William Faulkner Was An Iconic Author And A Mediocre Mailman

Today in 1897, the birthday of William Faulkner, the Nobel Prize winning author of novels like The Sound and the Fury, and, for a few years, one of the most unproductive postmasters the US mail has ever seen. 

By |2024-12-12T21:10:04-05:00September 25, 2023|Categories: Cool Weird Awesome, Podcasts|Tags: , , , , , |

25 Days of Holiday Songs 2022: “Mail Early For Christmas” by Jack Webb

The irony of a troupe singing that you’ll “be a mellow fellow,” while Jack Webb is getting tough on holiday laggards!

By |2022-11-08T07:51:23-05:00December 10, 2022|Categories: Blog|Tags: , , , , |

The “Parcel Post Bank” Was Mailed To Its Construction Site, A Few Bricks At A Time

This day in 1916 was an important day in US Postal Service history - a rule change that came after the community of Vernal, Utah basically had a bank mailed to them, in installments of bricks.

By |2024-12-07T20:42:16-05:00November 7, 2022|Categories: Cool Weird Awesome, Podcasts|Tags: , , , , |

How Ethel Merman Helped Get America To Use ZIP Codes

Today in 1963, the US Postal Service officially started using ZIP codes as a way to quickly sort huge amounts of mail and get it to where it needed to go. How did they get Americans to adopt ZIP codes? A mascot named Mr. Zip and a jingle sung by Broadway legend Ethel Merman.

By |2024-12-07T20:44:04-05:00July 1, 2021|Categories: Cool Weird Awesome, Podcasts|Tags: , , , , |
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