AirmailAirmail
(or air mail) is mail
that is transported by aircraft.
It typically arrives more quickly than surface mail, and costs more to send. Airmail
may be the only option for sending mail to some destinations, such as overseas,
if the mail cannot wait the time it would take to arrive by ship,
sometimes weeks. A postal service
may sometimes opt to transport some regular mail by air, perhaps because other
transportation is unavailable, but it is usually impossible to know this by examining
an envelope, and such items are not considered "airmail".
A letter sent by airmail may be called an aerogramme, aerogram,
air letter or simply airmail letter.
The choice to send a letter by air is indicated either by a handwritten note on
the envelope, by the use
of special labels called airmail etiquettes, or by the use of specially-marked
envelopes. Special postage
stamps may also be available, or required; the rules vary in different countries.
The study of
airmail is known as aerophilately.
History Although
carrier pigeons had long been used to send messages (an activity known as pigeon
mail), the first mail to be carried by an air vehicle was on 7
January 1785, on a balloon
flight from Dover
to France near Calais.
Balloons also carried mail out of Paris
and Metz during the Franco-Prussian
War (1870), drifting over
the heads of the Germans
besieging those cities. Balloon mail was also carried on an 1877
flight in Nashville,
Tennessee.
The introduction of the airplane
in 1903 generated immediate interest
in using them for mail transport, and the first official flight took place on
18 February 1911
in Allahabad, British
India, when Henri Pequet carried 6,500 letters a distance of 13 km. Many other
flights, such as that of the Vin Fiz Flyer, ended in disaster, but many countries
had operating services by the 1920s.
Since stamp
collecting was already a well-developed hobby by this time, collectors followed
developments in airmail service closely, and went to some trouble to find out
about the first flights between various destinations, and to get letters onto
them. The authorities often used special cachets on the covers, and in many cases
the pilot would sign them as
well. The dirigibles
of the 1920s and 1930s also
carried airmail, known as dirigible mail. The German zeppelins were especially
visible in this role, and many countries issued special stamps for use on zeppelin
mail. In the
1950s, general enthusiasm for
rockets led to experiments
with rocket mail. There was a single use of Missile Mail by the
United States in 1959; see: USS
Barbero. None of the various schemes went into production use, although many
souvenir covers exist. A number of spacecraft
have also carried space mail, sometimes in rather large quantities, all unabashedly
for promotional purposes. The study of these is known as astrophilately.
In the United States, separate
higher priced postage
stamps were long required for domestic airmail, but in 1977
the United States Postal Service initiated all domestic first class mail, land
or air, would be delivered by the most speedy practical option for a standard
first class stamp. Photographs,
illustrations and clipart at Classroom ClipArt.com |