Letter Boxes For Outside Wall



  1. Cable Wall Boxes
  2. Electrical Metal Boxes Wall Mounted
  3. Letter Boxes For Outside Wallpaper
  4. Letter Boxes For Outside Wall Decor

Commercial mailboxes for U.S.P.S. Delivery include Cluster Box Units (CBU’s), Horizontal Mailboxes, Vertical Mailboxes and a variety of additional products. These products are commonly used in apartment complexes, commercial buildings, residential developments, condominiums and several other applications. SM Through the wall letter box. The answer to is, “well yes, of course, they are, they are designed to be used outside!”. Our internal use boxes are obviously the exception but if you want to know if your rear access or your through the wall mailbox is going to keep your post dry, it.

Letter

Paul's Unofficial Letterbox Pages: History of British Letter Boxes - Part 1

Victorian Letter Boxes

Most houses in Britain have a letter box in the front door, usually a simple slot with a flap over it, through which the post is delivered each morning. The Post Office first encouraged people to provide these in 1849. Similar letter boxes were provided at post offices for people sending letters. One such letter box which was originally in the wall of the Wakefield Post Office has the date 1809 on it and is probably the oldest British letter box still in existence.

Wall

In 1840 Rowland Hill suggested the idea of roadside letter boxes for Britain. Letter boxes of this kind were already being used in countries such as France, Belgium and Germany. However there were no roadside letter boxes in the British Isles until 1852, when the first pillar boxes were erected at St Hellier in Jersey at the recommendation of Anthony Trollope, who was working as a Surveyor's Clerk for the Post Office.

Wall

In 1853 the first pillar box on the British mainland was erected at Botchergate, Carlise. A similar box from the same year still stands at Barnes Cross, Bishop's Caundle in Dorset. It is the oldest pillar box still in use on the mainland. Most of the early boxes were similar in design to the Channel Island boxes, but there were some interesting variations.

Figure 1.
Early British pillar box in Union Street, Guernsey


Photo copyright © Rosalind Wicks

Figure 2.
A pillar box from 1856 at Framlingham, Suffolk


Photo copyright © Rosalind Wicks

Figure 3.
An early 'fluted' pillar box at Eastgate, Warwick


Photo copyright © Rosalind Wicks

Storage

Only photos and a few odd parts remain of London's first pillar box which was at the corner of Fleet Street and Farringdon Street.

Figure 4.
London's first pillar box, 1855

In 1856 Richard Redgrave of the Department of Science and Art designed an ornate pillar box for use in London and other large cities. An example of one of these boxes, which would have been painted bronze, is now at the Victoria and Albert Museum. A less ornate version was used in other towns and cities. In 1859 the design was improved by moving the aperture from the top to below the rim and this became the first National Standard pillar box. The one exception to this standard is the Liverpool Special of 1863.

Green was adopted as the standard colour for the early Victorian boxes. Between 1866 and 1879 the hexagonal Penfold became the standard design for pillar boxes and it was during this period that red was first adopted as the standard colour. The first boxes to be painted red were in London in July 1874, although it took 10 years before nearly all the boxes had been repainted.

Figure 5.
National Standard, 1859


Photo copyright © Rosalind Wicks

Figure 6.
Liverpool Special, 1863


Photo copyright © Rosalind Wicks

Figure 7.
Hexagonal Penfold, 1872


Photo copyright © Rosalind Wicks

In 1879 came the cylindrical design of pillar box, which apart from a few recent experiments has changed very little since. The early boxes had no royal cipher and are known as 'anonymous' boxes. This oversight was corrected from 1887 when the words POST OFFICE were also placed either side of the aperture.

The cylindrical boxes came in two sizes, 'A' (larger) and 'B' (smaller). The oval type 'C' boxes with separate apertures for town and country first appeared in London in 1899. Lamp boxes, for use in areas where the amount of post is small, first started to be used generally from around 1897. Although designed to be attached to a lamp post they may also be found attached to telegraph poles, their own post or even set in a wall. The first proper roadside wall boxes had been in use from about 1857. Ludlow boxes, named after the Birmingham manufacturer James Ludlow, were made for use at sub-post offices between 1885 and 1965. Manufactured from sheet metal and wood with distinctive enamel plates they were more prone to rot than cast iron boxes.

Cable Wall Boxes

Figure 8.
High aperture anonymous pillar box, 1879


Photo copyright © Rosalind Wicks

Figure 9.
Victorian Wall Box 1881-1904


(with modified aperture circa 1956)
Photo copyright © Richard P Wicks

Figure 10.
A Victorian Lamp Box


Photo copyright © Rosalind Wicks

Figure 11.
Victorian 'Ludlow' Postbox


Photo copyright © Rosalind Wicks

Copyright © Paul Wicks 2002

Electrical Metal Boxes Wall Mounted

Welcome to the Postbox Shop, we provide an extensive range of individual and commercial postboxes, letterboxes and mailboxes, each designed with access, security and your lifestyle needs in mind.

With many years experience, we specialise in stylish practical solutions to suit your budget, products including; freestanding postboxes, surface mounted postboxes, recessed letterboxes, through the wall postboxes, door side panel postboxes, parcel boxes, mail chutes, anti arson postboxes, bespoke postboxes, apartment letterboxes and much more.

Excellent quality is maintained at our European manufacturing and assembly plants , using the finest materials, producing over 1 million postboxes a year, utilising sustainable energy processes reducing environmental impact.

To complement our letterboxes, we offer a key replacement service and retain records as part of our anti-fraud policy.

Wallpaper

Sort your post today with our huge range of postboxes, letterboxes and mailboxes, in a variety of designs, colours and finishes, from traditional to contemporary designs, find the right letterbox solution for your property.

Letter Boxes For Outside Wallpaper

We conform to British & European Standards (BSEN13724) and are Royal Mail compliant. We can also offer quotes for the installation of multiple letterboxes too.

Letter Boxes For Outside Wall Decor

If you have any questions regarding our postboxes, letterboxes, mailboxes or services, please contact us.