Let's send a letter in the scenery of Chuo-ku-Nihonbashi
About three weeks ago, during NHK Taiga drama series's "Pushing the Blue Sky," Eiichi Shibusawa, who was called by the new government of the Meiji era, created various systems, and Maejima Mitsuru drafted a postal system and received a letter for the first time in a modern postal system between Tokyo and Osaka. The current Nihonbashi Post Office has begun postal services using post offices, post boxes, and stamps from postal items that had been transported by hik until then. There is a monument of "the birthplace of mail" and a bust of Takashi Maejima. The bust of Takashi Maejima is also depicted on the landscape mark, and I feel that the ordinary postcard has become a little special.
There are several landscape signs designed with Nihonbashi, the symbol of Edo, and it is the center of this city. The right is a postcard of ukiyo-e by Hasui Kawase.
There was also a fun stamp. The seat issued in 2011 (Heisei 23) to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Nihonbashi Bridge, and the current bridge is the 20th generation.
In the Edo-Tokyo series, the seats released last year include the scenery of Nihonbashi, shops, and delicious food.
Ningyocho and Kofunecho are officially large in Nihonbashi Ningyocho, Nihonbashikobunacho, and Nihonbashi. Would you like to write a letter of autumn with the postcards you collected?