Tasmania - Colonial: 1856-1900.
Ad hoc transmission forms.


In the early days of the development of telegraph services in Tasmania, telegrams had to be sent but no relevant transmission form was available to complete. Sometimes also, one office might be off-line so notification of a message to be telegraphed had to be sent by some means - for example by horse, coach or by post.

 

Ad hoc transmission form folded into three parts (through Batteman and through Pitt):

Message sent from Green Ponds to Hobart on 1 June 1871.

Cost: 10 words for 1s.

Reverse side has Mrs Donnely,
Green Ponds.

   
Example of a telegram from Bothwell to Oatlands to be sent from Green Ponds (a route taken for reasons not now known).  
FrontTasmanian Stamp Auctions.
December 2013 Lot 268.
This message has been written on the inside of an envelope which has been folded out.

FRONT: An official envelope with appropriate wording at the top.

The envelope has been addressed to:

The Operator.
Green Ponds.

The date stamp is a Crown over FREE on
6 July 1875.

 

Reverse REVERSE:

No markings but a framed double circle Green Ponds date stamp of 7 July 1875.

 

Inside

INSIDE:

The message of 10 words has been written for transmission from Bothwell to Oatlands. It was submitted at 2:50 p.m. and sent at 3:30 p.m..

The sender had paid 1/- for the 10 word message.

The above image shows the message written on the inside of the envelope.

This mode of creating your own transmission form was very common in Tasmania in the 1870s-1880s - more common than in any of the other Colonies.

Examples of other forms are shown below:

Green Ponds to ??

14 August 1871.

Message is:
"The sheep are on Green Ponds".

Words: 6.

Cost: 1/- but Collect.

Received: 7:20 am.
Sent: 7:25 am.

On a torn up telegram delivery envelope (flap at the base here).