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Travelling Post Office Demonstration. - YouTube
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A Travelling Post Office (TPO) was a type of mail train used in Great Britain and Ireland where the post was sorted en route. The last Travelling Post Office services were ended on 9 January 2004, with the carriages used now sold for scrap or to preservation societies.


Video Travelling Post Office



Carriage of mail by train

Following an agreement in 1830, made between the General Post Office and the Liverpool and Manchester Railway (L&MR), mail had been carried by train in Great Britain, between Liverpool and Manchester, via the L&MR. The passing of the Railways (Conveyance of Mails) Act 1838 required railway companies to carry mail, by ordinary or special trains, as required by the Postmaster General; however, this act did not set the charges for such services.

These special trains eventually became Travelling Post Offices (TPOs). TPOs were employed in many British Commonwealth countries; and the Army Post Office had its own TPOs.

TPOs were equipped with letter boxes so that mail could be posted whilst the train stood at a station. The post-marks from TPOs are valued by philatelists.


Maps Travelling Post Office



History

Mail was first sorted on a moving train in January 1838, in a converted horse-box, on England's Grand Junction Railway. It was carried out at the suggestion of Frederick Karstadt, a General Post Office surveyor. Karstadt's son was one of two mail clerks who did the sorting. In 1845 the service was extended via Derby to Newcastle upon Tyne by the Midland Railway; and soon after reached Scotland.

The first special postal train was operated by the Great Western Railway between London and Bristol. The inaugural train ran on 1 February 1855, leaving Paddington station at 20:46, and arriving at Bristol at 00:30. In 1866, apparatus for picking up and setting down mailbags without stopping was installed at Slough and Maidenhead.

In 1963 (the year of the Great Train Robbery) there were 49 mail trains, with one to five TPOs attached to passenger trains, and complete TPO trains between London and Aberdeen and Penzance.


Scrap Metal - Totnes Trains
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Post-privatisation of British Rail

After the privatisation of British Rail in the mid 1990s, British TPOs were operated by Rail Express Systems and their successor EWS. Royal Mail decided to suspend all transportation of mail by rail in 2003. The last TPO services went out on the night of 9 January 2004, ending the sorting of mail on trains in the UK.

However, Royal Mail did restore the movement of some already-sorted letters by rail in time for the Christmas season that year, contracting with EWS's competitor GB Railfreight to resume bulk transfer services along the West Coast Main Line between its mail terminals at London (Willesden), Warrington and Glasgow (Sheildmuir) using the dedicated Class 325 electric multiple units that had been in operation since 1996. In 2009 the contract for these mail trains was transferred to EWS's successor DB Schenker Rail. For flexibility Royal Mail had preserved rail access to its distribution centres on Tyneside (Low Fell) and at Tonbridge in Kent, and did occasionally send mail trains to Low Fell, for example when Newcastle Airport was closed by snow. In June 2013, a regular service resumed from Low Fell.


Royal Mail Travelling Post Office 2013 Week 1, Day 4 at Durham ...
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Preservation

Several Royal Mail TPO's have been preserved along with stowage vans and GUV's. Only one PCV (Propelling Control Vehicle) remains, currently at the Mid-Norfolk Railway. At these preservation lines you can see the TPO's performing a live drop off/pick up from a preserved line side apparatus. The Great Central Railway and the Nene Valley Railway are leading this endeavour with many weekends devoted to 'Mail by Rail'. Other lines are following in their wake so there are many places you can see these vehicles in action.

Two Irish An Post TPOs have been preserved - both at the Downpatrick and County Down Railway, who own one, whilst the other is still owned by An Post.


An old GPO Travelling Post Office train wagon Stock Photo, Royalty ...
src: c8.alamy.com


TPO vehicles

TPOs were formed of several different types of vehicle:

  • Post Office Sorting Van
  • Post Office Stowage Van
  • Brake Post Office Stowage Van
  • Propelling Control Vehicle
  • Brake Van
  • General Utility Van

Victory Works: July 2016
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See also

  • Great Central Steam Railway - where the Travelling Post Office and Mail Exchange on the Move is recreated
  • Great Train Robbery (1963) in which £2.3 million was stolen from a Glasgow to London TPO train
  • Night Mail - Film and poem about Travelling Post Office
  • Railways (Conveyance of Mails) Act 1838
  • Railway post office - North American term for cars that served similar functions.
  • SNCF TGV La Poste - French Post Office dedicated TGV sets.
  • British Rail Class 325, Royal Mail EMUs used in Britain.
  • London Post Office Railway, that Royal Mail used to transport mail across London on private underground tracks.
  • Nene Valley Railway, where visitors can ride the TPOs and get off at a remote exchange point to watch the mail pickup/drop off.

Royal Mail Travelling Post Office Stock Photo, Royalty Free Image ...
src: c8.alamy.com


References


ROYAL MAIL Travelling Post Office - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com


Further reading

  • Cooper, Basil (July 1983). "The TPO story". Rail Enthusiast. EMAP National Publications. pp. 41-45. ISSN 0262-561X. OCLC 49957965. 

One of the last Royal Mail Travelling Post Offices(TPO's)where the ...
src: c8.alamy.com


External links

  • The Travelling Post Office, British Postal Museum and Archive
    • The British Postal Museum & Archive - Victorian Travelling Post Office.
  • Travelling Post Offices, Allan Yeo website.
  • Parcels and Post Office Traffic, Mike Smith 'Goods and Not So Goods' website.
  • Mail by Rail, John Chenery 'Light Straw' website.
  • Friends of M30272M TPO Group, Nene Valley Railway (via archive.org)
  • Schedule of mail trains operating from London (Willesden) in 2002
  • TPO and Seapost Society for all collectors of Rail and Ship Mail worldwide
  • Winchester, Clarence, ed. (1 March 1935), "Travelling Post Offices", Railway Wonders of the World, pp. 157-162 , an account of Travelling Post Offices in the 1930s

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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