Find the perfect victorian pillar box post box stock photo. Huge collection, amazing choice, 100+ million high quality, affordable RF and RM images. No need to register, buy now! The Pillar Box is a tall red Mayfair Royal Mail post box in London at the corner of Baker Street which so happens to be the home of famous Detective Sherlock Holmes. It is the home and main headquarters of Danger Mouse and Penfold. It has a spiral staircase up and down that leads to every room.
- UKAA always have in stock a large range of original reclaimed red Antique Royal Mail Pillar and Post Boxes that have all been fully restored. For the collector we also have a few Royal Mail red pillar boxes ready for restoration by you. The Royal Mail Red Cast Iron Pillar Box is a British Icon.
- Buy pillar post box and get the best deals at the lowest prices on eBay! Great Savings & Free Delivery / Collection on many items.
- Pillar boxes gave people the freedom of private correspondence. Young women particularly were able for the first time to send letters freely, without being subject to a trip to a Post Office. Not all people liked or trusted the iron stumps. Aunt Stanbury in He Knew He Was Right was extremely distrustful of any modern innovation, pillar boxes.
A short introduction to the history of the British Pillar Box
.
2003 year saw the 150th anniversary of mainland Post Boxes in the
The advent of the British wayside letter box can be traced to Sir Rowland Hill, Secretary of the Post Office, and his Surveyor for the Western District, Anthony Trollope, the noted Victorian novelist. Hill sent Trollope to the
Up until 1811, letters were pre-paid by weight and distance, so that the further a letter went, the more it cost to send. That all stopped when Rowland Hill introduced the Uniform Postage (originally set at 4d) that year, enabling the same charge for
Together with the famous Penny Black, the Post Office also introduced pre-paid Postal Stationary, known as Mulready envelopes, from 1st May 1840. This combined the postal charge with a fold-up envelope rather like an air letter of later years. The problem for the Trollope subsequently arrived in They were an instant success, despite some obvious problems with rainwater ingress. One Vaudin box still stands in Union Street, The very first boxes erected on the mainland are, unfortunately, not recorded, but the designs varied from area to area as each District Surveyor issued their own specifications and tendered to their own chosen foundries. We do know that the first mainland box was erected in Botchergate, Carlisle in 1853. The spot is commemorated today with a replica Penfold box. The earliest surviving mainland designs are the Butt boxes made in |
The picture at left shows a private version of the first Mainland box (without the VR crest) which can still be found at the Britannia Royal Naval Hospital site in Plymouth. It is no longer in use. In the Eastern Region, the boxes were founded by Andrew Handyside & Son of |
.
.
.
Standardisation of sorts came in 1857 with the deliberations of the Committee for Science & Art of the House of Lords. The Committee designed a very ornate box festooned with Grecian style-decoration, but in a major oversight, devoid of any posting aperture! These were hewn out of the cast iron locally, destroying the aesthetic of the box. Fifty were made for
.
The first real standard design came in 1861 with the First National Standard box. These were also cast in two sizes for the first time to allow for heavier traffic in big metropolitan areas. A number have survived and they were widely distributed from Brighton to Liverpool, via Stoke, Worthing,
.
.
Perhaps the most famous of the early designs is that named after the architect who designed it, J.W.Penfold. The Penfold boxes come in three sizes and altogether there are nine different types. They are very widespread, with the biggest accumulations in
.
.
A return to cylindrical boxes followed with the so-called Anonymous boxes of 1879. Andrew Handyside of
.
New post box designs were ordered in 1887 for Queen
ABOVE: Edward VII box with aperture on door, post 1905, fitted with Telephone Direction Sign.
Evening Post Pillar Box Club
From 1905, the Edward VII boxes had the posting aperture as part of the door, rather than the body of the box. That eliminated the chance for mail to get caught up in the top of the box. This basic design remains the same today, having served well throughout the reigns of George V, Edward VIII, George VI and Elizabeth II.
An experiment of 1932 was the addition of a Stamp Vending Machine to the end of the post box. This necessitated an oval planform for the box even though it was only provided with a single posting aperture. At one end of the oval is the stamp machine and at the other is the posting aperture. The boxes have two doors; one for clearance of mail and one for emptying the cash and reloading the stamp machines. The machines were set to vend two halfpenny stamps in exchange for one old penny, the stamps being supplied in a long continuously wound roll known as a coil. Boxes were again made in two sizes, designated Type D and Type E, and carried raised lettering on the castings indicating the position of the stamp vending machine, as well as an array of small enamel plates warning users of the danger of bent coins and the need to wait for stamps to be issued before inserting more money. Several of each have survived in use in England and in the Isle of Man.
Queen Elizabeth II
The next major design change came in 1968 with the introduction of the Type F pillar box. This was conceived by Vandyke Engineering and proposed to the Post Office as a cheaper alternative to the traditional cast box. It was fabricated in sheet steel with welded construction. Unfortunately, the British climate did not suit the use of galvanised steel (a problem often seen with the 1940 and 1988 pattern of lamp box) and the Vandyke pillars soon began to rust badly. The very last one was removed from service at Colmore Row in
In 1974 the Post Office experimented with a similar rectangular design known as Type G. This was made in traditional cast iron by the foundry of Carron Company in
The Post Office commissioned a new design of pillar box in 1980 from a panel of three competing designers. The competition was won by Tony Gibbs and his design, which was thought to be ultra-modern at the time, was designated Type K by the Post Office. Made in traditional cast iron, it stayed in production until 2000. Notable features included: replaceable lifting ring screwed in to the dome of the box, body and roof of box cast as one piece, large easy-to-read collection time plate, all surface details and collection plate window recessed to give a perfect cylindrical outline, integral restrictor plate, know colloquially as a 'Belfast Flap' to restrict posting to letters only and a flanged shallow base suitable for installation in modern buildings, shopping centres and other urban areas. These boxes were thus much easier to move and handle as they could be rolled over level ground or lifted by crane into position. The design had one major flaw in the area of the door hinge, which is prone to snap under stress and the K type pillar boxes are no longer being installed.
All new pillar boxes for use in the
In
Ireland
Following Irish independence in 1922, existing British pillar boxes were retained, and simply painted green. Many of these are extant around the country, retaining the monogram of the monarch who reigned at the time of the box's installation. The Department of Posts and Telegraphs continued installing similar pillar boxes and wall boxes, but with the initials SE (for Saorstat Eireann), a harp or the P & T logo, instead of a monarch's monogram. Since 1984 An Post, the current Irish postal authority, use the An Post logo to adorn their posting boxes.
Bibliography
.
Old Letter Boxes by Martin Robinson. Pub. Shire Books 3rd Edn 2010
Post Box Pillar Candles
Англо-русский современный словарь. 2014.
Pillar Post Box For Sale
Смотреть что такое 'pillar box' в других словарях:
pillar box — pillar boxes also pillar box N COUNT In Britain, a pillar box is a tall red box in the street in which you put letters that you are sending by post. [BRIT] (in AM, use mailbox) … English dictionary
pillar box — n. Brit. a pillar shaped mailbox … English World dictionary
pillar box — n BrE old fashioned a large red tube shaped box for posting letters that stands on streets in Britain = ↑postbox →↑letterbox … Dictionary of contemporary English
pillar box — ► NOUN ▪ (in the UK) a large red cylindrical public postbox … English terms dictionary
Pillar box — A pillar box is a free standing post box, in the United Kingdom, where mail is deposited to be collected by the Royal Mail and forwarded to the addressee. Similar designs exist as historical artefacts in certain Commonwealth of Nations countries … Wikipedia
pillar box — noun a red pillar shaped letter box • Regions: ↑United Kingdom, ↑UK, ↑U.K., ↑Britain, ↑United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, ↑Great Britain • Hypernyms: ↑postbox, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
pillar box — UK / US noun [countable] Word forms pillar box : singular pillar box plural pillar boxes British old fashioned a large red container in the street for posting letters in … English dictionary
pillar-box — see pillar box … English dictionary
pillar box — noun A free standing item of street furniture in the form of a short, red pillar with a slot for posting letters. Syn: letter box, letterbox, mailbox, post box, postbox … Wiktionary
pillar box — Brit. a pillarlike box in which letters are deposited for collection by mail carriers; mailbox. Also called pillar post. [1855 60] * * * … Universalium
pillar-box — (British) mailbox, receptacle for depositing postal mail, tall red mail box shaped like a pillar … English contemporary dictionary
Книги
- The Heyday Of The Football Annual, . Christmas Day 1959 and legions of schoolboys up and down the country feverishly unwrapped the very first Topical Times Football Book. On the cover Bobby Charlton smacked a leather ball out of… ПодробнееКупить за 2422 руб