# 1497 - 1973 8c Postal Service Employees: Letter Carrier
Postal Service Employees
To highlight “Postal Week,” ten special stamps were issued in 1973 “designed to emphasize to the American people the important duties performed by the men and women” who are employed by the United States Postal Service. Originally issued attached, each of the ten stamps depicts one of the many jobs performed by postal workers and contains a message written by the Post Office.
Free City Mail Delivery
Before the Civil War, postage only covered the delivery fee between post offices. People had to go to the post office to pick up their letters during its regular business hours. Or in larger cities, they could pay an extra 2¢ to have it delivered to their home or use a private delivery firm.
Joseph W. Briggs was the clerk and assistant to Cleveland’s postmaster, Edwin Cowles. After watching a group of women shivering in line one harsh winter morning in 1862, Briggs proposed a new system of home mail delivery. Cleveland’s postmaster quickly approved his plan. At first, the mail was sorted and taken to grocery stores in Cleveland, where it was distributed. Later, the mail was delivered to homes.
In 1862, US Postmaster General Montgomery Blair submitted his annual report to President Abraham Lincoln and recommended free city mail delivery. He said it would “greatly accelerate deliveries, and promote the public convenience.” Blair also said that if the system to mail letters was more convenient, more people would use it more often, increasing postal revenue.
Postal Service Employees
To highlight “Postal Week,” ten special stamps were issued in 1973 “designed to emphasize to the American people the important duties performed by the men and women” who are employed by the United States Postal Service. Originally issued attached, each of the ten stamps depicts one of the many jobs performed by postal workers and contains a message written by the Post Office.
Free City Mail Delivery
Before the Civil War, postage only covered the delivery fee between post offices. People had to go to the post office to pick up their letters during its regular business hours. Or in larger cities, they could pay an extra 2¢ to have it delivered to their home or use a private delivery firm.
Joseph W. Briggs was the clerk and assistant to Cleveland’s postmaster, Edwin Cowles. After watching a group of women shivering in line one harsh winter morning in 1862, Briggs proposed a new system of home mail delivery. Cleveland’s postmaster quickly approved his plan. At first, the mail was sorted and taken to grocery stores in Cleveland, where it was distributed. Later, the mail was delivered to homes.
In 1862, US Postmaster General Montgomery Blair submitted his annual report to President Abraham Lincoln and recommended free city mail delivery. He said it would “greatly accelerate deliveries, and promote the public convenience.” Blair also said that if the system to mail letters was more convenient, more people would use it more often, increasing postal revenue.