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  1. May 3, 2024 · Hazard was named postmaster general in 1782, toward the end of the Revolutionary War. He was the third postmaster general after Benjamin Franklin (1775-1776) and Richard Bache (1776-1782). Hazard worked a number of postal jobs before his appointment as postmaster general, including surveyor of post roads and inspector of dead letters.

  2. 10 hours ago · Just another WordPress.com site. “Weakest Link” 5/20. P: Tyler (research assistant), Clo (prop master in Monument, CO), Michael (photoshoot producer in Millburn, NJ), Abby (student in Eugene who prev. went to Indiana Univ.), Brandon (customer service rep in Hartford), Leigh (bartender & budtender in ORL), Sheree (P.E. teacher from pre-K to ...

  3. taraross.substack.com › p › tdih-airmail-serviceTDIH: First U.S. Airmail

    6 days ago · However, he did have the ear of Albert Burleson, the Postmaster General. Major Reuben Fleet with one of the Curtiss Jenny JN-4B's used on May 15, 1918. Burleson convinced the President to make airmail happen, which is how the War Department’s order of May 3, 1918, came to be.

  4. Apr 25, 2024 · Garfield demanded the resignation of the Assistant Postmaster General and ordered prosecutions of post office members who escalated mail route costs and divided profits amongst themselves. Garfield also proposed a universal education system funded by the federal government, believing that this would be the best way to improve the state of ...

  5. Apr 25, 2024 · In a Nov. 17, 1982, USPS memo, “Letters of Information/Letters of Concern,” issued by James Gildea, assistant postmaster general, USPS Labor Relations Department, he stated, in part: “The use of such letters serve no useful purpose as an element for consideration in future actions against an employee.

  6. May 13, 2024 · Bloomington's own Adlai E. Stevenson I became Cleveland's first assistant postmaster general, an unimpressive-sounding but vastly influential office that hired and fired tens of thousands of small ...

  7. May 14, 2024 · “Wynne, first assistant postmaster general started the ball rolling by getting a New York newspaper to print the article as it first appeared,” says the statement, which concludes: “I was gotten into the conspiracy by powerful officials who I dare not to displease from a newspaper or political standpoint.