By Vicki Hunt Budge
I really enjoyed the research for my fourth book in The
Surveyor’s Daughters Series, Winds of
Change. The story, a romance set in 1903, concerns the first cross-country automobile
trip across America and also about changes in the way rural people sent and
received mail.
Free mail delivery in our country started in 1863, but only
in the big cities. Farmers, ranchers, and country folk still had to travel into
town to pick up their letters from a post office or pay a private carrier to
deliver them. It took another thirty years for congress to pass the Rural Free
Delivery Act (RFD) in 1893 and another three years before rural mail delivery
really started. The RFD Act made it possible for country folk and farm families
to have their mail delivered and picked up right where they lived. Packages and
parcel post service didn’t start until 1913.
Not everyone wanted rural free delivery. Private carriers
fought against the act. Merchants in general stores and mercantiles were afraid
they’d lose business. Most of the rural post offices were located in these
stores, and the merchants feared people wouldn’t make their weekly visits to
town if they didn’t have to come in for the mail. Many people, including
politicians fought against the RFD Act because they thought rural service would
be too expensive.
Rural Delivery, Hill County, Texas |
This free postal service for rural folks started slowly back
in the eastern states, but two years later postal officials announced that people
in rural areas across the country could petition their congressmen for a free
delivery route in their area. The post office was flooded with petitions. In
1902 there were less than 8,000 routes in the nation, but by 1905 there were over
32,000 routes.
The rural free delivery routes became the largest and most
expensive endeavor ever for the United States postal service. The government financed
the route drivers, but not the delivery wagons or horses to pull them. The carriers
had to supply their own horse and wagon. There were soon ads in newspapers
across the country advertising “the lightest post office on wheels, sensible
vehicles for winter delivery, and off again, on again, gone again carts.”
An innovative mail carrier in Wisconsin |
Wagon makers were inundated with orders for delivery wagons
and carts. The wagons were simple to ornate; some with wood paneling, built-in
desks, and wooden mail slots for sorting the mail. Paper, envelopes, and stamps
were stored in drawers and sold to patrons along the routes. The driver also
needed a cash box or drawer for holding money collected for the supplies and
for giving change when necessary. Many wagons had some form of heating
equipment to keep the carrier warm.
All the wagons and carts used for delivering the mail were
required to have the initials, RFD printed on both sides. One company made
their RFD initials removable and advertised that their wagons could be used to
deliver the mail during the week, and then the owner could take the RFD
initials off on Sundays and use the wagon to take their sweetheart for a ride
in the country.
In my book, Winds of
Change, part of the story is about a family of wheelwrights who had made
wagons and wheels for generations, and how the RFD Act bolstered their business.
Almost at the same time, the advancement of the automobile came along and threatened
their livelihoods. The first gasoline-powered vehicle delivered mail in 1906. And
starting that same year, some carriers delivered and collected mail on Harley
Davidson motorcycles.
The beautiful little wagons and carts made by craftsmen and
artisans would soon become obsolete. Today, some of the wagons and carts can be
seen in The Smithsonian National Postal Museum.
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Winds of Change is at https://www.amazon.com/Winds-Change-Surveyors-Daughters-Book-ebook/dp/B07ZS4T5TK/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=vicki+hunt+budge&qid=1577732437&sr=8-3 for $2.99 in e-book or free in Kindle Unlimited.
When Cora Gardner reads about a wealthy doctor who’s attempting to drive an automobile from San Francisco to New York City via southern Idaho, she makes a fifty-cent bet that he’ll succeed. But there are only 150 miles of paved roads in the country, and none in Idaho, so her chances of winning are slim. Her enthusiasm for the cross-country road race excites all the young people in town who are fascinated with the idea of horseless carriages. All the young people, that is, except for that stubborn Gideon Lewis.Gideon Lewis learned to build wagons and wheels from his father, a master craftsman in his trade. He’s positive the automobile is simply a passing fancy for the wealthy, and that the doctor who’s attempting to drive across the country will bog down in Nevada’s sand like his predecessor. Gideon accepts Cora’s bet, however, and humors her in the attempt to win her hand.
Will the biggest event of 1903 in southern Idaho enable Cora and Gideon to stop arguing about the future of the automobile? Is the beginning of a new era in America also the beginning of a new era for Cora and Gideon?
Winds of Change is a fictional story based on an exciting true adventure. It’s a story of love and friendship and the ability to dream anew.
Caroline, thank you for the fascinating history of our postal service, something (like sooo many things) that we take for granted. However, seems with internet, on-line billing, texting, emails, UPS, FedEx and the ever-growing mammoth Amazon, we're using the postal service less and less.
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