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  2. STD-4C - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/STD-4C

    The STD-4C is the current USPS regulation for any centralized, wall-mounted mailboxes, whether located inside an office high-rise or within a new single-family subdivision as an outdoor centralized mailbox kiosk. New STD-4C compliant mailboxes are commonly referred to as centralized mail delivery equipment.

  3. Joralemon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joralemon

    Joroleman mailbox, designed in 1915 by Roy J. Joroleman . Joralemon or Joroleman is a surname. Joralemon Street in Brooklyn, New York was named in 1805 for Teunis Joralemon, the first person to own a brick house in Brooklyn. [1] The classic American mailbox is the Joroleman mailbox, designed in 1915 by a postal employee named Roy J. Joroleman ...

  4. Centralized mail delivery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centralized_mail_delivery

    New USPS regulations related to wall-mounted, clustered type of mailboxes were introduced in 2004. These were the first changes to “apartment style” mailboxes in more than 30 years. This new regulation, STD-4C, replaces all previous regulations for mailboxes such as these, which were previously approved under STD-4B and STD-4B+. [3]

  5. A man and his mailbox: How a dispute over rural mail ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/man-mailbox-dispute-over-rural...

    Chuck Klein stands next to the empty wood frame that once held a mailbox on the edge of his 130-acre property in Brown County, Ohio. Klein, 82, now drives almost a mile to pick up his mail because ...

  6. Letter box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_box

    A number of designs of letterboxes and mailboxes have been patented, particularly in the United States. One design was the visible mailbox (because it was made of transparent glass) with a flip-up aluminium lid produced during the first part of the 20th century by George F. Collins of the Barlet-Collins Glass Company in Sapulpa, Oklahoma. [4] [5]

  7. Mail chute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mail_chute

    On September 11, 1883, James Goold Cutler received U.S. patent 284,951, for a system connecting deposit boxes on multiple floors to a single ground-floor receptacle; the chute had to have a front of at least three-fourths glass to allow for the identification of mail clogs, and, if installed at a height of greater than two stories, an elastic cushion was to be fitted in the receptacle to ...

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