fbpx
Wikipedia

Wall box

Wall boxes are a type of post box or letter box found in many countries including France, the United Kingdom, the Commonwealth of Nations, Crown dependencies and Ireland. They differ from pillar boxes in that, instead of being a free-standing structure, they are generally set into a wall (hence the name) or supported on a free-standing pole, girder or other stable structure.

A British Wall box set into a brick pillar, at the Amberley Working Museum.

In the UK, UK Dependent Territories, Colonies and former Colonies and in many former British Empire countries, wall boxes usually bear the initials of the reigning monarch at the time the box was made. The first UK wall boxes were erected in 1857 in Shrewsbury and Market Drayton.

Construction edit

Wall boxes are normally made of cast iron and are fabricated in two large castings with a third casting for the door. The rear part of the box which is set into the wall is cast as one piece, rather like an upright coffin. The whole front of the box including the aperture, royal cipher and the collection plate holder, are cast as one. There is a large opening in the front casting into which a hinged door is inserted. It is held in place by steel pins at top and bottom which locate into machined holes in the front casting. A secure 5-lever Chubb lock is fitted to all wall boxes made after 1870. Previously, narrower locks from the firm of Nettlefields were used. They are not interchangeable and this causes problems when keys are lost and locks have to be changed.

 
The tablet holder box and the Chubb lock are clearly visible as a postman clears mail from an 'A' size wall box in Deal, Kent

Initial examples were fitted with a simple wire tray internally over the base to raise any post off the lower surface. This was necessary because water seeped into the box through the side seams and condensation could also form on the inside, making the base rather wet. Later modifications saw this wirework extended to form a vertical barrier across the whole inside front of the box. This prevented mail from cascading out onto the ground when the door was opened for clearing the box. By 1879, UK wall boxes were also fitted with a drop-down hinged metal letter chute to help guide the stored mail into the waiting sack or basket during clearance.

An even later modification, which was then widely retro-fitted, was the provision externally of a Next Collection tablet holder to hold the square metal tablet inscribed, enamelled or printed with the time or day on which the next collection is due to be made. At the same time, internally, a tablet storage box was added to hold the remaining day or hour tablets not currently in use.

Manufacturers edit

Many different manufacturers' names may be found on British-style wall boxes, many of which were exported around the world. Included amongst these are: Smith and Hawkes Ltd., Eagle Range & Foundry, Bernard P. Walker & Co., W.T. Allen & Co. Ltd., Carron Co., Derby Castings Ltd., Andrew Handyside & Co. Ltd.

Manufacture of cast-iron wall boxes in the UK for postal use finished in 1980.

History edit

In 1849, the British Post Office first encouraged people to install a letter box to facilitate the delivery of mail. Before then, letterboxes of a similar design had been installed in the doors and walls of post offices for people to drop off outgoing mail. An example of such a wall box (originally installed in the wall of the Wakefield Post Office) is dated 1809 and believed to be the oldest example in Britain. It is now on display at the Wakefield Museum.

Queen Victoria edit

 
This rare Victorian 2nd National standard wall box near Andover in Hampshire has a large hood and a pedimented top to keep the rain out

Letter Box Study Group identifiers appear in brackets. The first pillar box was erected in the Channel Islands in 1852 and it was soon realised that, while successful, pillar boxes were expensive to manufacture and sometimes difficult to site. A box which could be recessed into a wall was preferred in rural areas where no pavement or street lighting existed. The First National Standard (WB74) design was made by the Birmingham, UK firm of Smith & Hawkes Ltd. and the first boxes were installed in 1857. Today, around ten survive, mostly in the West Country and West Midlands of Great Britain.

The design was seen to have several flaws which led to unacceptable ingress of water when in use in the wet British climate. A modified version, The Second National Standard (WB75 and WB76), debuted in 1859 and was more successful. A pedimented top and a large rain hood helped to keep water out of the box. Drainage holes were provided at the base to enable accumulated water to drain away easily. The doors of these two boxes were rather small and set high up the front of the box, which made clearing them awkward.

 
The only known example of the large 2nd National Standard wall box is at Boydon End, Wickhambrook, in Suffolk

This problem was overcome with the 1861 modification to form the Smith & Hawkes No.2 Size (WB78), in addition, a larger size, known as No.1 (WB77), was also provided. It had been trialled with the Second National Standard in very small numbers, only one of which has survived in the UK at Wickhambrook, Suffolk. There are about ten survivors of the later No.1 Large size and several hundred of the No.2 size in the UK.

 
A Victorian Wall box (unidentified type) near Ashprington, Devon, UK.

By moving the Collection plate from the top front of the box casting to a slot in the door, it was made much easier to change, having previously been bolted to the box front. These produced the 1871 design (WB83/1). The foundry underwent a series of ownership changes which saw Eagle Range & Foundry, Bernard P. Walker and even a combination of these two incised into the box maker's plate at the foot of the door (WB83/2-83/5).

The Eagle Range & Foundry boxes of the mid-1880s were made with smooth recessed collection plates and small neat VR cipher and crown. The contract passed to W.T. Allen in 1886 with the production of the "odd" size C box (WB86), which should have been 10 inches (25 cm) wide and 13 inches (33 cm) deep, but was actually 13 inches (33 cm) wide and only 10 inches (25 cm) deep. Only 70 were made before this mistake was rectified, with the introduction in 1887 of the Queen Victoria Jubilee boxes. This series comprised three sizes with the largest now designated A, the medium size (formerly No.1) now B and the small one (formerly No.2) Type C (WB84, WB85, WB87). This trend remained the same for the next 75 years.

King Edward VII edit

 
A very good example of the Type A wall box with a full Edward VII Scroll type cipher at Cambridge Railway Station

Early Edwardian wall boxes used the Victorian patterns, modified to show an "E" instead of a "V", but retaining the Imperial State Crown from the Victorian boxes. This was modified in 1905 to correctly show the Tudor Crown of King Edward VII. Later still, a full "scroll cipher" was used on all but the smallest boxes.

King George V edit

During this long reign many thousands of wall boxes were installed. Of note are the free-standing wall boxes of Size A for use on the street and the introduction of boxes with rear-opening doors, designated Types D, E and F respectively, for use in sub-post offices. Included in these are the Type E boxes made respectively in:
WB106/1 1932 by Andrew Handyside & Co. of Derby
WB106/2 1933 by Derby Castings Ltd.
WB106/3 1934-6 by W.T. Allen & Co. Ltd. of London
which cause a lot of confusion for those photographing and studying them as they are identical save for the Maker's name on the base which may be obscured by 75 years' worth of paint. All have the larger GR cipher positioned low on the door, whereas earlier GR boxes by W.T. Allen 1910-25 have a smaller cipher set much higher on the door, so that the top of the cipher almost abuts the collection plate holder. Similar difficulties are encountered when trying to identify the corresponding B size wall boxes from this period.

 
Wall box Made by W.T. Allen & Co. Ltd., situated in Hod HaSharon (Israel) former post office. It was constructed by the British Mandate authorities, and later used by the Israeli Post Office which changed the collection plate. Traces of Royal cypher "GR" are still visible.

As noted, a few wall boxes are, confusingly, free-standing, such as that outside Vollams Newsagents (formerly a post-office) in Gloddaeth Street, Llandudno. These large A size boxes were designed specially to be free-standing and include additionally, a large cast-iron base and an attractive pedimented top surmounted by a ball. A well-known example was situated at Waterloo station in London until removal in the late 1990s and subsequent restoration at the Isle of Wight Postal Museum. In other areas of the UK, such as East Anglia and the West Country, standard wall boxes have been mounted on steel girders or poles where no suitable wall exists.

King Edward VIII edit

As Edward, Prince of Wales abdicated in November 1936 without ever reaching his coronation, only a handful of post boxes were made carrying his Royal Cipher. Of these, 200 were pillar boxes, 70 were Ludlow style wall boxes and just 11 were cast iron wall boxes. Following the Abdication Crisis in late 1936, resentment and bad feeling led to the removal or exchange of many of the doors of these boxes. Today none exists in their original form, save for one Ludlow wall box at Bawdsey in Suffolk. Unfortunately the original enamel plate on this box was stolen and the plate seen on the box today is a modern replica.

King George VI edit

With the accession of Prince Albert Edward as King George VI in 1936, the GPO continued to use up stocks of George V doors as these were simply marked "GR" with no regnal number. It was not until summer 1937 that boxes began to appear bearing the newly approved Royal Cipher of King George VI. This featured a scroll typeface with Roman numerals for the regnal number surmounted by the Tudor crown. The contract for wall boxes resided at this time with W.T. Allen & Co. Ltd. of London for the "B" and "E" size boxes and with Carron Co. of Falkirk Scotland for the "A" and "D" sizes and remained with them throughout this reign. By this time, production of the type "C" and "F" size boxes had been discontinued.

Elizabeth II edit

 
An interesting version of the EIIR wall box in use as a pillar at Cowley Bridge, Exeter. It is a Carron Co. box with full-width 10" aperture

Coming to the throne in 1952, Queen Elizabeth II has had the longest reign of any British monarch since the invention of the post box. (Queen Victoria reigned for nearly as long, but post boxes only appeared halfway through her reign.) Hence there are more EIIR boxes on the streets of the UK and Commonwealth countries than of any other monarch. Wall box manufacture at the time of her accession was with W.T. Allen & Co. Ltd.

The greatest changes were in the size of the apertures in use. The older six inches (15 cm) wide aperture was not sufficient for modern larger letters and was quickly enlarged – first to eight inches (20 cm) and then to ten inches (25 cm). This, combined with a change in contractor to Carron Co., led to a good variety of boxes in both Type B and the larger Type A. The contract for manufacturing cast-iron wall boxes ceased in 1980, but in the period 1952-1980 more than 20,000 boxes were installed in the UK.

In Scotland there were protests when the boxes made early in the reign of Elizabeth II were produced. These bore the cypher "EIIR" but there were objections because Queen Elizabeth is the first Queen of Scotland and Queen of the United Kingdom to bear that name; Elizabeth I having been Queen of England and Queen of Ireland only. After several EIIR pillar boxes were blown up by improvised explosive devices, the General Post Office (as it was at that time) replaced them with ones which only bore the Crown of Scotland and no royal cypher. Red telephone boxes or kiosks of type K6 were also treated in the same way, so too GPO/Royal Mail lamp and Pillar boxes.

Republic of Ireland edit

There are many true British boxes still extant in the Republic of Ireland from the reigns of Victoria, Edward VII and George V. However, locally made boxes from the foundry of H. & C. Smith in Dublin were commissioned very early in the history of wall boxes. Indeed, a First National Standard box of this type can be seen at Johnstownbridge, County Kildare. Additionally, H. & C. Smith were asked to provide local versions of the WB78 Smith and Hawkes wall box during 1861 and one can still be seen at Kilmacoon Hill in Dublin.

Following the 1922 Partition of Ireland, the Irish Free State continued to commission foundries to make boxes of similar design to those installed under British rule, but without a royal cipher and repainted the red boxes in green. Many of these were from the foundry of IVI at Athy, County Kildare, who held the contract for several decades. Earlier Irish Free State boxes, such as the large A size box seen below, have the elaborate wreathed harp emblem on the door. However, with the formation of the Irish Government Department of Posts and Telegraphs, their Gaelic script logo "P&T" (using a Tironian "et" instead of ampersand) began to appear on wall boxes, such as that seen below at Clonmany, County Donegal. In recent times the department has become a free-standing commercial organisation known as An Post. No cast iron wall boxes have been made with An Post's wavy line logo, but there are plenty of sheet steel wall boxes across the Republic bearing adhesive decals or screen printed with An Post's distinctive yellow on green logo.

Images edit

Wall boxes around the world edit

The wall box has proved to be a very resilient design. It has been widely adopted by French postal authorities with a succession of finely detailed and often ornate boxes in France and its dependent territories.

See also edit

References edit

  • Stray, Julian (2007). Ludlow Wall Boxes - in Cross Post-Journal of the Friends of BPMA - Autumn 2007 issue. British Postal Museum & Archive, UK.
  • various, Various (2004). Grand Catalogue - EIIR Wall Boxes. Letter Box Study Group, UK.
  • Ferrugia, Jean (1969). The Letter Box. Centaur Press, UK.
  • Robinson, Martin (2000). Old Letter Boxes. Shire Publications, Princes Riseborough, UK. ISBN 0-7478-0446-X.

External links edit

  • The Letter Box Study Group
  • Colne Valley Postal History Museum
  • British Postal Museum & Archive

wall, this, article, about, post, wall, boxes, electrical, wall, boxes, pattress, jukebox, remote, controls, jukebox, wallbox, this, article, includes, list, references, related, reading, external, links, sources, remain, unclear, because, lacks, inline, citat. This article is about post wall boxes For electrical wall boxes see pattress For jukebox remote controls see Jukebox wallbox This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Wall boxes are a type of post box or letter box found in many countries including France the United Kingdom the Commonwealth of Nations Crown dependencies and Ireland They differ from pillar boxes in that instead of being a free standing structure they are generally set into a wall hence the name or supported on a free standing pole girder or other stable structure A British Wall box set into a brick pillar at the Amberley Working Museum In the UK UK Dependent Territories Colonies and former Colonies and in many former British Empire countries wall boxes usually bear the initials of the reigning monarch at the time the box was made The first UK wall boxes were erected in 1857 in Shrewsbury and Market Drayton Contents 1 Construction 2 Manufacturers 3 History 3 1 Queen Victoria 3 2 King Edward VII 3 3 King George V 3 4 King Edward VIII 3 5 King George VI 3 6 Elizabeth II 3 7 Republic of Ireland 4 Images 5 Wall boxes around the world 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksConstruction editWall boxes are normally made of cast iron and are fabricated in two large castings with a third casting for the door The rear part of the box which is set into the wall is cast as one piece rather like an upright coffin The whole front of the box including the aperture royal cipher and the collection plate holder are cast as one There is a large opening in the front casting into which a hinged door is inserted It is held in place by steel pins at top and bottom which locate into machined holes in the front casting A secure 5 lever Chubb lock is fitted to all wall boxes made after 1870 Previously narrower locks from the firm of Nettlefields were used They are not interchangeable and this causes problems when keys are lost and locks have to be changed nbsp The tablet holder box and the Chubb lock are clearly visible as a postman clears mail from an A size wall box in Deal KentInitial examples were fitted with a simple wire tray internally over the base to raise any post off the lower surface This was necessary because water seeped into the box through the side seams and condensation could also form on the inside making the base rather wet Later modifications saw this wirework extended to form a vertical barrier across the whole inside front of the box This prevented mail from cascading out onto the ground when the door was opened for clearing the box By 1879 UK wall boxes were also fitted with a drop down hinged metal letter chute to help guide the stored mail into the waiting sack or basket during clearance An even later modification which was then widely retro fitted was the provision externally of a Next Collection tablet holder to hold the square metal tablet inscribed enamelled or printed with the time or day on which the next collection is due to be made At the same time internally a tablet storage box was added to hold the remaining day or hour tablets not currently in use Manufacturers editMany different manufacturers names may be found on British style wall boxes many of which were exported around the world Included amongst these are Smith and Hawkes Ltd Eagle Range amp Foundry Bernard P Walker amp Co W T Allen amp Co Ltd Carron Co Derby Castings Ltd Andrew Handyside amp Co Ltd Manufacture of cast iron wall boxes in the UK for postal use finished in 1980 History editIn 1849 the British Post Office first encouraged people to install a letter box to facilitate the delivery of mail Before then letterboxes of a similar design had been installed in the doors and walls of post offices for people to drop off outgoing mail An example of such a wall box originally installed in the wall of the Wakefield Post Office is dated 1809 and believed to be the oldest example in Britain It is now on display at the Wakefield Museum Queen Victoria edit nbsp This rare Victorian 2nd National standard wall box near Andover in Hampshire has a large hood and a pedimented top to keep the rain outLetter Box Study Group identifiers appear in brackets The first pillar box was erected in the Channel Islands in 1852 and it was soon realised that while successful pillar boxes were expensive to manufacture and sometimes difficult to site A box which could be recessed into a wall was preferred in rural areas where no pavement or street lighting existed The First National Standard WB74 design was made by the Birmingham UK firm of Smith amp Hawkes Ltd and the first boxes were installed in 1857 Today around ten survive mostly in the West Country and West Midlands of Great Britain The design was seen to have several flaws which led to unacceptable ingress of water when in use in the wet British climate A modified version The Second National Standard WB75 and WB76 debuted in 1859 and was more successful A pedimented top and a large rain hood helped to keep water out of the box Drainage holes were provided at the base to enable accumulated water to drain away easily The doors of these two boxes were rather small and set high up the front of the box which made clearing them awkward nbsp The only known example of the large 2nd National Standard wall box is at Boydon End Wickhambrook in SuffolkThis problem was overcome with the 1861 modification to form the Smith amp Hawkes No 2 Size WB78 in addition a larger size known as No 1 WB77 was also provided It had been trialled with the Second National Standard in very small numbers only one of which has survived in the UK at Wickhambrook Suffolk There are about ten survivors of the later No 1 Large size and several hundred of the No 2 size in the UK nbsp A Victorian Wall box unidentified type near Ashprington Devon UK By moving the Collection plate from the top front of the box casting to a slot in the door it was made much easier to change having previously been bolted to the box front These produced the 1871 design WB83 1 The foundry underwent a series of ownership changes which saw Eagle Range amp Foundry Bernard P Walker and even a combination of these two incised into the box maker s plate at the foot of the door WB83 2 83 5 The Eagle Range amp Foundry boxes of the mid 1880s were made with smooth recessed collection plates and small neat VR cipher and crown The contract passed to W T Allen in 1886 with the production of the odd size C box WB86 which should have been 10 inches 25 cm wide and 13 inches 33 cm deep but was actually 13 inches 33 cm wide and only 10 inches 25 cm deep Only 70 were made before this mistake was rectified with the introduction in 1887 of the Queen Victoria Jubilee boxes This series comprised three sizes with the largest now designated A the medium size formerly No 1 now B and the small one formerly No 2 Type C WB84 WB85 WB87 This trend remained the same for the next 75 years King Edward VII edit nbsp A very good example of the Type A wall box with a full Edward VII Scroll type cipher at Cambridge Railway StationEarly Edwardian wall boxes used the Victorian patterns modified to show an E instead of a V but retaining the Imperial State Crown from the Victorian boxes This was modified in 1905 to correctly show the Tudor Crown of King Edward VII Later still a full scroll cipher was used on all but the smallest boxes King George V edit During this long reign many thousands of wall boxes were installed Of note are the free standing wall boxes of Size A for use on the street and the introduction of boxes with rear opening doors designated Types D E and F respectively for use in sub post offices Included in these are the Type E boxes made respectively in WB106 1 1932 by Andrew Handyside amp Co of Derby WB106 2 1933 by Derby Castings Ltd WB106 3 1934 6 by W T Allen amp Co Ltd of London which cause a lot of confusion for those photographing and studying them as they are identical save for the Maker s name on the base which may be obscured by 75 years worth of paint All have the larger GR cipher positioned low on the door whereas earlier GR boxes by W T Allen 1910 25 have a smaller cipher set much higher on the door so that the top of the cipher almost abuts the collection plate holder Similar difficulties are encountered when trying to identify the corresponding B size wall boxes from this period nbsp Wall box Made by W T Allen amp Co Ltd situated in Hod HaSharon Israel former post office It was constructed by the British Mandate authorities and later used by the Israeli Post Office which changed the collection plate Traces of Royal cypher GR are still visible As noted a few wall boxes are confusingly free standing such as that outside Vollams Newsagents formerly a post office in Gloddaeth Street Llandudno These large A size boxes were designed specially to be free standing and include additionally a large cast iron base and an attractive pedimented top surmounted by a ball A well known example was situated at Waterloo station in London until removal in the late 1990s and subsequent restoration at the Isle of Wight Postal Museum In other areas of the UK such as East Anglia and the West Country standard wall boxes have been mounted on steel girders or poles where no suitable wall exists King Edward VIII edit As Edward Prince of Wales abdicated in November 1936 without ever reaching his coronation only a handful of post boxes were made carrying his Royal Cipher Of these 200 were pillar boxes 70 were Ludlow style wall boxes and just 11 were cast iron wall boxes Following the Abdication Crisis in late 1936 resentment and bad feeling led to the removal or exchange of many of the doors of these boxes Today none exists in their original form save for one Ludlow wall box at Bawdsey in Suffolk Unfortunately the original enamel plate on this box was stolen and the plate seen on the box today is a modern replica King George VI edit With the accession of Prince Albert Edward as King George VI in 1936 the GPO continued to use up stocks of George V doors as these were simply marked GR with no regnal number It was not until summer 1937 that boxes began to appear bearing the newly approved Royal Cipher of King George VI This featured a scroll typeface with Roman numerals for the regnal number surmounted by the Tudor crown The contract for wall boxes resided at this time with W T Allen amp Co Ltd of London for the B and E size boxes and with Carron Co of Falkirk Scotland for the A and D sizes and remained with them throughout this reign By this time production of the type C and F size boxes had been discontinued Elizabeth II edit nbsp An interesting version of the EIIR wall box in use as a pillar at Cowley Bridge Exeter It is a Carron Co box with full width 10 apertureComing to the throne in 1952 Queen Elizabeth II has had the longest reign of any British monarch since the invention of the post box Queen Victoria reigned for nearly as long but post boxes only appeared halfway through her reign Hence there are more EIIR boxes on the streets of the UK and Commonwealth countries than of any other monarch Wall box manufacture at the time of her accession was with W T Allen amp Co Ltd The greatest changes were in the size of the apertures in use The older six inches 15 cm wide aperture was not sufficient for modern larger letters and was quickly enlarged first to eight inches 20 cm and then to ten inches 25 cm This combined with a change in contractor to Carron Co led to a good variety of boxes in both Type B and the larger Type A The contract for manufacturing cast iron wall boxes ceased in 1980 but in the period 1952 1980 more than 20 000 boxes were installed in the UK In Scotland there were protests when the boxes made early in the reign of Elizabeth II were produced These bore the cypher EIIR but there were objections because Queen Elizabeth is the first Queen of Scotland and Queen of the United Kingdom to bear that name Elizabeth I having been Queen of England and Queen of Ireland only After several EIIR pillar boxes were blown up by improvised explosive devices the General Post Office as it was at that time replaced them with ones which only bore the Crown of Scotland and no royal cypher Red telephone boxes or kiosks of type K6 were also treated in the same way so too GPO Royal Mail lamp and Pillar boxes Republic of Ireland edit There are many true British boxes still extant in the Republic of Ireland from the reigns of Victoria Edward VII and George V However locally made boxes from the foundry of H amp C Smith in Dublin were commissioned very early in the history of wall boxes Indeed a First National Standard box of this type can be seen at Johnstownbridge County Kildare Additionally H amp C Smith were asked to provide local versions of the WB78 Smith and Hawkes wall box during 1861 and one can still be seen at Kilmacoon Hill in Dublin Following the 1922 Partition of Ireland the Irish Free State continued to commission foundries to make boxes of similar design to those installed under British rule but without a royal cipher and repainted the red boxes in green Many of these were from the foundry of IVI at Athy County Kildare who held the contract for several decades Earlier Irish Free State boxes such as the large A size box seen below have the elaborate wreathed harp emblem on the door However with the formation of the Irish Government Department of Posts and Telegraphs their Gaelic script logo P amp T using a Tironian et instead of ampersand began to appear on wall boxes such as that seen below at Clonmany County Donegal In recent times the department has become a free standing commercial organisation known as An Post No cast iron wall boxes have been made with An Post s wavy line logo but there are plenty of sheet steel wall boxes across the Republic bearing adhesive decals or screen printed with An Post s distinctive yellow on green logo Images edit nbsp WB75 Victorian 1st National Standard wall box in Brough Derbyshire England nbsp 1880s Victorian wall box at Stroud Gloucestershire nbsp Victorian wall box at Steeple Barton Oxfordshire nbsp One of the oldest wall boxes in Ireland is the locally made WB74 at Johnstownbridge made by H amp C Smith of Dublin nbsp WB84 Unusual modified aperture on a Victorian A size wall box inside Chatham Royal Navy Dockyard Kent nbsp WB87 2 Victorian Type C wall box still in use with An Post at Dromod railway station County Leitrim Ireland nbsp An An Post VR wall box at the National Museum of Ireland Dublin Ireland nbsp WB95 Large free standing GR Wall box in Gloddaeth Street Llandudno Wales nbsp GR wall box at Beverley railway station nbsp WB106 GR Type B Wall box in Saint Brelade Jersey nbsp GVIR wall box in a rural location near Darley Dale church Derbyshire England nbsp Irish Free State Type A wall box at the Isle of Wight Postal Museum nbsp Buncrana County Donegal High Street is the location of this C size P7T wall box nbsp Large EIIR Type D Wall box at Alrewas PO Staffordshire England nbsp Elizabeth II era design in Edinburgh showing the Crown of Scotland in place of the St Edward s Crown EIIR cypher used outside Scotland nbsp A wooden wall box in Burlington House London nbsp Victorian wall box in Rabat Malta nbsp Queen Elizabeth II wall box in Senglea Malta nbsp A Royal Mail wall box in Salle NorfolkWall boxes around the world editThe wall box has proved to be a very resilient design It has been widely adopted by French postal authorities with a succession of finely detailed and often ornate boxes in France and its dependent territories nbsp 1985 pattern large wall box at Les Mesnils Garnier Normandy nbsp 1944 Pattern wall box inside Mont Saint Michel Brittany nbsp 1930 sheet steel box at L Abbee de La Lucerne near Granville Normandy nbsp Old wall box in Mallorca Spain nbsp French wall box of the 1977 pattern now on display at the Colne Valley Postal History Museum Essex nbsp French Aerial Post box from the 1930s now in a UK private collection nbsp French Post Box at Dinard airport nbsp The standard post box of the former Soviet UnionSee also editPillar box Lamp box Ludlow style wall box Post box 2012 Olympics gold post boxes in the United KingdomReferences editStray Julian 2007 Ludlow Wall Boxes in Cross Post Journal of the Friends of BPMA Autumn 2007 issue British Postal Museum amp Archive UK various Various 2004 Grand Catalogue EIIR Wall Boxes Letter Box Study Group UK Ferrugia Jean 1969 The Letter Box Centaur Press UK Robinson Martin 2000 Old Letter Boxes Shire Publications Princes Riseborough UK ISBN 0 7478 0446 X External links editThe Letter Box Study Group Colne Valley Postal History Museum British Postal Museum amp Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wall box amp oldid 1173652393, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.