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Charlotte May Pierstorff
American shipped through the post From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Charlotte May Pierstorff (May 12, 1908 – April 25, 1987) was an American girl of German descent who was shipped alive through the United States postal system by parcel post on February 19, 1914.[1][2][3] After the incident, parcel post regulations were changed to prohibit the shipment of humans.[4]
In 1997, Michael O. Tunnell wrote a children's book, Mailing May, revolving around May's childhood.[5]
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Mailing
On February 19, 1914, then five-year-old Charlotte May Pierstorff was mailed from Grangeville, Idaho to Lewiston, Idaho to visit her grandmother C. G. Vennigerholz, as this was cheaper than buying a train ticket. Charlotte, who weighed 48.5 pounds (22.0 kg) at the time, rode in the mail car with a 32¢ stamp on her coat (equivalent to $10 in 2024).[6]
Leonard Mochel, May's mother's cousin and railway postal clerk, accompanied her during the trip and delivered her to her grandmother's house.[7]
This event indirectly caused the United States Post Office to bar all humans and live animals from mail delivery (with few exceptions, bees and day-old poultry amongst them).[8][9]
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