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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/goodspeedhist/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114With the future of the American postal system in doubt, I thought I\u201a\u00c4\u00f4d take a look at how it all began in New Jersey and here in Delaware Township.<\/p>\n
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I have written about our post offices before in \u201a\u00c4\u00faThe Bridge,\u201a\u00c4\u00f9 Delaware Township\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s newsletter,1<\/a><\/sup>\u00ac\u2020but my interest was reawakened when I\u00ac\u2020realized that the Sergeantsville Post Office has been in existence for 185 years, something worth celebrating. Also, I recently acquired\u00ac\u2020a book on the postal history of Hunterdon County, compiled by Jim Walker and available through the County\u201a\u00c4\u00f4s Cultural and Heritage Commission.2<\/a><\/sup> It reminded me that there is a lot more history in our post offices than we realize.<\/p>\n Before the Revolution, the best way to send a letter was to give it to someone who was going in the direction you wanted the letter to go, or to hire a special messenger. Letters exchanged between Nathaniel Saxton in Flemington and his father Charles living in Shamokin, PA in 1809, were sent by friends who were traveling between those two places. This was not always successful; sometimes those friends forgot to bring the letters or even lost them. But at least they knew who the intended recipient was, whether the handwriting was legible or not.<\/p>\n