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juliacornwal | 14:03 Wed 25th Sep 2013 | History
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Can anyone tell me, please, was there still an overseas postal service available during World War II? I mean to France and Holland and other Nazi occupied countries?
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http://postalheritage.org.uk/page/wenttowar

there is quite a bit available online for research, censorship would have been the biggest issue.
sorry I should read the question...

Occupied countries - communicating with the enemy - so that was out.
But what about Vichy France ?

Clearly post to the Empire and America continued at a slow pace.
All telephone calls (since all were hand connected) had to have 'war value'/content. - see Hang out more flags - but I am sure this was relaxed.

Post to Germany for POW camps continued - and were censored.
by both sides

Actually I thought all mail was censored but the sites say only a proportion. Censored material was scratched out not blacked out so there was a hole in the paper. One of my father's letters has..... ' SO many Italians tanks were lost but we all say that ..... Italian tanks are worth one German

and the ..... is a hole in the paper and there is a little slip glued :
" H M censor considers the ratio of worth of Italian to German tanks is classified information. " - but that could be a war time 'joke' by a bored censor.


Censorship is not new, you know - I have a censored post card from Ceylon ( P O W / internment / concentration camp) from 1901.
( Boer POW to my then spinster English grandmother - always wondered what was going on there...)

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