William H. Carney (1840-1908)
Minnie M. Cox (1869-1933)
Malcolm X
Hazel Singer writes:
Hello friends,
I
hope your summer is going well with family, friends, work, and leisure.
Please enjoy the new post on the Postal Service and the history of
African Americans:
Thanks!
-Hazel
Saturday, July 30, 2016
Blacks have been involved in the delivery of mail since the beginning of
slavery. Trusted enslaved blacks had been delivering parcels and
letters between plantations. It wasn't until a Congressional Act in 1802
that only free whites were allowed to deliver the mail. Concerns about
communication and rebellion amongst enslaved people were the impetus
behind this new law. According to the Smithsonian National Postal Museum,
the ban was expanded in 1828 "to include the regulation that 'if negro
labor was required to 'lift the mail from the stage into the
postoffice', it must 'be performed in the presence and under the
immediate direction of the white person who has it in custody.'" This
particular regulation remained in effect until 1862.
Postal records did not keep data on race in the 19th century. However,
it is know that during Reconstruction nearly 500 blacks were employed in
the postal service, including 116 postmasters. The earliest known black
postmaster was James W. Mason,
Sunny Side, Arkansas in 1867. He later served as a delegate to the
Arkansas Constitutional Convention and became a state senator. Despite
the fact that many African Americans "experienced
hardships in their jobs, the Post Office Department continued to
appoint African Americans to high level positions." These people included Joshua E. Wilson, George B. Hamlet, and John P. Green. William H. Carney,
the first African American to receive the Congressional Medal of Honor,
was a letter carrier in New Bedford, Massachusetts, and served there
from 1869 to 1901.
The early 20th century saw both increased opportunities (that began with the Pendleton Act Civil Service
Act of 1883) for blacks in the postal service as well as increased
segregation (President Woodrow Wilson's segregation of employment in the
federal government). Minnie Cox,
(1869-1933) was the first black female postmaster in the United States
in Indianola, Mississippi, appointed to this position by President
Benjamin Harrison and reappointed by President William McKinley and
again reappointed by President Theodore Roosevelt.. Significant
controversy erupted over her appointment and she resigned, but President
Theodore Roosevelt asked her to remain on. However, the situation was
so threatening that President Roosevelt suspended all mail delivery to
Indianola. Mrs.
Cox chose to leave in 1903 before the end of her term. The post office
reopened in 1904 but at a demoted rank of class 3 rather than class 4
(who knew post offices had class rankings!). In October 2008, the postal
service facility in Washington, D.C. was named the Minnie Cox Post Office Building in honor of Mrs. Cox.
The 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion
was made up of 855 enlisted African American women and officers and
managed the military's mail amongst other duties. They were lead by
Major (later lieutenant colonel) Charity Adams Early
(1912-2002), the highest ranking black woman by the end of the war. The
battalion was first deployed to Birmingham, England and later to Rouen,
France.
In spite of large employment numbers of blacks in the postal service and the long history
of their service, there is much evidence into the 1990's that they were
assigned to lower paying jobs and dismissed at a higher rate. Despite
this, a number of individuals have made it into the upper ranks of the
service. Among them was Henry W. McGee, the first African American postmaster of a major facility in Chicago, Illinois in 1966. And, Emmett E. Cooper, who held the positions of "Chairman of
the Board of Appeals and Review, Director of the Postal Management
Branch, Bureau of Operations, Manager of the Postal Service’s Detroit
District, and Postmaster of Chicago. Cooper held his position of
Regional Postmaster General of the Eastern Region from 1977-1983."
first
African American Postmaster of a major postal facility, - See more at:
http://www.blackpast.org/aah/mcgee-henry-wadsworth-sr-1910-2000#sthash.aftA4tiK.dpuf
first
African American Postmaster of a major postal facility, - See more at:
http://www.blackpast.org/aah/mcgee-henry-wadsworth-sr-1910-2000#sthash.aftA4tiK.dpuf
first
African American Postmaster of a major postal facility, - See more at:
http://www.blackpast.org/aah/mcgee-henry-wadsworth-sr-1910-2000#sthash.aftA4tiK.dpuf
This year marks the 70th year that African Americans have been featured on stamps of the United States Postal Service; a complete list through 2014 can be found here and here. And images here. For those interested in philately (stamp collecting), they should explore ESPER, Ebony Society of Philatelic Events and Reflections.
The United States Postal Service has been an integral part of African American history and lives.
Retweeted
By Mea Fiadhiglas (@wildwonderweb)
Retweeted
By Mea Fiadhiglas (@wildwonderweb)
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