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Postmaster General of the United Kingdom

Postmaster General of the United Kingdom
Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (HM Government).svg
Albert Illingworth.jpg
Albert Illingworth 1916–1921
Style Postmaster General
Appointer Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Precursor Master of the King's Post
Formation 1517
First holder

Brian Tuke

as Master of the Kings Post
Final holder John Stonehouse
Abolished 1969
Succession overseen by the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills

Brian Tuke

The Postmaster General of the United Kingdom was a Cabinet-level ministerial position in HM Government. Aside from maintaining the postal system, the Telegraph Act of 1868 established the Postmaster General's right to exclusively maintain electric telegraphs. This would subsequently extend to telecommunications and broadcasting.

The office was abolished in 1969 by the Post Office Act 1969. A replacement public authority governed by a chairman was established under the name of the "Post Office (that part subsumed by Royal Mail)". The position of "Postmaster General" was, with reduced powers, replaced with "Minister of Posts and Telecommunications"; since which most such regulation instead has been delegated to the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport however the present-day Royal Mail Group was overseen by the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills prior to flotation.

In England, the monarch's letters to his subjects are known to have been carried by relays of couriers as long ago as the 15th century. The earliest mention of Master of the Posts is in the King's Book of Payments where a payment of £100 was authorised for Tuke as master of the posts in February 1512. Belatedly, in 1517, he was officially appointed to the office of Governor of the King's Posts, a precursor to the office of Postmaster General of the United Kingdom, by Henry VIII. In 1609 it was decreed that letters could only be carried and delivered by persons authorised by the Postmaster General.


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