The postal system in Sind was highly
irregular until the mid-19th Century.
It had depended upon private messengers called
Qasids. This messenger, Qasid or Namaber, a name
which had acquired a poetic and romantic
connotation in the literature of the Orient, was
a foot-runner carrying mail, covering long
distances with only a spear to guard against
attacks and a pair of jingles tied at the top of
the spear to frighten away wild animals while
passing woods.
The
postal reforms in Great Britain gave an
initiative to the officials in India and efforts
were made to ensure speedy and safe mail
transit. On July 18, 1848, a system called
“Camel Dawk” was introduced between Karachi and
Thatta.
But this
proved neither effective nor safe and was soon
replaced by the services of the police horseman.
This kind of postal service was, by and large,
confined to carrying official mail from
Muffasils to Districts or Divisional
Headquarters. However, a few well-to-do and
privileged private citizens could also avail of
very high service charges.
Mr.
Bartle Frere (later Sir Bartle Frere), who was
the Commissioner of Sind during the period, was
aware of this problem. He was increasingly
concerned over the system of the post, run at
perpetual loss to the authorities. While the
government officers were entitled to use the
postal facilities free of charge, the public was
made to pay postage relate which were well above
the reach of the common man.
The practice
of defrauding the post offices also became quite
alarming. Un-paid or bearing letters became a
menace for the post office department. Many
letters were refused by the addresses after
penetrating searching looks at the covers. They
discerned the message of the sender from the
peculiar folding of the flaps, the way of
writing of the address, any unusual dot, and
mark or appar3ently undecipherable stripes on
the cover.
This led to
the piling up of enormous quantities of bearing
letters coming back to the post offices,
declared as “refused” or “addressees unknown”.
The postal authorities under this old Dawk
system experienced unsurmountable difficulties
in running the post offices as no profits
accrued. The postal services, too, were not
functioning for the benefit of the common
man.
Mr.
Frere belonged to the group of administrators
who felt the need for a simplified postal system
based on some sort of prepayment of postage.
They had in view the remarkable success of the
uniform penny postage in Great Britain in
1840.
Although
a very strong lobby existed against the
introduction of some uniform postage system in
Sind on the lines of the penny postage in London
on the plea that the political, administrative
and geographical conditions of the province
greatly differed from those in England, Mr.
Frere did not give up his sustained efforts to
introduce a uniform low-paid postal system which
would benefit every citizen.
He was greatly
assisted in this deavours by the then
postmaster, Karachi, Mr. Edward Less Coffee, in
designing the Sind District Dawk Stamp. July 1,
1852 finally saw the introduction of “Scinde
Dawk”- the first postage stamps of
Asia.
The design of
the stamps was the insignia, of the East India
Company. It had in the centre, a heart shaped
device divided into three segments, each
containing one of the letter EIC (East India
Company). Above this, a symbol resembling the
figure 4 denoted the handle of the sword of
authority. At the foot of the design was the
value ˝ Anna.
The whole
design was enclosed in a circular garter
containing the inscription Scinde District Dawk.
In the lower part of the garter, was a buckle as
well. The entire printed area was
embossed.
Stamps were
printed in three different colors, blue, red and
white by De la Rue & Co. and were suppressed
in October 1854. The quantity issued is not
known.
Although all three values are very
scarce, a block of 14 stamps, white un-used, is
unique. No other large block of this nature is
known to exist anywhere in the world. It is an
almost tattered, part sheet, folded at three
places, with the centers of six stamps punched
through by embossing and two stamps having
prominent crease running across. This seemingly
worthless piece of torn paper is among the
highest prized items in the philatelic
world.