From time to time we’ve all had issues with the US
Postal Service. Late deliveries,
misdirected mail, slow service, lost items or delayed pick-up, so we inquire at
the window, complain, try to understand the system, hoping to make it work
better for us. But I never thought that
the solution was to have my own Post Office -- Alice did!
In 1917, Alice Green Hoffman began acquiring land on Bogue Banks including a home-located midway between Salter Path and Atlantic Beach. She called her home Shore House.
With real estate and business interests in New York City and Paris as well as family and friends in the United States and Europe, she felt a strong need for regular, reliable and frequent mail service. In 1917, Shore House, which was on what is now Oakleaf Drive, lacked a telephone; in fact, it lacked electrical service. It was well into the 1940s before those conveniences arrived. The nearest telegraph office was in Morehead, down the street from the post office where she picked up her mail.
Shore House |
Her first application for
establishing a post office on Bogue Banks was submitted in 1918 and was not
acted upon. The following year, she submitted a more detailed application and
was successful. The application
described the proposed office as being seven miles from the Salter Path office.
The nearest mainland office was in Mansfield, three miles across the sound.
1920 historic map collection UNC |
At this point the alert
reader is thinking, “Why couldn’t she go to Atlantic Beach?” Two simple
reasons: there was no road to Atlantic Beach, and there was no post office in
Atlantic Beach. It wasn’t until the 1930s that an office was established there,
and for many years it was only a summer-season office.
The Post Office Department
established a post office named Bogue Banks located in Shore House with Alice
Hoffman as the postmaster on July 12, 1919.
The department chose the name Bogue Banks, rejecting her choices of Hoop
Pole or Hoop Pole Woods. It was announced in the Greensboro Daily News of July 15, 1919.
Either Rainbow or Florabell |
During her tenure as
postmaster, she had discussions with postal authorities concerning the
regularity and reliability of mail delivery.
She tried several times to convince them to establish daily delivery
from Morehead City, all to no avail.
Starting in 1923, Mrs. Hoffman began buying
land across the sound near the town of Mansfield, primarily to build a dairy
farm. Her attempt at dairy farming on
the Banks had proven unsuccessful. An
additional attraction in purchasing land on the mainland was the possibility of
improving her mail service. She thought
that a ten-minute boat ride crossing the sound to the Mansfield farm and then a
short trip by car to either the Mansfield or Morehead City post office would
speed-up delivery and give her greater control over the mail service.
In 1926, the Post Office
Department decommissioned the post office at Bogue Banks, and Alice lost her
job as postmaster--the pay for which was determined as a percentage of the
stamps cancelled. It is likely that she herself purchased the vast majority of
the postage, so she was essentially paying herself. This position,
which she had for six years, may have been the only paying job Alice ever held.
If the Bogue Banks post
office had continued in existence, we would have the convenience of a nearby
office, and Pine Knoll Shores may be named Bogue Banks. The history of what could
have been.
Much of this story is based on material found in
“A Postal History of Carteret County, North Carolina," by Charles Pitts. A good
read for what would seemingly be a dry subject.