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inquisition | 01:01 Tue 26th Apr 2011 | History
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Does anyone remember back in the 1950's when you could send an unsealed card for a halfpenny less than standard postage or is my memory playing tricks on me?
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No, your memory is not playing tricks. The rate for postcards and unsealed letters was a halfpenny less. I don't know the reasoning behind this but I still have the stamped, self-address postcard I had to give to the school to receive my O level results in 1964. It has 2 x 1d and 1 x ½d stamps, when the full letter rate was 3d.
I knew you were old Mike but I didn't know you had one foot in the grave already. 1964? Was it in hieroglyphs?
Cheeky sod! I'll have you know I am one of the younger members on this site. Mind I must confess that when I studied Latin and Greek they were classed as modern languages!
I tried to look up "cheeky sod" in Google translate. Apparently they only speak American English. I'll just assume that means "supercalafragalisticexpialadoshus ".
"Cheeky" means impertinent. "Sod", literal meaning a lump of turf, is used in England as a mild term of abuse.
Ah. Old country stuff. From an old man. How quaint. :P I knew what it meant I was just attempting humor. Like this comment. I'm not that far behind you, but I'll never be as old as you :D
Verily thou art an insolent scurvy knave,and poltroon. I shall stap thy vitals with my poignard erelong, sirrah!
I actually understand that better than modern Br. English. The first time I heard "taking the Fosters out on some one" I heard it as "taking a Fosters on someone". Then I found out it wasn't really that different.
Gah, the language filter is killing me. The other day I got my boa ruffled.
Fosters is a very new term. Derived from an Australian lager which is supposed to taste like the word for which it is substituted.
We have Foster's here. I don't drink it though. It just doesn't quite have the same ring to it.
I always understood that the cheap rate applied only if you wrote five words or less.
"Happy Birthday, love, Aunty Tess"
The postman could open it to check.
That was for postcards, Atalanta, when more than 5 words cost more to send.
According to my mother in law that's correct , hence you often sent cards unsealed but letters sealed.
Mike, we had to give a brown envelope, not a postcard - but same year as you.... ;-)
I don't remember a word limit. Letters as well as postcards could be sent unsealed. I always opened my sealed birthday cards first as I knew there would be money in them.
mike11111 - you seem to be better at remembering events from 1964 than those from 8 months ago!

http://www.theanswerb...y/Question934732.html
I had not seen that thread. I believe the five word restriction for reduced rate had gone out by the 50s. I don't predate that period. I have in my possession a postcard from the early 60s with many more than 5 words, sent at the reduced rate.
You may not remember seeing that thread but yours is the 11th answer!
Oh dear. Just realised I posted on that thread! I plead Old Timer's disease.

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