Mailboxes of all sizes and shapes line the gallery.
Mailboxes line a rural road.
Rural letter carrier poses between a patron's mailbox and his new automobile.
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When Rural Free Delivery Service began, first as an experiment in 1896 and later as an official service in 1902,
patrons looked around their homes and farms for anything they could find to use as a mailbox. As a result, rural
letter carriers found themselves face-to-face with a hodgepodge of homemade, semi-functional "mailboxes." Old coal
oil, syrup and food containers were dragged out, sometimes with sticky remnants of the original contents pooled
inside the box, and slapped on top of poles set out along the road.
In 1901, after having received a fair share of complaints from rural carriers about the large number of often unsuitable
assortment of mailboxes used by their patrons, the Post Office Department appointed a five-man commission to examine
commercial rural mailbox designs. Of the 63 mailboxes submitted for consideration, only 14 met the specifications, which
meant that patrons who wanted R.F.D. service would have to buy a box from the selected list of manufacturers.
The companies on that first list included the Postal Improvement Company of Norristown, Pennsylvania, Bates-Hawley of
Joliet, Illinois, A.L. Henry, American Metal Company of Ladoga, Indiana, Century Post Company and Bond Steel Post Company,
both of Adrian, Michigan, the Century Rural Mail Box Company of Detroit, Michigan and the Corbin Cabinet Lock Company of
New Britain, Connecticut.
Postal officials had hoped that by selecting 14 companies, the consumer would be able to pick and choose the best mailbox
at the best price. Naturally, just about every metal-manufacturing company in the country wanted to be included and the
list of selected companies grew quickly. Companies who were not chosen began to complain about a mailbox "monopoly."
The Post Office Department agreed that any company could manufacture rural mailboxes, provided the boxes were made to
postal specifications. By 1903, 46 different companies were manufacturing rural delivery mailboxes. Mailboxes that passed
scrutiny are still marked "Approved by the Postmaster General."
Patrons were asked to keep their mailboxes "buggy high" and within easy reach of the carriers. Today, right-hand drive
vehicles ensure that carriers can make quick mail exchanges without getting out of their cars or driving on the wrong
side of the road.
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Room full of boxes submitted for consideration
A pair of tunnel-shaped mailboxes stick out of a snowy drift along a road.
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