Photography
Related: About this forumHow many are old enough to remember
an old school newspaper box? My neighbor who lived here since the 1940's had one and asked me to remove it years ago. I saw the potential, and it has been the home of many Carolina Wren families. This year, a Carolina Chickadee family to be, beat them to it!




Walleye
(44,885 posts)Deuxcents
(26,969 posts)niyad
(132,537 posts)BattleRow
(2,456 posts)niyad
(132,537 posts)Diamond_Dog
(40,616 posts)What a great idea to recycle them into birdhouses!
I wonder how much longer before mailboxes disappear
RainCaster
(13,728 posts)I like your thinking. 😁
Auggie
(33,168 posts)Thanks for the memory
BidenRocks
(3,281 posts)The Milwaukee Journal and The Milwaukee Sentinel.
Our neighbor liked the horses in Illinois, so they had a paper box for The Chicago Tribune.
About 1963. I was 8.
Squaredeal
(733 posts)That took extra time to that of just putting the paper in a box on the street or tossing it on a porch. At that time, newspaper boys earned 2 to 2-1/2 cents per delivery (5 cents for each Sunday paper) plus collecting weekly and being responsible for paying for the deadbeats.
Cheezoholic
(3,722 posts)I've learned to check it for yellow jackets frequently lol
Beartracks
(14,609 posts)... or close enough.
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George McGovern
(12,096 posts)Small section of a small town. Papers were dropped off around 4-4:30 am. I'd walk my bicycle down the driveway to the newspaper box right around the corner. Load up the delivery bag, sling it over my shoulder and pedal off. I was taught by the previous paperboy to walk up to a customer's door, open the storm door and slip the paper between the doors. I imagine a larger route would have required hurling the paper toward, if not onto, a porch.
Complete the schedule, get home, eat breakfast, go to school. The route was year 'round, no mornings off. Fond memories, except for snowfallen cold winter mornings. Those were not so fond.
Beartracks
(14,609 posts)I did paper distribution while in college, but it was just a stroll in the quiet predawn hours to drop and unbundle them in the dormitory lobbies. Small campus, three dorms. I think I hauled them in a wagon. Your experience sounds much more character-building.
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George McGovern
(12,096 posts)we still have one up at the end of our road. I have been using it to leave things for people to pick up when I don't have time to actually meet them up there.
debsy
(950 posts)My mother always asked me to get the paper for her. We would sit down together, she in her rocking chair, and were would do the crossword together.
Squaredeal
(733 posts)As a young woman, she worked for a taxi cab company and drove one of the secondhand vehicles to and from work, which the firm would buy at auction to convert into cabs. She had one of the shop employees bolt her box onto the cars trunk and she parked it at the end of her driveway, which wasnt against the rules, and she then drove another future cab between home and work. She wasnt about to let her daily paper get wet whenever it rained.
HAB911
(10,447 posts)sounds like something I would do, lol