Signed, Sealed & Delivered | America in Pursuit
11 min
•Jan 27, 20264 months agoSummary
This episode explores how the U.S. Postal Service served as the technological and communications infrastructure that enabled the American Revolution and the founding of the nation. Through the lens of journalist Winifred Gallagher's research, the episode reveals how Benjamin Franklin and other founders used postal networks to share revolutionary ideas, and how a 1792 policy subsidizing newspapers to citizens created an informed electorate that shaped American political culture.
Insights
- The postal system functioned as the nervous system of the early republic, directly enabling revolutionary communication and later democratic governance through information distribution
- A deliberate subsidy policy (taxing expensive letter mail to fund cheap newspaper distribution) was a foundational strategy for creating an informed citizenry and remains radical by historical European standards
- Infrastructure investment in postal networks catalyzed broader economic development, forcing creation of transportation industries (stagecoaches, horseback riders) that organized the nation's physical and social landscape
- The postal system's low-cost distribution of books and magazines served as an informal secondary educational system for agrarian populations well into the 20th century
- Early U.S. government was fundamentally structured as an information and communications network, with the same people managing communications networks later running the government itself
Trends
Critical infrastructure as political foundation: Communications networks as prerequisite for democratic governance and national cohesionSubsidized information access as democratic policy: Using economic mechanisms to ensure universal access to knowledge and newsInfrastructure-driven territorial organization: Postal networks organizing physical expansion and settlement patterns across expanding nationsTechnology as revolution enabler: New communication technologies (postal networks, then social media) as catalysts for political upheaval and social changePublic goods investment in literacy and civic engagement: Government-funded distribution systems creating informed electoratesDecentralized communication networks for political coordination: Underground networks (Committees of Correspondence) preceding formal government structuresUniversal service mandates: Postal policy ensuring reach to every household regardless of profitability, establishing precedent for public infrastructure equity
Topics
U.S. Postal Service history and foundingBenjamin Franklin's role as Postmaster GeneralCommittees of Correspondence and underground revolutionary networksConstitutional Post and informal communications networks1792 postal policy reforms by Benjamin Rush and James MadisonNewspaper subsidization and distribution policyInformed electorate creation and democratic governancePost roads and transportation infrastructure developmentStagecoach and horseback mail delivery systemsMagazine and book distribution pricing policyAgrarian education through postal distributionAmerican Revolution communication strategiesInformation as national infrastructureComparison of U.S. and European postal systemsRole of technology in political revolutions
People
Benjamin Franklin
Founding father and first Postmaster General who wove the postal system into America's DNA and recognized its power t...
Thomas Jefferson
Revolutionary leader who used underground communications networks (Committees of Correspondence) to coordinate revolu...
Samuel Adams
Revolutionary leader who participated in underground communications networks enabling coordination of revolutionary a...
Benjamin Rush
Political philosopher who, with James Madison, devised the 1792 postal policy subsidizing newspapers to create an inf...
James Madison
Political philosopher who, with Benjamin Rush, created the 1792 postal subsidy scheme to distribute newspapers to all...
Alexis de Tocqueville
French observer who visited America in 1831 and was astonished at the rapid development of the postal system compared...
Winifred Gallagher
Journalist and author of 'How the Post Office Created America' who provides primary analysis of the postal system's r...
Quotes
"The first US government was really an information and communications network."
Ramteen Arableui•Early in episode
"The Post Office was really woven into America's DNA by Benjamin Franklin. His earlier experience of running the primitive mail system that linked Great Britain's 13 colonies gave him the managerial skills, but much more important, it also convinced him that these 13 very quarrelsome little fiefdoms would be far more powerful together than apart."
Winifred Gallagher•Mid-episode
"They realized that a democracy, if it's going to work, requires knowledgeable voters. So they decided that they would use their new postal network to create an informed electorate."
Winifred Gallagher•Mid-episode
"It was the nervous system of the Republic, the early Republic, and the same people who ran these communications networks ended up running the government."
Winifred Gallagher•Mid-episode
"The post office did arguably create the country and create our political culture. There are good days and bad days, but we do have this extraordinary freedom of information and communications that's kind of made us who we are."
Winifred Gallagher•Closing segment
Full Transcript