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From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office Ashley Bowen-Murphy, PhD @BowenMurphy

From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

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Page 1: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

Ashley Bowen-Murphy, PhD@BowenMurphy

Page 2: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office
Page 3: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

“Blind Reading”

Image courtesy of National Postal Museum

Page 4: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

Post Office Department, c. 1900. Image courtesy of the Library of Congress

Original Location7th and 8th Streets and E and F Streets NW

Page 5: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

Second LocationPost Office Pavilion

11th & Pennsylvania Ave NW

Image courtesy of the Library of Congress

Page 6: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

Post Office Department, c. 1900. Image courtesy of National Postal Museum

One Day’s Collection!

Page 7: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

Dead letters! does it not sound like dead men? … By the cart-load they are annually burned. Sometimes from out the folded paper the pale clerk takes a ring:—the finger it was meant for, perhaps, moulders in the grave; a bank-note sent in swiftest charity:—he whom it would relieve, nor eats nor hungers any more; pardon for those who died despairing; hope for those who died unhoping; good tidings for those who died stifled by unrelieved calamities. On errands of life, these letters speed to death.

Herman Melville, “Bartleby the Scrivener,” Putnam’s Monthly, November 1853.

Page 8: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

Missing Soldiers in the Mail

Image courtesy of the George Eastman House Still Photograph ArchiveImage number 1985.1103.0001-0035

Page 9: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

Unidentified soldier’s photograph, Dead Letter Office album number 2803Image courtesy of Kurt Luther

Page 10: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

Album of soldier’s photosImage in The Story of Our Post Office (1893) via Google Books

Page 11: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

Image courtesy of the Library of Congress

Inside the Dead Letter Office, c. 1900

Page 12: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

The Dead Letter Office Museum

Image reproduced from J.A. Truesdell, “Dead Letter Office.” The New North-West. March 11, 1887. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers.

Page 13: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

“Found In The Mails.” Pittsburg Dispatch. December 26, 1890. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers.

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A specimen of Guiteau’s hair is seen with this inscription:This contains my hair. Charles J. Guiteau

Accompanying this was a request for the modest sum of $1,000 to aid the compensation of his counsel.

Marshall H. Cushing, Story of Our Post Office (1893), pp. 273-274

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Image courtesy of the Library of Congress

Dead Letter Sale, c. 1910-1925

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Dead Letter Office Museum to National Postal Museum

Images courtesy of National Postal Museum

Page 17: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

Mail Recovery CenterAtlanta, GA

Image via the Department of Defense

Page 18: From Live Snakes to Missing Men: Inside the 19th Century Dead Letter Office

Thank you!

Ashley Bowen-Murphy, PhD@BowenMurphy twitter

[email protected]

Dead letter mail, Supt. Marvin McLean and Mrs. Clara R.A. Nelson, c. 1917, Image courtesy of the Library of Congress

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Selected Works Cited• Ames, Mary Clemmer. Ten Years in Washington: Life and Scenes in the National Capital, as a Woman Sees Them. Hartford, CT: A. D.

Worthington & Company, 1873.• Bagger, Louis. “The Dead-Letter Office.” Appletons’ Journal of Literature, Science and Art (1869-1876), November 8, 1873.• Castle, Henry A. “Trials of the Dead-Letter Office.” Evening Star. April 15, 1906. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers.• Collins, Patti Lyle. “The Deadletter Office.” St. Nicholas; an Illustrated Magazine for Young Folks (1873-1907), February 1894.• “Curiosities of the Dead-Letter Office.” Scientific American (1845-1908), May 12, 1883.• “Curiosities of the Mail.” Northern Tribune. February 26, 1885. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers.• Cushing, Marshall Henry. Story of Our Post Office: The Greatest Government Department in All Its Phases. A. M. Thayer & Company, 1892.• “Dead Letter Curios.” The Evening Star. August 8, 1903. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers.• “Dead Letter Office Museum: A Collection of Strange Finds in the Mails.” Barton County Democrat. July 29, 1897. Chronicling America: Historic

American Newspapers.• “Dead Letters.” The Youth’s Companion (1827-1929), December 9, 1915.• Dom Pedro. “Washington Letter.” Weekly Graphic. May 4, 1883. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers.• “Found In The Mails.” Pittsburg Dispatch. December 26, 1890. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers.• Howard, Clifford. “Marvels of the Dead-Letter Office.” The Youth’s Companion (1827-1929), March 3, 1898.• Kiger, Patrick. “Washington’s Dead Letter Office.” Boundary Stones: WETA’s Washington DC History Blog, May 21, 2014.

http://blogs.weta.org/boundarystones/2014/05/21/washingtons-dead-letter-office.• Malloy, Daniel. “Post Office Moving Atlanta Unclaimed Mail Auction Online.” Atlanta Journal-Constitution. March 7, 2013.

http://www.ajc.com/news/news/post-office-moving-atlanta-unclaimed-mail-auction-/nWkQs/.• Palmer, Alex. “Saving Santa’s Mail Bag.” Slate, December 11, 2014.

http://www.slate.com/articles/life/holidays/2014/12/letters_to_santa_why_charity_groups_fought_to_have_kid_s_letters_end_up.html.• “Post Office Museum: A Unique Collection Pertaining to the U.S. Mail Service.” The National Tribune. September 11, 1902.• Reynolds, Charles Bingham. Washington, the Nation’s Capital. New York: Foster & Reynolds, 1912. https://books.google.com/books?

id=yQwyAQAAMAAJ&lpg=PA164&ots=4DNo6W400F&dq=dead%20letter%20office%20museum&pg=PA164#v=onepage&q&f=false.• “The Dead Letter Office.” Literary Museum 3, no. 8 (1846): 60.• “The Dead Letter Office.” In The Standard Guide, Washington: A Handbook for Visitors. [1896- ], 122–24. B. S. Reynolds Company, 1898.• “The Letter Cemetery.” The Youth’s Companion (1827-1929), May 28, 1874.• Truesdell, J.A. “Dead Letter Office.” The New North-West. March 11, 1887. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers.• Zezula. “Washington Letter.” Bismarck Weekly Tribune. February 19, 1886. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers.