What was the Anchel system?

A special kind of postal system, which existed in the princely states of Travancore and Cochin, in Kerala, was known as the ‘Anchel’. It was introduced by a British officer Colonel John Monroe in 1811. He was the Resident of the English East India Company in Travancore and their political agent in Cochin. He was also the Dewan of Travancore State. In the beginning, the Anchel service was used to carry only royal implements, government letters, and flowers as offering to the Sree Padmanbhas swamy Temple at Thiruvananthapuram, owned by royal family of Travancore. Later, the system was opened to the public for a fee of one chakram (copper coin used in Travancore. One rupee was equal to 28 chakrams).

            The Anchel office was headed by an ‘Anchel Pillai’ (the post master). Each Anchel sepoy had to carry the postal articles for a fixed distance, and then hand it over to another person. It was like a relay race.

            The Anchel sepoy used to run with a metal rod fixed with bells, in his hand. The rule was that when people heard the sound of these bells they had to make way for him. Postal runners were allowed to occupy the centre of the road, and any obstruction made to the postal runners was considered a serious offence.

            The Anchel system continued even after the Travancore and Cochin states were brought together to form the Travancore Cochin States in 1949. In 1951, the department of Anchel was merged with the Central Government’s Postal Department