
Owney - Washington, DC
Posted by:
saopaulo1
N 38° 53.848 W 077° 00.690
18S E 325561 N 4307321
Quick Description: A statue of Owney, the post office's mascot. This statue is located in the National Postal Museum.
Location: District of Columbia, United States
Date Posted: 5/18/2009 6:53:50 PM
Waymark Code: WM6DVE
Views: 2
Long Description:"Owney, also known as "Globe-trotter," was a mutt found abandoned
outside an Albany, New York post office in 1888. Postal workers
brought him inside, bundled him in mail bags to keep him warm, and
grateful Owney began his career as the unofficial postal system dog
mascot.
Over the next decade Owney traveled over 140,000 miles, once
even circling the globe, following postal professionals wherever
they traveled. He was outfitted with a vest to which mail clerks
would pin baggage tags. "American postal workers were his family,"
explained the curator of the National Postal Museum. "He liked
anyone who smelled like a mail bag."
On June 11, 1897, a postal worker in Toledo, Ohio was showing
off Owney -- who was chained in the post office basement -- to a
local newspaper reporter (or photographer). Owney, who was an old
dog by now, was agitated and barking. He bit the postal worker on
the hand. A retired postmaster and historian told us that the
postal worker "spread the word that Owney was mad, and the Toledo
postmaster summoned a police officer, who shot him, thus ending the
career of the famous little dog. These are the facts."
More on Owney's end is offered by Wayne Escott: "While a postal
employee was showing Owney's tags to a local reporter in Toledo,
Ohio, Owney turned and bit the postal employee, who subsequently
died. The postal employee who died from the bite left behind a
widow and a one-year old son (my grandfather).""
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