Authors:
Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)
Historic Theme:
Subject:
September 2020 | Volume 65, Issue 5
Authors:
Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)
Historic Theme:
Subject:
September 2020 | Volume 65, Issue 5
Editor's Note: Bruce Watson is a writer, historian, and contributing editor at American Heritage. You can read more of his work on his blog, The Attic.
SUPAI VILLAGE, ARIZONA — Deep in the bowels of the biggest canyon on earth, six days a week, with neither rain nor heat nor dead of night to stop it, the U.S. Mail arrives. Each delivery includes letters, junk mail, plus boxes of frozen meat, milk, fresh vegetables, and packages from Amazon.
Located eight miles from the nearest road, Supai Village is, according to the US Department of Agriculture, “the most remote community in America.” Just 207 members of the Havasupai Nation live here. There are no paved streets or streetlights. Nothing but a lodge, a cafe, and a convenience store serving Grand Canyon hikers. But there is also U.S. Mail Delivery Zone. And day after day, at just about noon, the mail arrives — by mule.
Every country has mail, but only in America is the daily mail part ritual, part Constitutional mandate. The U.S. Constitution, Article 1, Section 8, Clause 7 empowers Congress “to establish Post Offices and Post Roads.” And since 1775, when Postmaster General Benjamin Franklin set the service in motion, some 200 laws have protected the mail and its carriers. Fed Ex and UPS and Amazon now deliver packages and “urgent letters,” but their carriers can’t touch your mailbox. It’s federal property.
We love to bash our government. That $#$@% Congress, that stupid V.A., that lame FCC. Yet the United States Postal Service has an approval rating of 84 percent. Perhaps that’s because, although most government agencies hunker down in D.C., the mail hits you where you live. From Zip Codes 00501 (Holtville, NY) to 99950 (Ketchikan, AK), from tiny towns far from anywhere to major cities everywhere, there’s a post office. And if there isn’t one near you, Rural Federal Delivery brings mail to your door. Like the folks in Supai Village, rural America depends on RFD for medicine, Social Security checks, mail order groceries and more. One Montana carrier drives 191 miles a day to reach just 272 mailboxes. Now that’s service.
For 55 cents — what else will 55 cents buy? — you can mail a first class letter from any of 30,825 post offices to any other P.O. Eighty percent of letters arrive within two days. Isn’t it time we celebrate the USPS?
Numbers suggest the thankless job done by 600,000 USPS employees. Last year the postal service delivered 150 billion items to 160 million addresses. First-class mail peaked in 2001 but package deliveries have since doubled. Last holiday season, the USPS stitched American families together, delivering 800 million packages.