest which he took in matters
+affecting the postal and telegraph services of Bristol, viz.:--
+
+ "Stoke Park,
+ Stapleton, near Bristol,
+ _21st May, 1898_.
+
+"DEAR MR. TOMBS,--I must write you a few lines of thanks for the very
+pleasant evening you gave us last night. Both the Duchess and I enjoyed
+it very much. I was remarkably struck with the appearance of your boys:
+such nice, clean, smart-looking youths. What a difference drill makes to
+lads! They have already a smart--soldierlike, I should call
+it--appearance, and I am sure it tends to sharpen their minds as well as
+to straighten their bodies.
+
+ "Believe me to remain,
+ Yours truly,
+ BEAUFORT."
+
+The messengers little thought as they listened to the Duke's encouraging
+words, addressed to them on the occasion of the meeting, that they
+would before a year had passed away be sending a modest, humble, but
+loving tribute, in the form of a wreath, which was thought worthy to be
+suspended over the pulpit in Badminton Church at the Duke's obsequies,
+in juxtaposition with a wreath of mammoth proportions sent by the
+officers of the 7th Dragoons (the Duke's old Regiment).
+
+The Bristol telegraph messengers have cause to remember that bright
+Saturday afternoon in 1895 when, preceded by their drum and fife band,
+they marched out to Burfield, Westbury-on-Trym, the country residence of
+Sir (then Mr.) R. H. Symes, the Mayor of Bristol. They were there
+enabled to have a few hours of recreation and pleasure, and to forget
+the busy hum of the city with its turmoil and heat. Following the
+excellent example, Mr. Arthur Baker, of Henbury, and other country
+gentlemen have invited the boys out on Saturday afternoons, to encourage
+them to keep banded together for good purposes, and to maintain that
+_esprit de corps_ which is so necessary in a body of youths drawn
+together after the manner of the Telegraph Messengers' Class.
+
+A most memorable occasion was that in 1897, when the messengers were
+inspected by Lieutenant-Colonel MacGregor, of the 24th Middlesex R.V.C.,
+London. They mustered at the Post Office, and, under the direction of
+Inspectors Mawditt, Appleby (late 29th Regiment and sergeant-major
+Scinde Volunteers), and Cook (late Royal Marines), and headed by their
+drum and fife band, marched to the Artillery Drill Ground in Whiteladies
+Road where, in presence of many visitors, military and civilian, they
+were put through manual exercises, physical drill to music, and then
+reviewed on the parade ground. In the speeches which followed the boys
+were complimented on their efficiency and smart appearance. It was on
+this occasion that it was announced the Postmaster-General had obtained
+the sanction of the Treasury for a grant of money in order to encourage
+telegraph messengers' institutes and drill in the large towns. Under
+this scheme, prizes for proficiency in drill and general good conduct
+are awarded--a system which has since been found to work admirably.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+LETTER DELIVERY SYSTEM. POSTMEN: THEIR DUTIES AND RECREATIONS.
+
+
+The extent of the Bristol postal establishment in 1775 may be gleaned
+from the reply given by the Postmasters-General to a memorial
+complaining that there was only one letter carrier for the delivery of
+all the letters received in Liverpool. The answer was that only one
+letter carrier was maintained in any provincial town, including the
+premier city of Bristol, and that they did not think themselves
+justified in incurring for Liverpool the expense of another. An
+additional Bristol postman was, however, appointed between then and
+January, 1778. In 1792 there were four letter carriers at Bristol, but
+only two appear to have been allowed by the Department, the other two
+being employed as extras, and provided for, probably, by an extra charge
+on the letters delivered. The Bristol letter carriers were not supplied
+with uniform clothing until 1858. Then, a hat and coat once yearly, and
+a waterproof cape once in two years, were given to them. The uniform
+clothing was not supplied to the auxiliary letter carriers. Bags or
+pouches for the men to carry for the protection of the letters were at
+that time provided.
+
+In 1859 the postmen wore scarlet uniform and issued out from the Post
+Office three times daily to traverse the length and breadth of the city
+in the distribution of letters. In 1899 the "men in blue" sally forth
+six times every day.
+
+In the postmen's department there are now seven inspectors and three
+hundred and seventy postmen. The delivery of letters in the town
+district is made from the head office. There is a branch delivering
+office at Clifton, but those at North Street and Phippen Street were
+long since abandoned. In the Bristol postal district, sixty years ago,
+there were fewer than 20,000 letters delivered in a week, or about
+1,000,000 in a year--a number now nearly reached in a week. The letters
+delivered annually from the Central Post Office number 31,000,000; from
+the Clifton Post Office, 6,250,000; from the suburban offices and rural
+offices, 7,300,000. It is a noteworthy fact that the letters posted in
+Bristol for delivery within its own limit form 27 per cent. of the
+total number, which percentage is only surpassed at two or three of the
+large cities of the Kingdom. Six deliveries of letters and five
+deliveries of parcels are made in the city, with ten collections. The
+average number of persons to whom letters are delivered by each postman
+in Bristol (city) is 1,800. There are 666,536 parcels delivered
+annually. To each of two firms are delivered more than one quarter of a
+million letters annually, equal to one hundredth part of the total
+number of letters delivered.
+
+The distances from the head office to the extreme outward terminal City
+and Clifton delivery points are as follows:--Westbury Park, 2-1/2 miles;
+Horfield Barracks, 3 miles; Ridgeway, 2-1/2 miles; Barton Hill, 1-3/4
+miles; Arno's Vale, 1-3/4 miles; Totterdown, 2 miles; Bedminster Down, 2
+miles; Ashton Gate, 2 miles; and Clifton Suspension Bridge, 1-1/2 miles.
+The trams are used by the postmen, and the Department pays the Tramways
+Company a lump sum in respect thereof. The convenience in this respect
+will be enhanced when the electric traction system is fully introduced.
+
+In the sorting office the letters are sorted to the various rounds by
+postmen dividers, and the general body of postmen then have to arrange
+them at their desks seated on little revolving stools. The process
+adopted by the postmen in setting in their letters for delivery may be
+explained by the following example relating to what is technically known
+as the "Cotham Brow Walk." The letters are first primarily divided
+(upright) into streets, roads, squares, courts, etc., taken thus--viz.:
+(_a_) Sydenham Road, 1 to 18 (one side only); (_b_) Sydenham Hill, 45 to
+11, odd numbers (one side only); (_c_) Tamworth Place 13 to 1 (one side
+only); (_d_) Arley Hill, 2 to 34 and 5 to 27 (cross); (_e_) Arley Park
+(cross); (_f_) Arley Hill, 36 and 38 and 29 to 41 (cross); (_g_) Cotham
+Brow, 124 to 88 and 125 to 27 (cross); (_h_) Southfield Road, 2 to 28
+and 1 to 27 (cross); (_i_) Upper Sydenham Road, 38 to 19 (one side
+only); (_j_) Springfield Road, 47 to 85, odd numbers (one side only).
+Then the letters for one of the above-named ten divisions or streets are
+taken one by one and placed in order of actual delivery flat on the
+table; then all are gathered together and stood upright, the letters
+for each division being treated in like manner. When the letters for
+any one street or road, etc., have been set in order, fresh batches of
+letters of, say, thirty or so, are fully sub-divided by the same process
+before being set in with the accumulated and finished letters. This
+course is necessary in order to obviate the postman having to go through
+a set of fifty or a hundred letters time after time as he gets a fresh
+batch of letters. Two hours are allowed for the morning delivery and one
+and a half hours for other deliveries. As those who have the longest
+rounds have the lightest burdens, they all contrive to finish at about
+the same time.
+
+The Clifton Suspension Bridge, which was erected in 1864 at a cost of
+L100,000, plays a very unimportant part in postal affairs, as it serves
+for the passage over the Avon of three postmen only, who cross with
+letters for the Leigh Woods and Failand districts. Long Ashton, which
+has a carriage road approached by the bridge from the Clifton side,
+receives its letters by a postman who crosses by a ferry lower down the
+river and reaches his destination more expeditiously than by crossing
+over the bridge.
+
+A Bristol postman, who was well acquainted with the locality which he
+had to serve, met with an ugly accident through colliding with a
+lamp-post, recently erected and not supplied with gas for lighting up.
+It had been put up during the man's interval of duty, so that he came
+upon it for the first time when it was shrouded in darkness. The
+postmen, having in the discharge of their duties to be early birds and
+to be first out and about in the morning, often pick up articles lost or
+deposited overnight. Thus it was that a postman found on one winter's
+morn in a Bristol suburb a parcel containing the dead body of a child,
+and had to constitute himself a corpse-carrier for the nonce. It was in
+this city of Bristol that the following somewhat amusing and certainly
+interesting incident took place. Two rats were found in combat over a
+letter, which, delivered in due course by the postman, had fallen upon
+the floor at the entrance to a warehouse, and had been dragged thence to
+the spot where the rodents were engaged in their fierce encounter, the
+gum on the flap probably being the attraction. The letter contained a
+cheque for L300, and its loss for some days caused no small amount of
+consternation and anxiety to the gentleman who should have received it,
+and who, it need scarcely be said, at once gave orders for a letter-box
+to be attached to his warehouse door.
+
+It was well for the Magistrates' Clerk for the Gloucestershire Division
+of Bristol that he was well known to the postman, or assuredly he would
+never have received the letter addressed thus: "Mr. Latchem Laforegat
+pleace stashun," the proper address being: "Mr. Latcham, Lawford's Gate
+Police Station, Stapleton Road, Bristol."
+
+Recently many valuable dogs were poisoned in different parts of the
+city, and a suggestion appeared in the newspapers that the postmen might
+be urged to constitute themselves amateur detectives for the discovery
+of the miscreants, on the ground that they enter every garden and knock
+at every door throughout the length and breadth of Bristol, and that at
+early morn and late at night as well as by day. The postmen are public
+spirited, but it is hardly likely that they would go considerably out of
+their way for the purpose, considering the risks which they run from
+dogs and the annoyances to which they are subjected to by them. The
+postmen have to face the snappish terrier and the ferocious-looking
+bulldog. Not infrequently they get bitten, and more frequently get
+soundly abused if, for their own protection, they belabour a dog
+occasionally, or give it a taste of their belt for want of a better
+weapon of defence or offence. Reciprocity would demand that if the
+postmen look out for dog poisoners, the owners of dogs on their part
+should take the utmost care to keep their dogs properly secured when
+known to be dangerous or to have a special dislike to the public
+servants in blue. The bold announcement given on the pillar of a gateway
+of a residence in a fashionable suburb of Bristol, "Beware of the
+bulldog," is not calculated to give confidence to the postmen who have
+to deliver the letters. One poor dog, well known in the city, fell dead
+in Small Street; and as the dog had just been seen to visit the Post
+Office, and even to drink from a Bristol Dogs' Home trough standing in
+the portico, it was assumed by the many spectators of the poodle's sad
+death that he had come to an untimely end through drinking poisoned
+water from the Post Office trough. The vessel was therefore confiscated
+by an over-zealous supporter of the Dogs' Home, and the water was
+subjected to analysis, but investigation proved that it was innocuous,
+although from an examination it transpired that the dog really had died
+from poison, which had, however, been taken in meat.
+
+A London firm made indignant enquiry as to why a letter had been
+returned to them through the Returned Letter Office, seeing that it was
+addressed to a well-known and distinguished baronet living near Bristol.
+It turned out that the right hon. gentleman was himself the cause of the
+return of the letter, as he read the contracted words "Rt. Honb.," in a
+line preceding his own name, as the name of "Robt. Hunt," a person who
+lived near his mansion, and he gave the letter back to the postman with
+the foregoing result. In 1847 a letter indicative of the times, with the
+following superscription, as noticed in the post:--"To the Post Office,
+Bristol, Somersetshire, England, 115 miles west of London, this letter
+is to be delivered to the Ladey that transported Jobe Smith and 2 others
+with him near Bristol." Members of the public complain from time to time
+in indignant terms respecting the loss of letters in the post, but in
+very many instances they afterwards write in meeker strain to say they
+have discovered the missing letters--in most unlikely places in their
+homes.
+
+At a dinner given by officials of the Bristol Post Office, the Dean of
+Bristol bestowed praise on the postmen for success in conveying
+ill-addressed letters to their destination. Dr. Pigou cited their
+performances in his own case. He had been addressed as Pigue, Picken,
+Pigon, Pigour, Pickles, Peggue, Puegon, Ragou, and Pagan. That
+"Ragou"--not being a name beginning with "P"--should have reached him,
+he thought could only be explained as the result either of a flash of
+inspiration or of the recollection of previous "hashes" of his name; but
+"Pickles" evidently got home on the mere strength of its initial letter,
+and though, as he complained, it is hard lines to be addressed as "Dr.
+Pagan" after having been thirty or forty years in orders, the written
+word would much more nearly resemble his real name than several of the
+other addresses which did find him. "The Head Gamekeeper, the Deanery,
+Bristol," was, of course, mysterious. The letter contained a circular
+advertising wire netting for pheasants, rabbits, and hares; and when the
+Dean replied, pointing out that the only space available on his
+premises--an area of 30 ft. by 40 ft.--was too small to rear pheasants
+in, he received, a further circular recommending a trial of "our dog
+biscuits." Occasionally, also, the local postmen meet with letters so
+peculiarly addressed as that for "Mr. ----, Oction her and Countent,
+Corn Street, Bristol," and another for "Chowl, near Temple," intended
+for "Cholwell, near Temple Cloud." The postmen collect, too, letters
+peculiarly addressed to other places.
+
+There are still a few postmen veterans in the Bristol Post Office who
+are toiling on long after having exceeded their "three score years."
+Doubtless these aged men excite sympathy as they are seen on their daily
+rounds, and the thought presents itself to the public mind that the Post
+Office is harsh to make them labour when so far advanced in years. Such
+is not the case, however, as the men, unfortunately not being entitled
+to pensions, have been allowed to continue to perform their duties long
+after pensionable established men would have been retired, either
+willingly or compulsorily, under the regulations which now call for a
+Civil servant's retirement to be considered his reaching the age of
+sixty years. These old worthies are not Post Office short-service men;
+but, as their good conduct stripes testify, they have for long years
+served their Queen and country.
+
+J. S., one of these life-long toilers, who worked as an uncovenanted
+postman for many years, commenced his career in the navy. When fifteen
+years of age (1844) he joined the gunnery ship _Excellent_ at
+Portsmouth, Captain (afterwards Admiral) Chade being then in command.
+After serving two years, he was transferred to the old _Conway_, then
+engaged in putting down the slave trade in East African waters; and
+after three years on board that vessel he went to the brig _Helena_, and
+was with her in the West Indies for several years. In about 1854 he was
+passed to the _Britannia_ for Mediterranean service. While sailing from
+Gibraltar to Malta, S. met with a serious accident. Being considered a
+smart young man, he was ordered by the captain to assist another "A.B."
+to rig the topgallant yard-arm. While thus at work he fell from the
+maintopmast cross-trees into the main rigging, again to the main chains,
+and then overboard--a drop in all of 120 feet. A boat was lowered
+promptly, and he was soon picked up, but he was in an insensible
+condition. It was found on examination by the ship's surgeon that his
+skull was fractured. He went into hospital on arrival at Malta, and
+there he remained six months. Shortly after the accident, the
+_Britannia_, which was the Admiral's flagship, was ordered to the Crimea
+(1855), and not only did the seaman who took over S.'s gun meet with his
+death by the shells from the fortifications at Sebastopol, but the whole
+of the gallant tars fighting on the starboard side of the ship were
+killed. S. was taken to London on board the _Growler_ (Sir Charles
+Wood), the first steamer he had ever seen, and was incapacitated for two
+or three years, but fortunately he obtained a pension on having to leave
+the navy. He was engaged in private life till 1878, when, at the age of
+49 years, he was given Post Office work, on which he was employed for
+twenty years, and, indeed, until he again came to grief through an
+accident when on duty at Christmas, 1898. On this occasion he was
+knocked over by a cart in Victoria Street, which ran into the parcel
+handcart S. was wheeling, and which sent him flying into the mud and his
+parcels all about in the road. This put an end to his Post Office
+career, and the old man, with disabled body from his first accident and
+somewhat impaired faculty from the latter, has now sunk back into
+seclusion, and it is hoped that he may end his days in peace. Except for
+three weeks' illness caused by influenza, he was never away on sick
+leave out of his twenty years of Post Office service. Not once was S.
+late at work. He was, he says, always out of bed at 3 a.m., and so
+punctual was he known to be that the remark was often made when he
+entered the office, that "We know what time it is without looking at the
+clock." On leaving the Post Office service this year (1899) a small
+gratuity was awarded him.
+
+S. T., although in his 71st year, managed up till quite recently to
+perform Post Office work for a few hours daily. From early boyhood up to
+his 22nd year, T. was engaged at shoemaking in this city; then he
+enlisted and served as gunner and driver in the Royal Horse Artillery
+for three years. Having obtained his discharge from the army, he acted
+as policeman on the Great Western Railway for a few months. At the time
+of the Crimean War, T. again enlisted, this time as a seaman and gunner
+in Her Majesty's Navy. He was disabled in action and discharged with a
+life pension. For the next twenty-seven years he followed his former
+occupation of shoemaking and rounding, working for about twenty years
+for one firm in this city. When 53 years of age, he first obtained
+employment in the Post Office, working for a few hours daily, and
+receiving 10s. per-week. He is a member of the Crimean and Indian
+Veterans' Association.
+
+A Bristol Post Office benefit society was established in March, 1861. It
+became the Bristol Letter Carriers' Sick Benefit Society in 1862, and
+was carried on under that title up to 1890 when it ceased.
+
+Early in the year of 1896, the remains of the late Thomas Rutley, one of
+the oldest of Bristol postmen, were interred at Greenbank Cemetery.
+About one hundred postmen, headed by the Post Office band, were in
+attendance to mark their sympathy, and respect to his memory. The Rev.
+Moffat Logan conducted the service. Such a mark of respect is not always
+accorded to deceased Post Office servants. The writer recollects on a
+bright summer day having attended the funeral at Highgate Cemetery of
+one of the oldest and most respected superintendents in the Post Office,
+London. The good man was so much liked by those who served under him
+that he had gained for himself the name of "Honest John," yet there was
+only one other official besides the writer to stand by his graveside.
+
+The postmen have a military band, composed of thirty members of their
+own staff. The primary object is to advance the art of music in the Post
+Office, and, secondarily, to provide concerts in the open spaces in
+Bristol for the benefit of the public. A grand concert is given by the
+band every year, which is usually attended by some 3,000 of the
+inhabitants, attracted chiefly by the popularity of the Post Office and
+by the fame of artistes so eminent as Madame Ella Russell, Madame Fanny
+Moody, Mr. Plunkett Greene, and others, who have from time to time been
+engaged.
+
+The "D" Company of the 1st Volunteer Battalion Gloucester Regiment is
+composed almost exclusively of members of the Bristol Post Office. For
+three years in succession, (1894-5-6), this company won the first prize
+in the drill competition and also first prize and challenge vase in the
+volley firing competition. The company challenge bowl and first prize,
+and the brigadier's cup and third prize in the Western District of
+England, were also won by the company during the same period. For many
+years the Bristol Post Office has had two out of the nine
+representatives of the battalion competing for the Queen's Prize. The
+company has also been well represented in all the battalion and county
+shooting matches. Of the eight battalion signallers, five are Post
+Office men, who have on several occasions held first place in the
+Volunteer service annual examinations.
+
+The postmen of Bristol maintain for the winter months two of the old
+veterans who are under the auspices of the Crimean and Indian Mutiny
+Veterans' Association.
+
+Mr. Goodenough Taylor, one of the proprietors of the _Times and Mirror_
+newspaper, has kindly given a Ten Guinea Challenge Cup, to be raced for
+by Bristol postmen who use bicycles in connection with their Post Office
+business of delivering and collecting letters. The cup has to be won
+three years, not necessarily in succession, before it becomes the
+postman's sole property. The terms under which the competition for the
+cup is held are as follows, viz.:--"Competitors to be postmen of any
+age or rank; appointed, unestablished, auxiliary, or sub-postmaster's
+assistant, of not less than two years' service, who have never won a
+prize in public competition. Competitors to be certified as having in
+the course of the preceding twelve months, under official sanction or
+direction, ridden 150 miles in the execution of their official duties,
+or to and from the office when attending duty. The race to be a handicap
+race of two miles, to take place on the Gloucestershire County Ground or
+other enclosure during each year. The postmaster, assisted by experts
+in the Post Office service, to be the handicapper. The handicap to be
+framed on points of age, physical ability, and regard to be had to the
+weight or kind of bicycle to be used in competition." Postman Newman,
+of Coalpit Heath, was the winner this year (1899).
+
+The postmen have a library, consisting now of some 700 volumes. It was
+started in 1892. The writer made an appeal through the local press for
+gifts of books to form the nucleus of a library for the postmen and
+telegraph messengers attached to the Bristol Post Office. This appeal
+was liberally and promptly responded to by the residents of Bristol and
+Clifton. Warmest thanks are due to the newspaper proprietors for their
+kindness in inserting paragraphs relating to the subject, as, but for
+their powerful co-operation in the matter, the movement could not have
+been brought to a successful issue. A well-known literary gentleman at
+Clifton gave eighty volumes, Mr. Harold Lewis, B.A., showed his interest
+in the movement by the donation of 200 copies; and Mr. J. W. Arrowsmith
+has frequently given fifty volumes at a time. The postmen themselves
+manage the library, and contribute small sums weekly towards its
+maintenance and further development.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+POST LETTER BOXES: POSITION, VIOLATION, PECULIAR USES.
+
+
+The three hundred and fifty pillar and wall letter boxes are placed at
+convenient points, regard being had to the wants of the immediate
+neighbourhood that each has to serve--to approach by paved crossings, to
+contiguity to a public lamp, to being out of the way of pedestrians and
+as far removed from mud-splashing as possible. At the same time, the
+inspectors endeavour to place the boxes so that they may be an
+attraction, rather than an eyesore, to the spot where erected.
+
+The sign of "The Pillar Box" has been given to a public-house before
+which a Post Office box stands. Occasionally the Post Office letter
+boxes are greatly misused. Some little time since a woman in Bristol was
+savage enough to drop oil of vitriol, nitric acid, and other dangerous
+fluids into the boxes. She even poured paraffin into the letter box at a
+post office, and dropped an ignited match in after it. A conflagration
+was only averted by the fortunate circumstance of the postman clearing
+the box just in time to extinguish the commencing fire. The woman's
+determination is evidenced from the fact that her hands were severely
+burned by the strong acid she used; but, notwithstanding this, she
+continued night after night to carry on her dastardly work. She was
+found out after much anxious watching, and having, on trial, been found
+guilty, she was sentenced by a lenient judge to six months'
+imprisonment. She would assign no reason for her incomprehensible
+behaviour even when asked by the judge in court. Not infrequently,
+mischievous children place lighted matches, rubbish, etc., in the Post
+Office letter boxes, and in the letter boxes of private houses and
+warehouses. The Post Office officials are always on the alert to
+discover the delinquents. It is desirable also that the public, in their
+own interests, should call the attention of postmen and the police at
+once to any case in which they may observe letter boxes being tampered
+with. It may not be generally known that offences of this kind are
+punishable by imprisonment under the Post Office Protection Act.
+
+A remarkable case was that of a servant who was a somnambulist, and who
+for some time wrote letters in her sleep, night after night, and took
+them to adjacent letter boxes to post. Sometimes she was fully attired,
+and at other times only partially so. As a rule, the letters were
+properly addressed, but the girl did not always place postage stamps
+upon them.
+
+Occasionally the postmen have to encounter the difficulties arising from
+a frost-bound letter box. Such a case occurred with a box situated on
+the summit of the Mendip Hills. The letter box and the wall in which the
+box is built were found by the postman to be covered with ice, caused by
+rain and snow having frozen on them. The door resisted all his efforts
+to open it, and he had to leave it for the night. On making another
+effort when morning came, it taxed his ingenuity and that of other
+interested and willing helpers to get the box open. Hot water was tried,
+paraffin was poured into the lock, and it was only after a hammer had
+been used and a fire in a movable grate had been applied for a time that
+the lid could be opened.
+
+A letter box erected in a brick pillar in a secluded spot on the East
+Harptree road, about a mile distant from any habitation, was, late one
+night, damaged to the extent of having its iron door completely smashed
+off, apparently either by means of a large stone which lay at its base
+when the violation was discovered, or by means of a hammer and jemmy.
+Although the adjacent ground, ditches, and hedges were searched, no
+trace of the iron door could be found. As three roysterers were known to
+have passed the box on the night in question, it was assumed that the
+damage was done by them out of pure mischief and not from any desire to
+rob Her Majesty's mails. Whether such were the case or not, they had the
+unpleasant experience of being locked up over the Sunday on suspicion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+RURAL DISTRICT SUB-POSTMASTERS. RURAL POSTMEN. INCIDENTS.
+
+
+The Bristol postal area is an extensive one, the distance from point to
+point being thirty miles, with width ranging from five to twelve miles.
+It is bounded on one side by the river Severn, from a point about five
+miles below Sharpness to a point close to Portishead; thence the
+boundary stretches across country to the Mendip Hills, up to Cheddar
+Cliffs; then from a point four miles north-east of Wells to
+Newton-St.-Loe, near Bath; across the river Avon, under Lansdown, thence
+in a line by Pucklechurch, Iron Acton, and Thornbury across to the
+starting-point on the Severn. The large rural area is for the greater
+part agricultural in character, but there are collieries and stone
+quarries in some few districts.
+
+At the Bristol town and rural sub-Post Offices there are 554 assistants
+of all kinds employed. Many rural sub-postmasters act as postmen; in
+the main it is a healthy occupation, and proves a very good antidote to
+sedentary employment, although there are hardships to be borne, as the
+toil has to be undergone in all weathers--the scorching sun of summer,
+the pitiless cold of winter--in rain, hail, and snow. In connection With
+the Early Closing Movement, at some of the outer Post Offices business
+is suspended at 5.0 on one day in the week--usually Wednesday.
+
+In the suburban and rural districts there are 105 sub-Post Offices, and
+78 of them are letter delivery offices, served by an aggregate number of
+226 postmen. Of the 78 districts, 42 have two daily deliveries 28 three,
+and 6 four, with about a corresponding number of collections.
+
+The sorting clerks and telegraphists at head-quarters gain some sort of
+acquaintance with sub-postmasters through daily communication by mail
+bag and wire; also in the passage of reports and counter-reports; but
+occasionally people performing postal work throughout the extensive
+Bristol district are brought into closer harmony and touch with each
+other by means of social functions, such as "outings" and Bristol
+Channel steamer trips, when town and country officials take their
+pastime in company, and the sub-postmasters and sub-postmistresses of
+the Somersetshire portion of the district get acquainted with those of
+the Gloucestershire side, and all with the head office officials. By
+these means of friendly intercourse and interchange of kindly feeling,
+the service is much benefited. As an indication of this exchange of
+courtesy, the felicitations exchanged by telegram when the first annual
+trip by steamer to Ilfracombe was taken ran thus:--
+
+"From Postmaster, Bristol.--Pleasant journey to you. Long may
+Sub-Postmasterly friendship continue."
+
+"From Sub-Postmasters at Ilfracombe.--Telegram received. Thanks for good
+wishes. Have just drank your good health. Pleasant trip. Regret your
+absence extremely.--Sub-Postmasters."
+
+The Bristol Post Office has only recently had electric light introduced,
+but the squire of East Harptree had long before set the good example of
+progress by having the Post Office in his village illuminated by
+electricity. In the Bristol area very many villages have their little
+counterpart of the huge combination shops in London, where the villager
+is enabled to procure everything that his modest income will allow him
+to purchase. It is at these village "Whiteleys" that the Post Office is
+generally to be found, and a surveying officer may soon become well
+versed in the qualities of bacon, cheese, bread, flour, candles, and get
+a knowledge of rakes, prongs, and besoms, without much difficulty. In
+other instances no business except that of Post Office work is carried
+on.
+
+The picture of the sub-Post Office at Cribbs Causeway, five miles from
+Bristol, may give our readers who are "in cities pent" an idea of a
+delightful place for the sale of postage stamps and postal orders and
+the distribution of letters. This unique Post Office has few houses
+anywhere near it, but it serves a large, albeit very sparsely populated,
+area. Some of its interest rests in the fact that it was formerly the
+half-way inn on the once important highway from Bristol to New Passage,
+for the ferry over the Severn into South Wales. Some of our elderly
+readers may probably recollect it as the stopping stage of the coaches
+which ran prior to the introduction of the railway system. The sub-Post
+Office, which stands on high ground, is held by two sisters, who went to
+it as a health resort from a farm in the low-lying Severn marsh. They
+act as postwomen, and brisk exercise and the early morning dew has
+brought such roses to their cheeks as would be envied by their Post
+Office sisters whose fate it is to reside in smoke-begrimed regions.
+
+[Illustration: CRIBBS CAUSEWAY POST OFFICE.]
+
+Although some of the Bristol district villages are situated at a long
+distance from town and remote from main roads, yet only one of the Post
+Offices presents the primitive condition of having a thatched roof. None
+of the rural postmen now avail themselves on their journeys of the
+services of that faithful creature, the donkey; but the last animal so
+used was on the road until 1890, when its master, poor Sims, the
+Congresbury to Shipham postman, shuffled off this mortal coil. Times
+change, and our manners change with them; so also do our tests for gold
+coins. At the Wrington Post Office there are brass testing weights, for
+sovereigns and half-sovereigns, inscribed "Royal Mint, 1843," such as
+have not been observed by the writer at any other Post Office, either in
+the Bristol district or in London. A certain sub-postmistress in the
+district has for many years been in the habit of keeping her sheets of
+reserve postage stamps in a large Family Bible. Not that she is
+irreverent--indeed, she is a pious woman,--but, being a lone widow, she
+has kept them in that manner for safety, as she imagines that no burglar
+would look for them in such a depository.
+
+[Illustration: MR. EDWARD BIDDLE.
+
+(_Sub-Postmaster of Rudgeway._)
+
+_Photographed by Mr. Protheroe, Narrow Wine Street, Bristol, from an oil
+painting._]
+
+A notable man in his day was Edward Biddle, on the Thornbury side of
+Bristol. Mr. Biddle was sub-postmaster of Rudgeway for over forty years,
+and occupied the post until his death in 1889, at the ripe age of 91
+years, when he was succeeded by his daughter, and she, in turn, was
+succeeded by his son, William Biddle, who still holds the appointment.
+Prior to becoming sub-postmaster, Mr. Edward Biddle was "Pike" keeper at
+Stone, and used to pay L752 per annum for his post. There he had to open
+his gate to no fewer than twenty mail coaches daily, on their way
+between Bristol and Gloucester. At Rudgeway he carried on the joint
+occupation of sub-postmaster and innkeeper, at a tavern where the Post
+Office business had been conducted for many years before he succeeded to
+it; but the innkeeping business had in course of time to be given up,
+under Post Office regulations. Mr. Elstone, of Alveston House, wrote
+expressing his satisfaction that the Post Office was to be carried on at
+a private house, and not as previously at a "roadside pothouse," which
+all the district considered a very improper place. At that time John
+Blann and other stage carriers drove their unwieldy waggons, drawn by
+four strong cart-horses at a walking pace, along the Gloucester turnpike
+road. The waggons were indeed the goods trains of olden times. The
+present sub-postmaster, the son of Edward Biddle, who has had for many
+years to use "Shanks's" pony in the delivery of letters, was engaged in
+olden times in going on horseback down to the Passage to take, in
+saddlebags, the mails for South Wales and receive them therefrom. As
+late as 1850, letters from Rudgeway for Bristol were impressed with a
+stamp thus:--
+
+ BRISTOL
+ 4 JA 50.
+ BY POST.
+
+Mr. James Tiley, the village blacksmith of Clutton, now an octogenarian,
+calls to mind that sixty years ago the letters for Clutton, Temple
+Cloud, Stowey, Bishop Sutton and adjacent districts were delivered from
+Old Down, a hamlet on the main coach road from Bath to Wells, distant
+from Tyburn Turnpike, London, 121 miles. Mr. Tiley has had the luxury of
+paying 10d. for a letter brought from London by the above means; and as
+it was dear to him at the time, it is dear to him now in another sense
+as a reminiscence of the past. Mr. Tiley recalls the sending of letters
+of the district by waggoners to Bristol or Bath to save the postage, and
+slyly remarks: "So stupid were the waggoners that as often as not they
+brought the letters back again, having forgotten to--what Post Office
+people now term--'properly dispose of them.'" Also that Joseph Tippett,
+a postman of the olden time, was brutally assaulted on Stowey Hill, and
+nearly lost his life and his letters. His assailants were discovered
+and were transported for life. The Old Down postman was timed to reach
+Temple Cloud Bridge at 12.0, and always blew horn or whistle to let the
+village schoolmaster know the time of day. During the Bristol riots the
+arrival of the mail every morning was eagerly awaited by persons far and
+near, anxious to hear the latest news.
+
+So recently as the year 1867, a postman had to trudge right away from
+Bristol to the distant village of Chew Stoke, having to breast the steep
+hill of Dundry and pass through Chew Magna on his way. All the letters
+and newspapers then delivered at Bishopsworth, Dundry, Chew Magna and
+Chew Stoke were carried by this man. Now, with the introduction of the
+parcel post and a cheaper letter post, and consequently increased
+weight, the morning mail is carried in a mail cart, and that service is
+supplemented by two or three other despatches to Chew Magna and Chew
+Stoke by train _via_ Pensford. The hamlets of Breach Hill, Moreton and
+Herons Green were at that time unserved by the postman officially, and
+if delivered privately by him he charged for them at the rate of an
+extra penny each. The residents in those outlying districts who did not
+get their letters delivered in that way, and who did not call for them
+at the Chew Stoke Post Office, usually obtained them--two, three, or
+four days old--from the postman on Sundays, who stationed himself at the
+church door to oblige such worshippers. Some of the older country
+postmen say that in by-gone days the poor people, unable to read
+themselves, considered it part of a postman's duty to read their letters
+for them, and they looked for sympathy from the postmen in case of
+receipt of bad news. The Chew Stoke postman had a walk, in and out, of
+over twenty miles, and had to carry whatever load there was for the
+route. The pay attached to the post was small. This was in the good (?)
+days of not so long ago, but the postman who then had to take the
+journey is by no means anxious for a return to them, for now he receives
+double the amount of pay then allowed. He was out from five o'clock in
+the morning till seven or eight o'clock at night; but now he performs
+his eight hours' duty straight off, and has, therefore, more time at
+home for his private purposes.
+
+When, about eight years since, there was a deep fall of snow in this
+district, the West Town postman, who is likewise sub-postmaster, very
+considerably added to his labours by carrying tea, sugar, medicine, and
+even bread to the people on the Mendips, who were snowed up and deserted
+by baker, butcher, grocer, and indeed by everyone except the faithful
+Queen's messenger. The floods of November, 1894, which proved very
+disastrous in the West of England, interfered in no small degree with
+Post Office arrangements in the rural districts around Bristol. In some
+villages the roads were submerged from three to four feet, and it was
+impossible for the public to get to the letter boxes, the postmen and
+postwomen being, perhaps, the greatest sufferers. In order to avoid
+flooded roads, it was necessary to change routes and make long detours.
+Many postmen were compelled to wade through the water waist deep, whilst
+others had to be driven through in horse and cart. The inhabitants and
+farmers in many places kindly lent their horses and carts for the
+purpose, and but for these kindnesses the letters would have been
+delayed for many hours. In spite of all difficulties, the letters were
+generally delivered without much delay, and only in a few cases had the
+letters to be held over for any length of time until the waters had
+subsided.
+
+[Illustration: LETTER BOX AT WINTERBOURNE.]
+
+A tit made her nest in the bottom of a Post Office letter box at
+Winterbourne, near Bristol, laid her eggs, and notwithstanding that
+letters were posted in the box and that the box was cleared by the
+postman everyday, the bird tenaciously held to her nest and brought up
+five young tits, two of which perished in their attempts to get out of
+the box by means of the small posting aperture through which their
+mother had squeezed so frequently, carrying with her all the materials
+for the nest. The three survivors flew off one day when the door of the
+box was purposely left open for a time by the obliging postman portrayed
+in the picture.
+
+That all is not gold that glitters has been recently brought home to
+three or four of the sub-postmasters in the Bristol district, a
+"sharper" having presented coins gilded to represent sovereigns and
+half-sovereigns, and obtained Postal Orders in exchange for them.
+Through the vigilance of the Bristol police the offender was eventually
+taken into custody, and, having been sentenced at the Assizes to six
+months' imprisonment, he had plenty of time to reflect on his offences.
+A bright, shining new farthing was received at the Bristol head office,
+sent inadvertently in a remittance from a sub-office as a
+half-sovereign, and mixed up with coins of that value, only to be
+detected, however, by the vigilant check clerk. The sub-postmaster who
+accepted it in error for a coin of more precious metal, and did not
+discover the mistake even in preparing the remittance, had to bear the
+loss.
+
+One sub-postmaster, who has now departed this life, was wont to furnish
+his explanations and reports in rhyme, a course which was tolerated on
+account of its singularity and of the writer's zeal and known devotion
+to his duty. The following is an example:--
+
+To the POSTMASTER OF BRISTOL:
+
+ "I willingly answer the question
+ Respecting the length of the track
+ From Shirehampton P.O. to Kingsweston
+ House front door, or lodge at the back;
+ But respecting the relative merits
+ Of back door, or door at the front,
+ As delivery door, I aver it's
+ A question I cannot but shunt.
+ To return to the question of distance:
+ Suppose that the birds of the air,
+ Sworn in as Post Office assistants,
+ To Kingsweston would messages bear:
+ As straight through their skiey dominions
+ They flew from front door to front door,
+ The length of the track of their pinions
+ In yards would be 1224.
+ When a featherless biped is bearer,
+ And through the lone woods his path picks,
+ The feet of this weary wayfarer
+ Cover yards quite 1466.
+ Should the wight have a key, there's a second
+ Way thro' the sunk fence's locked gate,
+ And then his poor feet must be reckoned
+ To make yards 1388.
+ As regards the back door, I pass by it;
+ The back lodge itself is much less
+ Than a mile, howsomdever you try it,
+ By Shirehampton Post Office Express.
+ I do not pretend to correctness,
+ To one yard or even a dozen;
+ No need for extreme circumspectness,
+ The margin's too ample to cozen.
+ I'm obliged by your flattering reference,
+ And when you've another dispute on,
+ I shall still be, with all proper deference,
+ Your obedient Servant,--G. NEWTON."
+
+The turnpike gates in the neighbourhood of Bristol were abolished in
+October, 1867, and the consequence was that the proprietors of the
+various omnibuses by which day mail bags were conveyed to and from
+several of the districts around Bristol applied for, and obtained, a
+money payment in lieu of the tolls, the exemption, from which had formed
+the sole remuneration for the services performed.
+
+The Bristol mail carts running to the rural districts, by permission of
+the Post Office, carry for the newspaper proprietors bundles of papers,
+weighing on an average on ordinary days 40 lbs., and on Saturdays 80
+lbs. The enterprise of the Bristol newspaper proprietors in circulating
+by private means the many thousands of the newspapers which they daily
+print is evidenced, from the circumstance that they find it necessary to
+commit to the agency of the Post Office only about 160 copies for
+distribution, and that chiefly in remote rural districts.
+
+Sub-postmasters in the rural districts of Bristol attain to great ages.
+The sub-postmaster of Mangotsfield, who had long since passed
+three-score years and ten, had his cross to bear, having at 60 entirely
+lost his eyesight. Although blind, and unable to work in consequence, he
+quaintly appeared in his apron to the end, and said that having worn it
+for so many years he did not feel happy without it. A daughter acted as
+his deputy, and mitigated, as far as possible, his hard lot. At his
+funeral some hundreds of people, representing various religious and
+other bodies, attended to pay their last tribute of respect to him.
+
+At Bitton, a village midway between Bristol and Bath, there died
+Sub-postmaster James Brewer, in the 87th year of his age, and in the
+fifty-seventh year of his Post Office service. It was more pleasant to
+enter this Post Office and find the old man calmly smoking his
+churchwarden pipe before the fire, cheery and chatty, than to have such
+a welcome as that afforded at another office by the exhibition on the
+Post Office counter of a miniature coffin and artificial wreaths for
+graves. Another worthy of local Post Office fame has lately passed away
+in the person of Join Warburton, aged 84, who for thirty years was the
+sub-postmaster of Henbury, and who for five years was his daughter's
+adviser after her succession to the appointment. The sub-postmaster of
+the village of High Littleton lost an arm some fifty years ago, but
+notwithstanding that affliction he manages with adroitness to sell
+postage stamps and issue postal orders to the public. This will not be
+considered a very great feat, considering that he has been for years a
+crack one-handed shot, and even now, at the age of 70, can bowl over a
+pheasant or a rabbit quite as readily as many of our sportsmen who have
+the use of both arms.
+
+Sub-postmistresses of great longevity are also to be found. One dame
+(Martha Pike), now in her 93rd year, represented the Department until
+quite recently in the charming little village of Wraxall. When nearly
+90 years old she had a three hour letter round every morning up hill and
+down dale, and she even trudged a mile and a half to fetch a letter and
+parcel mail from the railway station. The sub-postmistress of Stoke
+Bishop died at the age of 84; she and her father had held the Post
+Office in the village for over fifty years. An equally remarkable case
+was that of Hannah Vowles, the sub-postmistress of Frenchay, who, after
+performing the active duties of that position in the village of Frenchay
+for forty-seven years, resigned when within five years of 100 years old.
+In her youth she lived for some time in the West Indies; but she gave up
+her employment there in order to return home to support her mother, who
+was 90 years of age when she died. Mrs. Hannah was succeeded in the
+office of sub-postmistress by Miss Kate Vowdes, a relation, who had
+already been postwoman in the same district forty-two years!
+
+[Illustration: HANNAH BREWER.
+
+(_Postwoman._)]
+
+Hannah Brewer is one of the Bristol Post Office worthies. Her father was
+the sub-postmaster of the village of Bitton alluded to herein. Hannah
+commenced to deliver letters in the hamlets and at the farmhouses near
+Bitton when a mere child, and continued to do so during all the years
+our gracious Sovereign has sat on the throne. Recently, however, she had
+to give up the work, as, having attained the advanced age of 72 years
+and walked her quarter of a million of miles, she felt that she ought
+to take life more easily than hitherto. In distance her round was eleven
+miles daily, and the route was a very trying one on account of the steep
+hills she had to traverse, and of great exposure to the sun in summer,
+and to the wind, frost, and snow in winter. It may be interesting to
+record that Hannah Brewer, although she had to serve a district sparsely
+populated, was never robbed, stopped, nor molested in any way. She was
+the recipient of the first official waterproof clothing issued to
+postwomen in England, and in her picture she is represented as wearing
+it. She only occasionally made visits even to places so near as Bath or
+Bristol, and was, as a rule, a stay at home.
+
+She was not a great reader of the newspapers, but persons on her round
+looked to her as an oracle, and derived information from her as to
+passing events. Hannah naively says that, as regards Christmas boxes,
+she fared very well in olden times, but they were not so plentiful in
+her later years. Hannah, through her devotion to her father when he was
+alive, and through her assiduous attention to her duties as a humble
+servant of the Crown, had gained the respect of all those who knew her,
+both in her native village and on the long round she daily had to
+traverse. As she served the Post Office throughout her long life (her
+memory carrying her back to the days when the letters reached Bitton by
+mail coach and a "single" letter from London cost 10d.), it is
+gratifying that in her old age, when unable to continue to do her daily
+round, the Lords of the Treasury, under her exceptional circumstances,
+granted her half-pay pension, a sum which, with her savings, will serve
+to maintain her until the end of her days. The writer has had few more
+pleasurable duties than that which he undertook of presenting Hannah, in
+her neat and trim cottage, with her first pension warrant.
+
+At the celebration of the Queen's Diamond Jubilee in the village, the
+opportunity was taken, in the midst of the festivities, to make a
+presentation of an elegant marble clock and purse to Miss Brewer. The
+inscription ran: "Presented during Her Majesty's Diamond Jubilee,
+together with a purse of money, by the inhabitants of the postal
+district of Bitton, Gloucestershire, to Miss Hannah Brewer, postwoman,
+upon her retirement, having served this office from the commencement of
+Queen Victoria's reign."
+
+Even Post Office surveyors are sometimes the subject of little jokes on
+the part of their subordinates. An assistant surveyor, when testing a
+rural postman's walk, said that if he had arranged the round originally,
+he should have taken a shortcut across the fields to a certain little
+hamlet so as to serve it before instead of after a more distant place,
+when the postman drily said that he should not have done anything of the
+kind, as there was a rhine about 18 ft. wide and very deep, which could
+not well be got over or through, and, turning to the surveyor, he
+remarked: "Evidently you never were a postman." The humour of this
+incident lies in the fact that the surveyors have always been drawn from
+the elite of the Service. A certain imperious surveyor visited a
+sub-office for the purpose of reprimanding the sub-postmaster for some
+delinquency, and after soundly rating the individual he addressed, and
+refusing to hear a single word in explanation, he, when his harangue
+was over, was coolly informed that he had made a slight mistake, as the
+circumstance referred to another sub-office altogether.
+
+On a certain occasion recently, on entering a Post Office the writer
+heard proceeding from a back room a voice, recognisable as that of the
+sub-postmaster, shouting out a greeting in his (the writer's) Christian
+name: "Come in, Robert." Well, the sub-postmaster thought he saw through
+the partly-curtained glass in the door a friend of that name, and meant
+no disrespect to his surveyor-postmaster.
+
+On calling at another little Post Office on a Saturday, the aged
+sub-postmistress was washing her stone floor--down on her knees in
+business-like attitude. Without looking up, her greeting to the writer
+was: "Halloa! I thought you had been to Jericho. You have not been to
+see me for such a long time!" That salutation was rather embarrassing;
+but on getting to the perpendicular the old lady was the confused party,
+as she had thought her visitor was a local resident who occasionally
+looked in to have a cheery word with her.
+
+It would seem that postal improvements in the Bristol district have been
+carried almost as far as is needful; indeed, in one district, not seven
+miles from the city, contemplated improvements whereby letters would be
+delivered an hour earlier in the morning and might be posted two hours
+later at night, and a day mail in and out be afforded, were declined by
+the parish authorities in council and by memorial from the villagers
+generally. In this rural hollow the people are very clannish, and rather
+than let their postwoman suffer a loss of two shillings a week, which
+the change involved, they were content to forego improved postal
+facilities, and were not greatly stirred by the "lasinesse of posts" as,
+according to history, was King James of old.
+
+While Bristol is ever expanding and while splendid buildings are being
+erected, there are not wanting places within a short distance of the
+ancient city where there are signs of decadence, as indicated by houses
+unoccupied and cottages in ruins, and by shrinkage in the number of
+letters. At Stanton Drew, where some thirty large stones alone remain to
+mark a site where there probably stood a splendid Druidical Temple, the
+postal arrangements a few years since were not in a satisfactory
+condition. Not unlike the story which has recently been going the round
+of the newspapers, that a sub-postmaster of an Oxfordshire village fixed
+this notice up: "Have gone fishing. Will be back in time to sell
+stamps," the sub-postmistress of this Somersetshire hamlet went away for
+days without putting up any notice whatever, and left her son to supply
+the inhabitants with postage stamps when he got home in the evening from
+his work as an agricultural labourer. Still, people did not complain, so
+that they may be regarded as accessories to the sub-postmistress's
+delinquencies. There was, however, a postal super-session in that
+village!
+
+There is still in the rural service a postman who labours under the
+disabilities of having only one arm and of being unable to read or
+write. He has not a very extensive delivery, and so his pockets are made
+to do duty in the place of the faculty of reading. The left breast
+pocket indicates that letters placed in it are for Cliff Farm, those in
+the right breast pocket for Rush Hill Farm, several other pockets
+serving in like manner.
+
+From very old official books sent into store on the change of holders of
+sub-offices, it is noticeable that the writing of fifty years ago was
+much superior to that of the present day, indicating that
+sub-postmasters of olden time either took more interest in caligraphy
+than their successors, or possibly had more leisure in which to make the
+necessary entries than is afforded in the present period of high
+pressure.
+
+'Tis strange that it was so, as at the time the steel pen had not ousted
+the quill. Even so short a time as forty years since a new intrant to
+the Post Office, hailing from the Emerald Isle, had, like all other
+new-comers, to enter his name and address in the Order Book on his first
+introduction to St. Martin's-le-Grand. A steel pen was handed to him,
+with which he dallied for a time, and when asked why he did not proceed,
+said: "Sure, I was waiting for a feather."
+
+The institution for the care of consumption started in this country, and
+known as Nordrach-upon-Mendip, is in the Bristol postal district at one
+of its most distant points on the range of the Mendip Hills, at an
+altitude of 850 feet above sea level. It has already played an important
+part as regards the Bristol Post Office, inasmuch as a consumptive
+telegraph clerk has benefited considerably from the new treatment, and
+has indeed left the institution as cured. It is not generally known that
+until recently there existed a small Convalescent Home on the Mendips,
+but "Cosy Corner," founded and maintained by Sir Edward Hill, K.C.B.,
+stood there as such, and it served a good part as regards a postal
+servant. A postman employed at the Bristol railway station as mail
+porter, who had suffered from a serious attack of typhoid fever, and who
+had been verily at death's door, passed several weeks at this rural
+retreat, and derived such benefit from the kind treatment he received
+and from the bracing air of the district that he quite recovered from
+his ailment and is now in robust health. "Cosy Corner" has now been
+affiliated to Nordrach-upon-Mendip.
+
+The rule of the Service is that coins, postage stamps, and other
+articles of value picked up in a sorting office are regarded as treasure
+trove and have to be handed over to the authorities for disposal; but a
+letter carrier's round can hardly be regarded in the light of a Post
+Office, and so a postman of the Thornbury district who at Aust Cliff,
+picked up a well-preserved bronze coin with the image and superscription
+of Claudius Caesar (A.D. 41-54) did not consider himself called upon to
+give it up to the sub-postmaster, but disposed of it for the sum of 15s.
+6d. The purchaser presented it to the Leicester Museum.
+
+Tradition hath it that Miss Hannah More, the celebrated authoress and
+philanthropist, when residing (1770) at Wrington, near Bristol, in the
+churchyard of which place her remains now repose, made an arrangement
+with the postman of the period whereby on passing along the road near
+her residence he was to signal to her when any event of importance had
+occurred. Her sitting and bedroom windows commanded a view of the walk
+near which the postman had to pass, so that she could see him coming,
+and she always hurried down to the wicket-gate in readiness to meet him
+when he put up his flag. A son of the postman, now alive, remembers well
+that his father told him that he had given the signal on the death of
+Queen, Caroline. It was outside the postman's function, to wave the red
+flag with which Mistress Hannah, had provided him, but Post Office
+matters were not carried on so strictly in those days as under the
+present regime. The Wrington postman obtained the news about important
+passing events from the mail-man who rode through the village on his way
+from Bristol to Axbridge. George Vowles, who died twenty-six years ago,
+at the ripe age of 88 years, was the mail-man who conveyed to the
+villages on his way the news of the battle of Waterloo, brought down
+from London by the mail coach, which had been decorated with laurels and
+flowers in honour of the great event.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+GENERAL FREE DELIVERY OF LETTERS.
+
+
+No stone has been left unturned in the endeavour to afford a free
+delivery of letters at the door of every house in the district; and at
+last all houses and cottages, even in the remotest localities, have been
+reached, and the woodman, the gamekeeper, and the lone cottager now
+receive a daily visit from the postman. In visiting out of the way
+places of the kind with a view to arranging a delivery, the surveyor has
+to look out for dogs. A certain warren house in this district affords a
+typical case. It is far from the ordinary haunts of man, and was without
+an official delivery on account of its extreme inaccessibility. The
+approach is through a deep gorge, known as Goblin Combe, and the path to
+the house is precipitous. The gamekeeper residing there had to send to a
+farmhouse a mile and a quarter distant for his letters, which the
+obliging farmer had consented to take in for him. The attempts of the
+staff to arrange a method of delivery by postmen had long been baffled.
+At the time when the writer went to view the place there was a rumour in
+the neighbourhood that, owing to serious depredations by poachers,
+fierce dogs roamed the enclosed warren; and on passing out on to the
+warren from the wood corner, there was observed standing on a wall near
+the house what in the distance and misty morn, appeared to be a large
+bloodhound, and so the advance had to be made warily. The attendant
+rural postman was armed with a riding whip, on which his grip tightened,
+for he had already been four times bitten by dogs, as the scars on his
+hand testified, and he desired to guard himself against another attack.
+At last, as the place was neared, the object of distrust was found to
+be--a large goat! Another out-of-the-way place in the same
+neighbourhood, also unserved by the postman, was a woodman's house in a
+dense wood, which, with its bowling-green, is said once to have been
+used by "Bristol bloods" of old time as a safe retreat where they could
+indulge in a little business connected with the prize ring and cock
+fighting. That the Duke of Norfolk's liberal policy in Her Majesty's
+Diamond Jubilee year has proved a boon and a blessing to many residents
+in isolated spots is indicated, for instance, by what a poor woman
+living in a wild district stated. She had recently to trudge the whole
+way from her house to Bristol, a distance of eight miles out and eight
+miles back, while a letter which would have obviated her journey had
+been lying undelivered for days at a Post Office only two miles off.
+
+Blaize Castle, which is within four miles of the Head Post Office, was
+singularly enough almost the last habitation in the Bristol district
+which was granted a free delivery of letters daily, for until 1898 the
+postman in his official capacity had never penetrated to that
+rock-elevated and remote part of the Blaize Woods where the castle
+stands. That reproach to the Bristol district has now been removed, and
+the custodians of the castle have obtained their rights as citizens of
+the great kingdom in having their letters delivered at the door daily by
+the Postmaster-General's representative. It was a difficult matter to
+find out all the houses at which the postman did not call, and this
+particular castle, which is now only occupied by caretakers, was not
+notified by the rural postman, as the occupiers had signified to him
+that they did not care for a delivery and were quite satisfied if the
+letters were left in the village till called for. The circumstance may
+be of interest to Bristolians, from the fact that Blaize Castle is
+spoken of by many but is seen by very few. Its flagstaff is visible from
+some little distance, but the castle itself can scarcely be discerned
+through its wooded surroundings, even from the far-famed Arbutus Walk,
+which is separated from it by a deep gorge. The castle is situated on a
+lofty plateau in the midst of the large woods. Close to it is a sheer
+perpendicular rock, three hundred feet high, known as "The Giant's
+leap." The castle is said to have derived its name from St. Blaisius,
+the Spanish patron of wool-combers, to whom a chapel was dedicated on a
+hill in the grounds where the castle now stands, and where there was
+once a Roman encampment. The interest attaching to this castle is
+enhanced from a postal point of view by the circumstance that the son of
+the lady who owns the property married a daughter of the late
+Postmaster-General, the Right Hon. H. C. Raikes.
+
+Mr. Raikes was one of the hardest working of Postmasters-General. So
+diligent indeed was he, that almost nightly, when the House of Commons
+was sitting, the right hon. gentleman, after all other Members had gone
+home, retired to his official room and went through the papers which had
+been sent up from the Post Office for his consideration. So absorbed
+would he become in the documents, which he read carefully through from
+end to end, so that he might judge from his own standpoint and not from
+that of his official advisers, that he would sit well into the small
+hours of the morning, whilst that patient and most obliging of
+officials, the postmaster of the House, Mr. Pike, kept weary vigil,
+waiting to take the despatch-bag to the Post Office in the City before
+he went home to his well-earned rest. Mr. Raikes's invariably clear and
+even writing betokened that, long past the hour for bed as the time
+might be, he never had any idea of doing his work in a hurry. He was
+probably known to many of the citizens of Bristol, through his frequent
+visits to a mansion on the Westbury side of the Downs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+LOCAL RETURNED LETTER OFFICE.
+
+
+The Bristol Post Office has its returned letter branch, with which
+almost all the towns in the West of England, and South Wales are
+affiliated for "dead letter" work. Through its agency over a million
+letters and postal packets are returned to senders annually. Book
+packets and circulars form 50 per cent. of the total number, and of
+these only 75 per cent. can be restored to the persons who posted them.
+Over 10,000 letters containing property are recorded in the ledgers, and
+they represent a total value in cash, bank-notes, bills, cheques,
+postage stamps, etc., of about L36,000 per annum, nearly the whole of
+which reaches the hands of the senders. About 400 letters containing
+money orders, and 1,700 letters containing value, compulsorily
+registered, are returned in the course of the year. Amongst the
+curiosities of returned letter office experience may be mentioned the
+following. A letter was received thus peculiarly addressed:--"Miss ----,
+4, Pleasant View, in that beautiful city which charms even eyes familiar
+with the masterpieces of Bramanto and Palladio, and which the genius of
+Anstey and of Smollett, of Frances Burney and of Jane Austen has made
+classic ground." The pundits in the returned letter office who deal with
+derelict letters properly divined that the place so glowingly described
+was Bath, and issuing the letter accordingly, it was duly delivered in
+the fair city.
+
+A packet was received simply addressed "Post Office, Bristol, to be
+called for." The contents were an army reserve man's discharge papers
+and pension application forms. The application bore evidence that it
+referred to Lichfield, and the packet was accordingly sent to that
+military depot. Two or three days afterwards an old soldier called at
+the Bristol office for his letter, and could not possibly understand why
+it had been opened in the returned letter branch, and the contents sent
+to Lichfield. His fury was unbounded, and he consigned all and sundry to
+Hades. His papers were soon obtained for him from Lichfield, and his
+gratitude at getting them, was as effusively manifested as his
+disappointment had been in not finding the papers awaiting him on first
+application. His thanks were conveyed in the following terse
+communication:--
+
+"Dear Boss,--A thousand pardons, everything comes right to those who
+wait. Patience is a virtue.
+
+ "Obt servt,
+ W. H. ----."
+
+"Sir," wrote a Bristol citizen on a postcard, "I have lost a ingine off
+3 gine oneing to the delay of a post care wich Mr. ---- send of wine ts
+plaa to ingury and abould youre turly I ----, 10, ---- lane rielence
+Bristol." It was not at first apparent what the writer of the card
+actually required, but by degrees it was made out that what he meant
+was:--"I have lost an engagement of 3 guineas owing to the delay of a
+postcard which Mr. ---- sent, of Wine Street. Please to enquire and
+oblige, yours truly, I. ----, 10, ---- Lane, Residence, Bristol."
+
+Danger lurks in unexpected places, even for Post Office cleaners.
+Packages which have remained in the returned letter office for the
+prescribed period have to be destroyed from time to time. Sometimes
+they contain chemicals. It chanced that at Bristol one of the charwomen,
+when pouring out hot water into a large waste bucket, was startled by
+the emission from the bucket of a fierce, bright, flame which badly
+burned her hand and caused her no small fright. The flame lasted for a
+minute. The fumes were overpowering, and unpleasantly pervaded the whole
+telegraph gallery above. Upon investigation, it appeared that another
+charwoman who had been instructed to "dispose" of a bottle of sodium
+amalgam, had carelessly emptied it into the waste bucket with the
+startling result narrated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Post Office is ever progressing, and in course of time there will be
+further particulars for a future writer to relate concerning the
+"Bristol Royal Mail."
+
+THE END
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Note: Discovered publisher's punctuation errors have been
+corrected. In addition, the following spelling errors have been
+corrected:
+
+p. 22: 6th instant intead[instead] of on the first of the month. The
+
+p. 136: in the chair, the Post Office is again roproved[reproved]
+
+p. 163: about 30,000 letters. Birminghan[Birmingham] comes next in
+
+p. 229: spoken of the disclipine[discipline] and training telegraph
+
+p. 283: Office, hailng[hailing] from the Emerald Isle, had, like all
+
+p. 164: pension or gratuity is given. The apppointment[appointment]
+
+p. 112: Post Office now was was[delete second 'was'] the centre of
+
+p. 153: not [been] offered, would most likely have been sent
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bristol Royal Mail, by R. C. Tombs
+
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