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Red letter day for local postman 29.04.09

Well-wishers give Callaghan the stamp of approval

by Simon McGeady, Inishowen Independent

HE'S ONE of the most recognisable faces in the greater Newtowncunningham area, but now the time has come for local postman Gerald Callaghan to leave the postal service.
Callaghan delivered his final letter on Friday the 17th of April, two days before his 65th birthday, the cut-off age for postmen.
Prior to his farewell do at Pairc Colmcille on Saturday evening Callaghan talked briefly to the Inishowen Independent about his 43 years delivering mail.
“It’s going to be strange not getting up at 5am every morning. I will miss the daily contact with the local pensioners, who I have got to know well and done a wee bit extra for over the years. To have that daily contact severed will be strange. I’ll have to think about doing a wee sideline to keep me occupied,” said Mr Callaghan.
After five years of manual labour in Scotland (first as a farm hand, then at the Clydebank docks, where he had a small hand in the construction of the QEII) the 22 year old Callaghan returned home and, as luck would have it, an opening at Newtown post office presented itself.
“Back in 1966 a guy in Newtowncunningham went ‘through the hoops’ and he lost his job. I replaced him in May of that year, as an auxiliary postman first on a 30 hour week.”
After the postmistress divvied out the mail, off on his iron bike would the young Gerald go, full satchel strung over his back, whistling as he worked.
Gerald Callaghan
“I didn’t mind riding the bike, and I knew the area like the back of my hand. In those days I was responsible for delivering mail from the south east of Newtown and on through the townlands of Dooish, Monreagh, down as far as St Johnston. I was on the bike for six years, then, when [senior postman] James Toye died in 1974, I was given his route as well. They gave me a car allowance and with it I bought a 1970 Volkswagon beetle. Then, in 1978, I was taken on full time.”
The years have seen some changes to the way mail is handled. The introduction of bar-coding in 1980 was a big change for Gerry, but the biggest upheaval of his mail-man days came six years ago when he was reassigned from the sub-office in Newtown to the mail centre in Lifford.
The strangest item he ever had to deliver was a whole turkey a local was posting to family in England.
“I often wondered how it would keep, but in those days a parcel took three days to go to England, now it can be ten days,” joked the jovial pensioner.”
Gerry is proud of the fact that in 42 years and eleven months, he has only taken one week of sick leave, and that was in Christmas 1990 when he passed out from exhaustion and doc’s ordered were to take it easy over the next week.
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