Mail robbery

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Mail robbery is the robbery of mail usually when it is in the possession, custody, or control, of the delivering authority, which in most countries is the postal operator and can involve the theft of money or luxury goods.

Contents

History

1794 post office notice of reward concerning the robbery of the mail between Chester and Liverpool PO Notice 1794 Mail Robbery (improved).png
1794 post office notice of reward concerning the robbery of the mail between Chester and Liverpool

In the UK stage coach (from 1784 Mail coach) robberies by highwaymen were common, despite the death penalty. For example, in 1722 two were executed for robbing the Bristol mail. [1]

Robberies from trains also began early. An early example was on the Bristol and Exeter Railway in 1849. [2]

In the USA, the period immediately following the First World War witnessed a large number of mail robberies. Eventually, the frequency of these thefts caused the Department of the Navy to place armed Marines on all mail trains. [3]

A number of high-value mail robberies occurred in the UK after the Second World War, as a result of a lack of improvements in security in the transport of money. [4] One major example was the Eastcastle Street robbery in 1952, involving the theft of £287,000 from a post office van in London. Overall that year, 629 mailbags went missing, and in the following year the figure was 738. [4]

The two most significant mail robberies both occurred in the early 1960s. In the UK, £2.6 million was taken in the 'Great Train Robbery' of 1963. A year earlier, $1.5 million was stolen from the hold-up of a U.S. Mail truck in Massachusetts. By the end of the 1960s, however, mail robbery had become less common. [4]

See also

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Terence Hogan

Terence Hogan, also known as Terry "Lucky Tel" Hogan and Harry Booth, was an English professional criminal and notorious figure in the London underworld in the 1950s and 1960s. He took part in the 1952 Eastcastle Street mailbag robbery in which £287,000 was stolen from a post office van leaving Paddington station. Hogan was a member of the infamous "Bowler Hat Gang", who dressed-up as city gents to execute the robbery of an armoured payroll truck at London's Heathrow Airport in 1962, and following a short time later, was believed to be tied to the Great Train Robbery (1963) under his alias Harry Booth.

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References

  1. Geri Walton (2014-04-18). "18th and 19th Century: Mail Coach Robberies". Geri Walton. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
  2. "Vtbt Vreb hues". The Spectator. 1849-01-06. p. 6. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
  3. "Rail Detectives Victors in War on Crime". Popular Mechanics . 41 (3): 336–339. March 1924.
  4. 1 2 3 Thomas, Donald (2006). Villains' Paradise: A History of Britain's Underworld. Pegasus Books. pp. 312–313. ISBN   9781933648170.