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A Real Romance


A Tale of Stage Robbers and Opened Mail Bags

The following is a true and romantic story of an old and worthy citizen of Missouri, and who was widely known throughout the State in former times:

Fifty years ago one Dr. Morris was Postmaster in the mountain town of Christiansburg, Southwestern Virginia, where the writer hereof was born. Webster Houston, a youth, was his deputy, and he was so intelligent and faithful that he was entrusted with almost the sole management of the office. This town was on the stage road from Richmond to North Carolina, and not far from the border. Newburn, thirteen miles south of it, was the next post-town on the route. As the mail had been frequently robbed somewhere between Richmond and Raleigh, the department at Washington sent out a detective to discover the thief. He went to Raleigh, got some bank bills, mostly of the Bank of North Carolina, marked them, put them in a letter directed to himself at Richmond, and started northward in the same stage coach with the letter. There were no envelopes or mucilage in those old days. Letters were always written on large double sheets, then folded and sealed with a wafer under the outer leaf. The wafer was about the size of a nickel. Each State had its own bank, and the paper money of each State was at a discount in every other State. After passing each postoffice on his way North, the detective stopped the coach, showed his authority, opened the mail bag and examined the letter to see if it had been opened. After leaving Newburn the detective took out the… Read More