
audiobook
by Canada. Post Office Department
Transcriber’s Note: A large number of obvious printer’s errors have been corrected, mostly around punctuation and accents, but more or less no attempt has been made to standardise the varying spelling of the names of people and places.
LIST OF POST OFFICES IN CANADA, WITH THE NAMES OF THE POSTMASTERS ON THE 1st JULY, 1874.
(Memorandum.)
PRINCIPAL OFFICERS OF THE POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT.
LIST OF POST OFFICES IN CANADA, On THE 1st JULY, 1874.
List of Post Offices closed and not subsequently re-opened, between the 1st July, 1873, and the 1st July, 1874.
List of Changes in the Names of Post Offices between the 1st July, 1873, and the 1st July, 1874, inclusive.
POST OFFICES IN CANADA, ON THE 1st JULY, 1874, ARRANGED ACCORDING TO THE PROVINCES AND ELECTORAL DISTRICTS.
Anglesea.
Ashby.
Step back to the summer of 1874 and hear the bustling network of Canada’s early postal system, captured in a meticulous government list. The record names every post office—from the remote way stations of the West to the bustling counters of Toronto—paired with the men and women who ran them. As the transcriber smooths out printing glitches, the document retains the authentic spellings that reveal the era’s local flavor.
Beyond the sheer catalog of locations, the list also introduces the senior officials overseeing the service, from the Postmaster General to regional inspectors, offering a glimpse into the bureaucracy that kept the country connected. Included are notes on which offices handled money orders, savings banking, and which were designated way offices, painting a picture of how communication and finance intertwined. For listeners interested in genealogy or the development of Canadian infrastructure, each entry is a small portal to a town’s daily life.
Listening to this compilation feels like leafing through a time‑worn ledger, where every name and place hints at stories of settlement, trade, and community ties. The straightforward, factual style lets the listener imagine the rhythm of letters traveling across prairies and forests, making the past feel tangible. It’s an ideal companion for history enthusiasts seeking a concise yet vivid portrait of Canada’s postal heritage.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (489K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by WebRover, Adrian Mastronardi, tfkowal, The Philatelic Digital Library Project at http://www.tpdlp.net and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
Release date
2019-10-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
A government department rather than an individual writer, this historical author name appears on official Canadian postal guides, regulations, and lists of post offices from the 19th century. These works were created to explain how the mail system operated and to document the growing postal network across Canada.
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