By Christi Mays
Instead of sitting around with laptops and cell phones at Bawcom Student Union like students do today, hanging out at the post office was the place to be when Julia (Amason) Walker 鈥60 was at Mary Hardin-Baylor.
By Christi Mays
Instead of sitting around with laptops and cell phones at Bawcom Student Union like students do today, hanging out at the post office was the place to be when Julia (Amason) Walker 鈥60 was at Mary Hardin-Baylor.
Even though it鈥檚 been more than 60 years since she graduated, Julia vividly remembers running to the campus post office every day to check box No. 124. Long before tapping out a text connected us to the world, communication revolved around the hand颅written word.
Along with her five best friends, Julia would take off from her room on the third floor of Stribling Hall and stroll over to a small building near what is now Walton Chapel and wait until she could get a look inside her box.
The small building also contained the bookstore where she and a gaggle of girls would congregate between classes, waiting on Postmistress Stegall to signal the mail was out. She wouldn鈥檛 allow the girls to check their boxes until every piece had been posted, which was usually around 10 a.m. Gathered around tables inside the bookstore, which also served as a general store, Julia and her friends drank coffee and bottles of Coke while sharing a sweet treat.
鈥淲e looked forward to getting letters, and it was very special,鈥 Julia said. 鈥淭oday, it would seem really out of date because we have all these modern conveniences with communi颅cation at our fingertips. Like this morning, I鈥檝e already talked to my grandchildren!鈥
The oldest of three sisters, who also came to Mary Hardin-Baylor, Julia received weekly letters from her mother and sisters.
鈥淢y mother wrote beautiful letters to me, encouraging and uplifting me, 鈥榊ou can do this!鈥欌 she said. 鈥淚 tended to take on more than I should have and would be overwhelmed. But when I got her letters, I would try harder.鈥
When Grace (Dannelley) McDonald 鈥70 was in elementary and middle school, one of her favorite things was to run over to the MHB post office and bookstore and chat with all the college girls.
Grace, who lived on or near campus since she was eight years old, would meet up with a buddy after school and head over to the post office (when it was located near what is now Walton Chapel).
Ironically, one of their houses was located where the current post office sits now inside the Mabee Student Success Center. Because her dad worked at MHB and her family lived on campus, their mailbox was located at the MHB post office.
Grace and her friend would sit at the same tables inside the bookstore where Julia Walker had once sat. They couldn鈥檛 wait for all the college girls to come by so they could say 鈥渉ello.鈥
鈥淭he college was smaller then, and we thought we knew them all,鈥 Grace recalled with a chuckle. 鈥淚 guess we were kind of like their little brothers and sisters they had left back home.鈥
Grace later attended MHB as a student, and even though her parents still lived on campus, she resided in Burt Hall her freshman year. By then, the post office had moved to the basement of Ely-Pepper Hall; however, she didn鈥檛 receive many handwritten letters since her parents lived so close.
Even so, she鈥檚 always cherished the many memories of sitting around the post office and chatting with students. 鈥淭hey were just kind of like our family.鈥
According to museum documents, letters weren鈥檛 the only items students received in the mail over the years.
Perhaps one of the earliest records of packages students received was of a dress made in Philadelphia in 1883. It was the graduation dress for Carrie Clay Thornhill. The dress arrived a day or two before com颅mencement, and instead of being the usual white, it was green. There was no time to make another dress, so President John Hill Luther and the board held an emergency meeting. They reluctantly allowed her to graduate in the green dress.
On April 21, 1886, officials laid the first corner颅stone on campus amid a lavish ceremony. Except, it almost didn't happen. On the day of the ceremony, the stone was nowhere to be found. Wells Fargo Company was entrusted with the shipping, but the train had arrived, and the stone wasn't on board. A little town near Temple telegraphed saying, 鈥渢hat rock you have been fussing about so much" had come there instead.
The Wells Fargo agent, Mr. W. D. Woodruff, ensured that the cornerstone arrived just in time for the ceremony through frantic telegrams and a special train sent to fetch the stone.
In the 1950s, there were letters back and forth from Peggy Albin 鈥58 and her mother, who each year mailed her daughter a milk chocolate cake for her birthday. The cake was a big hit with Peggy and her friends!
Even today, students are mailing and receiving extraordinary objects. Several years ago, during the painted rock craze, the 麻豆视频直播 post office began re颅ceiving鈥攁nd sending out鈥攔ocks. No box or envelope. Just rocks.
鈥淪tudents were finding flat rocks and painting one side and on the other side, would put 鈥榯o鈥 and 鈥榝rom鈥 and a stamp. The post office will accept anything to mail as long as you can get the address and postage on it,鈥 said Chuck Mills, manager of mail services.
He says the mailroom workers always seem to know when something is trending on social media because 鈥渨eird鈥 things start showing up in the mail. For instance, during the fall before COVID-19 hit, students were receiving basketballs in the mail. They were signed with notes right on the ball. And then there was the time the mailroom received a dozen or so huge Idaho potatoes. (Again, no box or envelope. Just a potato in the mail addressed to a student).
鈥淭hat was a mess!鈥 Chuck exhaled. But perhaps the most unusual thing of all that has gone in or out of the 麻豆视频直播 post office was a frozen, full-sized smoked brisket from Miller鈥檚 Smokehouse鈥攁ll the way to Oregon.
鈥淭he first year I was here, we had a student from Oregon who fell in love with Central Texas barbe颅cue,鈥 Chuck said. 鈥淗e bought a brisket and froze that thing, and we packed it in dry ice for him and sent it back home to his parents in Oregon. He was a hoot!鈥
Sadly, the days of students congregating at the post office to chat with friends may be a thing of the past, Chuck said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just grab-and-go now. They still bring their posse with them, but they don鈥檛 stand around chatting. I think it鈥檚 because they have so many other places to do that.鈥
Surprisingly, though, he said a notable number of students still receive handwritten letters.
鈥淣ormally, it鈥檚 from granny, the crazy aunt, or somebody from the church,鈥 he said, adding that some girl students also still send handwritten letters to their boyfriends and friends back home. 鈥淚 think is pretty cool that they鈥檙e actually sending a letter and not a text.鈥
But just because the handwritten form of com颅munication may have slowed down considerably doesn鈥檛 mean the crew at the post office has time to sit around.
On average, the three-man team (plus eight student workers) sort and deliver 300 to 350 pieces of mail daily, totaling more than 10,000 pieces each month. Since COVID-19 hit in March 2019, the number of packages received at the post office has increased tenfold, Chuck said. Depending on the month, they receive between 3,500 to 4,000 pack颅ages and eight to 10 grocery deliveries each week to students living in residence halls.
He said when school starts each fall, there used to be a week or two delay before the mailroom would get slammed with shipments for students鈥攂ooks, dorm room necessities, etc.
鈥淭his year, on the first day of school, an Amazon truck pulled up and dropped off 800 packages!鈥 Chuck said. 鈥淎nd the shipments didn鈥檛 die down until November.鈥
With close to 3,000 students living on campus, Chuck said he gets to see most of them every day as they鈥檙e picking up mail at their boxes.
鈥淲e get to know them in about a week or so, 鈥楬ow are your classes going? How was your test today? What student orgs do you belong to?鈥欌 he said. 鈥淔or us, that鈥檚 the really cool part.鈥
As for Julia Walker, who still cherishes the letters her mother wrote to her in college, she鈥檒l always warmly remember the days she received them at box No. 124. 鈥淚 have very fond memories of the book颅store and the people and the letters that I received.鈥
Those letters helped lead her to be the woman she is today and to do the work the Lord wanted her to do as a schoolteacher.
鈥淭here鈥檚 something very real about a letter in the words that someone writes,鈥 she said. 鈥淪ome of the most beautiful writing I鈥檝e ever read was in those letters from people that I loved so much.鈥
To learn more about the history of the post offices on campus, visit the free rotating exhibit at the Musick Alumni Center and Museum at the Parker House from now through April.
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