"The Postoffice
on Wheels" The November 5, 1898 issue of the
Westminster Democratic Advocate newspaper
carried a story under the headline of "CARROLL
COUNTY AHEAD." which detailed Edwin W. Shriver's upcoming experiment with his
"Postoffice on Wheels": |
A few of the intimate friends of Mr. Edwin W. Shriver, of this city, have known for some months that he was perfecting plans for a "Postoffice on Wheels," and that he had submitted the same to the Postoffice Department at Washington. On Tuesday the plan was accepted and Mr. Shriver was informed of it, and the information was given to the various newspaper correspondents in Washington. We copy the following from the Baltimore American of Wednesday:
Today Mr. Machen ordered the trial for experiment
in free rural delivery, which, if it realizes even a part of what is claimed for it, will
literally establish a postoffice on wheels for every country community contiguous to a
country town of moderate size.
Mr. Machen has selected the town of Westminster
as the central point of his experiment. He has closed a contract with Mr. Edwin W.
Shriver, of that town, whereby Mr. Shriver, for $1,375 per annum, binds himself to make a
tour daily, except Sunday, over a circuit of more than thirty miles, collecting and
delivering letters and mail of every other kind, issuing and paying out money orders,
registering and delivering registered letters - in a word, performing for the farmers in
the vicinity of Westminster all the functions performed by the postmaster at Westminster. Mr. Shriver is to furnish a two-horse covered
wagon, the necessary assistance in the way of driver and postal clerk and is to establish
a perambulatory postal service. He has
designed a wagon expressly for the service not unlike the wagons employed in some of the
larger cities used for collecting the mail and preparing it for forwarding en route. MR. SHRIVER'S CIRCUIT Mr. Shriver's wagon will leave Westminster at seven
o'clock every morning except Sunday. Before
the hour the last mail from Baltimore and the East has arrived. The local mails from the West and the star route
mails are also in the office, and the mail for his route has been sorted out. He drives first to Frizellburg, which is four and
a half miles from Westminster. Here he
delivers all the mail for that office and takes up the mail intended for all the other
points on his route, including Westminster. His
next stopping point is Wakefield, five miles distant; then Medford, two and a half miles;
then Avondale, two and a half miles; then Warfieldsburg, three miles; then Smallwood, four
miles; then Reese, two miles, and thence back to Westminster, four miles, making a total
circuit of thirty-one and a half miles. This
is the circuit mapped out for the first or experimental route. If it succeeds similar routes will be established
all over the county. Mr. Shriver's wagon has
been built for him by the government, and it is a provision of his contract that if the
plan proves to be feasible the government will pay him a fixed sum for every wagon it
builds for future routes. It will require nine
or ten hours for Mr. Shriver to make his route. He
will return to Westminster every evening in time to catch the mail trains East and West. There are eight postoffices on his route. At every postoffice he will exchange mails. Thus, at Frizellburg he leaves the mail from
Westminster for that office and for all the little offices between those two towns. He takes with him all mail from Frizellburg and
the intermediate points between it and Westminster intended for other points on his route
and all the railroad mail. As the service now
exists, all matter for the points on the route are brought first to Westminster by the
star routes and the railroads, and then sent out again.
For example, a letter mailed today at Frizellburg for Smallwood goes back to
Westminster, and is tomorrow delivered at its destination.
Under the new system, Mr. Shriver's wagon picks up the letter at Frizellburg and
carries it directly to Smallwood, delivering it a few hours after it has been mailed. FARMERS CAN HAVE BOXES Matter can be mailed at any point along the route
where a person meets the mail wagon. Matter
will be delivered at any point along the route where the person desiring his letters
delivered will put up a suitable small box. Every
farmer living within a mile or two of the route can put up a box with his name plainly
marked on it, and Mr. Shriver will drop all mail intended for him in this box. There will also be made arrangements by which the
wagon will collect all letters left in these boxes. It
is intended that farmers desiring to adopt this easy method of receiving or sending mail
will provide Mr. Shriver with a duplicate key to their letter box, so that he can unlock
the box and take out letters to be forwarded. Villages
along the route that have no postoffices can thus supply themselves with a daily postal
service. Farmers living along the route thus
have a quick communication with one another, which is impossible under the old system. Money orders and registered letters will be
delivered by Mr. Shriver, and he will be appointed a postal clerk to authorize him to
issue money orders and register letters. If
the project turns out successfully, as the department believes it will, every farmer along
the route will have as complete a daily postal service as the resident of any city." |
| Shriver's experiment was successful and
led to Carroll County having the first county wide system of rural Free Delivery in
December 1899. Shriver later assisted with
the development of rural free delivery in other parts of Maryland and in other states.
|
| Photo caption: | Edwin W. Shriver experimented with the "Postoffice on Wheels" in November 1898 led to the development of Rural Free Delivery in 1899. Historical Society of Carroll County collection. |