The postal history of India is strongly related to its intricate political history. Portuguese, Dutch, French, Danish, and British colonialists coexisted with their postal systems among other systems and rules as they rose to power in India. Read here to learn the postal history of India.
Department of Posts has transformed itself with the passage of time and the demands of the public.
Technology induction and the addition of new services have made India Post a modern and multiple service provider.
Today, it provides banking, insurance, and the last-mile delivery of benefits of several welfare schemes run by the Government to every village through its network of 1.59 lakh Post Offices.
The history of postal service in India dates back to ancient times before a special department was set up for postal services by the British.
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Before the British, there was mention of messenger services used by kings to pass messages.
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The existence of an early postal system in India can be found during the reign of Emperor Chandragupta Maurya.
Babur developed the runner services along the road from Agra up to Kabul. For exchanging communication, on the Agra-Kabul Road, six horses were stationed every 36 miles.
Shershah Suri reorganized and further developed the communication system. He built the Grant Trunk Road and the rest houses called Sarais on the roadside.
The eighteenth century saw the beginning of British engagement in India’s postal system. In the beginning, the East India Company was in charge of running the service, and between 1764 and 1766, it opened post offices in Mumbai, Chennai, and Calcutta (now Kolkata).
1727: The East India Company started opening its first post office.
1766: Robert Clive sets up a regular postal system.
1774: Warren Hastings (Governor General of British India from 1773-1784) opened the posts to the public and Calcutta General Post Office (GPO) was established.
1786: Madras GPO opened
1794: Bombay GPO opened
1837: The Post Office Act reserved the government the exclusive right to convey letters in the territories of the East India Company.
1850: A report was commissioned into the working of the Post Office in India by Dalhousie. He recognized the Indian Post Offices as separate organizations of national importance.
The East India Company started losing political influence in the late eighteenth century. In 1858, the Company was eventually disbanded, and India was then placed under the direct control of Parliament as a Crown territory.
1852: The first adhesive postal stamp in India, Scinde Dawk was introduced by Sir Bartle Frere, the East India Company’s administrator of the province of Sind.
1873: Government Savings Bank Act, 1873 passed by the legislature.
1876: India joined the Universal Postal Union.
1879: Postcards were introduced and Railway Mail Service /Money order was launched.
1882: The first Post office savings bank was opened and by 1884 Post life Insurance was launched.
1885: The Indian Telegraph Act, of 1885 was enacted.
1898: Post Office Act VI was introduced and Imperial Penny Postage was introduced.
The world’s first official airmail flight took place in India on 18 February 1911.
1931: The first pictorial stamps were issued and there was a victory issue in 1946, followed shortly by the first Dominion issue.
Following independence, the new Indian Government assumed control of the postal system. However, Britain continued to oversee postal services to India in the same manner that it did for other nations.
In 1947, three Independence Postage Stamps were issued.
The Postal Index Number (PIN, or sometimes redundantly PIN code) is a six-digit postal code.
The PIN system is organized in the following way:
The first speed post was introduced in 1986.
In 2003, the Meghdoot software was introduced and in 2006 e-Payment services were launched in Post offices.
In April 2008, Project Arrow was launched for the modernization of post offices.
The India Post is a part of the Department of Post under the Ministry of Communications.
For more than 150 years, the Department of Posts (DoP) has been the backbone of the country’s communication and has played a crucial role in the country’s social and economic development. As seen through the postal history of India, the department underwent numerous changes with time to reach where it is today.
It is a crucial part of Indian citizens as it functions in delivering mail, accepting deposits under Small Savings Schemes, providing life insurance coverage under Postal Life Insurance (PLI) and Rural Postal Life Insurance (RPLI), and providing retail services like bill collection, sale of forms, etc.
The DoP also acts as an agent for the Government of India in discharging other services for citizens such as Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) wage disbursement and old age pension payments.
With more than 1,55,000 post offices, the DoP has the most widely distributed postal network in the world.
-Article written by Swathi Satish