Return to sender: Artist puts Royal Mail to the test
Harriet Russell decided to lay down a challenge to her postmen and women with a series of brain-teasers, and as Jonathan Brown reports, they responded
Thursday, 9 October 2008
We may be living in the era of the email, but one young illustrator has proved that the art of correspondence is far from dead. While working for her degree at Glasgow School of Art Harriet Russell decided to find out exactly what lengths the men and women of the Royal Mail were willing to go to to ensure the safe delivery of her missives.
To put them to the test she concealed the addresses of 130 letters to herself in a series of increasingly complex puzzles and ciphers. Among the disguises she employed were dot-to-dot drawings, anagrams and cartoons. The answer, it seems, was very far indeed. Amazingly, only 10 failed to complete their journey back to her.
In another pleasing twist to the story, Ms Russell was unwittingly resurrecting a family tradition first begun by her great-great grandfather Henry Ponsonby, a private secretary to Queen Victoria and a veteran of the Crimean War. This eminent forebear embellished letters to his children at Eton with a series of illustrations in which he concealed the school's address. It was a family quirk continued by his son, Arthur Ponsonby, a pacifist who went on to be Labour MP for Sheffield Brightside before his elevation to the House of Lords.
However, neither quite set about their task with the degree of invention employed by their 21st-century descendant who over the course of a year went to ever greater lengths to disguise her address.
These, it seemed gripped the imagination of Clydeside Royal Mail sorting workers as much as they did their author. Now the results of this unique and anonymous collaboration form the basis of a new book, Envelopes: A Puzzling Journey Through the Royal Mail, published by Allison & Busby, and hotly tipped as a stocking-filler hit this Christmas.
Ms Russell, 31, who now works from a studio in Wapping, east London, confesses that she had no idea her family had preceded her when it came to teasing the postman. She also admits she is no great letter writer, preferring to communicate by email: all the envelopes she sent contained nothing but blank sheets of paper.
She said: "It is an odd coincidence. We used to get a lot of wrongly addressed mail sent to our home, which was Shulbrede Priory in Surrey and that got me thinking about the postal system. The first one started as an experiment to see if it could get through."
Among the initial batch of envelopes was a letter with the address written in mirror writing. But it was not until sorting office staff forwarded one in which her street name and number were the answer to a series of crossword clues that she realised someone was taking their job very seriously indeed. Especially when the letter eventually flopped on to her mat with the boxes filled in and bearing the proud message: "Solved by the Glasgow Mail Centre."
She admits there were times when she worried that she might be in trouble for wasting Royal Mail time but still the letters continued to find their way back. "I was really quite amazed. I didn't know who was doing it. I imagined there was a small group of them and I think they must have caught on because a lot of them were to the same address." The identities of the sleuthing Royal Mail staff have never been established and Ms Russell, who also counts Hubert Parry, the composer of "Jerusalem" among her illustrious forebears, believes it is most likely they have moved on.
"I have never spoken to anyone and no one has come forward," she said. "But it is clear they were taking part and involving themselves in it."
The book, with its periodic tables, colour-blindness test and eye-chart addresses has already caused something of a stir in the United States although it is expected to do even better in the UK. The Bookseller has already described it as "a little treasure waiting to be discovered".
Ms Russell said: "I started out not knowing anything about my relatives doing this so my family dug out some of their old letters to show me."
For his part, Henry Ponsonby preferred whimsy to ciphers and cryptic clues. His letters bore addresses appearing as doodled signposts in snowstorms or as huge envelopes shouldered by tiny people.
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Copyright 2008 Independent News and Media Limited

Comments
30 Comments
This lady must be bored to the bits. Pls. come down to Dubai and test your skills over here as we have only PO Box numbers down here and no proper address system.
Since this book is coming out I can already see the lady testing out the same method in countries all around the world. Wait for the International Edition out by next year......!!!
Posted by J K Motwani | 15.10.08, 08:08 GMT
I have always had the greatest admiration for the tenacity of the workers within the Post Office. I remember, some years ago, receiving a letter within 2 days of posting with only my name and county name for an address. Just this week I received one with only slightly more than this, it included the name of the village as well. A big thank you to all at the PO I think you do a grand job.
Posted by AWBox | 14.10.08, 09:27 GMT
Lucky her to have so much time to a**e around, must be the inheritence she gets from her rich ancesters.
Posted by Jen | 14.10.08, 08:37 GMT
there's one massive stupid error with this whole story - and I can't believe you missed it. THEY WERE ALL ADDRESSED TO HER. So after the first few, you dno't have to really sllve them to deliver them - you know where they are from and where they are going to. PPE guys.
Posted by Postal Worker | 14.10.08, 01:55 GMT
There are reviews of this book from a couple of years ago. It's an old book?
I also heard of this book on a trailer for the news on BBC Radio 4 News. It's news, or an 'advertorial'?
This book should be in Harry Enfield's 'Blondes of a certain age' shop.
Posted by Alastair Warren | 13.10.08, 23:24 GMT
What I liked about this story is that, for once, it is positive about our postal service. I use the mail a lot and am usually very impressed by how quick and reliable it is, and far less of a hassle than the courier companies who, if you miss their first delivery attempt, invariably have an office in some far-flung and hidden industrial estate. With private sector meltdown all around us we should start to re-evaluate the fetish for privatizing and marketizing everything. I am all for efficiency and using the market where it makes sense, but tired of the ideology-driven insistence that state-managed services are inherently useless. This story is a good illustration of the truth.
Posted by Jonathan Murphy | 10.10.08, 10:32 GMT
Quite delightful. I started the day with a whistle and a jaunty step after reading this.
Posted by Deena Bennet | 10.10.08, 04:49 GMT
Oh boy, and here I was worrying over the state of Mighty England's edjumacation system! no more worries m8, not from me,NO! This article and the one aboot the doctors' trained at Cambridge who lit themselves on fire after an unsuccessful nail-bomb attack has reassured me as to ur fitness and all around superiority... I am writing my congressman today and axing him to request some medical and military training from ur mighty empire. lung liver the queen
Posted by american pip | 10.10.08, 01:54 GMT
Arthur Ponsonby was purposely memorialized as Ponsonby Britt, the nom de plume of the non-existent Executive Producer of "The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle," a US cartoon show from the 60's - 70's. Ponsonby Britt even had a bogus "official biography" that went out with the show's press releases. Viral pranksterism?
Posted by Geronimo | 10.10.08, 01:02 GMT
Delightful! Bless her
Posted by Jeremy Poynton | 09.10.08, 15:38 GMT
30 Comments