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Robert Moon (postal inspector)
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'''Robert Aurand Moon''' (April 15, 1917, [[Williamsport, Pennsylvania]], US – April 10, 2001, [[Leesburg, Florida]], US), sometimes called "[[Mr. ZIP]]", is considered the father of the [[ZIP Code]] or Zone Improvement Plan, a mechanism to route mail in the United States.<ref name="obit">{{cite news | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2001/04/14/us/robert-moon-an-inventor-of-the-zip-code-dies-at-83.html | title=Robert Moon, an Inventor of the ZIP Code, Dies at 83 | first=Douglas | last=Martin | date=2001-04-14 | newspaper=[[New York Times]] | access-date=2017-09-23}}</ref> ==Biography== The U.S. Postal Service had been providing a premium level "air mail" service since the introduction of regular air transportation. As air transportation reliability improved and cost per ounce of mail decreased, it began to make financial sense to transport larger quantities of mail via intercontinental airlines rather than ship, and interstate via the old airmail routes rather than via train. But this made the sorting of mail by hand the new "bottleneck" for mail service. Rather than leisurely hand sorting mail bound for various destinations while passenger trains traveled between town centers, there was a need for machine sorting speed that could match the increased volume traveling between communities by jet and direct trucking. Rather than being sorted within a city, destined for another city, the structure of delivery had by necessity become sorting at regional sorting centers that were connected by various modes of transport (rail, air and road), with the regional centers responsible for routing mail and packages to each local post office in their region. In 1944, Moon submitted his idea for the {{citation needed span|text="ZIP Code"|reason=this specific term is credited to Jamison Cain in the WP zip code article|date=February 2025}} while working as a [[United States Postal Inspection Service|postal inspector]] in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]], but no action was taken.<ref name=nyt20010414>[https://www.nytimes.com/2001/04/14/us/robert-moon-an-inventor-of-the-zip-code-dies-at-83.html New York Times: Robert Moon, an Inventor of the ZIP, dies at 83.] Accessed 23 Sep 2022.</ref> Following his third submission of the concept, in 1963 it received the approval of a top-level postal service committee which shares credit for further development of the Zoning Improvement Plan, "ZIP". Mr. Moon's system described the routing to general regions of the country using the first three digits of what would eventually become a five-digit and later a nine-digit system. The next two digits of the first five-digit numeric code would be for smaller delivery areas, and were the work of others.<ref name=nyt20010414 /> The first ''Directory of Post Offices'' using five-digit ZIP code numbers would be published in 1963.<ref name="obit"/> The "Mr. ZIP" cartoon character that was seen on postal delivery vehicles across the United States was originally developed by ad man Harold Wilcox, whose father was a postman. Wilcox's agency, [[Cunningham & Walsh]], originally displayed the image for a Chase Manhattan bank-by-mail campaign.<ref name=nyt20010414 /> ==See also== *[[ZIP Code]] ==References== {{reflist|1}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Moon, Robert}} [[Category:1917 births]] [[Category:2001 deaths]] [[Category:People from Williamsport, Pennsylvania]] [[Category:Postal codes in the United States]]
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