Rural Americans didn’t get mail at home until the late 19th century.

  • Rural Free Delivery carrier
Rural Free Delivery carrier
Credit: Len Collection/ Alamy Stock Photo

While residents of the biggest cities in the U.S. enjoyed the luxury of free mail delivery to their homes beginning in 1863, it was more than three decades before rural dwellers could depend on regular mail access that didn’t involve an inconvenient trek to the nearest town. Initial pushes to expand delivery service came from department store magnate John Wanamaker, who served as postmaster general in the early 1890s, and Georgia politician Tom Watson, who initiated a bill to fund the expansion in 1893. Finally, new postmaster general William L. Wilson agreed to launch an experimental rural free delivery (RFD) service in three West Virginia towns in 1896.

There were a few challenges that stood in the way of rural mail delivery, including the crude roads that made traveling between towns a harrowing experience in winter. What’s more, rural carriers, who were paid less than their urban counterparts, were expected to provide their own transportation. But as it turned out, Americans outside of busy urban centers were strongly yearning not only for mail delivery, but also for the connection to the world at large that carriers relayed via newspapers and basic social interaction. Thousands of residents of previously isolated areas rounded up the signatures needed to petition for RFD service, and rebuilt their local roads and bridges to ensure safer passageways. Following steady expansion of delivery routes into the next century, Americans of all but the most impossible-to-reach locales could rejoice when RFD was designated a permanent service effective July 1, 1902.

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