50 Mailboxes That Made Getting Mail Way More Interesting

When last did you hand-write a letter to someone, and take the time to post it? For many of us, that’s a thing of the past. We have email, mobile phones, social media and other instant ways to communicate.

But there’s something super nostalgic about receiving a written letter or Christmas card… Walking to the mailbox, opening it up and being pleasantly surprised to see an envelope with your name and address scrawled across the front.

Despite the world embracing the digital era, it’s nice to know that you can still see mailboxes scattered around neighborhoods during your daily walks. What’s even better is when they aren’t your average box-shaped style. Mailboxes come in all shapes and sizes, standing proud like full-time front desk employees, ready to greet the next visitor.

Bender Mailbox

Robot holding a creative and cool mailbox designed like a Pabst Blue Ribbon beer box outdoors on grass.

If you were to imagine the very first letters ever written, what would they look like? If you pictured pieces of paper scrawled with curly handwriting, you’d be wrong. The world‘s first “letters” came in the shape of clay tokens. They were bobs of baked clay with dots or lines incised in them. Used in Mesopotamia some 9,500 years ago, these tokens during trade.

“A courier might bring tokens to a seller for so many bushels of grain, or so many jars of olive oil, and the seller would send the tokens with the goods back to the buyer. Think of it as a Bronze Age bill of lading,” explains the ThoughtCo. site.

This would mark the start of writing, and the very early days of what would later become the postal system.

A Mailbox I Made. I’m Very Proud

Creative and cool mailbox designed as a metal tree sculpture with leaves in a workshop setting.

Scrap Metal Mailbox Art

Rusty metal robot sculpture holding a mailbox, representing one of the most creative and cool mailboxes spotted in the wild.

State-sponsored, designated couriers started emerging in Egypt around 2400 BCE. This is believed to be the first documented use of an official postal system, and at the time, it was only available to pharaohs.

“The main mode of transportation was through the Nile River,” reports Egyptian Streets. “The letters were placed in a box escorted by guards.” The pharaohs would use this method to communicate with each other and send updates on political developments in their territories.

That’s Just Adorable

White USPS mail truck parked on a suburban street next to a creative mailbox shaped like a mini postal vehicle.

This Snoopy Mailbox

Creative and cool mailbox designed like Snoopy's doghouse with mailbox number 414 and outgoing mail flag displayed outdoors.

My Neighbor’s Mailbox Matches His House

Creative mailbox designed as a miniature house matching the real home behind it on a sunny day with green lawn.

Around 305 B.C., the postal service got a little makeover in the form of a new method of transportation: horses. Believe it or not, this marked the earliest documentation of what is now known as “express mail” and “regular mail.”

“The express mail services were exclusive to state officials and rulers while the latter was used by the wider public and was delivered by a postman on a donkey or mule,” reveals Egyptian Streets.

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