Motoring2 mins ago
Old Postcards - why only 5 words?
17 Answers
Sorry if the category is wrong, couldn't find out where else to post! I picked up some postcards this morning at the car boot, and on some old ones, where the stamp would be attached, it says "1d stamp if with only sender's name and address and 5 words conventional greeting". What I want to know is WHY ONLY 5 WORDS?! There must be a reason for this, but I can't think of one....
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the lower rate of postage also applied to greetings cards (e.g. birthday cards and Christmas cards). However it was important to leave the envelope unsealed (i.e. with the flap simply tucked inside the envelope) otherwise the full letter rate of postage would be applied.
The 1d price for sending a postcard lasted between 3rd June 1918 and 30th April 1940 (with the exception of between 13th June 1921 and 23rd May 1922, when it 1½d). The last date on which there was a lower rate for postcards (3d instead of 4d for a letter) was on 15th September 1968. The following day the new system of First and Second Class mail was introduced, with letters and postcards both being charged at 5d (1st) or 4d (2nd). I remember, a few months later, how odd it seemed to be actually sealing the envelopes on Christmas cards for the first time ;-)
Chris
the lower rate of postage also applied to greetings cards (e.g. birthday cards and Christmas cards). However it was important to leave the envelope unsealed (i.e. with the flap simply tucked inside the envelope) otherwise the full letter rate of postage would be applied.
The 1d price for sending a postcard lasted between 3rd June 1918 and 30th April 1940 (with the exception of between 13th June 1921 and 23rd May 1922, when it 1½d). The last date on which there was a lower rate for postcards (3d instead of 4d for a letter) was on 15th September 1968. The following day the new system of First and Second Class mail was introduced, with letters and postcards both being charged at 5d (1st) or 4d (2nd). I remember, a few months later, how odd it seemed to be actually sealing the envelopes on Christmas cards for the first time ;-)
Chris
Chuck obviously doesn't read (or watch) Sherlock Holmes. He would often get a postal reply to mail he'd sent earlier the same day (and still be in time to post his response, possibly expecting a second reply to arrive before the day was out).
From 'Murray's Handbook to London As It Is', 1879:
"London is divided into 8 postal districts, in which the number of deliveries varies from 12 to 6 daily, between 7.30 a.m. and 7.45 p.m."
Chris
From 'Murray's Handbook to London As It Is', 1879:
"London is divided into 8 postal districts, in which the number of deliveries varies from 12 to 6 daily, between 7.30 a.m. and 7.45 p.m."
Chris
Postcards were the i-phone of their day. The postal service was fantastically efficient - as the only artery of distant communication.
Plus, updated editions newspapers were published every couple of hours and keen sports fans often bought several a day to keep up with the latest results. I think this endd with the wider use of radio.
Plus, updated editions newspapers were published every couple of hours and keen sports fans often bought several a day to keep up with the latest results. I think this endd with the wider use of radio.
Amazing isn't it that the postal service was so fast in those days despite the absence of post codes and sorting equipment, although I suppose the post office wasn't bogged down by so much junk mail so volumes were probably much lower. Twenty years ago I used to get my post before I set off for work at 7.30-8.00. Now we're lucky to get it before 2 o'clock
-- answer removed --
Inland post cards generally cost 1/2d to send up to June 1918 when the cost was doubled to 1d. However, as a concession, provided no more than five words of conventional greeting were used, they could still be sent for 1/2d (being classified as "printed matter). The printed matter rate was itself increased to 1d in June 1921, at which point the normal post card rate was further increased to one and a half pence. However, following protests the normal post card rate was put back to 1d in May 1922 at which point it remained until 1940. Therefore it was only between June 1918 and May 1922 that there was any point in limiting the greeting to five words and this helps to more precisely date many post cards of that era.
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