Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 June 2015
Attributing revolutionary potential to new international communications technology, notably the internet, is not new. On a global scale, similar ideas emerged in the mid nineteenth century in relation to government-subsidized mail steamers. These visions remained utopian, then as now, although some nations went further than others in attempting to implement ‘world peace’ and ‘social improvement’ through communications. Before widespread electrical transmissions, Americans created the blueprint for such utopian visions through mail steamers. Americans had long considered their postal system socially transformative; the development of mail steamers turned that social vision outwards to the globe. This article examines two movements of the 1850s that sought change through global communications: using mail steamers to resettle American free blacks in Africa and reducing international postage rates to such a low rate that increased communications would prevent war. These two nearly simultaneous histories suggest that the evolving concept of the nation-state deserves further investigation as an element at the conjuncture of global communications and social reform.
Thank you to Heidi Tworek and Simone Müller for their heroic organizational and editorial insights, and additional thanks for guidance and suggestions from Sebastian Conrad, Richard R. John, two anonymous reviewers, and participants in both the 2013 ‘Intellectual foundations of global commerce and communications’ conference at Harvard and attendees at the 2012 Society for the History of Technology conference in Cleveland, Ohio, where I presented early drafts of this article.
1 On Franklin's self-promotion, see John, Richard R., Spreading the news: the American postal system from Franklin to Morse, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1995, pp. 136–8Google Scholar.
2 New Britain Public Library, Elihu Burritt Journal (henceforth EBJ), vol. 19, 31 March 1854. On table tipping, see Albanese, Catherine L., A republic of mind and spirit: a cultural history of American metaphysical religion, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2007, p. 223Google Scholar.
3 EBJ, vol. 6, 24 September 1846; vol. 7, 16, 19, and 23 November 1846; Northend, Charles, ed., Elihu Burritt: a memorial volume containing a sketch of his life and labors, New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1879, p. 27Google Scholar; Tolis, Peter, Elihu Burritt: crusader for brotherhood, Hamden, CT: Archon Books, 1968, pp. 152–160Google Scholar.
4 Swarthmore College Peace Collection, Swarthmore, PA, Elihu Burritt Papers, Elihu Burritt to ‘My Good Friend’, 9 October 1846; Tolis, Elihu Burritt, pp. 84–202; Ceadel, Martin, The origins of war prevention: the British peace movement and international relations, 1730–1854, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996, pp. 356–413CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
5 Congressional Globe, 20 September 1850, p. 1889. On African colonization in global perspective, see Burin, Eric, Slavery and the peculiar solution: a history of the American Colonization Society, Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2005Google Scholar; Clegg, Claude A. III, The price of liberty: African Americans and the making of Liberia, Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2004CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sanneh, Lamin, Abolitionists abroad: American blacks and the making of modern west Africa, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999Google Scholar; Zimmerman, Andrew, Alabama in Africa: Booker T. Washington, the German empire, and the globalization of the new south, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2010Google Scholar.
6 Müller, Simone M., Wiring the world: the social and cultural creation of global telegraph networks, New York: Columbia University PressGoogle Scholar, forthcoming, ch. 3; Lynch, T. K., A visit to the Suez Canal, London: Day and Son, Limited, 1866, p. 39Google Scholar; van Rensselaer, Cortlandt, Signals from the Atlantic cable: an address delivered at the telegraphic celebration, Philadelphia, PA: Joseph M. Wilson, 1858, pp. 13–14Google Scholar.
7 Maier, Charles S., ‘Leviathan 2.0’, in Emily S. Rosenberg, ed., A world connecting, 1870–1945, Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2012, pp. 29–282Google Scholar.
8 Historians have often noted the importance of newspapers in creating national consciousness, without noting the new postal systems that enabled them: e.g. Bayly, C.A., The birth of the modern world, 1780–1914: global connections and comparisons, Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2004Google Scholar, p. 211. Similarly, historians’ emphasis on telegraphy has obscured postal networks: see Osterhammel, Jürgen, The transformation of the world: a global history of the nineteenth century, trans. Patrick Camiller, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2014, pp. 719–724Google Scholar. Important exceptions include Kielbowicz, Richard B., News in the mail: the press, Post Office, and public information, 1700–1860s, New York, NY: Greenwood Press, 1989Google Scholar; and John, Spreading the news.
9 Hill, Rowland, Post office reform: its importance and practicability, 3rd edn, London: Charles Knight and Co., 1837Google Scholar, p. 6.
10 Robinson, Howard, The British post office: a history, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1948, pp. 258–386Google Scholar; Vaillé, Eugène, Histoire des postes françaises: depuis la Révolution, Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1947, pp. 79–93Google Scholar; Maclachlan, Patricia L., The people's post office: the history and politics of the Japanese postal system, 1871–2010, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center, 2011, pp. 21–67Google Scholar; Shaw, Stanford J. and Shaw, Ezel Kural, Reform, revolution, and republic: the rise of modern Turkey, 1808–1975, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977, p. 229Google Scholar; Reid, Donald, ‘The symbolism of postage stamps: a source for the historian’, Journal of Contemporary History, 19, 2, 1984, pp. 228–229CrossRefGoogle Scholar. China's postal system adopted modernizing reforms slightly later: see Lane Jeremy Harris, ‘The Post Office and state formation in modern China, 1896–1949’, PhD thesis, University of Illinois, Chicago, 2012.
11 Rodgers, Daniel T., Atlantic crossings: social politics in a progressive age, Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1998Google Scholar.
12 John, Richard R., ‘Projecting power overseas: U.S. postal policy and international standard-setting at the 1863 Paris postal conference’, Journal of Policy History, 27, 2, 2015CrossRefGoogle Scholar, forthcoming. On the UPU, see Codding, George A. Jr, The Universal Postal Union: coordinator of the international mails, New York: New York University Press, 1964Google Scholar. As an international technical body, the UPU was preceded only by the International Telegraph Union, founded nine years earlier in 1865. On the post and domestic reform, see John, Spreading the news; Perry, C. R., The Victorian post office: the growth of a bureaucracy, Woodbridge: Royal Historical Society and Boydell Press, 1992, pp. 53–84Google Scholar; Henkin, David M., The postal age: the emergence of modern communications in nineteenth-century America, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2006CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Fuller, Wayne E., Morality and the mail in nineteenth-century America, Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2003Google Scholar.
13 Castells, Manuel, The rise of the network society, 2nd edn, Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010Google Scholar.
14 Robinson, Howard, The British Post Office: a history, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1948, pp. 24–29Google Scholar, 159–75; Robinson, , Carrying British mails overseas, New York: New York University Press, 1964, pp. 44Google Scholar, 49; McCormick, Richard P., ‘Ambiguous authority: the ordinances of the Confederation Congress, 1781–1789’, American Journal of Legal History, 41, 4, 1997, pp. 426CrossRefGoogle Scholar, 438–9; Journals of the American Congress: from 1774 to 1788, Washington, DC: Way and Gideon, 1823, pp. 4, 93–5, 99, 125–6.
15 Act of 20 February 1792, ch. 7, 1 Stat. 235, 236, 239.
16 Act of 2 March 1799, ch. 43, 1 Stat. 734–5. The Act of 3 March 1825 (ch. 64, 4 Stat. 106), was still in force in 1867.
17 Amos Kendall, Report of the postmaster general, H.doc. 2/9, 24th Congress, 2nd session, 1836, p. 513.
18 Robert Greenhalgh Albion with Pope, Jennie Barnes, The rise of New York port, 1815–1860, Hamden, CT: Archon Books, 1961Google Scholar (first published 1939), p. 265.
19 Albion, Robert Greenhalgh, Square-riggers on schedule: the New York sailing packets to England, France, and the cotton ports, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1938Google Scholar, pp. vii, 20–1, 35, 274–95; Staff, Frank, The transatlantic mail, London: Adlard Coles Ltd., 1956, p. 62Google Scholar.
20 National Archives and Records Administration (henceforth NARA)-II, RG 84, Despatches to the Department of State [from the American Minister in London], vol. 7, Edward Everett to Daniel Webster, 28 February 1843; Charles A. Wickliffe, Report of the postmaster general, H.doc. 2/8, 28th Congress, 2nd session, 1844, pp. 690–3; Martineau in Albion, Square-riggers, p. 188.
21 NARA-I, RG 233, House Committee on Naval Affairs, HR 31A-G12.8, John P. Heiss and others, ‘Petition of J.P. Heiss and his associates’, 16 August 1850, pp. 9–10, 14–15.
22 Staff, , Transatlantic mail, pp. 62–63Google Scholar, Butler, John A., Atlantic kingdom: America's contest with Cunard in the age of sail and steam, Washington, DC: Brassey's, 2001Google Scholar, p. 83. See also Arnell, J. C., Steam and the north Atlantic mails: the impact of the Cunard line and subsequent steamship companies on the carriage of transatlantic mails, Toronto: Unitrade Press, 1986Google Scholar; and Fox, Stephen, Transatlantic: Samuel Cunard, Isambard Brunel, and the great Atlantic steamships, New York: HarperCollins, 2003Google Scholar.
23 NARA-I, RG 233, House Committee on Post Office and Post Roads, HR 32A-G15.3, ‘Memorial of M C Templeton of New Orleans’, 30 January 1851; ‘Memorial of Henry Mankin of Baltimore’, 12 February 1852; NARA-I, RG 233, House Committee on Post Office and Post Roads, HR 33A-G16.38, ‘Petition of C. Hansen, of Brooklyn’, 3 April 1854.
24 ‘Post-Office regulations with foreign countries’, Hunt's Merchants’ Magazine, 13, September 1845, pp. 292–3; Henry Hilliard, Atlantic mail steamers, H.Rep. 476, 29th Congress, 1st session, 1846, pp. 1–6; ‘Trial trip of the US mail steamer Washington’, New York Evangelist, 18, 21, 1847, p. 1; ‘Steam and sailing lines’, Scientific American, 2, 43, 1847, p. 342. See also Maischak, Lars, German merchants in the nineteenth-century Atlantic, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013, pp. 131–158CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
25 ‘United States naval and mail steamships’, Hunt's Merchants’ Magazine, 16, 4, April 1847, pp. 419–20; NARA-I, RG 46, Senate Committee on Naval Affairs, Sen 31A-H12.1, ‘Memorial of Ambrose W. Thompson’, 17 September 1850; NARA-I, RG 233, House Committee on Naval Affairs, HR 31A-G12.7, ‘Resolutions relative to the establishment of a line of mail steamers between San Francisco and China, and Philadelphia, Norfolk, and Europe’, 15 February 1851.
26 ‘Correspondence of the Baltimore Sun’, The Sun (Baltimore), 17 September 1850, p. 4; Remini, Robert V., At the edge of the precipice: Henry Clay and the compromise that saved the union, New York: Basic Books, 2010Google Scholar.
27 ‘Correspondence of the Baltimore Sun’.
28 Douglass, Frederick, ‘Persecution on account of faith, persecution on account of color’, in John W. Blassingame, ed., The Frederick Douglass papers, series one, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1982, vol. 2, p. 301Google Scholar.
29 Burin, , Slavery, pp. 6–33Google Scholar.
30 ‘Thirty-seventh annual report of the American Colonization Society’, African Repository, 30, 2, February 1854, pp. 44–5.
31 Staudenraus, P. J., The African colonization movement, 1816–1865, New York: Columbia University Press, 1961, pp. 15–35Google Scholar, 59–68, 251; Burin, , Slavery, pp. 6–33Google Scholar.
32 Report of the Naval Committee on establishing a line of mail steamships to the western coast of Africa, and thence via the Mediterranean to London, Washington, DC: Gideon & Co., 1850, p. 3; Goode, George Brown, Virginia cousins: a study of the ancestry and posterity of John Goode of Whitby, Richmond, VA: J.W. Randolph & English, 1887Google Scholar, p. 98; Burin, , Slavery, pp. 14–15Google Scholar.
33 Report of the Naval Committee, pp. 8–9, 23.
34 Ibid., pp. 15, 27–8.
35 ‘Table Aa145-184 – population, by sex and race: 1790–1990’, in Susan B. Carter et al., eds., Historical statistics of the United States, earliest times to the present: millennial edition, New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2006.
36 Constance McLaughlin Green, The secret city: a history of race relations in the nation's capital, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1967, p. 33.
37 Boritt, Gabor, ‘The voyage to the colony of Linconia: the sixteenth president, black colonization, and the defense mechanism of avoidance’, The Historian, 37, 4, 1975, p. 620CrossRefGoogle Scholar; David Herbert Donald also notes the opposition of most prospective black colonists in Lincoln, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995, pp. 166–7. On nineteenth-century population movements, see Foner, Eric, ‘Abraham Lincoln, colonization, and the rights of black Americans’, in Richard Follett, Eric Foner, and Walter Johnson, The problem of freedom in the age of emancipation, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011, p. 34Google Scholar.
38 Daniels, Roger, Coming to America: a history of immigration and ethnicity in American life, 2nd edn, New York: Perennial, 2002, pp. 129Google Scholar, 146; Hoerder, Dirk, ‘Migrations and belongings’, in Rosenberg, A world connecting, pp. 435–589Google Scholar.
39 ‘Interesting correspondence: the mail steamer service’, Washington Republic (Tri-Weekly), 14 September 1850, p. 2.
40 Congressional Globe, 19 September 1850, p. 1864; F. P. Stanton, ‘Joseph Bryan’, H.Rep. 438, 31st Congress, 1st session, 1850, pp. 7–8.
41 Congressional Globe, 20 September 1850, pp. 1889–90.
42 Congressional Globe, 23 September 1850, pp. 1914–5; 19 September 1850, pp. 1867–8; Congressional Globe Appendix, 19 September 1850, pp. 1292–7; ‘The Liberia Steamships’, African Repository, 26, 11, November 1850.
43 ‘The great steamship enterprise’, African Repository, 27, 1, January 1851, p. 8.
44 Clay, Henry, ‘Speech of the hon. H. Clay’, African Repository, 27, 4, April 1851, p. 112Google Scholar.
45 Harris, D.T., ‘Letter from D.T. Harris, Liberia’, African Repository, 27, 2, February 1851, p. 59Google Scholar; Seys, John, ‘The line of steamers to Africa’, African Repository, 27, 6, June 1851, p. 189Google Scholar; ‘In Memoriam’, in Fifty-third annual report of the Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church for the year 1871, New York: Missionary Society, 1872, p. 135.
46 ‘Memorial of members of the Virginia Reform Convention in favor of the establishment of a line of mail steamers between the United States and the western coast of Africa’, S. Mis. Doc. 19, 31st Congress, 2nd session, 1851; ‘Memorial of members of the legislature of Virginia in favor of the establishment of a line of mail steamers between the United States and the western coast of Africa’, S. Mis. Doc. 18, 31st Congress, 2nd session, 1851; Congressional Globe, 15 January 1851, pp. 246–7; 11 February 1851, p. 503; 17 February 1851, pp. 574, 595; 1 March 1851, p. 811; 24 February 1851, pp. 200–2; 20 February 1851, p. 623; US House Journal, 31st Congress, 2nd session, 3 March 1851, p. 393; Report of the Naval Committee, p. 16; ‘Action of the Synod of Virginia on colonization, and the proposed steamships’, African Repository, 26, 12, December 1850, pp. 354–5; ‘The colonization of free blacks: steamships to Africa’, African Repository, 27, 7, July 1851, pp. 209–11; ‘A line of steamers to Africa’, Christian Register, 3 August 1850, p. 123.
47 ‘But will they go?’, African Repository, 26, 10, October 1850, p. 292.
48 Congressional Globe, 1 March 1851, p. 769.
49 ‘Extracts from the minutes of the board of directors’, African Repository, 31, 2, February 1855, pp. 56–8.
50 Gurley, R. R., ‘Regular communication with Liberia’, African Repository, 30, 5, May 1854, pp. 134–135Google Scholar; ‘Evening session, January 17’, African Repository, 31, 3, March 1855, p. 72.
51 ‘Forty-first annual report of the American Colonization Society; January 19, 1858’, African Repository, 34, 3, March 1858, pp. 81, 87.
52 EBJ, vol. 6, 23 September 1846.
53 Burritt, Elihu, Ocean penny postage: its necessity shown and its feasibility demonstrated, London: C. Gilpin, 1849, p. 3Google Scholar.
54 Hill Smyth, Eleanor C., Rowland Hill: the story of a great reform, London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1907, pp. 308–310Google Scholar.
55 Burritt, Elihu, Ocean penny postage, p. 5Google Scholar.
56 McGilchrist, John, Richard Cobden, the apostle of free trade, London: Lockwood and Co., 1865, pp. 161–163Google Scholar; Simone Müller-Pohl, ‘The class of 1866 and the wiring of the world’, PhD thesis, Freie Universität, Berlin, 2012, pp. 151–4; Nicholls, David, ‘Richard Cobden and the international peace congress movement, 1848–1853’, Journal of British Studies, 30, 4, 1991, pp. 351–376CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Northend, Elihu Burritt, pp. 78–80.
57 E. D. Bacon, ‘Ocean penny postage’, St. Martin's-Le-Grand, April 1899, pp. 164–72; ‘Enveloppes avec dessins, sans timbre-poste: association pour l'ocean penny postage’, Magasin Pittoresque, 31, September 1863, pp. 294–6; Bodily, Ritchie, Jarvis, Chris, and Hahn, Charles, British pictorial envelopes of the 19th Century, Chicago, IL: Collectors Club of Chicago, 1984Google Scholar; Turner, D. P., ‘A “mystery” ocean penny postage envelope’, The Philatelist-P.J.G.P., 5, 5, 1985, p. 226Google Scholar.
58 EBJ, vol. 12, 26 January 1849.
59 Ibid., vol. 12, 4 December 1848; vol. 13, 28 April 1849.
60 Ocean penny postage: will it pay?, London: n.p., 1849, reproduced in The Liberator, 21, 43, 24 October 1851, p. 172.
61 Headrick, Daniel, The tools of empire: technology and European imperialism in the nineteenth century, New York: Oxford University Press, 1981Google Scholar.
62 Houghton Library, Harvard University, Charles Sumner Papers, microfilm reel 8, Elihu Burritt to Charles Sumner, 7 November 1851; EBJ, vol. 8, 24 and 25 June 1847; vol. 9, 9 August, 22 October, and 24 October 1847; vol. 10, 7 December 1847 and 4 January 1848; vol. 18, 8, 17, and 18 June 1853; Burritt, Ocean penny postage.
63 Central Connecticut State University, Elihu Burritt Letters (CCSU, EBL), Elihu Burritt to ‘Sister’, 8 April 1853; Northend, Elihu Burritt, p. 32; EBJ, vol. 18, 29 June 1853.
64 ‘Cheap ocean postage’, Pennsylvania Inquirer, 20 December 1852, p. 1; MacBride, Van Dyk, Barnabas Bates: the Rowland Hill of America, Newark, NJ: V.D. MacBride, 1947Google Scholar.
65 NARA-II, RG 84, Dispatches to the Department of State, vol. 13, Abbott Lawrence to Daniel Webster, 7 May 1852.
66 EBJ, vol. 18, 22 December 1853; CCSU, EBL, Elihu Burritt to Amasa Walker, 29 December 1853, and Elihu Burritt to Henry Longfellow, 15 December 1853; Houghton Library, Harvard University, Letters to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Burritt to Longfellow, 26 December 1853; Houghton Library, Harvard University, Cartland Family Papers, Elihu Burritt to John Greenleaf Whittier, 19 December 1853. See also Tolis, Elihu Burritt, pp. 223–4.
67 ‘The Faneuil Hall meeting’, Daily Evening Transcript (Boston), 22 December 1853, p. 2; ‘Cheap ocean postage’, The Sun (Baltimore), 23 December 1853, p. 1; ‘Memorial adopted at a meeting of the citizens of Boston’, S. Mis. Doc. 9, 33rd Congress, 1st session, 1854. On 13 January 1854, a public meeting in Philadelphia reached similar conclusions: see NARA-I, RG 46, Committee on Post Office and Post Roads, SEN 36A-H3.1, ‘Proceedings of a meeting of citizens of Philad^a’, 18 January 1854.
68 EBJ, vol. 19, 2, 6, and 7 January 1854; NARA-I, RG 46, Committee on Post Office and Post Roads, Ocean Postage, SEN 36A-H3.1, petition in ‘Proceedings of a meeting of citizens of New York held at the Tabernacle in Broadway’, 26 January 1854.
69 Newspapers included The Union and The Intelligencer; EBJ, vol. 19, 20 February–19 May 1854, esp. 1 March 1854.
70 EBJ, vol. 19, 8 March, 9 March, and 1 April 1854; Northend, Elihu Burritt, p. 439. Burritt remained frustrated that Rusk never submitted his completed report: see EBJ, vol. 19, 28 April 1854.
71 EBJ, vol. 19, 16 May 1854.
72 ‘Cheap ocean postage’, Albany Journal, 13 February 1854, p. 2.
73 EBJ, vol. 19, 24 March 1854.
74 Ibid., vol. 19, 14 March 1854; Sumner, Charles, ‘Cheap ocean postage’, in The works of Charles Sumner, Boston, MA: Lee and Shepard, 1875Google Scholar, vol. 3, p. 47; Congressional Globe Appendix, 3 July 1852, p. 825.
75 Despite Burritt's anti-slavery work, trade-minded southern merchants welcomed his postage campaign: see EBJ, vol. 19, 20 May 1854.
76 Ibid., vol. 19, 23 and 24 May 1854.
77 Ibid., vol. 19, 22 May 1854.
78 NARA-I, RG 233, House Committee on Post Office and Post Roads, HR 33A-G16.40, ‘Petition of John G. Whittier and 54 others’, 24 February 1854.
79 NARA-I, RG 46, Committee on Post Office and Post Roads, Ocean Postage, SEN 36A-H3.1, ‘Petition of inhabitants of Oberlin, Ohio’; Lieber in ‘Petition of Citizens of Columbia, S.C.’.
80 See NARA-I, RG 46, Committee on Post Office and Post Roads, SEN 36A-H3.1; RG 233, Committee on Post Office and Post Roads, Ocean Postage, HR 33A-G16.40.
81 Resolutions of the legislature of Maine, in favor of cheap ocean postage, S. Mis. Doc. 58, 33rd Congress, 1st session, 1854; Resolutions of the legislature of Massachusetts in favor of a reduction of the rates of ocean postage, S. Mis. Doc. 76, 32nd Congress, 1st session, 1852; Cheap ocean postage: resolutions of the legislature of New Jersey, on the subject of cheap ocean postage, H. Mis. Doc. 41, 33rd Congress, 1st session, 1854; Cheap ocean postage: resolutions of the legislature of Wisconsin, on the subject of cheap ocean postage, H. Mis. Doc. 62, 33rd Congress, 1st session, 1854; Resolutions of the legislature of California, in relation to cheap ocean postage, S. Mis. Doc. 66, 33rd Congress, 1st session, 1854; Cheap ocean postage: resolutions of the General Assembly of Connecticut, on the subject of cheap ocean postage, H. Mis. Doc. 85, 33rd Congress, 1st session, 1854; Cheap postage: resolutions of the legislature of Rhode Island, in relation to cheap postage, H. Mis. Doc. 5, 33rd Congress, 1st session, 1854; ‘Resolution no. 31: ocean postage’, Acts, resolutions and memorials passed at the regular session of the fifth General Assembly of the state of Iowa, which convened at Iowa City, on the fourth day of December, Anno Domini 1854, Iowa City, IA: D.A. Mahony & J.B. Dorr, 1855, p. 281.
82 Columbia University, Rare Book & Manuscript Library Collections, New York Chamber of Commerce and Industry Records, Box 436, ‘Petition to Congress from Citizens of New York for Postal Reform, May, 1856’; Pierce, Edward L., ed., Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner, Boston, MA: Roberts Brothers, 1893Google Scholar, vol. 3, p. 274.
83 ‘Rates of domestic and foreign postage’, Charleston Courier, 8 September 1865, p. 4; ‘Rates of postage with the United Kingdom’, Providence Evening Press, 30 November 1868, p. 3; Report of the postmaster general, H.ex.doc. 1/4, 42nd Congress, 2nd session, 1871, pp. 11–12; ‘Foreign postal rates’, Macon Weekly Telegraph, 11 January 1876, p. 4; ‘Death of Elihu Burritt’, San Francisco Bulletin, 8 March 1879, p. 2. The establishment of the General Postal Union in fact owed little to Burritt's organizational efforts. His contribution entailed popularizing the idea that cheap, global communication was itself a moral force for peace and prosperity.
84 Report of the secretary of state, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate of February 24, 1855, calling for copies of the correspondence between the United States and Great Britain, relative to the postal treaty with the British government, S. Exdoc. 73, 33rd Congress, 2nd session, 1855.
85 Younger, Edward, John A. Kasson: politics and diplomacy from Lincoln to McKinley, Iowa City, IA: State Historical Society of Iowa, 1955Google Scholar, pp. 39, 49, 141–52; ‘Foreign Intelligence’, The Times (London), 14 May 1863, p. 11. On the 1863 conference, see John, ‘Projecting power overseas’. On postal administrators – heirs to Kasson – building bureaucracies to globalize communications, see Léonard Laborie, ‘Global commerce in small boxes: parcel post, 1878–1913’, in this issue, pp. 235–58.
86 ‘How events in Egypt are playing out online’, 10 February 2011, http://www.npr.org/2011/02/10/133660816/How-Events-In-Egypt-Are-Playing-Out-Online (consulted 20 March 2015).
87 For the latest scholarship on historicizing the nation-state, see Maier, ‘Leviathan 2.0’.