Catcher pouch
A catcher pouch was a mail bag used by Railway Post Offices of the nineteenth century and the early twentieth century.[1] Its use was limited to exchanges onto moving trains. The specially constructed catcher pouch was grabbed by the catcher mechanism in the passing railway car[2] and the catcher pouch would release from the holding rings on the mail crane.[3][4] This technique was known as "mail on-the-fly". Starting in the 1870s the use of this technique of the Railway Mail Service was an important issue in the United States. It was a popular technique and the backbone of the United States Postal Service through the 1930s.[5][upper-alpha 1]
Mail on-the-fly technique
When the mail clerk of the Railway Post Office car grabbed the catcher pouch on the mail crane he would at the same time kick out the outgoing mail for delivery to that village. The idea behind the catcher pouch was that there could be an exchange of mail to villages too small to justify the train stopping.[6] The complete transfer technique (tossing out the outgoing mail a second before grabbing the catcher pouch) required much skill and potentially could cause harm or even death for those not trained properly.[7] Another reason why the catcher pouch and mail crane were developed is so the train did not have to slow down just for the exchange of mail (Old School method).[5]
The mail on-the-fly was not a smooth operating technique.[8] One problem with the technique was that the postal clerk had to pay close attention when he raised the train's catcher arm. If it was raised too early there was a chance of hitting and destroying switch targets, telegraph poles, and railway semaphore signals, as well as the train's mail catcher arm. If the clerk was too late in raising the train's catcher arm, he might miss the catcher pouch altogether.[9]
In the United Kingdom as early as 1855 an apparatus for snatching mailbags on-the-fly and delivering mail without stopping a train was in use at Slough, England. It continued in service until 1939.[10]
Nineteenth century regulations
Catcher pouches could not be used for any other purpose. The catcher pouch was to be used only for letters (sometimes newspapers were an exception). The maximum weight of a filled catcher pouch was to be 50 pounds. The catcher pouch was to be locked and placed upside down on the mail crane no sooner than 10 minutes before the scheduled arrival of the Mail Train. The catcher pouch was to be tied in the middle before it was to be transferred. If a small amount of mail, it should be put in the lower half below the tie strap. If a large amount of mail, it should be divided equally between the upper half and the lower half of the catcher pouch.[11]
Construction
The catcher pouch is a specialized form of sack made of an extra tough canvas material and had metal rings on each end so they could attach to the arm of a railway mail bag crane. The body of the pouch was strengthened by leather bindings both at the top and bottom. A Registered Mail pouch came also with a leather bottom and had a special postal lock to secure the contents. A leather strap was secured around the center of the canvas body of the catcher pouch when it was readied to be snatched by a passing train's mail hook.[12]
See also
- mail bag
- Mail hook
- mail pouch
- mail sack
- mail satchel
- mochila
- Owney (dog)
- portmanteau
- Travelling Post Office and Travelling Post Offices in the United Kingdom
Footnotes
- ↑ As the United States Postal Service undergoes its fiscal crisis in the second decade of the 21st Century, it is well to note that these are not entirely new problems. A national pick up and delivery system to remote and small locales is a fiscally challenging model. "A Congressional Investigation of the United States Post Office Department in 1900 disclosed that postal expeditures were not and, in some cases, could not be apportioned to revenues. A remarkable anomaly in Maine, at the intersection of mail bags and a printing press, provided, at the time, a basis for costing questions of policy and regulation and, for us now, an understanding of the postal commons in its Golden Age."DeBlois, Diane; Harris, Robert Dalton. "It’s in the Bag" – The Shape of Turn-of-the-Century Mail". Retrieved August 16, 2012.
References
Notes
- ↑ Romanski, Fred J. (Fall 2005). "The "Fast Mail": A History of the U.S. Railway Mail Service"". Prologue Magazine (Smithsonian National Postal Museum): 1–6.
- ↑ Melius p. 40
- ↑ Scheer, Frank. "Railway Post Office Lingo". Guide and Glossary of Terms for Mobile Unit Substitutes, Railway Mail Service Library. Eastern Illinois University. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
- ↑ Cushing, Marshall Henry (1892). Story of our post office: the greatest government department in all its phases (Google eBooks). Boston, Massachusetts: A.M. Thayer. p. 116. Retrieved August 15, 2012.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Pope, Nancy (December 2007). "Railway Mail Crane". Former Object of the Month. National Postal Museum, Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
- ↑ Cushing, Marshall (1893). The Story of Our Post Office: The Greatest Government Department in all its Phases. Boston, Massachusetts: A.M. Thayer & Co. p. 59. at Internet archive
- ↑ DeBlois, Diane; Harris, Robert Dalton. "Constant Motion: The Job of Railway Post Office Clerks Teaching Ideas" (pdf). Teaching with Primary Sources. Smithsonian Institution; Eastern Illinois University. p. 4. Retrieved August 15, 2012.
- ↑ Collins, Ronnie. "The "Mail Catcher"". Retrieved August 16, 2012.
- ↑ "Mail-on-the-fly". National Postal Museum, Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
- ↑ EARLY PUBLIC SERVICES
- ↑ The Postal laws and regulations (Google eBook), United States. Post Office Department, G.P.O. 1893, pp. 239-240
- ↑ DeBlois, Diane; Harris, Robert Dalton. "It’s in the Bag" – The Shape of Turn-of-the-Century Mail". Retrieved August 16, 2012.
Sources
- Melius, Louis (1917). The American postal service: history of the postal service from the earliest times. The American system described with full details of operation. Washington, D.C.: National Capital Press. Retrieved August 15, 2012. at Internet Archive
- Romanski, Fred J. (Fall 2005). "The Fast Mail: A History of the U.S. Railway Mail Service". Prologue Magazine (Washington, DC: Library of Congress) 37 (3): 1–6.
Further reading
- Bergman, Edwin B. (1980) 29 Years to Oblivion, The Last Years of Railway Mail Service in the United States, Mobile Post Office Society, Omaha, Nebraska.
- Crissy, Forrest (December 1902). "The Traveling Post-Office". The World's Work: A History of Our Time V: 2873–2880. Retrieved 2009-07-10.
- Culbreth, Ken (2007). The railway mail clerk and the highway post office: when the mail really worked: the story of the postal service's elite. Victoria, B.C, Canada: Trafford Publishing. ISBN 9781412202275.
- Cushing, Marshall (1893). The Story of Our Post Office: The Greatest Government Department in all its Phases. Boston, Massachusetts: A.M. Thayer & Co. at Internet archive
- Long, Bryant Alden (1951). Mail by Rail. New York: Simmons-Boardman Publishing Corporation.
- National Postal Transport Association. (1956) MAIL IN MOTION, Railway Mail Service Library, Boyce, Virginia. Portion available as a video clip at http://www.railwaymailservicelibrary.org/videos/MIM-01.MPG
- Romanski, Fred J. The Fast Mail, History of the Railway Mail Service, Prologue Vol. 37 No. 3, Fall 2005, College Park, Maryland.
- Pennypacker, Bert The Evolution of Railway Mail, National Railway Bulletin Vol. 60 No. 2, 1995, Philadelphia.
- Meyer, Henry A. (1958). "Railroad Postmarks of the U.S.], 1861-1886". Retrieved August 21, 2012.
- U.S. Post Office Department. (1956) MEN AND MAIL IN TRANSIT, Railway Mail Service Library, Boyce, Virginia. Portion available as a video clip at http://www.railwaymailservicelibrary.org/videos/m&mit01.MPG
- Wilking, Clarence R. (1985). The Railway Mail Service United States Mail Railway Post Office (MSWord). Railway Mail Service Library.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to mail bags. |
- Mail on-the-fly 1903 video from Library of Congress (notice the clerk tossing the outgoing mail a moment before receiving the catcher pouch.)
- At the Smithsonian National Postal Museum:
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