DC -- Natl Postal Museum -- Exhibit (Case): Disaster: Response and Recovery:
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- Description of Pictures: Disaster: Response and Recovery
June 27, 2007 – January 25, 2008
This exhibition reveals how the Postal Service responds to disasters -- natural or manmade -- that dramatically affect everyday life in an instant. Among the objects representing disaster in two cases are postal keys recovered from the body of sea post clerk Oscar Woody, who perished trying to protect the mail aboard the Royal Mail Ship (RMS) Titanic; a mailbox remnant that survived the San Francisco earthquake of 1906; and an envelope postmarked the first day mail service resumed in New Orleans after the destruction of Hurricane Katrina.
Archival film footage of the construction of the Titanic runs continuously.
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- Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
- PMDIS_071211_01.JPG: Mail Carton Remnant:
Mail is often flown on commercial air carriers in plastic mailing containers. This container was destroyed when United Airlines Flight 93 was hijacked and crashed on September 11, 2001.
- PMDIS_071211_06.JPG: Keys to RMS Titanic's Mailbags:
To ensure the security and privacy of the mail, the mailbags were kept under lock and key. Despite the valiant efforts of the clerks to salvage the mail as the Titanic was sinking, most of it was lost when the ship sank.
- PMDIS_071211_10.JPG: Personal Effects Bag:
All five postal clerks aboard the Royal Mail Ship (RMS) Titanic perished at sea. After the wreck, workers recovered the personal effects of American clerk Oscar S. Woody from his body and returned them to his widow in this bag.
- PMDIS_071211_25.JPG: Mailbox Remnant:
Floodwaters rushing through Johnstown, Pennsylvania, on May 31, 1889, wiped out telephone, telegraph, railroad, and mail lines. Emergency mail routes were established on horseback between Johnstown and nearby cities. Mail across the Mid-Atlantic region had to be rerouted through New York.
- PMDIS_071211_29.JPG: Mailbox Remnant:
On April 18, 1906, an earthquake and subsequent fire destroyed much of San Francisco. The main post office was damaged, but service resumed two days later. For several days after the disaster, portal clerks accepted letters without stamps.
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