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Transport

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Image of First TPO stamp 1838

Transport has always been a crucial part of the operation of postal services. This is reflected in the quantity and variety of transport-related records which survive in The Royal Mail Archive. The earliest of these date from the 1680s and are held in archive class POST 43.

Our records cover all periods from the days of packet ships and mail coaches, through to air mail and the post bus. More detailed summaries of transport records classes can be found in our Guide to The Royal Mail Archive (PDF, 1MB) or on our online catalogue.

Find out about our Transport objects in the Museum collection

Go to Archive collection

In our collection...

Image of a horse mail contractMail by road
Material in archive class POST 10 covers the transport of mail first by horse or mail cart and later by mail coach.
See examples of our records on transporting mail by road...


Image of a route plan for TPOMail by rail
Archive classes POST 11 and POST 18 relate to the sorting of mail during rail transit.
See examples of our records on transporting mail by rail...


Image of a blue print of the mail room on the TitanicMail by sea
The records in archives classes POST 12, POST 39 and POST 43 deal with the transport of mail by packet boats.
See examples of our records about transporting mail by sea...


Image of Empire Air Service brochureMail by air
Archive classes POST 13 and POST 50 contain material about transporting mail by air.
See examples of our records about transporting mail by air...


We also have records related to the Post Office Railway in London (later known as “Mail Rail”) in archive class POST 20, and attempts at starting helicopter mail in POST 13/3 (click on the links to see these items in our online catalogue). 

Access

The best way to see all our transport-related records is to visit The Royal Mail Archive in Freeling House (see the Visiting section for details). A few of the records are yet to be catalogued but most have been processed. You can search for them in our online catalogue. To protect original material some records may be on microfilm.