Postal system in the Helvetic Republic In 1798, the Old Swiss Confederacy collapsed under the military and political pressure of
France. The
Helvetic Republic replaced the loose structure of the 13 cantons with their associated places as a centralized state from April 12, 1798. Following mercantilist logic, the postal system was to be controlled only by the centralized state. The first attempt to centralize the cantonal postal enterprises was not made by the Grand Council (today: National Council), but by the Directory in Aarau (government, today: Federal Council in Bern) with the Postal Service Clothing Regulation of May 5, 1798. The legal basis, the postal monopoly, only gained legal force from September 1, 1798, through the Grand Council and the Senate (today: Council of States). Organizationally, the Helvetic Post took shape with the law on the establishment of a "Regie Post Administration" and the setting of uniform postal rates from November 16, 1798. The local location of the postal central administration proved problematic. In 1798, no fixed seat of government for the Republic was decided. The capital was to rotate between Aarau, Lucerne, Basel, Zurich and Bern. , Bern) The centralization of the post provided for the creation of five postal districts. The first postal district was Basel. The second postal district Zurich included the regions
Zurich,
Baden,
Aargau,
Graubünden,
Glarus,
Waldstätten,
Bellinzona and
Lugano.
St. Gallen with the cantons
Säntis and
Linth was the third postal district. The fourth postal district
Schaffhausen, comprising the same canton, was followed by the fifth postal district Bern with the areas
Bern,
Oberland,
Léman,
Freiburg,
Solothurn and
Wallis. However, the Canton of Valais was briefly an independent republic from 1802 due to its separation from the Helvetic Republic.) in the summer of 1802, the Helvetic Republic was short-lived. General and First Consul Bonaparte – from 1804 Emperor Napoleon – intervened in 1802 and had the cantonal sovereignty restored through the Act of Mediation. During the
Mediation act (1803–1815), the centralized state transformed into a loose confederation of 19 cantons (without Geneva, Valais, Neuchâtel, Bishopric of Basel and Biel). The central power was limited to a minimum, and a
Landammann of Switzerland replaced the Directory of the Helvetic Republic. The representatives of the cantons decided at the reintroduced Diet in Fribourg in 1803, as a direct consequence, the dissolution of the central postal administration on September 10, 1803. The
Federal Treaty of August 7, 1815 replaced the Act of Mediation of 1803, but the regained cantonal postal sovereignty remained until the founding of the federal state. With the laws on the postal monopoly and postal organization of June 4, 1849, the
Federal Post took shape. The Basel Benedikt La Roche-Stehelin held the office of General Director of the
Federal Post. Political oversight lay with the St. Gallen Federal Councillor
Wilhelm Matthias Naeff. From the 18 federal postal districts, eleven were created at that time. This division lasted until 1911 and was only slightly changed by the transfer of the
Canton of Zug from the Zurich postal district to the
Lucerne postal district. The district postal directorates replaced the cantonal postal directorates. The total staff one year after the establishment of the organization was 2,803 people. With the first complete revision of the Federal Constitution of May 29, 1874, the
Federal Assembly freed the Confederation from the obligation of financial postal monopoly compensation to the cantons. In addition, Article 36 of the Constitution received an addition regarding the telegraph system. From then on, not only the postal but also the telegraph system in the territory of the Confederation was purely a federal matter. The revenue of the "Post and Telegraph Administration" flowed into the federal treasury. The founding of the
Universal Postal Union with Switzerland as a founding member also fell in the year 1874.
Building loose telephone networks Pioneer in the field of telephony was the German Empire. The
Swiss Telegraph Directorate, taking the Empire as a model, ordered the first telephone devices from the company Siemens & Halske in 1877. In December 1877, trial operations took place between Bern,
Thun and
Interlaken as well as in
Bellinzona. The Telegraph Directorate did not yet grant private concessions despite requests, but in return allowed the cantonal Interior Department of the
Canton of Vaud to connect the psychiatric clinic in Cery by telephone. The Swiss Federal Council subordinated the telephone system to the telegraph monopoly in 1878. This state monopolistic claim of the Telegraph Directorate was not uncontested. Thus, the telephone entrepreneur Wilhelm Ehrenberg filed a complaint with the Swiss Federal Assembly. Nevertheless, the federal councils adhered to the extended postal monopoly. ) Initially, the
International Bell Telephone Company was in discussion for the network expansion. Wilhelm Ehrenberg, in turn, submitted an application for the company
Kuhn & Ehrenberg to build a central telephone station in Zurich, which made a name for itself with the telephone transmission of the federal singing festival in Zurich via a line to
Basel. The "Central Telephone Station in Zurich" officially went into operation on October 2, 1880. However, the private Zurich telephone company remained an episode. In 1886, the Confederation took over the Zurich network. In the other Swiss cities, the Telegraph Directorate itself was responsible for building the telephone network. The
Post and Railway Department of Federal Councillor
Simeon Bavier granted permission for this in 1880. The number of subscribers was decisive for the expansion. "While in Basel the Telegraph Directorate itself went in search of participants," in the other cities the private commercial, industrial or banking associations helped in their own interest in the search for subscribers. Thus, loose telephone networks first emerged in the cities, then in larger municipalities, which were only gradually connected to each other. Explosively, on November 8, 1918, in the run-up to the
Swiss general strike, telephone conversations between
Robert Grimm and
Ernst Nobs and
Rosa Bloch (see source) were eavesdropped. Through telegram and telephone censorship, the PTT tried to interrupt the connection between the local strike committees and the general strike leadership. For example,
Ticino remained communicatively isolated during the strike. In March 1919, the national strike trial against 21 members of the strike leadership then took place.
Interwar period and founding of the PTT The interwar period brought great challenges for the Swiss Post. The
Great Depression at the beginning of the 1930s led to a decline in postal traffic, whereupon the General Directorate took rationalization measures, which also included staff reductions. From 1920, the first steps were taken to organizationally combine the postal system with the telephone and telegraph system. In 1928, Reinhold Furrer was appointed the first General Director of the newly founded
Swiss Post, Telephone and Telegraph Enterprises (PTT). In 1939, the PTT General Directorate decided to use postal yellow for all purposes. The color had already been introduced in 1849, but letter boxes were painted dark green for a long time and post office signs red-white.
Second World War The
outbreak of war in Europe in the first days of September 1939 also had far-reaching consequences for the Swiss Post, which was networked across Europe, on very different levels. First of all, the war meant a decline in civilian letter mail transport at home and abroad for the PTT. However, the statistics point to longer-term trends. Thus, letter and parcel post as well as newspaper traffic to
Germany, but also to the other neighboring countries, slowly declined already in the 1930s. The takeover of power by the
National Socialists in Germany had a particularly inhibiting influence on newspaper traffic, which was increasingly subject to censorship. In the decline of letter post, it can be assumed that the competition from the emerging
telegram partially displaced letter post. In contrast to the declining trends of regular post, the area of
field post grew enormously in numbers. New in the Second World War were the handling of internee mail as well as prisoner-of-war mail. The staff in the administration increased continuously during the war years (see diagram). The proportion of women during this period was an average of 26.2%, falling from 30.8% (1944) to 27.9% (1945) at the end of the war. The total PTT staff only decreased between the years 1939 and 1941 from 21,809 via 21,252 to 21,216 people. At the end of 1945, the PTT employed 23,171 people compared to 21,809 in 1939. Calculated on the entire workforce, there were an average of 18 women per 100 employees (17.7%) in these years. The Swiss Post employed female employees mainly as non-civil servant telephone operators.
Postal traffic with Germany Postal traffic with Germany remained largely unaffected during the Second World War. However, the fact that German postal officials were still allowed to move freely into the city of Basel caused discussions. In 1939, the PTT had decided to continue allowing the German Reichspost cars to go to the post office
Basel 17 Transit, which was located in the SBB station: on the one hand due to more efficient handling, on the other hand due to national security. The PTT feared a change in practice and thus a postal exchange at the border, which meant additional effort and traffic obstruction. In addition, for reasons of national security, they did not want to offend the German side. The war led to extended transmission and delivery times. Delays also occurred in Swiss postal traffic due to the German and French censorship authorities. The war thus had a great influence on Switzerland's postal traffic with abroad.
Prisoner-of-war mail to the family in Glasgow, August 1944. The card is a pre-printed form for prisoner-of-war mail with the camp number indicated at the bottom. The PTT played a central role in international postal traffic during the Second World War. Since
Switzerland officially remained
neutral while the neighboring countries were at war, its location was predestined to take over the mediation of
prisoner-of-war mail. The responsible parties assumed a positional war in the West and did not expect many prisoners. They therefore assumed that the mediation of prisoner-of-war mail – in contrast to the First World War – would only involve a small effort. On October 24, 1939, the first load of prisoner-of-war mail from Germany destined for southern France arrived in
Basel 17 Transit. It consisted of 200 postcards from French prisoners of war, who wrote on pre-printed cards that they had been taken prisoner and were doing well. The international postal network was so impaired by the war that smooth postal traffic was no longer possible. This had negative consequences especially for mail shipments with perishable contents. The PTT General Directorate noted in June 1940 regarding prisoner-of-war packages that due to interrupted postal connections, "signs of rot and spoilage" were noticeable in the shipments that had been underway for weeks. Food therefore had to be partially disposed of. This particularly affected the border transit stations
Basel 17 and
Genf 2. In the first third of 1942, a total of 153 railway wagons filled with prisoner-of-war parcel mail were dispatched from
Basel 17 to Germany. This number gives an idea of the amount of spoiled food that had to be destroyed due to lack of delivery options. In times of food rationing, such waste was poorly received by the population. In 1945, the post office
Basel 17 was heavily criticized in a letter to the editor in the newspaper
Die Nation because the perishable food had not been distributed to the Swiss population. At that time, so many prisoner-of-war packages were backed up that the said post office had to store part of the shipments on the platforms, as all storage rooms were already overcrowded. In cooperation with the
International Committee of the Red Cross, perishable food could finally be further utilized. Part of the packages was also sent back to the countries of origin. The PTT replaced the last manually operated telephone exchange in Switzerland on December 3, 1959. On October 1, 1964, the
postal code system with four digits common in Switzerland today was introduced to simplify sorting. Now, personnel with very extensive knowledge of Swiss geography were no longer needed. These postal codes were ultimately also the basis for the mechanical sorting of letters and packages. In May 1977, a new parcel post center was opened in
Däniken. In Zurich, the Herdern telecommunications operations center by Theo Hotz was completed in 1978; the Mülligen parcel post center in
Schlieren followed in 1985. Another major PTT building was the short-lived "New Sihlpost", which was built between 1985 and 1992. In 1978, before the first
ATM, the "Postomat" was introduced. On February 8, 1994, the Sihlpost robbery took place. In 1995, the so-called "PubliCar" was introduced. This is a kind of post bus that can be ordered by phone call. Shortly before their dissolution in 1998, the PTT were the largest employer in Switzerland. In the course of the European liberalization of
telecommunications, the PTT were dissolved on January 1, 1998, and their tasks transferred to
Swiss Post and
Swisscom. == Organizational structure of the PTT ==