What was it like to work on a TPO?
Hear this page read aloud
"It’s not a job, it’s a way of life."
Ernie Gosling, TPO Sorter, 1990
When the mails were first transported by rail, the mail guard continued the practice from the horse-drawn mail coaches and took his seat on the roof of the carriage. In July 1837, approval was given for 'shades for the eyes' to be provided to the unfortunate mail guards, to provide protection from 'the wind and cinders, or rather sparks from the chimney of the steam engine.' After several years, the guard was moved to escort the mails from within the carriages.

From the outset, the TPO required a special type of worker. Post Office employees called railway clerks sorted the letters on early TPOs. The arrangement, tying, sealing, despatch and receipt of mail bags was carried out by mail guards.
In 1860,
the system of clerks and mail guards changed to one of sorters with clerks
acting as superintending officers. The
mail guards now found that they were not required in the new regime, though a
large number were trained up and transferred to the class of 'sorterships'.
Dancing up and down
Work on the
TPOs was both dangerous and demanding. In the 19th century, fumes from the oil lamps and melting wax (used for
sealing bags) caused respiratory problems. A large number of sorters were
forced to retire from the service due to ailments that were attributed to 'the
peculiar character of their duties.' These ailments included, 'loss of memory, congestion of brain and spine,
paralysis', and 'injury to the spine and nervous system.'
"We’d get flung around a lot and you were constantly bracing yourself against the lurching of the train. You got used to that, though you never actually liked it! You learned to work around each other, almost like a dance routine."
Bill Barnet, Sorter on the Great Western Up and Down, 2004
