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Queen honeybee cage

Postal Museum

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    Object Details

    Description

    Used for shipping a queen bee, this rectangular wooden container has three circular chambers covered in a wire mesh that hold the queen bee and a few accompanying workers bees, who feed her in transit. Two holes at the ends are sealed during transit, one with a cork and the other with a sugar-candy plug. When the cage is introduced to the hive, the bees work their way through the candy plug, and the queen is released.
    Shipping of agricultural products blossomed as the result of the 1896 introduction of Rural Free Delivery service and the 1913 commencement of Parcel Post service. The mailing of live animals continues today and is well regulated in the interest of the health of the public and the animals.

    Credit line

    National Postal Museum collection

    Date

    c. 1990s

    Object number

    1991.0414.1

    Type

    Commercial Products

    Medium

    wood; metal; cork

    Dimensions

    Height x Width x Depth: 3/4 x 3 1/2 x 1 in. (1.91 x 8.89 x 2.54 cm)

    Place

    Maryland

    See more items in

    National Postal Museum Collection

    On View

    Currently on exhibit at the National Postal Museum

    Data Source

    National Postal Museum

    Topic

    Contemporary (1990-present)
    Customers & Commerce

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/hm82b682993-7e88-42ce-9f7b-962bbd4f58fc

    Record ID

    npm_1991.0414.1

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