Untitled

Untitled

Metadata

Title

Untitled

Collection

Publications & Reports

Summary

Bleek discusses postal charges to England and the Imperial Parliament's contract with the Union company which services the Cape and how this arrangement enables them to act unilaterally. This increased rate of one shilling, introduced by Solomon's bill, makes regular contact with Europe inaccessible for the poorer colonists. To remedy this, England arranged a fixed rate for all letters sent by private ships, forgoing a monopoly. The contract with the less-established rival Diamond line is opposed, as the Cape cannot carry the cost and will likely lose the Union service entirely if it pursues an independent mail arrangement. Bleek concedes that competition is beneficial but thinks that the conditions are not suitable for a formal arrangement establishing the Diamond Company's vessels as subsidised mail steamers. He advises non-interference with the British Government's postal arrangements. The English/British Postmaster-General advises against formally contracting the Diamond line at the Cape -- which the Cape Government has not done -- but takes no issue with their informal service provision. They are restricted to the four-pence-the-half-ounce rate as long as they remain private vessels. Undercutting the Imperial Post Office's revenue may even cheapen ocean postage long-term.

Medium

Printed newsprint glued on paper

Date

25/05/1865

Description

Two cut out columns of newsprint text, positioned vertically parallel, pasted onto a plus-sized A4 unlined sheet with visible warping. No title was subsequently handwritten onto the mount/paper backing.

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