This August, Quentin Uppgard retired from 33.5 years of service with the post office, 30 of those spent in Silver Bay. Throughout those years, Uppgard has faithfully delivered the mail to local residents, through a variety of hardships.
Quentin Uppgard started his postal career at the Two Harbors Post Office as a janitor in the fall of 1991, working two and a half hours a day, filling in while the post office was between contracted janitors. It was that fall that the Great Halloween Blizzard arrived. Uppgard’s mother was delivering mail on the rural route out of Two Harbors at this time, and the morning after the blizzard, Uppgard and his parents got into his father’s old Scout, which had a plow, and headed to the post office. Uppgard remembered his father having to “plow a couple of times to get to the P.O.. We made it, along with Bruce Solemn, the postmaster. The mail truck made it from Duluth.”
After getting the post office running, Solemn asked Uppgard to carry the mail to the businesses on 1st Avenue, since only one other mail carrier had made it to work. “That was my start carrying mail,” Uppgard related. “I was then hired for Christmas help as a letter carrier.” After that Christmas appointment was over, Uppgard went back to being janitor…until the next Christmas, at which time he became a full-time mail carrier. When Silver Bay postal worker Maury Flanagan went on vacation, Uppgard came to Silver Bay, and “Willy Johnson, the postmaster at the time, liked me, and he got permission to hire a part time career carrier, and he hired me for Silver Bay.”
Working for the postal service was not without its trials, though. “When I started, the postal service was the lifeline to the community, and people believed they needed their input.” In Two Harbors, during Uppgard’s time there, clerks began unloading and sorting mail for the carriers at 4:30 a.m. “There was one old guy that lived in the Bayview Terrace behind the post office. If we didn’t have the flag up by 5 [a.m.] he would call and let us know.” One day, Uppgard couldn’t resist pranking the man. “I went up and put the flag up before 5. Then about 5:15 I took it down. The boss got called later by the old guy wondering if we were under attack. I got in trouble for doing that to the town.” That wasn’t the only time Uppgard served his own justice to people on his route. The mother of one of his fellow carriers lived at Bayview Terrace, and she had a habit of reaching her arm through her mailbox to be sure she had gotten all her mail. Behind the mailboxes was a room the carriers would fill them from, and one morning Uppgard grabbed her hand as she reached through the box. “She screamed and away she went,” Uppgard reported. “I got told not to do that again.”
Sometimes a mail carrier is the only person that visits the home of a person that lives alone. One afternoon, Uppgard was delivering mail when he noticed that the previous day’s mail hadn’t been picked up by the elderly man that lived there. Uppgard knocked on the door, but there was no answer, and upon looking in the window he saw the man lying on the floor. This being the days before cell phones, Uppgard went to the neighbor’s and called 911, and an ambulance crew was able to help the (unhappy at being disturbed) man to the hospital.
“I have seen Silver Bay change over the last 30 years,” Uppgard said. “The kids who have grown up and had kids.” He referenced a few people that really stood out to him in his years carrying mail for Silver Bay. “The people of Silver Bay have been very good to me. Evie Buetow, Steve Haga, Molly Velcheff waiting every day to see you. Mrs. Savonen with either lemonade or hot chocolate for you every day. Herman Radtke with loaves of bread and stories of being a cook in the army. Checking on Ted Peterson every day, having my lunch with him to make sure he has something to eat. Listening to his stories of being in the Merchant Marines during WWII. Friends with Bob and Ed Eckstrom, fishing with them. Listening to Bob and seeing a man who saw the dramatic changes in the world during his lifetime.” Uppgard finished his reflections by saying, “I’ll miss the people. I won’t miss the frozen fingers and nose. The long hours. Being a postal worker is not just walking around talking to people. It’s a lot of hard work to make sure that the resident gets their mail and packages six days a week no matter what.”
On behalf of the communities of Silver Bay and Two Harbors, thank you Quentin for delivering our mail in all kinds of conditions for so many years.