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Mr. Palmer. Expansion of mail coach routes (August 6, 1785)

General Post-Office, August 6, 1785
Raguin Code: NEWS –8508

MR. PALMER having engaged to accomplish his Plan for the Conveyance of His Majesty's Mails to all Parts of the Kingdom as soon as possible, the Letters for every Part of Great Britain and Ireland, must, on and after Monday the 15th Instant, be put into the Receiving Houses before FIVE o'Clock in the Evening, and into this Office before SEVEN, in order to prevent the Inconveniencies which have arisen to the Public from two Deliveries in London on the same Day, and the sending out the Mails at different Hours on the same Evening.

From that Time likewise the Letters are intended to be sent out regularly from hence between the Hours of Nine and Ten in the Morning, so as to reach the most distant Parts of the Town by Twelve at Noon.

Notice will be given in a few Days when the Mail Conveyance upon Mr. Palmer's Plan will be established to Hampshire, Dorsetshire, Somersetshire, Devonshire, and Cornwall, as likewise to Birmingham, Shrewsbury, Gloucester, and Ludlow, and also to Dover.

ANTHONY TODD, Sec.

The following are the Mail Coaches already established.

To Bath and Bristol from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane, and the Gloucester Coffee-house, Piccadilly.

To Norwich and Yarmouth, through Newmarket and Thetford from the White Horse, Fetter-lane.

To Norwich, through Colchester and Ipswich from the same Place.

To Nottingham and Leeds from the Bull and Mouth, in Bull and Mouth-street.

To Manchester, through Derby.

And to Liverpool, through Coventry and Litchfield, from the Swan with Two Necks, Lad-lane.