Tin Can Mail

Author's Personal Collection: Honolulu Postmarked July 9, 1934
Author's Personal Collection

Honolulu Postmarked July 9, 1934

Name/Title

Tin Can Mail

Description

Tin Can Mail Inscribed " This Envelope was Thrown Overboard in a Tin Can from the "S.S. Mariposa" off Niuafou or "Tin Can Island" in the Tonga Islands -Lat. 15 - 33' South, Long 175 - 89' West" Wm. R. Meyer, Commander. Tin Can Mail In the early part of the 20th century, philatelists began seeking out postal cancellations from Niuafo'ou, a volcanic Tongan island. Since Niuafo'ou lacked a deep water harbor to accommodate ships, postal deliveries were received via the so-called "Tin Can Mail" system of having mail thrown overboard in biscuit tins and retrieved by local swimmers. To swim mail out, Tongans adopted the traditional fishing technique of using a buoyancy pole, called a fau, to swim out with a biscuit or kerosene tin to visiting ships. Using the pole for support the swim could take several hours. After a shark killed a Tongan swimmer in 1931, swimming was banned and canoes had to be used. The specially marked Tin Can covers of the 1930s and 1940s became collectors items after an Englishman, Charles Ramsey, became the first and only white man to swim out with the mail. A German trader, Walter Quensell, cashed in on what had become a major tourist attraction with visiting cruise ships, by stamping all the mail and sending it on. There was great rivalry between the two men. Ramsay, who was an agent for Morris Hedstrom Ltd on the island, made 112 swims, many of them at night. Frequently, they lasted for hours in treacherous seas. Ramsay started the practice in commercial innocence but Quensell, who was an agent for the rival trading company Burns Philp (South Seas) Pty Ltd was more shrewd. He set up a shed on the shore and cacheted the covers for the passengers on the cruise liners, in a totally unofficial but rather profitable operation. Ramsey, who had given romance and created world interest in the special mail service, was purposefully exploited by his commercial rival. Quensell never made the swim himself, but his sister-n-law, Pauline Hoeft, a champion swimmer in Australia became the only woman to make the swim, occasionally helping the Tongans.[2] Wikipedia reference nos.

Web Links and URLs

Wikipedia - Tin Can Mail

Created By

hawaiiancovers@gmail.com

Create Date

May 5, 2024

Update Date

May 5, 2024