mail bag or mail bag is a generic term for the type of bag used to collect, carry, categorize, and classify different types of postal materials, depending on their priorities, objectives, and transportation methods. Often used by post office systems in transporting these different letters. The mailbag is carried by some means of transport such as mail carriers, animals (eg, , donkeys, horses), or mobile post offices. Letters and printed material sent by mail at seventeen hundreds were carried by horses in saddlebags. There are different types of mail letters for different purposes (eg, for example, transporting mail to and from the post office, sending letters to businesses and homes.) This different bag style depends on size and purpose, can range from "large bags used to carry letters on trucks, planes, etc." to the simple "postcase" used by postal couriers to send mail.
The idea of ââhaving a mail bag on a ship traveling between Jamaica and Great Britain was established as early as 1780. The name of the ship carrying the letter was placed at the corner of the letter so it would be inserted into the letter bag. > appropriate for the intended purpose.
A mailbag throughout the history of the United States has been called various names depending on its form and function at the time, some of which are now obsolete. Among these names are mail bags, letter bags, mail bags, captains, mochila, and portmanteau.
Personal Mail Bag or so-called "Locked Handbag" is a worldwide solution for sending special mail to a single location. Like PO Box addresses, Private Mail Bag addresses eliminate names of buildings and roads, and only include numbers allocated to users. Private Mail Bag addresses are often used in countries in Africa where there may be no delivery service. In Europe and North America, where on-street delivery is more common, large users can be allocated their own zip code, and consequently only need to use their physical address in correspondence; the postal code implies that the recipient receives mail by caller service. Personal mailing bags may be a replacement for the Post Box, but can sometimes have individual company zip codes.
Video Mail bag
Jenis
The US National Postal Museum says that any bag carrying a letter (eg, letter, magazine, advertising brochure, package) is defined as "Mailbag". mail bags are called postcards in the UK. The shape and structure of the mailing bag has implications for industrial fatigue and injury to mail operators.
Email bags
Mail sacks are mailbags of lower security classes that are used to carry second, third, and fourth grade letters. It has no locking mechanism with it.
Mailbox
Satchel letters are an over-the-shoulder letter carrier to help deliver private mailings to businesses and homes.
Email pocket
Mail bags are strong materials (eg, , canvas) letters designed to lock at the top to prevent access to the bag. They are usually used to transport Class letters and registered to and from different post offices. The mail bags also carry domestic airmail and military military.
Picker Catcher
A capturing bag is a mailing bag that is only used by the Railway Post Office in exchange for mail when the train does not stop in the city. It was most popular in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Mochila
A mochila is a removable, lightweight leather lid that is placed on a horse saddle for carrying mail and used by Pony Express.
Portmanteau
Portmanteau was a traveling suitcase that was used as a mailing bag in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries to carry letters and newspapers. When opened, there are two different compartments, one for mail and the other for newspapers.
Maps Mail bag
Mailbag in popular culture
- With the advent of the Parcel Post in 1913, after several adults sent their children in the post - with stamps attached to clothing - the US Postgraduate General issued a regulation prohibiting such submissions. The theory is that children are under the weight limit of £ 50, and it's much cheaper to ship it than to pay the train fare. In part, the rule follows a letter asking whether the parcel post will be appropriate, and the Postmaster General argues that children are not in the definition of "bees and insects", which are the only fauna that is permitted to be sent. Nevertheless, some children are actually sent. On June 13, 1920, sending children by Parcel Post was officially banned. After that, a briefcase filled with a child is clearly displayed in a funny photo to illustrate the ban.
- The shape of this sack is so evocative and iconic that it inspires a "fake letter bag" in the Company catalog of J. Peterman.
- Phantom Ranch, at the Grand Canyon, is one of two places in America where mail is still carried by donkeys in specially designed leather bags. The other place is Supai, Arizona, inhabited by the native American Indians of Havasupai, also in the Grand Canyon.
- Houdini's Illusionist and Escapologist first popularized the so-called "Mailbag escape" using US Postal Mail handbags, after finding an unsuitable English bag.
See also
Footnote
References
Further reading
- Cushing, Marshall (1893). Our Post Office Story: The Largest Government Department in All Phases . Boston, Massachusetts: A.M. Thayer & amp; Co - via Internet Archive.
- Melius, Louis (1917). Postal service America: history of postal service from the earliest time. The American system is described with full details of operations . Washington, D.C.: Press Capital National . Retrieved August 15, 2012 - via Internet Archive.
External links
- US Post Office - 1950 to 2011
Source of the article : Wikipedia