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| Owney guarding a mail sack Wikimedia photo |
Originally, I
had a different idea for this blog. My latest contemporary romance released
this month, so I was looking for a historical dog-related theme for this month.
And in the process, I found a rabbit hole to research. Over the centuries, only
the wealthy had dogs as pets. Everyone else kept dogs to perform useful
services such as watchdog, ratter, or cattle dog. While researching the origin
of dog tags, I found a brief mention of a mixed-breed terrier who was a postal
service mascot, and I had to know the story. And now I'm sharing it with you.
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| Vest full of medals Wikepedia photo |
During the
1890s, Owney was the unofficial mascot of the Railway Mail Service. Owney was
owned by a postal clerk in Albany, New York, who took the dog to work with him.
When he left that job, he left Owney behind. The dog loved traveling in the
mail cars. Postal employees adopted him as their mascot. For nine years he was a
mail-riding dog.
Riding the
rails
He rode resting
on the mailbags, protecting that mail from anyone who wasn't a mail clerk. He
would growl at anyone coming near those bags unless they were mail clerks.
Sometimes
he'd leave Albany and not return for months, moving from train to train. The
Albany clerks became concerned he might get lost. They purchased a collar and
added a dog tag with his name and Albany post office. As he arrived at other post
offices, they added tags.
Medals and
Tags
Soon at every
stop he made, a new tag was added. It is believed he visited all forty-eight
states, Alaska, Canada and Mexico. Everywhere he went, he received a tag, some
brass or silver, others made from leather or aluminum.
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| John Wannamaker |
There were also
commemorative medals from organizations that wanted to honor him. Tokens with
the date and place he visited were also added. Eventually, the Postmaster General
John Wannamaker had a special vest made for him to display his tags. Wannamaker
was concerned Owney would injure his neck from their weight. Overtime, as new
medals were added, older ones were removed and mailed to Albany or Washington,
D.C. for safekeeping. It is said he accumulated over 1,000 medals and tags. Currently,
the National Postal Museum has only 372. Some of the more fragile medals didn't
survive.
Tidbits
from Owney's travels
While he
visited Montreal, Ontario, Canada, the city postmaster kept him in a kennel. He
sent a request for reimbursement of the $2.50 fee for care and feeding. Once it
was paid, the dog was returned to Albany.
In 1895, Tacoma,
Washington, businessmen, concocted a publicity stunt to honor George Francis Train,
the inspiration for Phineas Fogg in Jules Verne's Around the World in 80
days. Train had once ended one of his world travels in Tacoma. In honor of
Train, they wanted to send America's most famous K9, around the world on a mail
ship.
Owney set
sail on August 19,1895 on the steamship Victoria. According to an article published
in The Roanoke Daily on July 24, 1896, his trip was quite fanciful. He carried
a travel bag containing a comb, brush, his blanket and his vest full of medals
for formal meetings, along with letters of introduction. Reportedly, the port
authority in Japan, on seeing all his medals, thought he must be someone very
important and treated him with respect. While in Japan, he was given a passport
by the emperor. The emperor of China also gave him a passport and then arranged
for Owney to tour a silk and tea factory. Chinese coins and commemorative ribbons
were added to the dog's vest as well.
Captain
Panton of the Victoria took Owney on tours of the American ships in the Hong
Kong harbor where he acquired more medals and letters of introduction. After
touring Asia, he boarded the steamship, Port Philip, and was placed in the care
of Captain Grant and his crew for his return trip to Tacoma, Washington. He returned
August 19,1985 after 132 days. He broke no speed records and, according to ship's
records, never visited Europe. Even so, his fame grew.
At the end
of his life
Owney traveled
over 144,000 miles, more than any wealthy individual in that era. He was
beloved by all the postal employees along his train routes. As he aged, Post
Office management felt his traveling days were over. Mail clerk J. M. Elben, of
St. Louis, agreed to take him in. The Chicago manager of Railway Mail Service insisted
in colorful language that the "mongrel cur" no longer be allowed to
travel on the trains. Management was looking for ways to improve service. The
postal employees felt their mascot represented the working class and didn't
appreciate the new management's attitude toward Owney. The remarks seemed to mirror
their attitude toward them as postal employees.
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| Smithsonian display |
Owney's
passing was reported in every newspaper in the country. Some gave a soft report
that Owney had become ill and died. While others called it murder. Owney had
become aggressive in his old age and supposedly bit a clerk and then a US
Marshal, at which point a sheriff put him down.
But according
to some modern research into the details of his death, they discovered a clerk had
chained Owney in a basement. His freedom to roam was taken away, probably adding
to his aggression. My question, if a clerk in St. Louis took him in, how did he
end up in a basement in Ohio. Whether he was in a basement or outside attacking
people, it was confirmed he was put down in Toledo, Ohio on June 11, 1897.
Postal
Employees insist he is honored
The postal
employees refused to bury him. Instead, they ask that he be preserved and
presented to the Post Office Department's headquarters. Their request was
granted. The postal department placed him displayed at the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair. Cleveland, Ohio,
postal workers commissioned a silver spoon in honor of their mascot. Owney is
on exhibit at the Smithsonian. He was sent there in 1911 and has been called
one of the museum's most interesting artifacts.
He was the subject
of two poems by postal clerks.
And the Smithsonian National Postal
Museum in 2012 published a digital edition Owney: Tails for the Rails, written
by Jerry Rees, with songs by Stephen Michael Schwartz and illustrated by Fred Cline,
and narrated by Trace Adkins who also voiced the songs. Here is a link to the
free book.
I
had never heard of Owney before. When I visited the Smithsonian years ago, I
never made it to their postal museum. As I've spent few years writing contemporary
romances with hero dogs in them, I couldn't pass up a chance to tell a real hero
dog story.
Have
you ever heard of Owney?
Cindy Ervin Huff
is a multi-Award-winning, hybrid author of historical and contemporary romance.
She loves researching odd historical tidbits and visiting museums with her husband
of 50-plus years. Although they don't currently have a dog, Cindy takes pictures
of all the ones she meets at vending events. She's addicted to chocolate and reading
and loves encouraging future authors. You can visit her at
www.cindyervinhuff.com or on social
media.
https://www.facebook.com/author.huff11
https://www.instagram.com/cindyervinhuff/
https://twitter.com/Cindyhuff11Huff
Here
is a link to my contemporary romance series featuring adorable dogs.