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The ‘diabol­ical but­cher­ing’ of Bri­tain’s red post­boxes

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TrueBlueTerrier
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The ‘diabol­ical but­cher­ing’ of Bri­tain’s red post­boxes

Post by TrueBlueTerrier »

https://www.pressreader.com/uk/features ... 5117446640

Royal Mail has ‘upgraded’ 3,500 of the beloved land­marks – but crit­ics claim they now resemble recyc­ling bins.

Image

“How does it work, then?” asks a middle-aged man peer­ing sus­pi­ciously at the refur­bished post­box in the centre of my Essex vil­lage. Our 1950s-style red cast-iron box is one of 3,500 that have recently been “upgraded” to become a “post­box of the future”, as Royal Mail struggles to com­pete with the par­cel ser­vices offered by com­pan­ies such as Evri and InPost (whose massive locker units have already made most of our local shops feel like school chan­ging rooms).

The man scowls at the post­box’s instruc­tions, which inform him the chute will remain locked unless he has first down­loaded the Royal Mail app to pay for post­age, prin­ted a QR-coded label for a small pack­age and pressed the but­ton to activ­ate the scan­ner. He taps the tilted plastic lid, where a solar panel provides the power for the ser­vice. “Won’t be both­er­ing,” he deliv­ers a swift ver­dict. “I don’t own a printer, and it looks like a lot of faff when the Post Office is just over there!”

SOLAR PANELS Pil­lar box lids have been replaced to provide power for label scan­ners
Great Bad­dow’s Post Office is, indeed, less than a minute’s walk from the new post­box. Queues there had been longer than usual when the post­box was shrouded in a black bag dur­ing its high-tech sur­gery. But now, its robot mouth is ready to receive par­cels.

I wondered if Post Office staff were wor­ried the future box was part of a long-term plan to replace them. But when I popped in to ask, they just laughed.

“We were a bit wor­ried people might stop com­ing in here when we first heard the plans,” they shrug. “But nobody has been using it so far as we can tell. It seems like a waste of money. A few people have asked us how it works and decided not to bother. You can only use it for small par­cels [under 2kg] any­way, and people think it’s ugly.”

My neigh­bours are not alone in recoil­ing at the appear­ance of the new boxes. Dinah John­son, founder of The Hand­writ­ten Let­ter Appre­ci­ation Soci­ety, is up in arms against “the diabol­ical but­cher­ing of these beloved Brit­ish icons”.

Post­boxes are a French inven­tion – the first was installed in Paris in 1653. The old­est Brit­ish box (black and wall-moun­ted) appeared in Wake­field in 1809, but the first red pil­lar box was intro­duced in Guern­sey in 1852. Main­land UK boxes remained a more taste­ful green for another 20 to 30 years before being repainted an eye-catch­ing scar­let.

By 1879, the ornate, hexagonal Pen­fold boxes com­mis­sioned in 1866 had mostly been replaced by more cost-effi­cient cyl­in­ders. The design most of us use today was final­ised in 1974.

This dra­matic revamp of post­boxes began in August last year after a pilot study. The over­all cost has not been dis­closed, and only boxes from Eliza­beth II’s era are being con­ver­ted – older her­it­age post­boxes are pro­tec­ted.

“Every her­it­age Brit­ish film or TV drama fea­tures a tra­di­tional post­box,” says John­son. “You can have a lot of fun spot­ting them once you start play­ing that game. It’s awful, the way they’ve mutil­ated these icons, chop­ping into them and put­ting these cheap plastic lids on them. They look like recyc­ling bins.

“I hear some of them are already break­ing. And they don’t seem secure to me. Once you’ve put

your pack­age into the tray and closed the chute, you can open it again to see if it has dropped down, so – in the­ory – the next per­son who opens the par­cel tray could remove your par­cel… I am not against all new tech­no­logy. This just seems like an attempt to solve a prob­lem that doesn’t exist.”

John­son notes that while remote rural post­boxes might bene­fit from the addi­tion of a small par­cel option, many of the upgraded boxes – includ­ing the one in my vil­lage – are right beside Post Offices. “It makes me won­der if Royal Mail is in cahoots with the Gov­ern­ment to run down the Post Office. Is it a co-ordin­ated attack after the Hori­zon scan­dal – to make us all go digital?”

Royal Mail was split from the Post Office by New Labour, and it became a pub­lic lim­ited com­pany in 2001. In 2022, the hold­ing com­pany for Royal Mail, Par­celforce and GLS (the group’s European par­cel ser­vice), changed its name to Inter­na­tional Dis­tri­bu­tions Ser­vices (IDS). At the end of 2024, IDS was bought for £3.6bn by Czech bil­lion­aire Daniel Kret­in­sky’s EP Group, mark­ing the first time the 508-year-old postal ser­vice came under for­eign own­er­ship.

“I’ve writ­ten to Mr Kret­in­sky,” says John­son. She thinks he – and Royal Mail – should leave the par­cels to the Post Office and other deliv­ery ser­vices, and focus on their tra­di­tional USP. “They need to advert­ise to cus­tom­ers and remind them why let­ter-writ­ing still mat­ters,” she argues vehe­mently.

At a time when younger gen­er­a­tions are dis­cov­er­ing the per­sonal, tact­ile joys of vinyl records, board games and crafts, the hand­writ­ten let­ter is poised for a comeback, she believes.

“A stamp for 87p is quite good value, I think, when you con­sider how much pleas­ure a let­ter can bring to the per­son who writes it and the per­son who receives it,” John­son says. “People think noth­ing of spend­ing over £1 on a chocol­ate bar as a treat, £3-£4 for a new game app on their phones or to rent a film from Amazon.”

She notes that the solar pan­els on the new boxes also pre­vent “yarn­bombers” from dec­or­at­ing post­boxes with their delight­ful knit­ted and cro­cheted cre­ations.

Post­box “bon­nets” first began appear­ing around the UK in 2012, and the trend took off dur­ing the pan­demic.

Gaynor White from Wok­ing­ham says she’s been mak­ing top­pers for 13 years now. “We have brought a lot of joy and raised over £70,000 for char­it­ies – includ­ing the Royal Brit­ish Legion with our Remem­brance-themed top­pers,” she says.

White is also con­cerned about changes to the tra­di­tional boxes. “We have a lovely post­box here in Barkham, with a beau­ti­ful 1930s metal sign on the top read­ing, ‘To The Post Office,’” she explains. “Last year, Raj in the Post Office told me the sign was going to be removed to make space for a solar panel. He said it was really sad, people would really miss my top­pers.”

White asked him if he had chal­lenged Royal Mail and, on learn­ing that he hadn’t, sug­ges­ted he try push­ing back. It worked. “When he asked them not to change the box, they relen­ted. They’re not doing it. So it is worth object­ing,” she says.

Another “yarn­bomber”, who goes by the name of Syston Knit­ting Banxy, had less suc­cess with her cam­paign to keep the box in her Leicester­shire vil­lage.

“Admirers of my work – which has fea­tured on Coron­a­tion Street – were so saddened by the news that we’d be get­ting a solar panel on our box that they star­ted a peti­tion, ask­ing the Royal Mail to recon­sider. They col­lec­ted over 1,300 sig­na­tures,” she says. “But it made no dif­fer­ence, even with our local MP’s involve­ment. So res­id­ents set up a GoFundMe page and have raised £3,500 to buy a recon­di­tioned post­box just for my knit­ting. We have one on order now.” Other “yarn­bombers” are more san­guine. Linda Cat­ling, 80, from Essex, says: “Royal Mail are doing the right thing to keep their busi­ness going. We can put our cre­ations on bol­lards, walls and things.”

A spokes­man from The Bar­lick Yarn Fair­ies, based in Lan­cashire, says she felt a real sad­ness when she saw the post­box at Bolton Abbey “wrapped up in a plastic bag” ready for its adapt­a­tion. “I found out from the Post Office staff that each door is unique to the post­box, so it has to be removed and sent away for five to six weeks for the new­fangled pan­els to be fit­ted,” she says.

“One of the duty man­agers told me there was noth­ing they could do to stop things. It’s such a pic­tur­esque vil­lage, and we were all a bit upset. People felt the box would be naked without one of our top­pers. So I went out after dark and took meas­ure­ments of the new tilted lid and the place­ment of the solar panel. We’re now craft­ing around them.”

Back in Great Bad­dow, 75-yearold Alison McColl tuts at our new box. “I had abso­lutely no idea they were doing this. I sup­pose the par­cel slot might be handy for people who can’t get to the Post Office dur­ing open­ing hours. Can you still post nor­mal let­ters in it?”

She’s relieved to hear she can. Nobody else I speak to is plan­ning on using it for par­cels, and the post­man empty­ing the box doesn’t think he’s col­lec­ted many from it. “Mak­ing people print their own labels is a real flaw in the sys­tem,” says 27-year-old local, Nick Walshe. “If I’m using Evri or InPost, I can just scan the QR code from my phone. As ever, Royal Mail has over­com­plic­ated things.”

A Royal Mail spokes­man said, “Our post­boxes of the future offer another con­veni­ent way for cus­tom­ers to access Royal Mail’s ser­vices, along­side home deliv­ery and col­lec­tion, our cus­tomer ser­vice points, Post Office branches, lock­ers and Royal Mail shops. We’re pleased to see pos­it­ive feed­back from cus­tom­ers in areas where the new post­boxes have already been intro­duced.

“We appre­ci­ate the pas­sion and care that goes into the crochet­ing, knit­ting and dec­or­at­ing of top­pers. With 115,000 post­boxes across the UK, there are plenty that remain unaltered, and that will remain the case in the future.”

‘Admirers of my work were so sad that we were get­ting a solar panel they star­ted a peti­tion’
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pinstripe
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Re: The ‘diabol­ical but­cher­ing’ of Bri­tain’s red post­boxes

Post by pinstripe »

“I’ve writ­ten to Mr Kret­in­sky,” says John­son. She thinks he – and Royal Mail – should leave the par­cels to the Post Office and other deliv­ery ser­vices, and focus on their tra­di­tional USP. “They need to advert­ise to cus­tom­ers and remind them why let­ter-writ­ing still mat­ters,” she argues vehe­mently.


Yeah, I wonder if that will have any effect.