Fonopost

Summary

Fonopost, or Phonopost, was an experimental postal service in Argentina to record a person's voice and deliver the resulting recording by mail.[1]

A 1939 Fonopost stamp from Argentina.

The service was demonstrated at the Postal Union Congress in Buenos Aires in 1939 and later the Argentine Post Office issued three stamps to mail the records.[1]

Special mobile recording vans were used to make the recordings which used 8 inch 78 rpm acetate gramophone records.[2]

As a service approved by the Universal Postal Union, Fonopost was not restricted just to Argentina. The Museum voor Communicatie in The Netherlands has a Fonopost unit with recordings that was used in postal offices from 1937 to 1939 mainly to provide people with the opportunity to send spoken messages to relatives in the Dutch East Indies.

The approved status of Fonopost was removed at the Tokyo U.P.U. congress in 1969.[3]

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Bose, Walter B.L. Phonopost service: Its Introduction and Development in the Argentine Republic. Berne: L'Union Postale, 1945.
  • "Fonopost" by Harry M. Konwiser in Stamps, 6 July 1946.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Patrick, Douglas & Mary. The Hodder Stamp Dictionary, Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1973, p.89. ISBN 0-340-17183-9.
  2. ^ Phillips, Stanley. Stamp Collecting: A guide to modern philately, revised edition, Stanley Gibbons, London, 1983, p.27. ISBN 0-85259-047-4.
  3. ^ "The Evolution of the Postal Service in the Era of the UPU" by Jamie Gough in The London Philatelist, Vol.114, No. 1331, December 2005, pp.362-363.