Pre-WWI Oviedo Post Office

This 1907 postal cover, franked with a two-cent carmine Washington stamp, was mailed from Oviedo, Florida, to A. J. Dietz in Toledo, Ohio, on July 17. The front of the envelope features a crisp Oviedo circular postmark timed at 9 AM, while the reverse side bears a Sanford, Fla. Rec'd transit stamp from just 90 minutes later at 10:30 AM. This rapid processing highlights the efficiency of the local rail connection between Oviedo and the Sanford hub, where mail was consolidated before heading north. Interestingly, the recipient, A. J. Dietz, was a known early 20th-century poultry breeder and author, suggesting this correspondence likely related to the agricultural or horticultural exchanges that frequently passed through the hands of Oviedo's specialized farming community.

The circular handstamp on the reverse of this 1907 envelope is an arrival and transit mark from the Sanford, Fla. REC'D office. It is dated JUL 17, 10:30 AM, 1907, documenting that the letter arrived at the Sanford hub only an hour and a half after its 9:00 AM dispatch from the Oviedo post office. This mark serves as a record of the letter's first major connection on its northward journey toward its final destination in Ohio.

    Oviedo’s Post Office Prior to WWI

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