THE 40-HOUR WEEK
NOT FOR EBEN. HAZARD RAN U.S.A. POST OFFICE In these days of nation-wide discussion about the 40-hour week and ovecrtime pay on Government projects, it is interesting to consider the case of Bbenezer Hazard, who was in the Government's service at the close of the Revolutionary War. He likely will go down in history as the original "nothing to do 'til to-morrow" man. He ran the U.S. Post Office Department alone, because his salary didn't warrant his keeping a clerk, states the Christian Science Monitor. Before he became the first Secretary of the Insurance Company of North America, which is this year observing its 150 th Anniversary, Hazard was Postmaster-General in Washington's Cabinet. In the company's archives is a copy of a letter he wrote to President Washington, under date of September 121, 1789, when Philadelphia was the capital of the United States. The letter, asking for "more assistance." follows:-— "Dear Sir, Though I have made repeated applications for more assistance, and so clearly pointed out the necessity there was' for it that a Committee of Congress reported, in favour of its being allowed, I have been left to encounter the whole business of the Department almost alone . . . betsides the general superin tendance of fifteen hundred miles, exclusive of post roads, I have had to maintain a very burdensome correspondence: to examine the quarterly returns from all the eastern offices; to enter all the accounts; to keep the books of the Department (which since my appointment has been in doubt entry);, to make communications to Congress and Committees, which have frequently required lengthy and tedious calculations; to form and enter into contracts and pay the contractors quarterly; to inspect the dead letters, and to do the business out of doors as well as within. My own attention has been so frequently necessary that I havenot had time for proper relaxation, ' and in three years past have not \ been to the distance of ten miles from this city. I once hired a clerk, but found my salary was not equal to that expense in addition to the support of my family, and was obliged to dismiss him." At that time there were 75 post offices in the United States and total postal revenues were 30,000 dollars. I To-day there are approximately 45,j 000 post offices, doing an annual business in excess of 750,000,000 dol-> ' lars.
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Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 05, Issue 80, 20 July 1942, Page 5
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397THE 40-HOUR WEEK Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 05, Issue 80, 20 July 1942, Page 5
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