Airmail imprint on an envelope (Thailand)
Airmail (or
air mail) is
mail that is transported by
aircraft. It typically arrives more quickly than
surface mail, and usually 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.
In June 2006 the
United
States Postal Service formally
trademarked Air Mail (two words with
capital first letters) along with
Pony
Express. On 14 May 2007,
Air Mail was incorporated
into the classification
First Class Mail
International.
Air-speeded
A postal service may sometimes opt to transport some regular mail
by air, perhaps because other transportation is unavailable. It is
usually impossible to know this by examining an envelope, and such
items are not considered "airmail." Generally, airmail would take a
guaranteed and scheduled flight and arrive first, while air-speeded
mail would wait for a non-guaranteed and merely available flight
and would arrive later than normal airmail.
Names
A letter sent via airmail may be called an
aerogramme,
aerogram,
air
letter or simply
airmail letter. However,
aerogramme and
aerogram may also
refer to a specific kind of airmail letter which is its own
envelope; see
aerogram.
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
airmail stamps may also be
available, or required; the rules vary in different
countries.
The study of airmail is known as
aerophilately.
History
Specific instances of a letter being delivered by air long predate
the introduction of Airmail as a regularly scheduled service
available to the general public.
Although
homing 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
January 7, 1785, on a balloon flight from
Dover
to France
near
Calais
.
During the
first aerial flight in North America by balloon on January 9, 1793,
from Philadelphia
to Deptford, New Jersey
, Jean-Pierre
Blanchard carried a personal letter from George Washington to be delivered to the
owner of whatever property Blanchard happened to land on, making
the flight the first delivery of air mail in the United
States.
The first
official air mail delivery in the United States took place on
August 17, 1859, when John
Wise piloted a balloon starting in Lafayette,
Indiana
with a destination of New York
.
Weather
issues forced him to land in Crawfordsville, Indiana
and the mail reached its final destination via
train. In 1959 the U.S. Postal Service issued a 7 cent stamp
commemorating the event.
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
, India
to Naini, India, when Henri
Pequet carried 6,500 letters a distance of
13 km.
The
world's first scheduled airmail post service took place in the
United Kingdom between the London
suburbs of
Hendon
, North
London
, and Windsor
, Berkshire, on 9 September
1911. Although mail flights were being accomplished
around the world, the first airmail service established officially
by an airline occurred in Colombia
, South America, in the 19th of October 1920.
Scadta, the first airline of the country,
flew landing river by river delivering mail in its
destinations.
In Australia, the first air mail contract was won by the fledgling
Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Services (
QANTAS), commencing in November 1922. Many other
flights, such as that of the
Vin Fiz
Flyer suffered crashes and some ended in complete disaster, but
many countries had operating services by the 1920s.

A cover carried on a 1932 first flight
in the north woods of Canada, with a cachet and franked with both a
regular and an airmail stamp.
1928 book
So Disdained by Nevil Shute - a novel based on this author's
deep interest in and thorough knowledge of aviation - includes a
monologue by a veteran pilot, preserving the atmosphere of these
pioneering times: "We used to fly on the Paris route, from Hounslow
to Le Bourget and get
through as best as you could. Later we moved on to
Croydon
. (...) We carried the much advertised Air
Mails. That meant the machines had to fly whether there were
passengers to be carried or not. It was left to the discretion of
the pilot whether or not the flight should be cancelled in bad
weather; the pilots were dead keen on flying in the most impossible
conditions. Sanderson got killed this way at Douinville. And all he
had in the machine was a couple of picture postcards from trippers
in Paris, sent to their families as a curiosity. That was the Air
Mail. No passengers or anything - just the mail".
In the
same 1928 when this was published, the famous German pilot Gunther Plüschow carried out the first
air mail from Puntas
Arenas
to Ushuaia
, in the southern part of Argentina
. Later Plüschow was killed in an air crash,
his memory still honoured in Argentina.
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 first
stamps designated specifically for airmail were issued by Italy
in 1917, and
used on experimental flights; they were produced by overprinting special delivery
stamps. Austria also overprinted stamps for airmail in March
1918, soon followed by the first
definitive stamp for airmail, issued by the
United States in May 1918.
The
dirigible 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.
Media

A 1945 newsreel covering various
firsts in human flight, including U.S.
See also
References
Notes
Sources
- Richard McP. Cabeen, Standard Handbook of Stamp
Collecting (Collectors Club, 1979), pp. 207–221
External links