Mail used to come with a side of meow
This kitten, though adorable, was not one of the post office cats.
(Lowell Georgia/Corbis)
By
Erin Blakemore
smithsonian.com
When the Royal Mail announced that it will be opening a Postal Museum and Mail Rail exhibition that
will feature a restored section of a little-known underground railroad,
it kind of buried the real story. Sure, the institution is responsible
for such mail-delivery revolutions as the postage stamp and the iconic red pillar mailbox,
but the upcoming heritage effort is exciting for more than mere
philatelic history. Located beneath the streets of London, the Royal
Mail will also pay tribute to the phenomenon of post office cats.
The Guardian’s Maev Kennedy reports
that the museum will feature a display paying homage to the the postal
system’s furry employees of yore—post office cats with their own wages
and pensions.
Early postmasters weren’t necessarily cat lovers; they
needed a way to get rid of mice. So they brought cats in to their
buildings. But cats don’t eat for free, and in 1868 the Secretary of the
Post Office authorized post offices to hire cats, allotting only
one shilling, not the requested two, a week to feed all three
original cats—over time, the salary of these furry workers
would sometimes result in bitter battles over just how much money they
deserved.
In 1918, a finicky cat helped bump the salary up, giving each
cat its own weekly shilling, and that rate remained until the 1950s,
when it was revealed that the one-shilling-a-week allowance had stayed the same, though the rate apparently kept up with inflation over the years.
Tibs the Great was the Royal Mail’s most famous post office cat. According to the mail service,
he eventually weighed in at 23 pounds and became the official Royal
Mail Headquarters cat over 14 years of service. When he died, Tibs (the
son of Minnie, another epic post office cat) was lauded with an obituary
in the service’s magazine that recalled that “there is no record of
Tibs ever granting audience to a Postmaster General.”
An artist's rendition of New York post office cats of the 1890s.
(Public Domain/St. Martin's-le-grand)
The UK may have had Tibs, but it didn’t have dibs on the idea of hard-working postal felines. In 1904, the New York Times reported
that George W. Cook, “the only Superintendent of Federal Cats in this
country,” gave a party for 60 post office cats in honor of his own 81st
birthday. On the menu? Calve liver and lamb kidney.
Three years earlier, the population of post office cats had reached such proportions that the New York Post Office took the unprecedented step
of banishing the entire group. The phenomenon was apparently quite
common: Historic newspapers are filled with accounts of post office
cats, their amazing rat- and mouse-catching skills, and their lives of
brave (and adorable) service.
Daniel Piazza, chief curator of philately at the Smithsonian National Postal Museum, says that post offices often kept beloved dogs as well. One example is Owney,
a mail dog so beloved his colleagues at the post office had him stuffed
and put him in a museum. "Dogs tended to be mascots for post offices,"
Piazza explains. "They were kept by the postal employees as pets,
whereas cats were viewed more as working animals." Today, Owney is one
of the National Postal Museum's biggest attractions, though Piazza
admits he finds the taxidermied pup "kind of creepy."
These days, things like exterminators and no dogs allowed rules
have made post office pets a thing largely of the past. But it’s fun to
think of the modern postal service being built on the backs of hungry
kitties.
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