![]() |
|||||||||||||||||
![]() |
Essay Sections:
Introduction | On
The Edge of Modernity | The Railroad and the Modern
Landscape | The Railroad's Direct and Indirect Effects
| Nature's Limits | Conclusion
| Notes | Recommended Resources
The Railroad and the Modern Landscape:
Postal Service:
Post offices opened every community on the Eastern
Shore to the doings of the world. On Chincoteague
in March 1884, thirty-three Northern daily newspapers arrived each day
at the post office. Later that year (the year the railroad made its way
down the peninsula), the citizens of the hamlet of Muddy
Creek campaigned for a post office with feverish dedication. They
cleared timber for a new road to Cattail Neck, and a Democratic storeowner
in hopes of attracting the good favor of the new administration renamed
his establishment "Cleveland" for the President-elect. Post
offices established nodes on a greater network and, in effect, helped
attract roads, banks, hotels, services, stores, and residences. Once a
place obtained postal service, its citizens were equally determined not
to lose it or see it curtailed. When one small town had its mail service
to the Accomack County courthouse cut to three days a week, its citizens
demanded "equal rights."26
The post office's effects on the ways local citizens understood their
landscape were not confined to the race for town status. Postmasters,
responding to federal requests, filled out annual reports on their offices'
activities and reach. These reports grew in sophistication and detail
over the 1880s and 1890s. By the turn of the century postmasters recorded
postal routes and areas of service on a map of concentric circles showing
the extensive and intensive network they oversaw. New understandings of
space, time, service, and the perceived "rights" of citizens
who interacted with the post office mixed in these years, yielding a modern
world built on tangible and intangible networks.27
Essay Sections:
Introduction | On
The Edge of Modernity | The Railroad and the Modern
Landscape | The Railroad's Direct and Indirect Effects
| Nature's Limits | Conclusion
| Notes | Recommended Resources
Published: 31 July 2007
© 2007 William G. Thomas III, Brooks Miles Barnes, Tom Szuba and Southern Spaces |
||||||||||||||||