County Wide R.F.D.
Began in 1899" Tomorrow will be the Centennial of
the nation's first county wide rural free delivery system. Carroll County was selected due
to the efforts of Westminster Post Office employee Edwin W. Shriver. Not surprisingly, the
experiment drew a number of dignitaries and received extensive coverage in the local
press. Since then R.F.D. has been a popular local history topic. Historical Society member
Howard Lawton Knight wrote about the beginnings in 1954: |
"FIRST R. F. D. Carroll County is
justly proud of its early association with Rural Free Delivery. Most of us know something of its history. However, there is much about it that is not so
generally understood, and many do not realize how early R. F. D. really began to operate
in this county. Everyone visiting the [former] Post-Office or passing along [Westminster's] Main street has probably seen the marker on the corner at Longwell Avenue. As this marker states, 'the first complete county Rural Free Delivery Service in the United States was inaugurated by the Post-Office Department on December 20, 1899, covering the whole of Carroll county and small parts of adjacent county and small parts of adjacent counties with Westminster as the central distribution point.' Readers of the Carroll
Record for February 11 also know of a second claim to distinction. This was the conception and construction locally
of the special U.S. Postal Wagon. This went
into use on Easter Monday, April 3, 1899, and operated for over eight months before three
other wagons and about forty other carriers were added and the system became county-wide. Although its unique service of a 'post office on
wheels' was eventually taken over by the regular carriers, it was a most spectacular
development and attracted widespread attention. These
happenings on 1899 are still relatively familiar, but they do not constitute the
beginnings of R. F. D. in Carroll county. It
had already been in operation for over two years. Back
in 1896 funds appropriated by Congress became available, and the Post Office Department
selected 44 localities in 29 States as experimental 'guinea pigs.' The first three
of these were in West Virginia, established on October 1st, 1896, but only fourteen days
later a second group was set up. This
included two localities in Indiana, four in Ohio, and one each in Missouri and Maryland. The Maryland route was in Carroll county and
operated from Westminster. In view of the pioneer aspects of the venture and the wide publicity deservedly given to later developments, it seems strange that so little is known about what went on between 1896 and 1899. Available files of the Democratic Advocate and the American Sentinel, the two Westminster weeklies of the period, give no indication of any local fanfare or even of much interest. No mention on the matter was found in either journal until July 3, 1897, when the Advocate stated that Postmaster Boyle, of Westminster had been notified that the R.F.D. system, 'which had been in operation for several months' would be continued. 'The farmers are much pleased with the free delivery.' In March 1898, the
Sentinel referred to a report to Congress by the Postmaster General on the experimental
R.F.D., including the service in the county adjacent to Westminster, still the only
locality in the State being tried. Four
carriers at the annual compensation of $250; each were employed with an area covered of 16
miles. The number of pieces of mail
delivered for the previous year was 6,831. A September note in
the same journal reported that 'inspection of the RFD section revealed great satisfaction
in the district of Carroll county where it has been in operation, and that other districts
are anxious to have the service.' Eventually, of course, these desires found
fruition in the great expansion on 1899. The limited references
to the project are perhaps explainable by the small area affected and its slight impact on
Westminster and the county as a whole. Possibly
an examination of other county and outside publications would bring more details. Personal recollections should also still be
obtainable. In view of the scarcity of
available material, the Historical Society of Carroll county would appreciate further data
for the 1896-1899 period. One angle which
excites curiosity is as to why Maryland and Carroll county received such early priority
for the experiment. A letter written in 1939
by the Taneytown resident attributes the original R. F. D. concept to Mr. A. W. Machen,
subsequently Superintendent of R. F. D. for many years, and states that Mr. Machen whose
wife was a Miss Baumgartner of Westminster, had spent much time in the county and had
become familiar with its many advantages. Another theory as to
the selection of Maryland rest on the idea that some restiveness was developing within the
State over the action of the Post Office Department in consolidating some small post
offices with those of nearby large cities to the alleged detriment of the service. It may have been thought that a free delivery
service to rural areas would be a possible alleviation.
This is purely speculation, but it is a fact that Senator Gorman, Maryland had just
vigorously criticized the Department for its consolidations, particularly one that reduced
the office at Elicott City to a substation of Baltimore. Some apprehension of what was going on was felt in Carroll county, and on May 2, 1896, the Advocate, came out with an editorial 'Don't Touch Westminster.' In this the expansive activities of the Baltimore post-master were described. 'He may', it was said, 'Reach for Westminster next and make it a substation with an $600 clerk in charge. That is not desired. Westminster, a live progressive town, that has excellent water-words, electric light and gas system, an ice factory, the best in the State, the best and most complete telephone system, the best College, a Theological Seminary, the prettiest summer resort on the line of the Western Maryland Railway, handsome churches and fine residences, with a good post office and a private rapid-carrier system, cannot afford to be made a substation of a city that fiddle-faddled for two years over an international exposition, then ignominiously abandoned the project. If Westminster is to be made a substation, hitch us to Atlanta, Georgia, or some other live town.' Needless to say, these
forebodings never materialized. On the
contrary Westminster soon became the distributing point for delivery system which resulted
in the closing of many fourth-class offices. The
direct service which R.F.D. provided, however, also brought compensations and eventual
acceptance." |
| Despite misgivings and some downright
hostility, Rural Free Delivery caught on in Carroll.
Later research revealed the leading role that Edwin Shriver had played and
that he had later helped design routes in other states.
|
| Photo caption: | R.F.D. carrier Philetus R. Haight posed with his decorated mail wagon in December 1899. Mr. Haight carried the mail from Sykesville on the first day of county wide delivery, December 20, 1899. Historical Society of Carroll County, gift of Anna Haight Brown. |