From the Post Office Department records, National Archives and Records Administration:



At NARA II in College Park:

From the Post Office Department records, National Archives and Records Administration:
At NARA II in College Park:
From the Western Union collection at the Archives Center at the National Museum of American History:
For Mom & Dad:
For Dave:
For Sue:
Other Finds:
“Every time an incision is made in the pavement, those noisy surgeons expose ganglia that are tangled beyond belief.” -E.B. White, “Here is New York,” 1949.
“Outside, alone on a delivery run, the uniformed messenger served as both visual advertising and as the direct customer contact for the telegraph company. Boys were to appear neat, speedy, polite, and responsible, with ‘Clean Hands and Face,’ ‘Uniform Pressed and Spotless,’ and ‘Cap Squarely on Head’…” -Gregory J. Downey, Telegraph Messenger Boys: Labor, Technology, and Geography, 1850-1950 (New York: Routledge, 2002), p. 68.