In a previous post I explained that I had put on line 306 pages of Northampton Post Office's wartime newsletters which include letters from staff in the services. I'm stuck on some of the terminology and would be grateful if someone could explain:
"Post-Office skins" - context suggests forms about disciplinary matters.
"Greens and Pinks" - context is a member of National Fire Service helping postal staff at Paddington Station.
"Nineteen Duty" context suggests unpopular shift?
"King Edward Building" Another London location?
I can imagine what the "Primary Tables" and Preparation tables" were / are?
Here's hoping someone will help out.
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Wartime PO Terminology
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Lounge Lizard
- EX ROYAL MAIL
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Re: Wartime PO Terminology
King Edward Building was the main Post Office in London for many years - Former General Post Office Building, King Edward Street, City of London Built 1907-1911 to the designs of Sir Henry Tanner, architect of the Office of Works. An early example of the use of reinforced concrete construction. In front of the building is a statue (by Onslow Ford) of Rowland Hill, with the inscription "HE FOUNDED UNIFORM PENNY POSTAGE 1840"uptodat wrote:In a previous post I explained that I had put on line 306 pages of Northampton Post Office's wartime newsletters which include letters from staff in the services. I'm stuck on some of the terminology and would be grateful if someone could explain:
"Post-Office skins" - context suggests forms about disciplinary matters.
"Greens and Pinks" - context is a member of National Fire Service helping postal staff at Paddington Station.
"Nineteen Duty" context suggests unpopular shift?
"King Edward Building" Another London location?
I can imagine what the "Primary Tables" and Preparation tables" were / are?
Here's hoping someone will help out.
The others aren't quite so easy.
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wandle
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Re: Wartime PO Terminology
Hmmmuptodat wrote: "Nineteen Duty" context suggests unpopular shift?
The 'nineteenth hole' in golf is the pub at the end of a round.
"Nineteen Duty" sounds like a week off on the sick, spent down the pub ?
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fishtank
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Re: Wartime PO Terminology
"Pinks and Greens" is the the WW2 U.S Army dress uniform.

Perhaps someone had a "friend" from over there over here.

Perhaps someone had a "friend" from over there over here.
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TrueBlueTerrier
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Re: Wartime PO Terminology
"Primary Tables" and Preparation tables" were / are? - If you guessed Primary that was where they sorted to the duties I think your right we call it IPS. Preparation tables I am guessing is what we call Frames and thats where we prepare our rounds before we deliver them.
19 Duty May just be that a delivery duty named 19 - At my Office they are numbered and then have the section added at the end, (ie 1E, 15W, 22C, 18N etc) but in an office of only 1 post code they won't have the letters at the end.
19 Duty May just be that a delivery duty named 19 - At my Office they are numbered and then have the section added at the end, (ie 1E, 15W, 22C, 18N etc) but in an office of only 1 post code they won't have the letters at the end.
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uptodat
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Re: Wartime PO Terminology
Many thanks for your assistance folks. I'll be adding to the glossary on the webpages:
https://sites.google.com/site/northamptonnews/home
https://sites.google.com/site/northamptonnews/home
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Forrest Grump
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Re: Wartime PO Terminology
"Skins" this was common parlance for a bollocking of some form or another. In Crewe they had a "Skin Box" which was a spare locker in the RLE where bollockings could be given in private (unless anyone in locker 9 was listening). 
Last edited by Forrest Grump on 23 Nov 2011, 21:26, edited 1 time in total.
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uptodat
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Re: Wartime PO Terminology
Thanks Forrest. But RLE, Locker 9? And how did "skin" come to mean a bollocking? Was it confined to the PO who did skin have a wider application? One girl spoke of PO skins as though there were other sorts. I wonder when it died out. (Scuse my ignorance!)
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uptodat
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Re: Wartime PO Terminology
I've been told by retired postal worker that Skin did refer to form requiring explanation for some error or misdemeanour. Greens and pinks apparently were tags placed on labels to indicxate the contents of bags. Nineteen duty remains a puzzle but apparently all roles, walks etc were duties so it refers to either a popular one or an unpopular one.