Page 1
Postal Heritage
Converting Postal Heritage into Tourist Attractions
* Rashi Sharma
* The author is Deputy Director General (Establishment) in Department of Posts, Ministry of Communications, India.
Email:rashi.edu@nic.in
ith 8-10 million international
tourists, India ranks 8
th
in the
Asia Pacific region. Domestic
tourists, on the other hand, are
a whopping 600-700 million per
annum. Whereas, Gujarat, Maharashtra, West Bengal,
Delhi and UP are the top recipients of foreign tourists,
domestic tourists prefer Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu,
Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, and Gujarat. As regards the
source countries of international tourists visiting India,
W
India has among the world’s oldest postal histories, dating back to the Mauryan times.
However, the foundations of the modern organised Postal system were laid by the British
in the 19
th
century. As Posts and later telegraph were the only means of communication
in the 19
th
and 20
th
centuries, post offices, Dak Bungalows, mail trains, stamps, letters,
etc. are a very important part of our history. With 44 heritage buildings and more than
350 Pre-1939 buildings, Postal Department manages a large heritage estate. Each of
the heritage buildings has a rich history and needs to be developed as a tourist attraction
so that citizens and foreigners can appreciate not only their beauty but also know about
the past associated with these structures. Department of Posts is working closely with
INTACH and CPWD to restore many of these important heritage buildings so that they
become tourist attractions in such places.
Page 2
Postal Heritage
Converting Postal Heritage into Tourist Attractions
* Rashi Sharma
* The author is Deputy Director General (Establishment) in Department of Posts, Ministry of Communications, India.
Email:rashi.edu@nic.in
ith 8-10 million international
tourists, India ranks 8
th
in the
Asia Pacific region. Domestic
tourists, on the other hand, are
a whopping 600-700 million per
annum. Whereas, Gujarat, Maharashtra, West Bengal,
Delhi and UP are the top recipients of foreign tourists,
domestic tourists prefer Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu,
Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, and Gujarat. As regards the
source countries of international tourists visiting India,
W
India has among the world’s oldest postal histories, dating back to the Mauryan times.
However, the foundations of the modern organised Postal system were laid by the British
in the 19
th
century. As Posts and later telegraph were the only means of communication
in the 19
th
and 20
th
centuries, post offices, Dak Bungalows, mail trains, stamps, letters,
etc. are a very important part of our history. With 44 heritage buildings and more than
350 Pre-1939 buildings, Postal Department manages a large heritage estate. Each of
the heritage buildings has a rich history and needs to be developed as a tourist attraction
so that citizens and foreigners can appreciate not only their beauty but also know about
the past associated with these structures. Department of Posts is working closely with
INTACH and CPWD to restore many of these important heritage buildings so that they
become tourist attractions in such places.
23 Kurukshetra April 2024
more than 80% tourists belong to Bangladesh, EU, USA,
and UK. India shares a common history with Bangladesh
and UK, meaning that almost 3.5 million tourists who
visit India every year, would be definitely interested
to visit the historical places dating back to the colonial
times. As British were the rulers of India, Australia, a
large part of South East Asia, Sri Lanka, etc. the heritage
links in the form of similarly designed buildings and
institutions is bound to attract tourists from these
countries. The heritage of colonial times is represented
majorly by the buildings that were constructed during
the colonial rule as well as the institutions that were
created or expanded by the British. Railways and Posts
are the two major institutions that were created by the
British for administering our vast country.
The foundations of the modern organised Postal
system were laid by the British in the 19
th
century.
As Posts and later telegraph were the only means of
communication in the 19
th
and 20
th
centuries, post
offices, dak bungalows, mail trains, stamps, letters,
etc. became a very important part of our history. Few
would know that the guard room of old Fort William
where the Black hole tragedy happened in 1756 is
situated in an alley just on the backside of Kolkata
GPO. Mumbai GPO constructed in 1913 is a classic
example of Indo-Saracenic architecture and has been
inspired from Gol Gumbaz of Bijapur. Bombay GPO
has 3 basements which are connected to the Bombay
Docks, the Mint through 3 underground tunnels, to be
used in case of an attack. The famous Bombay Duck
fish derives its name from Bombay Dawk mail train
which used to transport this fish from
Bombay to Kolkata during the colonial
times. The famous Dak Bungalows
which find mention in so many
novels, stories, films and plays were
built as resting points for the mail
runners and Government officials on
tour; they continued to be managed
by the Postal Department for a very
long time in British India.
With 44 heritage buildings and
more than 350 Pre-1939 buildings,
Postal Department manages a large
heritage estate. Each of the heritage
buildings has a rich history and needs
to be developed as a tourist attraction
so that citizens and foreigners can appreciate not only
their beauty but also know about the past associated
with these structures. Department of Posts is working
closely with INTACH and CPWD to restore many of
these important heritage buildings so that they become
tourist attractions in such places.
Historical Perspective
Before 1854, the Post Office was a medley of
services in different provinces, each having separate
rules and different rates of postage. Regular mails
were conveyed over a very few main lines between
important towns, and collectors of districts were
responsible for the management of their own local
post offices. In 1850, a Commission was appointed to
consider the state of the postal services, and the result
of its deliberations was the Post Office Act of 1854
and the conversion of the Post Office into an Imperial
Department under a single head called the Director-
General. The Post Office building construction was of
prime importance and hence the General Post Office
in Calcutta was built in 1868 from designs made by
Mr. Grenville. Later, Bombay General Post Office was
constructed in 1910 by Mr. James Begg. The building
was hardly large enough for the great mass of work
which it has to transact and although the removal of
the Postmaster-General’s Office and the Sorting Branch
somewhat relieved the congestion, there was already
a demand for increased accommodation. The same
thing has happened in Madras where there was a large
Post and Telegraph Office facing the sea, designed by
Mr. Chisholm and opened to the public in 1885. The
Page 3
Postal Heritage
Converting Postal Heritage into Tourist Attractions
* Rashi Sharma
* The author is Deputy Director General (Establishment) in Department of Posts, Ministry of Communications, India.
Email:rashi.edu@nic.in
ith 8-10 million international
tourists, India ranks 8
th
in the
Asia Pacific region. Domestic
tourists, on the other hand, are
a whopping 600-700 million per
annum. Whereas, Gujarat, Maharashtra, West Bengal,
Delhi and UP are the top recipients of foreign tourists,
domestic tourists prefer Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu,
Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, and Gujarat. As regards the
source countries of international tourists visiting India,
W
India has among the world’s oldest postal histories, dating back to the Mauryan times.
However, the foundations of the modern organised Postal system were laid by the British
in the 19
th
century. As Posts and later telegraph were the only means of communication
in the 19
th
and 20
th
centuries, post offices, Dak Bungalows, mail trains, stamps, letters,
etc. are a very important part of our history. With 44 heritage buildings and more than
350 Pre-1939 buildings, Postal Department manages a large heritage estate. Each of
the heritage buildings has a rich history and needs to be developed as a tourist attraction
so that citizens and foreigners can appreciate not only their beauty but also know about
the past associated with these structures. Department of Posts is working closely with
INTACH and CPWD to restore many of these important heritage buildings so that they
become tourist attractions in such places.
23 Kurukshetra April 2024
more than 80% tourists belong to Bangladesh, EU, USA,
and UK. India shares a common history with Bangladesh
and UK, meaning that almost 3.5 million tourists who
visit India every year, would be definitely interested
to visit the historical places dating back to the colonial
times. As British were the rulers of India, Australia, a
large part of South East Asia, Sri Lanka, etc. the heritage
links in the form of similarly designed buildings and
institutions is bound to attract tourists from these
countries. The heritage of colonial times is represented
majorly by the buildings that were constructed during
the colonial rule as well as the institutions that were
created or expanded by the British. Railways and Posts
are the two major institutions that were created by the
British for administering our vast country.
The foundations of the modern organised Postal
system were laid by the British in the 19
th
century.
As Posts and later telegraph were the only means of
communication in the 19
th
and 20
th
centuries, post
offices, dak bungalows, mail trains, stamps, letters,
etc. became a very important part of our history. Few
would know that the guard room of old Fort William
where the Black hole tragedy happened in 1756 is
situated in an alley just on the backside of Kolkata
GPO. Mumbai GPO constructed in 1913 is a classic
example of Indo-Saracenic architecture and has been
inspired from Gol Gumbaz of Bijapur. Bombay GPO
has 3 basements which are connected to the Bombay
Docks, the Mint through 3 underground tunnels, to be
used in case of an attack. The famous Bombay Duck
fish derives its name from Bombay Dawk mail train
which used to transport this fish from
Bombay to Kolkata during the colonial
times. The famous Dak Bungalows
which find mention in so many
novels, stories, films and plays were
built as resting points for the mail
runners and Government officials on
tour; they continued to be managed
by the Postal Department for a very
long time in British India.
With 44 heritage buildings and
more than 350 Pre-1939 buildings,
Postal Department manages a large
heritage estate. Each of the heritage
buildings has a rich history and needs
to be developed as a tourist attraction
so that citizens and foreigners can appreciate not only
their beauty but also know about the past associated
with these structures. Department of Posts is working
closely with INTACH and CPWD to restore many of
these important heritage buildings so that they become
tourist attractions in such places.
Historical Perspective
Before 1854, the Post Office was a medley of
services in different provinces, each having separate
rules and different rates of postage. Regular mails
were conveyed over a very few main lines between
important towns, and collectors of districts were
responsible for the management of their own local
post offices. In 1850, a Commission was appointed to
consider the state of the postal services, and the result
of its deliberations was the Post Office Act of 1854
and the conversion of the Post Office into an Imperial
Department under a single head called the Director-
General. The Post Office building construction was of
prime importance and hence the General Post Office
in Calcutta was built in 1868 from designs made by
Mr. Grenville. Later, Bombay General Post Office was
constructed in 1910 by Mr. James Begg. The building
was hardly large enough for the great mass of work
which it has to transact and although the removal of
the Postmaster-General’s Office and the Sorting Branch
somewhat relieved the congestion, there was already
a demand for increased accommodation. The same
thing has happened in Madras where there was a large
Post and Telegraph Office facing the sea, designed by
Mr. Chisholm and opened to the public in 1885. The
24 Kurukshetra April 2024
expansion of business had outgrown the capacity of
these building. Most head offices and important sub-
offices were designed to provide a proper hall for the
public who wish to transact business, with a counter
for clerks and sufficient open space in the building
to allow each branch to work independently and in
comfort under the supervision of a responsible officer.
At Nagpur, Patna, Chittagong, Bareilly, Kanpur, Calcutta,
Pune, Agra, Allahabad, Varanasi, Mount Road Madras,
beautiful Post Office buildings were constructed,
followed by Delhi, Darjeeling, Ajmer, Ahmedabad and
several other large towns.
Kolkata GPO was designed in 1864 by Walter B.
Grenville who acted as consulting architect to the
Government of India from 1863 to 1868. The building
construction was executed by Mackintosh Burn Ltd. and
completed in 1868. It was built to serve as a post office
for the British East India Company and was built at the
site of the first Fort William.
RLO building at Dalhousie square in Kolkata was
India’s first and largest Return Letter Office, earlier
known as ‘Dead Letter Office’. The building was
completed in 1876 when Lord Lytton was the Governor
General of British India. It has a 120-feet-tall bell tower.
Yangon GPO, which was built a few years earlier and
Melbourne’s Mail Exchange, which was built a few years
later, are architecturally similar to this building.
The Delhi GPO was the first Post office of Delhi. It was
built in 1885 in the historic wall city of Shajahanabad.
It was the largest Post office of Delhi established by
the East India Company. The building exhibits iconic
decorative elements of Colonial architecture style. The
Magazine which was blown up by the British soldiers
during the siege of Delhi in 1857 is located right opposite
Delhi GPO in Kashmere Gate.
The New Delhi GPO was constructed in 1934, as the
Sub-Post Office called “Gol Dak Khana”. The building
was designed by Robert Tor Russell, the chief architect
of PWD at that time. Located in the close proximity
of Raisina village, the site earlier had the building of
Viceroy Camp Post Office.
PMG Office Goa was built in 1914 as the divisional
headquarters of Posts and now serves as the PMG
office. The building is located in front of the Head post
office at the Largo de Estanco square which was a very
important historic commercial square. The style of the
architecture has strong Portuguese and native Goan
influences developed over the centuries.
Panjim Head Post Office building’s current structure
was built in 1893 as the Portuguese Post on a footprint
of a Tobacco Depot in succession to a police station
until 1888. Located in front of the Largo de Estanco,
which was a major commercial square during the 18
th
-
19
th
century, it denotes the importance of the building
during its time.
Chaura Maidan Post Office in Shimla is a beautiful
building constructed in 1910. The architecture mirrored
that of the G.P .O, boasting Neo-Tudor elements with
round-dressed stones and pebble-dash walls, using
the traditional Kath- Kuni construction style of the
Himalayas.
Postal Museum building Bengaluru dates back to
1804. At one point, it held the Government Museum,
later it was used as an administrative office by the
Postal services. It was converted into a Postal Museum
in 2019.
The Fort Kochi Post office, constructed in 1900, is a
landmark structure and holds special significance in the
lives of people of Fort Kochi. It was one of the busiest
places in the city especially during the days when mails
from Europe used to arrive here via ships.
PMG Office building Thiruvananthapuram was
once the office of Chief Engineer of Travancore. In
1933-34, the Air Training Complex of the Govt. of India
was established here. Later in 1939, Sri Chitra Thirunal
started the Engineering College in this building. The
PMG Office building, Thiruvananthapuram
Page 4
Postal Heritage
Converting Postal Heritage into Tourist Attractions
* Rashi Sharma
* The author is Deputy Director General (Establishment) in Department of Posts, Ministry of Communications, India.
Email:rashi.edu@nic.in
ith 8-10 million international
tourists, India ranks 8
th
in the
Asia Pacific region. Domestic
tourists, on the other hand, are
a whopping 600-700 million per
annum. Whereas, Gujarat, Maharashtra, West Bengal,
Delhi and UP are the top recipients of foreign tourists,
domestic tourists prefer Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu,
Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, and Gujarat. As regards the
source countries of international tourists visiting India,
W
India has among the world’s oldest postal histories, dating back to the Mauryan times.
However, the foundations of the modern organised Postal system were laid by the British
in the 19
th
century. As Posts and later telegraph were the only means of communication
in the 19
th
and 20
th
centuries, post offices, Dak Bungalows, mail trains, stamps, letters,
etc. are a very important part of our history. With 44 heritage buildings and more than
350 Pre-1939 buildings, Postal Department manages a large heritage estate. Each of
the heritage buildings has a rich history and needs to be developed as a tourist attraction
so that citizens and foreigners can appreciate not only their beauty but also know about
the past associated with these structures. Department of Posts is working closely with
INTACH and CPWD to restore many of these important heritage buildings so that they
become tourist attractions in such places.
23 Kurukshetra April 2024
more than 80% tourists belong to Bangladesh, EU, USA,
and UK. India shares a common history with Bangladesh
and UK, meaning that almost 3.5 million tourists who
visit India every year, would be definitely interested
to visit the historical places dating back to the colonial
times. As British were the rulers of India, Australia, a
large part of South East Asia, Sri Lanka, etc. the heritage
links in the form of similarly designed buildings and
institutions is bound to attract tourists from these
countries. The heritage of colonial times is represented
majorly by the buildings that were constructed during
the colonial rule as well as the institutions that were
created or expanded by the British. Railways and Posts
are the two major institutions that were created by the
British for administering our vast country.
The foundations of the modern organised Postal
system were laid by the British in the 19
th
century.
As Posts and later telegraph were the only means of
communication in the 19
th
and 20
th
centuries, post
offices, dak bungalows, mail trains, stamps, letters,
etc. became a very important part of our history. Few
would know that the guard room of old Fort William
where the Black hole tragedy happened in 1756 is
situated in an alley just on the backside of Kolkata
GPO. Mumbai GPO constructed in 1913 is a classic
example of Indo-Saracenic architecture and has been
inspired from Gol Gumbaz of Bijapur. Bombay GPO
has 3 basements which are connected to the Bombay
Docks, the Mint through 3 underground tunnels, to be
used in case of an attack. The famous Bombay Duck
fish derives its name from Bombay Dawk mail train
which used to transport this fish from
Bombay to Kolkata during the colonial
times. The famous Dak Bungalows
which find mention in so many
novels, stories, films and plays were
built as resting points for the mail
runners and Government officials on
tour; they continued to be managed
by the Postal Department for a very
long time in British India.
With 44 heritage buildings and
more than 350 Pre-1939 buildings,
Postal Department manages a large
heritage estate. Each of the heritage
buildings has a rich history and needs
to be developed as a tourist attraction
so that citizens and foreigners can appreciate not only
their beauty but also know about the past associated
with these structures. Department of Posts is working
closely with INTACH and CPWD to restore many of
these important heritage buildings so that they become
tourist attractions in such places.
Historical Perspective
Before 1854, the Post Office was a medley of
services in different provinces, each having separate
rules and different rates of postage. Regular mails
were conveyed over a very few main lines between
important towns, and collectors of districts were
responsible for the management of their own local
post offices. In 1850, a Commission was appointed to
consider the state of the postal services, and the result
of its deliberations was the Post Office Act of 1854
and the conversion of the Post Office into an Imperial
Department under a single head called the Director-
General. The Post Office building construction was of
prime importance and hence the General Post Office
in Calcutta was built in 1868 from designs made by
Mr. Grenville. Later, Bombay General Post Office was
constructed in 1910 by Mr. James Begg. The building
was hardly large enough for the great mass of work
which it has to transact and although the removal of
the Postmaster-General’s Office and the Sorting Branch
somewhat relieved the congestion, there was already
a demand for increased accommodation. The same
thing has happened in Madras where there was a large
Post and Telegraph Office facing the sea, designed by
Mr. Chisholm and opened to the public in 1885. The
24 Kurukshetra April 2024
expansion of business had outgrown the capacity of
these building. Most head offices and important sub-
offices were designed to provide a proper hall for the
public who wish to transact business, with a counter
for clerks and sufficient open space in the building
to allow each branch to work independently and in
comfort under the supervision of a responsible officer.
At Nagpur, Patna, Chittagong, Bareilly, Kanpur, Calcutta,
Pune, Agra, Allahabad, Varanasi, Mount Road Madras,
beautiful Post Office buildings were constructed,
followed by Delhi, Darjeeling, Ajmer, Ahmedabad and
several other large towns.
Kolkata GPO was designed in 1864 by Walter B.
Grenville who acted as consulting architect to the
Government of India from 1863 to 1868. The building
construction was executed by Mackintosh Burn Ltd. and
completed in 1868. It was built to serve as a post office
for the British East India Company and was built at the
site of the first Fort William.
RLO building at Dalhousie square in Kolkata was
India’s first and largest Return Letter Office, earlier
known as ‘Dead Letter Office’. The building was
completed in 1876 when Lord Lytton was the Governor
General of British India. It has a 120-feet-tall bell tower.
Yangon GPO, which was built a few years earlier and
Melbourne’s Mail Exchange, which was built a few years
later, are architecturally similar to this building.
The Delhi GPO was the first Post office of Delhi. It was
built in 1885 in the historic wall city of Shajahanabad.
It was the largest Post office of Delhi established by
the East India Company. The building exhibits iconic
decorative elements of Colonial architecture style. The
Magazine which was blown up by the British soldiers
during the siege of Delhi in 1857 is located right opposite
Delhi GPO in Kashmere Gate.
The New Delhi GPO was constructed in 1934, as the
Sub-Post Office called “Gol Dak Khana”. The building
was designed by Robert Tor Russell, the chief architect
of PWD at that time. Located in the close proximity
of Raisina village, the site earlier had the building of
Viceroy Camp Post Office.
PMG Office Goa was built in 1914 as the divisional
headquarters of Posts and now serves as the PMG
office. The building is located in front of the Head post
office at the Largo de Estanco square which was a very
important historic commercial square. The style of the
architecture has strong Portuguese and native Goan
influences developed over the centuries.
Panjim Head Post Office building’s current structure
was built in 1893 as the Portuguese Post on a footprint
of a Tobacco Depot in succession to a police station
until 1888. Located in front of the Largo de Estanco,
which was a major commercial square during the 18
th
-
19
th
century, it denotes the importance of the building
during its time.
Chaura Maidan Post Office in Shimla is a beautiful
building constructed in 1910. The architecture mirrored
that of the G.P .O, boasting Neo-Tudor elements with
round-dressed stones and pebble-dash walls, using
the traditional Kath- Kuni construction style of the
Himalayas.
Postal Museum building Bengaluru dates back to
1804. At one point, it held the Government Museum,
later it was used as an administrative office by the
Postal services. It was converted into a Postal Museum
in 2019.
The Fort Kochi Post office, constructed in 1900, is a
landmark structure and holds special significance in the
lives of people of Fort Kochi. It was one of the busiest
places in the city especially during the days when mails
from Europe used to arrive here via ships.
PMG Office building Thiruvananthapuram was
once the office of Chief Engineer of Travancore. In
1933-34, the Air Training Complex of the Govt. of India
was established here. Later in 1939, Sri Chitra Thirunal
started the Engineering College in this building. The
PMG Office building, Thiruvananthapuram
25 Kurukshetra April 2024
Postal Department took over the building in 1961, after
the college was shifted from here. It is a rectangular
structure made of granite, bricks and lime mortar. It has
5 towers, one in each corner of the building and one
in the front centre with a clock. Towers have pyramidal
roof in keeping with the local architecture.
Thiruvananthapuram Fort Post Office building was
part of Shree Padam Palace, constructed by Maharani
Gowri Parvathi Bayi. The palace complex included
two Nalukettu, double storied buildings and a main
building. This building was once used as an outhouse
of the palace complex. The building has timber flooring,
balcony and railings, roof rafters. The wooden sloping
roof is finished with Mangalore tiles.
Lashkar Post Office, at Maharaj Bada in Gwalior,
is one of the most prominent areas of the city,
having about seven buildings constructed in different
architectural style centred with a statute of Jiwaji Rao
Scindia on grand white marble platform. The Post
office building is one of those seven buildings. It is a
rectangular structure built on a raised plinth. The front
facade of the building is designed in Greek style.
The Nagpur GPO, which was originally the
headquarters of the erstwhile Postmaster General of
Central Provinces and Berar, was constructed in 1921.
The heritage building is highly influenced by Victorian
style of architecture.
The Office of Director Accounts (Postal) is a
majestic Georgian-style building in Nagpur. The Nobel
Prize Winner Dr. C.V. Raman, who served as the office’s
Deputy Accountant General, was one of the many
distinguished figures with whom it had the honour to
be connected. This office acts as the pay and accounts
office for both the entire Army Postal Service Corps as
well as the Maharashtra and Goa Postal Circle.
Pune HPO had a beginning when the city’s first
telegraph line was established here in 1854. This
structure was replaced in 1873 by bigger structure
designed and constructed by Colonel Finch R.E. The
present building is however a renovated building,
modified in 1903 when a dome and a front porch was
added to it. The heritage building is highly influenced by
Palladian style which had a revival in the 19
th
and 20
th
century in Europe as well as in its colonies.
Puducherry Head Post Office building dates back
to mid 18th century. The old part of the building now
lies behind the modern building constructed in 1980s. It
once belonged to the industrialist, Henri Gaebele who
was a French cotton yarn and fabric manufacturer and
politician who was the Mayor of Pondicherry in French
India from 1907 to 1928, and Senator of French India
from 1922 to 1924.
Chennai GPO (then known as Madras GPO) was
established in 1884. The building was designed by
British architect Robert Fellowes Chisholm.
Philatey Bureau Chennai building was constructed
in 1900 as one of South India’s first Electric theatre.
It was designed by Warwick Major and his partner
Lashkar Post Office, Maharaj Bada, Gwalior General Post Office, Nagpur, Maharashtra
Page 5
Postal Heritage
Converting Postal Heritage into Tourist Attractions
* Rashi Sharma
* The author is Deputy Director General (Establishment) in Department of Posts, Ministry of Communications, India.
Email:rashi.edu@nic.in
ith 8-10 million international
tourists, India ranks 8
th
in the
Asia Pacific region. Domestic
tourists, on the other hand, are
a whopping 600-700 million per
annum. Whereas, Gujarat, Maharashtra, West Bengal,
Delhi and UP are the top recipients of foreign tourists,
domestic tourists prefer Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu,
Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, and Gujarat. As regards the
source countries of international tourists visiting India,
W
India has among the world’s oldest postal histories, dating back to the Mauryan times.
However, the foundations of the modern organised Postal system were laid by the British
in the 19
th
century. As Posts and later telegraph were the only means of communication
in the 19
th
and 20
th
centuries, post offices, Dak Bungalows, mail trains, stamps, letters,
etc. are a very important part of our history. With 44 heritage buildings and more than
350 Pre-1939 buildings, Postal Department manages a large heritage estate. Each of
the heritage buildings has a rich history and needs to be developed as a tourist attraction
so that citizens and foreigners can appreciate not only their beauty but also know about
the past associated with these structures. Department of Posts is working closely with
INTACH and CPWD to restore many of these important heritage buildings so that they
become tourist attractions in such places.
23 Kurukshetra April 2024
more than 80% tourists belong to Bangladesh, EU, USA,
and UK. India shares a common history with Bangladesh
and UK, meaning that almost 3.5 million tourists who
visit India every year, would be definitely interested
to visit the historical places dating back to the colonial
times. As British were the rulers of India, Australia, a
large part of South East Asia, Sri Lanka, etc. the heritage
links in the form of similarly designed buildings and
institutions is bound to attract tourists from these
countries. The heritage of colonial times is represented
majorly by the buildings that were constructed during
the colonial rule as well as the institutions that were
created or expanded by the British. Railways and Posts
are the two major institutions that were created by the
British for administering our vast country.
The foundations of the modern organised Postal
system were laid by the British in the 19
th
century.
As Posts and later telegraph were the only means of
communication in the 19
th
and 20
th
centuries, post
offices, dak bungalows, mail trains, stamps, letters,
etc. became a very important part of our history. Few
would know that the guard room of old Fort William
where the Black hole tragedy happened in 1756 is
situated in an alley just on the backside of Kolkata
GPO. Mumbai GPO constructed in 1913 is a classic
example of Indo-Saracenic architecture and has been
inspired from Gol Gumbaz of Bijapur. Bombay GPO
has 3 basements which are connected to the Bombay
Docks, the Mint through 3 underground tunnels, to be
used in case of an attack. The famous Bombay Duck
fish derives its name from Bombay Dawk mail train
which used to transport this fish from
Bombay to Kolkata during the colonial
times. The famous Dak Bungalows
which find mention in so many
novels, stories, films and plays were
built as resting points for the mail
runners and Government officials on
tour; they continued to be managed
by the Postal Department for a very
long time in British India.
With 44 heritage buildings and
more than 350 Pre-1939 buildings,
Postal Department manages a large
heritage estate. Each of the heritage
buildings has a rich history and needs
to be developed as a tourist attraction
so that citizens and foreigners can appreciate not only
their beauty but also know about the past associated
with these structures. Department of Posts is working
closely with INTACH and CPWD to restore many of
these important heritage buildings so that they become
tourist attractions in such places.
Historical Perspective
Before 1854, the Post Office was a medley of
services in different provinces, each having separate
rules and different rates of postage. Regular mails
were conveyed over a very few main lines between
important towns, and collectors of districts were
responsible for the management of their own local
post offices. In 1850, a Commission was appointed to
consider the state of the postal services, and the result
of its deliberations was the Post Office Act of 1854
and the conversion of the Post Office into an Imperial
Department under a single head called the Director-
General. The Post Office building construction was of
prime importance and hence the General Post Office
in Calcutta was built in 1868 from designs made by
Mr. Grenville. Later, Bombay General Post Office was
constructed in 1910 by Mr. James Begg. The building
was hardly large enough for the great mass of work
which it has to transact and although the removal of
the Postmaster-General’s Office and the Sorting Branch
somewhat relieved the congestion, there was already
a demand for increased accommodation. The same
thing has happened in Madras where there was a large
Post and Telegraph Office facing the sea, designed by
Mr. Chisholm and opened to the public in 1885. The
24 Kurukshetra April 2024
expansion of business had outgrown the capacity of
these building. Most head offices and important sub-
offices were designed to provide a proper hall for the
public who wish to transact business, with a counter
for clerks and sufficient open space in the building
to allow each branch to work independently and in
comfort under the supervision of a responsible officer.
At Nagpur, Patna, Chittagong, Bareilly, Kanpur, Calcutta,
Pune, Agra, Allahabad, Varanasi, Mount Road Madras,
beautiful Post Office buildings were constructed,
followed by Delhi, Darjeeling, Ajmer, Ahmedabad and
several other large towns.
Kolkata GPO was designed in 1864 by Walter B.
Grenville who acted as consulting architect to the
Government of India from 1863 to 1868. The building
construction was executed by Mackintosh Burn Ltd. and
completed in 1868. It was built to serve as a post office
for the British East India Company and was built at the
site of the first Fort William.
RLO building at Dalhousie square in Kolkata was
India’s first and largest Return Letter Office, earlier
known as ‘Dead Letter Office’. The building was
completed in 1876 when Lord Lytton was the Governor
General of British India. It has a 120-feet-tall bell tower.
Yangon GPO, which was built a few years earlier and
Melbourne’s Mail Exchange, which was built a few years
later, are architecturally similar to this building.
The Delhi GPO was the first Post office of Delhi. It was
built in 1885 in the historic wall city of Shajahanabad.
It was the largest Post office of Delhi established by
the East India Company. The building exhibits iconic
decorative elements of Colonial architecture style. The
Magazine which was blown up by the British soldiers
during the siege of Delhi in 1857 is located right opposite
Delhi GPO in Kashmere Gate.
The New Delhi GPO was constructed in 1934, as the
Sub-Post Office called “Gol Dak Khana”. The building
was designed by Robert Tor Russell, the chief architect
of PWD at that time. Located in the close proximity
of Raisina village, the site earlier had the building of
Viceroy Camp Post Office.
PMG Office Goa was built in 1914 as the divisional
headquarters of Posts and now serves as the PMG
office. The building is located in front of the Head post
office at the Largo de Estanco square which was a very
important historic commercial square. The style of the
architecture has strong Portuguese and native Goan
influences developed over the centuries.
Panjim Head Post Office building’s current structure
was built in 1893 as the Portuguese Post on a footprint
of a Tobacco Depot in succession to a police station
until 1888. Located in front of the Largo de Estanco,
which was a major commercial square during the 18
th
-
19
th
century, it denotes the importance of the building
during its time.
Chaura Maidan Post Office in Shimla is a beautiful
building constructed in 1910. The architecture mirrored
that of the G.P .O, boasting Neo-Tudor elements with
round-dressed stones and pebble-dash walls, using
the traditional Kath- Kuni construction style of the
Himalayas.
Postal Museum building Bengaluru dates back to
1804. At one point, it held the Government Museum,
later it was used as an administrative office by the
Postal services. It was converted into a Postal Museum
in 2019.
The Fort Kochi Post office, constructed in 1900, is a
landmark structure and holds special significance in the
lives of people of Fort Kochi. It was one of the busiest
places in the city especially during the days when mails
from Europe used to arrive here via ships.
PMG Office building Thiruvananthapuram was
once the office of Chief Engineer of Travancore. In
1933-34, the Air Training Complex of the Govt. of India
was established here. Later in 1939, Sri Chitra Thirunal
started the Engineering College in this building. The
PMG Office building, Thiruvananthapuram
25 Kurukshetra April 2024
Postal Department took over the building in 1961, after
the college was shifted from here. It is a rectangular
structure made of granite, bricks and lime mortar. It has
5 towers, one in each corner of the building and one
in the front centre with a clock. Towers have pyramidal
roof in keeping with the local architecture.
Thiruvananthapuram Fort Post Office building was
part of Shree Padam Palace, constructed by Maharani
Gowri Parvathi Bayi. The palace complex included
two Nalukettu, double storied buildings and a main
building. This building was once used as an outhouse
of the palace complex. The building has timber flooring,
balcony and railings, roof rafters. The wooden sloping
roof is finished with Mangalore tiles.
Lashkar Post Office, at Maharaj Bada in Gwalior,
is one of the most prominent areas of the city,
having about seven buildings constructed in different
architectural style centred with a statute of Jiwaji Rao
Scindia on grand white marble platform. The Post
office building is one of those seven buildings. It is a
rectangular structure built on a raised plinth. The front
facade of the building is designed in Greek style.
The Nagpur GPO, which was originally the
headquarters of the erstwhile Postmaster General of
Central Provinces and Berar, was constructed in 1921.
The heritage building is highly influenced by Victorian
style of architecture.
The Office of Director Accounts (Postal) is a
majestic Georgian-style building in Nagpur. The Nobel
Prize Winner Dr. C.V. Raman, who served as the office’s
Deputy Accountant General, was one of the many
distinguished figures with whom it had the honour to
be connected. This office acts as the pay and accounts
office for both the entire Army Postal Service Corps as
well as the Maharashtra and Goa Postal Circle.
Pune HPO had a beginning when the city’s first
telegraph line was established here in 1854. This
structure was replaced in 1873 by bigger structure
designed and constructed by Colonel Finch R.E. The
present building is however a renovated building,
modified in 1903 when a dome and a front porch was
added to it. The heritage building is highly influenced by
Palladian style which had a revival in the 19
th
and 20
th
century in Europe as well as in its colonies.
Puducherry Head Post Office building dates back
to mid 18th century. The old part of the building now
lies behind the modern building constructed in 1980s. It
once belonged to the industrialist, Henri Gaebele who
was a French cotton yarn and fabric manufacturer and
politician who was the Mayor of Pondicherry in French
India from 1907 to 1928, and Senator of French India
from 1922 to 1924.
Chennai GPO (then known as Madras GPO) was
established in 1884. The building was designed by
British architect Robert Fellowes Chisholm.
Philatey Bureau Chennai building was constructed
in 1900 as one of South India’s first Electric theatre.
It was designed by Warwick Major and his partner
Lashkar Post Office, Maharaj Bada, Gwalior General Post Office, Nagpur, Maharashtra
26 Kurukshetra April 2024
Reginald Eyre. The building was bought by the Postal
Department in 1951 and used to house the Mount Road
Post Office. In 1998, it was developed as the Philatelic
Bureau.
Lucknow GPO building was designed by a British
architect as a Ring Theatre and was used by British
families for recreation purposes. It was also used as
a platform for screening English films and dramas.
At that time, Indians were not allowed to enter this
building. It was later converted into a court where the
Kakori trial in May 1926 was held. It was converted
into GPO in 1929- 32.
Way Forward
Currently, the Postal Department has no policy
to promote heritage buildings for tourism purpose as
almost all these buildings are currently
being used as offices and most of the
administrative and operational areas are
out of bounds for the general public. The
following steps can be undertaken by
the Department of Posts to convert the
valuable Postal heritage into major tourist
attractions:
1. Notify a Policy for opening up
heritage buildings for tourism purpose.
This can be done in consultation with
Ministry of Tourism and Ministry of
Culture.
2. Research and compile the history of its heritage
buildings and get interesting facts about them
displayed on attractive signages in front of such
buildings. The same can be placed on social media
and in tourist booklets & travel books for publicity.
The tourist guide guilds of the respective cities/
towns can also be roped in for placing such buildings
on the regular tourist circuit/itinerary.
3. Restore the heritage buildings as per their original
design
4. Free the main areas of such buildings from official
use and make them accessible to tourists and
guides
5. Set up museums on local postal history in parts of
such buildings
6. Include Postal
heritage tourism as one of the
revenue earning activities of
the Department in order to
make it sustainable. In fact,
heritage building restoration
can be funded partly from
entry tickets, sale of souvenirs,
etc.
Promoting our rich
postal heritage shall go a
long way in not only creating
tourist attractions in our
towns & cities and boost
local employment but would
also lead to restoration and
maintenance of our historical
buildings. ? Lucknow GPO building, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh
Philatey Bureau, Chennai
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