I was part of a beautiful concept brought by Roshan Prasad, our popular philatelist from Singtam, to re-install a neglected Post Box found lying near the old post office building in the heart of the bazaar.
In one of its kind event, we, the members of the Sikkim Philatelic and Numismatic Society, added a page to the map of the world’s postal history when we removed the neglected post-box given new colors and had its permanent installation near the Water Fountain as a Heritage Post Box. An earlier Sikkim postal cancellation mark, along with the establishment of a Post Office in Singtam in 1903, was written on the stone slab below the base of the postbox. First of its kind in Sikkim and a proud place of being few in India and the world.
KN Rai, then Speaker of Sikkim Legislative Assembly, inaugurated the Heritage Box on Inspire 2017 – A Hobby Fest. The event coincided with the 12th anniversary
of the formation of the Sikkim Philatelic and Numismatic Society. A hobby exhibition was held at Bihari Dharamsala, Singtam, on May 30th, 2017- the first hobby fest of Sikkim. Inspire 2017- a hobby fest featuring a display of stamps, coins, bank notes, antiques, a matchbox collection, autographs, old newspapers, identity cards, and button flowers.
Three years passed, and we received numerous calls of appreciation. Our photograph of the Heritage Post Box of Singtam was published in various philatelic magazines worldwide. We just wanted to have the name of Singtam on the world map. We have succeeded today, but this wasn’t as easy as it looked.
Two days ahead of the event, the place where we had decided to install the Heritage Post Box at the water fountain site, despite having permission from Area MLA, Singtam Police Station, and the Singtam Nagar Panchayat, we were stopped from doing so. We wanted passers-by people to see the Post Box and feel proud of the century-old postal history of Singtam.
A huge section of the crowd came forward and alleged the ‘dustbin’ – the word used for our Heritage Post Box to be thrown away. In that mass, few good human souls spoke for our cause. Finally, after a few hours of noises, we were forced to shift our structure to the corner on the back of a paan dokan. The crowd justified – that the structure would disturb their wedding function on the way to Bihari Dharamsala. But today, in that much-chosen place, we have a Police Sign Board of No Parking – and that crowd was there to praise the efforts of the Police Station to have the No Parking Sign Board.
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