Children Sent Through the Mail

Children Sent Through the Mail

In the winter of nineteen fourteen, a five-year-old girl named May Pierstorff stood on a train platform in Grangeville, Idaho, with fifty-three cents in postage stamps pinned to her coat. Her parents had just mailed her to her grandmother.

In this episode, I dig into one of the strangest true stories in American history, the brief window between nineteen thirteen and nineteen fifteen when poor rural families discovered that the brand new parcel post service would accept a child at the counter, weigh her like a crate of apples, and deliver her, and the federal government had never written a rule saying otherwise.I follow every documented case, from baby James Beagle, mailed to his grandmother in Ohio for fifteen cents just days after parcel post launched, to six-year-old Edna Neff, who traveled seven hundred and twenty miles from Pensacola to Virginia in the care of railway mail clerks, to little Maud Smith, whose forty-mile trip through the Kentucky hills finally triggered the federal investigation that ended the practice.

Along the way we look at everything else Americans crammed into the mail in those first wild years, the eggs and the bees and the day-old chicks, the man in Utah who mailed an entire bank building fifty pounds of brick at a time, and the nineteen twenty ruling in which the Post Office was forced to declare that children did not qualify as harmless live animals.

This is a gentler episode than most, and not one child in it was ever harmed. What makes it disturbing is what it reveals, a country where train fare was out of reach for farm families, where the rural mail carrier was the most trusted man anyone knew, and where poverty could turn a child into a package because the bureaucracy had not yet decided otherwise. As a former cop, I have seen what people do when a system leaves a gap.

This is the story of families who found one, read the rate table more carefully than the men who wrote it, and stamped their children.

Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation?

Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com.

Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past.

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Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

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Jaksot(122)

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