undecipherable address? the postal service’s handwriting detectives are on it
Snail mail carries a special kind of charm — you can see it in the unique handwriting, uneven lines, and occasional pen smudges. But when it comes to pinpointing the intended address of a piece of mail, these perfectly imperfect human touches can present quite a challenge for post office machines. That’s where a U.S. Postal Service team comes in to do what machines cannot: decipher chicken scratch.
In Salt Lake City, handwriting experts known as “keyers” work around the clock at the Remote Encoding Center to parse out illegible or hard-to-read addresses, usually sent to the center as digital images for human interpretation. Last year, the keyers processed roughly 1 billion pieces of mail, Ryan Bullock, the site’s operations manager, told CBS News.
While the Postal Service once had 55 remote encoding centers nationwide, the Utah center is now the only such facility left, making it an essential part of the efforts to ensure handwritten notes reach their destinations — personality-filled penmanship and all. As the service continues celebrating its 250th birthday, watch the handwriting detectives at work.
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The phrase “chicken scratch” originates from the visual resemblance between a chicken’s foot marks and messy, illegible handwriting. Chickens, while scratching at the ground to find food, leave behind marks that look like a series of haphazard, uncoordinated lines and dashes. This imagery was then applied to handwriting that was difficult to read, hence the idiom “chicken scratch”.
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‘the only thing most people do better than anyone else is read their own handwriting.’
-john adams
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source credits: cbs news, Justin Sullivan, Getty images
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Sometimes one can’t read one’s own handwriting 😅
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myself included and so true!
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Lol 😆
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this is what we call ‘pig’s foot’ and when I see HH’s writing – which, incidentally, he often can’t decipher himself! – I always add: sorry pigs! another one I use seeing his handwriting (and being a ‘leftie’ in writing doesn’t help either): by the way your writing looks, you should make the income of a doctor or a professor…. he’s not impressed! ;)
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hahahahaha!
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Amazing
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a shocker
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It’s great to know that they bother to do that, and that they get such good results too.
Best wishes, Pete.
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yes, and I had no idea this was a thing
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Having worked in a profession where I needed to quickly make handwritten notes (and read them later) I am quite familiar with the need to decipher my own chicken scratch., Beth. Way to go, USPS!
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right! and I had no idea this was a job!
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Very interesting! Thanks for sharing this information!
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I never knew there were a group of actual people working on this
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I adore John Adams’ quote, and I am a “Chicken Scratch” writer … 🐔
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a doctor at heart )
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Mine’s still mostly legible.
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mine too, a mashup of cursive/print
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Yep.
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My printing and writing are both neat when I start out, but once my mind starts going off the track and I’m trying to keep up with putting things into written word, they both get wonky. Fortunately, my ‘chicken scratch’ printing stays readable, just messier, so I print most of the time.
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mine is certainly a mix!
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Wow – you know what? I’ve always wondered how some pieces of mail make it to their destinations these days. Handwriting and machines are incompatible…but cheers to the human touch. It’s been a rite of passage for so many of us…of a certain age…learning to read scribbles. xo, Beth! 😁💕😁
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yes, and it helped that I learned to translate pre-k writing, I think )
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🥰😁🥰
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I just looked it up and only 25 states still require the teaching of cursive. I’m always wondering what happens when there’s no one left who can, for example, read the original Constitution. I’m glad the post office still recognizes and supports the need. I’ve been told my irregular handwriting looks like a boy’s. Go figure.
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interesting –
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That is very interesting. Leave it to you, Beth to find something totally interesting. Happy Monday. By the way, I sent 15 postcards from my trip to Boston and I hope the recipients can read them. Ha!
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Best of luck to all recipients!
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Another subculture I was not aware of.
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it was new to me too, there are so many little secret things all around us
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Handwriting detectives – love it!
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it would be a pretty cool job!
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Happy 250th to Chicken Scratch! I always wondered what happened to mail that was unreadable.
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right? where does it go? )
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Exactly!
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I never thought of that problem, but I can imagine it is rather difficult to read some addresses. Fun to decipher though :-)
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yes, I think it would be like solving a puzzle !
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I probably contribute to a few of the billions piece of mail that’s processed by the encoders! 😆 A very necessary job to help get important messages sent to loved ones.
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it would probably be very cool to unlock the codes!
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Looking at my own handwriting, I have only one comment for you: bok bok!
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Scritch scratch!! I think this would be kind of a fun job ( for about 2 weeks), as you have contests to see who has the letter with the least decipherable scrawl and a happy hour after wok event with everyone doing shots and taking a wild guess at what the address might be and sending it off.
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I had no idea that there are even people hired for deciphering addresses on letters. That’s interesting!
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It was a surprise to me as well
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Fascinating! I really like how the P.O. will take the time to decipher the writing to get it right. I combine cursive and printing..in one word, haha. That’s just how I roll. And I love that John Adams quote. Spot on!
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I do as well –
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yikes!
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right –
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Thank you for honoring postal workers with this post. My second daughter delivers mail in Madison, WI. Letter carriers and other postal employees are not thanked enough for their service.
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and their job is so incredibly important. I had no idea that there were people who were assigned the job of trying to decipher hard to read addresses. they must feel a certain satisfaction when they figure out the addresses.
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This made me think of that movie The Six Triple Eight on Netflix. Have you seen it? The way those women worked together like detectives to sort out and deliver the backlog of mail during WWII is wild. A very cool film.
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I haven’t seen it, but heard that it is great. I’m adding it to the list.
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Excellent. It was time well spent. :)
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I could do this job very well. Thirty-one years of translating misspellings and chicken scratch are part of my resume.
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I’d say you’d be a perfect candidate .
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That quote is perfect 😄
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it really fits –
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Love that quote! :)
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it’s quite true )
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Sometimes I can’t read my own writing, so I’m not sure how the mail people can. I give the a lot of credit for a job well done.
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i think it’s incredible that there department exists
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I think so too. Puzzle solvers for sure.
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this department, sorry and yes, puzzlers
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Reminds me of student days at the pst office working with Christmas mail. In those days everyone sent Christmas cards. Sorting all night, the early morning delivery round. How time has changed!
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how great! i still write handwritten letters and christmas cards, so this really resonates with me and it matters –
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That’s so interesting! I wonder if we have something like that here. With my handwriting, it would come in very useful!
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maybe they see your letters often if there is something there )
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Wow, I didn’t know that. I thought they just returned it to the sender.
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I thought they just disappeared into the system )
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Perhaps the strangest thing of all is that the senders of letters with difficult-to-read addresses don’t recognize that someone will have a hard time reading what they’ve written.
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a total lack of awareness of this
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