Articles
- African American Postal Workers in the 19th Century
- The History and Experience of African Americans in America’s Postal Service
- List of Known African American Postmasters, 1800s
- Lynching Of Julia and Frazier Baker (1898): A | B | C | D | YouTube Video
- Postal SERVICE — After Civil War, African-Americans began long record of contributions to Post Office
- 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion (1945–1946)
Individuals
Individuals Cont.
- William Harvey Carney - the first African American to earn the Congressional Medal of Honor
- Minnie M. Cox - the first African-American woman to serve as a postmaster in the United States: A | B
- Mary Fields - In 1895, became the first African-American woman employed as a mail carrier in the United States: A | B | C
- John T. Jackson - On April 1, 1891 became the postmaster of Alanthus, Virginia: A | B
- William “Curly” Neal - "In 1885 he won a contract with the U.S. Postal Service hauling mail and did so for forty-two years ..."
- William Cooper Nell the first to hold a federal position as clerk in the U.S. Postal Department: A | B
- Sol Plaatje - in 1894 he was a telegraph messenger for the Post Office in Kimberley, South Africa: A | B
- Heman Marion Sweatt was a postal worker who integrated the University of Texas (UT) Law School in 1950: A | B | C | D