How the Post Office created America A history

Winifred Gallagher

Book - 2016

Discover the surprising role of the postal service in our nation's political, social, economic, and physical development. The founders established the post office before they had even signed the Declaration of Independence, and for a very long time it represented the government for most citizens. The post became the catalyst of the nation's transportation grid, from the stagecoach lines to the airlines, and the lifeline of the great migration from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Gallagher traces its origins and leaders and describes its role in every major event in American history, from the Revolutionary War to the dawn of the Internet age.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Penguin Press 2016.
Language
English
Main Author
Winifred Gallagher (author)
Physical Description
326 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 291-315) and index.
ISBN
9781594205002
  • Introduction: Why the Post Office Matters
  • 1. Inventing the Government
  • 2. Building the Postal Commons
  • 3. Moving the Mail
  • 4. The Politicized Post
  • 5. Crisis and Opportunity
  • 6. The Personal Post
  • 7. Growing the Communications Culture
  • 8. Linking East and West
  • 9. The Mail Must Go Through
  • 10. War Clouds, Silver Linings
  • 11. Full Steam Ahead
  • 12. The Golden Age
  • 13. Redefining "Postal"
  • 14. Starving the Post
  • 15. Mid-Modern Meltdown
  • 16. The U.S. Postal Service
  • Afterword: Whither the Post?
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • A Suggested Readings
  • Index
Review by New York Times Review

BEING A BEAST: Adventures Across the Species Divide, by Charles Foster. (Picador, $16.) "I want to know what it is like to be a wild thing," Foster, a British naturalist, writes in this dispatch from the animal world. To that end, he stripped naked, ate earthworms, was hunted by bloodhounds and attempted to catch fish with his teeth - all to experience the natural world as do naked Welsh badgers, London foxes and Exmoor otters. WE COULD BE BEAUTIFUL, by Swan Huntley. (Anchor, $16.) With an apartment in the West Village and a hefty trust fund, Catherine has nearly everything - except a husband. When she meets William, they appear to be an ideal match, until a secret threatens to derail the engagement. Huntley's debut novel is equal parts psychological thriller and sendup of New York's social elite. WHISTLESTOP: My Favorite Stories From Presidential Campaign History, by John Dickerson. (Twelve, $16.99.) The author, the political director of CBS News and the host of "Face the Nation," reflects on decades of election cycles: their memorable collapses and comebacks, surprise upsets and victories. As he puts it, "News is what surprises us, which is why the political press always has news: Voters are always undoing our certainties." MISS JANE, by Brad Watson. (Norton, $15.95.) Drawing on the real-life experiences of his great-aunt, Watson tells the story of Miss Jane Chisolm, a woman in rural Mississippi with an isolating and rare birth defect. The condition was an obstacle to sexual or romantic relationships, but Jane sought wholeness through other means. "The complexity and drama of Watson's gorgeous work here is life's as well," our reviewer, Amy Grace Loyd, said. "Sometimes heroism lies in combating our helplessness, sometimes in accepting it." HOW THE POST OFFICE CREATED AMERICA: A History, by Winifred Gallagher. (Penguin, $18.) The post office - established even before the Declaration of Independence was signed - was long a symbol of the United States' commitment to democratic values, ensuring that citizens across all the colonies were informed. Now, with the office in jeopardy, Gallagher urges a reconsideration of its future. GOODNIGHT, BEAUTIFUL WOMEN: Stories, by Anna Noyes. (Grove, $16.) The women in Noyes's collection are tested - by sexual abuse, terminal illness, poverty and young widowhood. In the opening story, a woman struggles to understand her husband's apparent suicide by drowning. "The stories may sound grim," our reviewer, Elizabeth Poliner, said, "but they consistently sparkle with expressive detail."

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [July 30, 2017]
Review by Booklist Review

On the advice of the American colonies' first postmaster general, Benjamin Franklin, in 1792 the inaugural United States Congress passed the Post Office Act, establishing the newborn country's first mail-delivery system. Yet, according to versatile nonfiction writer and journalist Gallagher (New, 2012) in this well-researched history of the U.S. Postal Service, the founding fathers' primary aim was simple and lofty: to ensure Democracy by making certain the citizenry stayed informed with a daily newspaper. As the American population grew and spread to the western territories, the demand rose for the delivery of other materials, from letters and packages to crates of mining tools and furniture. Inevitably, expanding delivery routes into undeveloped regions proved challenging, which spurred companies like Wells Fargo to compete with government carriers. Along with offering other fascinating tidbits about the USPS' growing pains, from the Civil War through WWII and beyond, Gallagher compellingly argues that mail delivery played a vital role in creating American unity via interpersonal communication and points a way forward to a postal service that can remain relevant even in the Internet age.--Hays, Carl Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The post office may not have actually "created" America, but journalist Gallagher (New: Understanding Our Need for Novelty and Change) makes a strong case for its historical importance in this brisk history. Forging early links among the colonies and then uniting the nation and its frontier as settlers moved west, the post office has by necessity survived by modernizing and developing in parallel with the nation. The institution single-mindedly pursued more efficient systems of delivery for generations, though it struggled with the demands of independent contractors-whether stagecoach operators or airlines-and opportunistic competitors that were able to adapt faster than the federal bureaucracy. The 1970 transformation of the Post Office Department into the U.S. Postal Service, a business run by the government, was meant to ameliorate these problems. But, as Gallagher explains, this shift in emphasis from innovation to the bottom line may have doomed the post office as it entered the digital age. Despite its waning relevance, Gallagher still sees the post office as a pride-inducing institution. Socially progressive since its inception, the post office represents one of the purest distillations of America and takes on one of modern democracy's most necessary (and tedious) tasks: the convenient distribution of information and ideas to every American with a mailbox. Agent: Kristine Dahl, ICM. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A history of the United States postal system, which George Washington believed would "tranquilize" the country's restless citizenry.In 1792, the new nation's Congress passed the Post Office Act, giving citizens access to mail service. As Gallagher (New: Understanding Our Need for Novelty and Change, 2011, etc.) makes clear in this well-researched history, the law did not make such service "a basic right, like freedom of speech or religion," but merely stipulated that the government would meet citizens' demands. Benjamin Rush and James Madison believed postal service essential to "ensure democracyeducate the people, and change society." With newspapers dominating mail, keeping citizens informed was a major function. From the beginning, though, postal service was undermined by bad roads and high costs for postage. Independent delivery services arose, undercutting the government's rates and providing quicker, more reliable service by its own couriers. As the nation expanded westward, these competitors vied to meet the needs of Californians, who demanded "a reputable, regularly scheduled, twice-weekly stagecoach service that would carry both mail and travelers." The short-lived Pony Express, and later Wells and Fargo, offered delivery through treacherous territory. Gallagher cites a Pony Express ad: "Wanted: Young, skinny fellows not over 18. Must be expert riders willing to risk death daily. Orphans preferred." During the Civil War, the South scrambled to set up its own postal service, including issuing stamps. One enslaved man "successfully mailed himself to freedom inside a wooden crate" that was delivered to Philadelphia abolitionists. Gallagher traces the way a burgeoning postal service created a market for pens, stationery, and other letter-writing accouterments. The United States Postal Service was created in 1970, transforming a government agency into a government-owned corporation. The author regrets Congress' "dysfunctional relationship" with the USPS and suggests ways to modernize "the world's most productive postal system." The future of the post, Gallagher argues in this readable, straightforward history, depends on citizens' awareness of its history. For a somewhat livelier, personality-driven account of the USPS, see Devin Leonard's Neither Snow nor Rain (2016). Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The history of its post office is nothing less than the story of America. Of the nation's founding institutions, it is the least appreci- ated or studied, and yet for a very long time it was the U.S. govern- ment's major endeavor. Indeed, it was that government in the experience of most citizens. As radical an experiment as America itself, the post was the incubator of our uniquely lively, disputatious culture of inno- vative ideas and uncensored opinions. With astonishing speed, it established the United States as the world's information and commu- nications superpower. After the Revolution, America needed a central nervous system to circulate news throughout the new body politic. Like mail service, knowledge of public affairs had always been limited to an elite, but George Washington, James Madison, and especially Dr. Benjamin Rush (a terrible physician but a wonderful political philosopher) were determined to provide the people of their democratic republic with both. Their novel, uniquely American post didn't just carry letters for the few. It also subsidized the delivery of newspapers to the entire popula- tion, which created an informed electorate, spurred the fledgling mar- ket economy, and bound thirteen fractious erstwhile colonies into the United States. For more than two centuries, the founders' grandly envis- aged postal commons has endured as one of the few American institu- tions, public or private, in which we, the people, are treated as equals. The America of the Early Republic desperately needed physical as well as political and economic development. The government quickly mapped this terra incognita with post routes that connected towns centered on post offices; it also subsidized the nascent transportation industry, then dominated by the stagecoach, by paying its owners to carry the mail. By 1831, French political philosopher and mail coach passenger Alexis de Tocqueville wondered over America's unparalleled communications system, which brought the latest national and foreign news even to the Michigan outback. By the time of Tocqueville's visit, the founders' ideal of nonpartisan politics had faded, and the post they created to unite opinionated Americans could divide them as well. President Andrew Jackson, a slaveholder, fumed when abolitionists used the network to send their unsolicited publications to Charleston, South Carolina, where irate lo- cals committed a federal crime by burning the mail--a conflagration that illuminated slavery as a national rather than merely regional issue. Yet Jackson himself scandalously politicized the post with his "spoils system," which allowed the party that won the White House to hire its supporters for postal jobs wrested from the defeated rival's ranks--a gold mine of patronage that cemented and sustained the country's two- party system for the next 140 years. In the 1840s, the post faced the worst crisis in its history. Antebel- lum Americans, including the migrants moving from farms to cities, and increasingly to the western frontier, protested its high letter postage by turning to cheaper private competitors that contested its exclusive right to carry mail. The post responded by turning personal corre- spondence, historically a costly luxury, into a cheap daily staple, which both aided its recovery and transformed Americans' personal lives. The combination of postage for pennies and the Railway Mail Service--a now forgotten wonder that efficiently processed mail aboard moving trains--later enabled many people to write to a friend in the morning and receive a reply that afternoon. The post played a crucial role in one of the nineteenth century's crowning achievements: turning the Atlantic-oriented United States into a Pacific nation as well. The transcontinental telegraph and rail- road of the 1860s usually get the credit, but they followed in the tracks of a post that was already responding to the needs of history's greatest overland migration. (Most settlers got their mail at post offices in gen- eral stores, much like the one served by the young postmaster Abra- ham Lincoln on the Illinois frontier.) The post subsidized the Overland Mail Company's western stagecoaches but only paid the Pony Express to carry mail at the end of its short life, when the private service helped to keep distant California slavery-free and connected to the rest of the Union. Like America itself, the post was transformed by the Civil War. When the Confederacy stole its entire southern network, Montgomery Blair, Lincoln's brilliant postmaster general, used the savings from the discontinued operations to pay for expensive new services, including Free City Delivery, which brought mail to urban doorsteps, and the postal money order system, which initially enabled Union soldiers to send their salaries back home safely. The post had been the first, and was for a very long time the only, institution to give jobs to disenfran- chised women that offered them rare entrée into public life. Most had been small-town postmasters, but  Blair went further, hiring women  for prestigious positions as clerks even at the department's august headquarters in Washington, D.C. The post had long been prohib- ited from using enslaved workers, lest they learn from publications circulated in the mail that all men were created equal. After the war, the victorious Republicans underscored their politics by employing significant numbers of African Americans. As a black woman, sharp- shooting, cigar-smoking "Stagecoach" Mary Fields, a former slave who transported the mail by wagon in the wilds of Montana, broke both barriers. Around the turn of the twentieth century, the post became a pro- gressive champion for Americans who looked to the government to protect them from the Industrial Revolution's dark side, notably the powerful new monopolies that deprived them of affordable, competi- tively priced services. Their fearless if improbable spokesman was Post- master General John Wanamaker, the Republican merchant prince. Critics accused him of running his department like his legendary namesake department store in Philadelphia, but he used his business genius on behalf of average Americans to fight for Rural Free Delivery and broaden the meaning of "postal" to include parcel delivery and even savings banking. Despite the austerity imposed by two global wars and the Great Depression, the undernourished post nevertheless supported, for many years single-handedly, the infant aviation industry required for its Air Mail Service (an unknown Charles Lindbergh was among its pilots). It also linked citizens at home with their loved ones fighting abroad--in World War II with microfilmed Victory Mail letters (no lipstick kisses allowed). Deprived of funds and stuck with long-obsolete equipment and facilities, the post even managed to cope with the booming middle class's quadrupling mail volume until 1966, when, amid riots, protests, and burning cities, the institution faced its second crisis, famously il- lustrated by the weeks-long shutdown of Chicago's post office. By 1970, America increasingly looked to business rather than gov- ernment for problem-solving strategies, and Congress, now accustomed to focusing on the post's bottom line, transformed the tax-subsidized Post Office Department into the self-supporting United States Postal Service. This odd government-business hybrid was finally allowed to modernize its facilities for handling traditional mail. Within a decade, however, the post--ruled by a fiscally conservative Congress and ham- pered by its own mismanagement--failed to join, much less lead, the revolution from paper mail to email that was its next logical develop- ment. In 2007, reeling from onerous new regulations as well, the USPS began to report huge deficits and entered its third and ongoing period of crisis. Since 1775 until recently, the post has responded to the nation's changing needs--indeed, the institution's advances had often helped precipitate them--but crises and budget-driven policy decisions have gradually, almost imperceptibly, erased America's collective memory of what this dynamic institution has been and vision of what it could be. The people and their elected representatives, who must soon decide the post's future, now know very little about the post, past or present. In- deed, the most widely read academic history was published in 1972, and the best popular one in 1893. Most of the scholarly literature focuses on the nineteenth century, and there has been very little study of the pe- riod after the 1930s. It is time for Americans to learn more, particularly about the post's modern history, which this book bases on extensive primary research, including interviews with scholars and postal profes- sionals as well as explorations of libraries, museums, and archives. Most histories of the United States focus on military, political, and socioeconomic matters, but How the Post Office Created America tells the nation's story from the perspective of its communications network. Restoring the record of how the post made us the people we are is im- portant, both for this misunderstood, underappreciated institution and for the insights into the country's past and current affairs that it pro- vides. After all, recurrent themes in the post's story--including the respective merits of public service  and  private  enterprise,  the  limits of federal power and states' rights, the complex  relationships  be- tween government and business, the fruits of bipartisanship, the value of national infrastructure, and the country's regional and political polarization--echo through the history of the United States to this  day. The post deserves the effort to remember, because just as the founders had envisioned, it created America. Excerpted from How the Post Office Created America: A History by Winifred Gallagher All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.