Page 178 - British Post Office Notices 1666 to 1799
P. 178
1780-1789
-- 8 5 2 O NEWS (General Post-Office, November 5, 1785)
MR. PALMER having engaged to accomplish his Plan for the Conveyance of his Majesty's Mails to all Parts of the
Kingdom as soon as possible, the Letters for every part of Great-Britain and Ireland must be put into the Receiving Houses
before FivE o'Clock in the Evening, and into this Office before SEVEN, in order to prevent the Inconveniencies which have
arisen to the Public from two Deliveries in London on the same Day, and the sending out the Mails at different Hours on
the same evening.
The Letters likewise will be sent out regularly from hence between the Hours of Nine and Ten in the Morning, so as
to reach the most distant Parts of _the Town by Twelve at Noon.
It is necessary that all Newspapers should be put into this Office before Six o'Clock, otherwise they cannot be certain
of an immediate Conveyance.
ANTHONY TODD, Sec.
The following are the Mail Coaches already established.
To Bath and Bristol, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane, and the Gloucester Coffee-house, Piccadilly.
To Norwich and Yarmouth, through Newmarket and Thetford, from the White Horse, Fetter-lane.
To Norwich, through Colchester and Ipswich, from the same Place.
To Nottingham and Leeds, from the Bull and Mouth, in Bull and Mouth-street.
To Manchester, through Derby, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane.
To Liverpool, through Coventry and Litchfield, from the same place.
To Portsmouth, from the Angel, behind St. Clement's Church.
To Southampton and Poole, from the Bell and Crown, Holborn; and the Gloucester Coffee-house, Piccadilly.
To Gloucester and Swansea, from the Angel, behind St. Clement's Church; and the Gloucester Coffee-house,
Piccadilly.
To Hereford, and Milford Haven, from the Angel behind St. Clement's Church; and the Gloucester Coffee-house,
Piccadilly.
To Birmingham, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane.
To Worcester and Ludlow, from the George and Blue Boar, Holborn, and the Gloucester Coffee-house, Piccadilly.
To Bath and Bristol, through Andover, Devizes and Bradford, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane; and the
Gloucester Coffee-house, Piccadilly.
To Shrewsbury, from the Bull and Mouth, Bull and Mouth-street.
To Cirencester, Tedbury, and Stroud, from the George and Blue Boar, Holborn; and the Gloucester Coffee-house,
Piccadilly.
To Windsor, from the Three Cups, Bread-street, and the Gloucester Coffee-house, Piccadilly.
To Chester and Holyhead, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane.
To Carlisle, by Way of Manchester, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane.
To Exeter, through Salisbury, Blandford, and Dorchester, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane, and the
Gloucester Coffee-house, Piccadilly.
To Dover from the George and Blue-Boar, Holbom; and the Gloucester Coffee-house, Piccadilly, to York House,
Dover.
And this Day,
To EXETER, through Hounslow, Staines, Bagshot, Hartfordbridge, Basingstoke, Whitchurch, Andover, Amesbury,
Heytisbury, Wanninster, Froome, Shepton-Malfet, Wells, Bridgewater, Taunton, Wellington, Cullompton, to Exeter.
The Mail Coach to Exeter, by Way of Wells, Bridgewater and Taunton, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane, and
the Gloucester Coffee-house, Piccadilly.
-- 8 5 2 1 NEWS (General Post Office, November 19, 1785)
MR. PALMER having engaged to accomplish his Plan for the Conveyance of His Majesty's Mails to all Parts of the
Kingdom as soon as possible, the Letters for every Part of Great Britain and Ireland must be put into the Receiving Houses
before FivE o'clock in the Evening, and into this Office b~fore SEVEN, in order to prevent the Inconveniencies which have
arisen to the Public from two Deliveries in London on the same Day, and the sending out the Mails at different Hours on
the same Evening.
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