- Home
- Pages
Inner Page 1
Inner Page 3
Portfolio Archive – ClasssicPortfolio Archive – ClasssicPortfolio Archive – GridPortfolio Archive – GridPortfolio Archive – ModernPortfolio Archive – ModernPortfolio Detail 1Portfolio Detail 1Portfolio Detail 2Portfolio Detail 2Portfolio Detail 3Portfolio Detail 3Donation ArchiveDonation ArchiveInner Page 3
Inner Page 4
- Pages
- Events
- Event Archive
- Template 1
- Template 1
- Template 2
- Template 2
- Template 3
- Template 3
- Template 4
- Template 4
- Template 5
- Template 5
- Template 1 – Sidebar
- Template 1 – Sidebar
- Template 2 – Sidebar
- Template 2 – Sidebar
- Template 3 – Sidebar
- Template 3 – Sidebar
- Template 4 – Sidebar
- Template 4 – Sidebar
- Template 5 – Sidebar
- Template 5 – Sidebar
- Event Archive
- Event Category
- Event Category
- Events Elements
- Events Elements
- Event Details
- Event Details
- Event Archive
- Events
- Documention
- Documention
- Team Archive
- Team Archive
- Career Details
- Career Details
- All Directories
- All Directories
- Directory Details
- Directory Details
- Department Archive
- Department Archive
- Department Category
- Department Category
- Department Details
- Department Details
- Service Archive
- Service Archive
- Service Category
- Service Category
- Service Details
- Service Details
A post office is a customer service facility forming part of a national postal system. Post offices offer mail-related services such as acceptance of letters and parcels; provision of post office boxes; and sale of postage stamps, packaging, and stationery. In addition, many post offices offer additional services: providing and accepting government forms (such as passport applications), processing government services and fees (such as road tax), and banking services (such as savings accounts and money orders). The chief administrator of a post office is a postmaster.
Prior to the advent of postal and ZIP codes, postal systems would route items to a specific post office for receipt or delivery. In 19th-century America, this often led to smaller communities being renamed after their post offices, particularly after the Post Office Department ceased to permit duplicate station names within a state.