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View Full Version : When are we going to have mails at our door steps



arabian-brain
27-06-02, 08:51 PM
Rural Free Delivery
Today it is difficult to envision the isolation that was the lot of farm families in early America. In the days before telephones, radios, or televisions were common, the farmer's main links to the outside world were the mail and the newspapers that came by mail to the nearest post office. Since the mail had to be picked up, this meant a trip to the post office, often involving a day's travel, round-trip. The farmer might delay picking up mail for days, weeks, or even months until the trip could be coupled with one for supplies, food, or equipment.

John Wanamaker of Pennsylvania was the first Postmaster General to advocate rural free delivery (RFD). Although funds were appropriated a month before he left office in 1893, subsequent Postmasters General dragged their feet on inaugurating the new service so that it was 1896 before the first experimental rural delivery routes began in West Virginia, with carriers working out of post offices in Charlestown, Halltown, and Uvilla.

Many transportation events in postal history were marked by great demonstrations: the Pony Express, for example, and scheduled airmail service in 1918. The West Virginia experiment with rural free delivery, however, was launched in relative obscurity and in an atmosphere of hostility. Critics of the plan claimed it was impractical and too expensive to have a postal carrier trudge over rutted roads and through forests trying to deliver mail in all kinds of weather.

However, the farmers, without exception, were delighted with the new service and the new world open to them. After receiving free delivery for a few months, one observed that it would take away part of life to give it up. A Missouri farmer looked back on his life and calculated that, in 15 years, he had traveled 12,000 miles going to and from his post office to get the mail.

A byproduct of rural free delivery was the stimulation it provided to the development of the great American system of roads and highways. A prerequisite for rural delivery was good roads. After hundreds of petitions for rural delivery were turned down by the Post Office because of unserviceable and inaccessible roads, responsible local governments began to extend and improve existing highways. Between 1897 and 1908, these local governments spent an estimated $72 million on bridges, culverts, and other improvements. In one county in Indiana, farmers themselves paid over $2,600 to grade and gravel a road in order to qualify for RFD.

The impact of RFD as a cultural and social agent for millions of Americans was even more striking, and, in this respect, rural delivery still is a vital link between industrial and rural America.

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How long it will take guys?

I really dream to check my mails at my home, not drive to them.

Are we late for this technology? I mean free delivery

First we have to redesign our infrastructure (streets, transportation, buildings, highways, etc…)

I dream for the day when my friend ask for my house direction, I tell him go to SOUTH 6th st., and house number 10000, other than telling him my house is by Babooh supermarket near Al mesjed Al kabeer.

arabian-brain
27-06-02, 08:53 PM
sorry guys

I copied this form a website


http://www.usps.com/history/his2.htm

Arabian Princess
27-06-02, 09:49 PM
good and intresting point arabian brain,
Well although I agree with you that I dream that my mail will come next to my door step, but I dont see that happening. Advancment of technology took alot from the mail's importance (I dont say it is not important, am saying not as important as before).

Wanderer
27-06-02, 10:04 PM
Omani's have to go to the Post Office to collect their mail ??

arabian-brain
28-06-02, 12:37 AM
Thank you Miss


But we can do it, if the Ministry of transportation put their effort in this FD (free delivery) mail project. It will enhance our businesses to reach their target markets. Imagine that Sultan shopping center can send you coupons or other sales discount programs at your home address.


Can someone think with me in how are we going to utilize FD mail to serve our businesses and the public in general?

Please bare with me :)

mimosa
28-06-02, 01:18 AM
Brain,

Good Subject...I've never understood why the Gulf states with their relatively small populations and poor telecommunications have never justified a door-to-door mail service.

The UK, for example, has twenty times the population of Oman, a good telecoms system, is about the same size geographically, yet can have a letter delivered anywhere in the country for the equivalent of 100bz within 24 hours....and it's been that way for 100 years (and it's profitable, even with UK labour costs).

Privatise the mail, I think that's the answer. Let an experienced company come and code every house and building in Oman and start the new service. Then Oman could be ahead of all it's neighbours, even Dubai.....that would be nice!

arabian-brain
28-06-02, 02:26 AM
mimosa

I agree with you %100

Indeed, this project will create enormous number of jobs for unemployed Omani people. As you said, we should has a comparative advantage in having this FD project and that later will make us the leader of it in the Gulf region.

While I was reading your replay, a good idea came to my mind

Other then just concentrating on the Omani Airline and trying to make it the ‘best in the world’ we can start a business like FEDERAL EXPRESS or DHL and keep our share with Gulf Airline ( we and Bahrain can make a hell of a Airline). The result will be, the 1st Arabian mail service Airline.

Great isn’t

I know it is a huge project, but hay, it worth thinking about it.

Everyone starts with one mile

:p :p :p :p :p

Nimr Mal Zibala
09-07-02, 09:02 PM
You kids crack me up? Nest you will want to vote for your MP's
Where do u think you are teh west, te land of the free? This is Oman the land of khalfan, khamis and JumA baby. Mail at the door lol! free mail AHAHAHAHHAHA LOL
shuuuuure would u like free tea & cake when u goto pay your bills at Omantel too?

mimosa
11-07-02, 03:31 PM
That would be a nice touch fishface :)

I'm not advocating a free door-to-door mail service. Just a privatised mail service: This would mean investment, and a door-to-door service eventually. I can't believe how expensive the mail is in Oman, when there's only a PO Box system. If you're in the same city, you may as well just take it yourself!

X-press
12-07-02, 02:24 AM
Interesting thread Arabian-brain and indeed it will be wanderful if our mails could be delivered to our door-step, like in most countries.

In my case, because it is delivered through a work mailbox and go from one department to another, I end up getting some of my mails very late or even not at all.

Unfortunately, no matter how great the idea is, I don't see Oman having that facility any time soon...

jack
16-10-04, 01:38 AM
Any progress with the mail system ... ?

This looks like a great business opp :scratch:

CrazyReD
16-10-04, 04:25 AM
It does they set up mail boxes on houses ages ago
Maybe with this privitazation of the post office will change that

HaYa
16-10-04, 03:56 PM
arabian-brain

Its seems like a wish which will never come True!

Great topic anyway :)

HITMAN
16-10-04, 04:42 PM
This looks like a great business opp :scratch:

Jacky, need a partner? :scratch:

Amir
17-10-04, 03:56 PM
In such case for government's and business betterment it would be better that they make a trade-mark for the postal service, and then give out private people something like a franchise.

Give each franchise responsibility of a certain area to deliver the mail, I think by doing this the government can reduce the cost and they can more gain with the franchise they've given out.

But yeah to take such changes it would take longer time, the banks would also need to help people to do such business.

Maybe it will occure, but let's wait and see!

Amir
17-10-04, 04:03 PM
Omani's have to go to the Post Office to collect their mail ??

Nope we still do not have such system my friend!