Post box history featured on Guernsey stamps

Ben ChappleGuernsey
News imageGuernsey Stamps Two Guernsey stamps showing blue post boxes. One box is free standing with flowers in a tub and two bicycles on stands behind and the other is set in a wall with dogs playing on the wall.Guernsey Stamps
The post box in Trinity Square was made in 1887 to mark the Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria and it the only example of this specific Jubilee design in Guernsey

A set of stamps featuring post boxes has been published to mark key moments in Guernsey's postal history.

The stamp issue features six post boxes including a rare 1887 Jubilee pillar box at Trinity Square, and a Georgian wall box at Fort Road, which was damaged in an air raid during the Nazi German Occupation.

A trial in the Channel Islands in 1852 marked the first use of pillar boxes within the British postal system. Guernsey's first boxes were installed in 1853 - including Union Street, which is the oldest continuously used pillar box in the British Isles.

Guernsey Post is running several projects to celebrate the history of post boxes after it closed 83 boxes last year due to falling use.

News imageGold post box next to a wall. A building is to the right of the image.
The St Clair Hill post box was painted gold in 2012 to honourGuernsey athlete Percy Hodge's medal in the 3,000m steeplechase at the 1920 Olympic Games

The initial trials carried out in the islands led to the boxes being adopted across Britain.

While red became the standard colour in 1874, Guernsey Post adopted the island's distinctive blue in 1980.

Bridget Yabsley, head of philatelic at Guernsey Post, said: "Post boxes are a distinctive and enduring part of Guernsey's landscape, reflecting both the island's rich postal history and their continued role in everyday life."

News imageA blue post box set inside a damaged concrete surround with grass, trees, and a stone wall behind it.
Damage from an Allied air raid in 1944 can still be seen in the concrete surround of this post box on Fort Road

She said a display at the Guernsey Post Museum, which offers a free exhibition located on the second floor of the island's branch at 7 Commercial Arcade in St Peter Port.

"The new museum displays build on this theme by exploring the wider stories connected with Guernsey's postal heritage, including historic Liberation stamp issues, Sark's first official postage stamps, and Guernsey's long association with Victor Hugo.

"Together, they highlight how stamps and postal history continue to preserve and share the Bailiwick's cultural identity."

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