

City carrier's leather mailbag



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In 1863, the first City Free Delivery Service letter carriers used leather satchels to
carry the mail along their appointed rounds. During the first quarter of service, New
York City carriers delivered 2,069,418 letters.
For many years, letter carriers were required to lug as much as 70 pounds of mail matter in
their leather mailbags. And, before the advent of Parcel Post in 1913, carriers were compelled
to load their satchels with all sorts and sizes of packages. Now, generally no packages weighing
over two pounds are delivered by the carrier on foot.
As businesses and populations flourished over the next century, carriers' mail loads swelled to enormous
burdens. But, as the volume even and the nature of mail changedone thing remained constantthe leather mailbag.
The Post Office Department tried to change that in 1973, when they decided to replace the leather satchels
with canvas ones. Yet, even though the traditional leather satchels are twice as heavy (3-4 pounds) as
canvas bags, carriers were reluctant to make the switch. Leather certainly held up well to the demands of
the mail delivery, many of the satchels survived six or more years of service. Most carriers, in fact, sought
out old, yet functioning replacement leather mailbags rather than use the new canvas satchels.
The canvas bags, which were not as sturdy, wore out in less than two years, and certainly were no match for
leather bags when it came to fending off dogs along the route. But, even the sturdiest leather bags wore out
after time, and with only canvas bags available as replacements, carriers had no choice but to switch. By the
late 1980s, almost all carriers were using canvas bags.
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Even after postal officials tried to replace leather satchels with canvas ones, carriers still used their old favorites.
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