Catalogue description Records created or inherited by the Post Office Telegraph and Telephone Service

Details of TCB
Reference: TCB
Title: Records created or inherited by the Post Office Telegraph and Telephone Service
Description:

Records of the telegraph and telephone services of the Post Office held by BT, which also hold some more general records where they are relevant to telecommunications such as Post Office annual reports. Consequently some records in the series date back to before 1870, the year the Post Office took over the telegraph service from private telegraph companies. As well as covering telegraph and telephone services, the records shed light on the early history of wireless, and the beginning of broadcasting in the UK.

Date: 1854-1969
Related material:

Further telecommunications records are in:

There are also records relating to telecommunications held either by the Post Office Archives or by BT Archives in POST

TCC

TCK

Files relating to postal and telegraphic matters passed to the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications following the Post Office Act 1969 are in BT 229

Some files of the Post Office External Telecommunications Executive, inherited by the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications, are in FV 4

Held by: BT Group Archives, not available at The National Archives
Legal status: Public Record(s)
Language: English
Creator:

Post Office, 1635-

Physical description: 5 series
Access conditions: No records held at The National Archives in this departmental code
Immediate source of acquisition:

Some records have been deposited by outside agencies and individuals, and some have been purchased.

Custodial history: Records of the Post Office telegraph and telephone service have been transferred where feasible (ie where the records relate exclusively to telecommunications) from the Post Office Archives to BT Archives Records of the Post Office which do not relate exclusively to telecommunications are preserved at the Post Office Archives
Administrative / biographical background:

The Telegraph Act of 1868 gave Her Majesty's Postmaster General the right to acquire and operate the inland telegraph systems in the UK, which had been installed and operated by independent telegraph and railway companies. The Telegraph Act of 1869 further conferred on the Postmaster-General a monopoly in telegraphic communication in the UK and, on 28 January 1870, the previously privately owned telegraph system was transferred to the State.

In 1878, the Post Office provided its first telephones, on rental terms to a firm in Manchester and, on 20 December 1880, a court judgement was issued in favour of the Post Office in a landmark legal action which laid down that a telephone was a telegraph, and a telephone conversation a telegram, within the meaning of the 1869 Telegraph Act. Independent telephone companies were thereupon obliged to obtain 31-year licences to operate from the Postmaster-General. As a result of this court judgment, the Postmaster-General was to continue providing the telephone service under the provisions of the various telegraph acts until 1951, when the first telephone act was passed.

On 4 April 1896, the Post Office took over the trunk network of the National Telephone Company (the largest of the private telephone service providers) and, in 1905, the Post Office agreed with the National Telephone Company that the company's undertakings would be transferred to the State in 1912. Consequently, on 1 January 1912, the Postmaster General took over the system of the National Telephone Company and soon became the monopoly supplier of telephone services in the UK, with the exception of the municipal service in Kingston-upon-Hull.

The Post Office also became involved in wireless and early broadcasting services: in 1904 the Wireless Telegraphy Act was passed, which conferred licensing powers on the Postmaster General. The 1949 Wireless Telegraphy Act vested responsibility and the necessary statutory powers with respect to regulating the use of radio frequencies in the Postmaster General. In 1969, this responsibility was transferred to the new Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications.

The General Post Office ceased to be a government department in 1969 and, under the provisions of the Post Office Act 1969, the Corporation was split into two divisions - Posts and Telecommunications - which thus became distinct businesses for the first time.

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