In postal mail, the sender's address is the explicit inclusion of the address of the person who sent the message. It provides the recipient (and sometimes authorized intermediaries) with the means to determine how to respond to the sender of the message if necessary. The sender's address does not need to include the sender's name, but must include the address or P.O. detail box in the same way as shipping address. In some countries, the sender's address is usually in the top left corner of the envelope, card, or label. In the UK, the sender's address is usually placed on the back of the envelope, near the top.
Businesses often use pre-printed envelopes with the sender's address. Many people have previously printed adhesive label sheets with their home address to affix their correspondence. Charities sometimes include such sheets in letters. Reel Address Label Rolls can be purchased from companies that sell personalized labels to give individuals an easy way to peel and paste the sender's address labels into their envelopes.
A return address is not required on postal mail. However, the lack of sender addresses prevents the postal service from being able to return an item if it can not be delivered; such as from damage, postage, or invalid destination. Such a letter can be a letter of death.
If the sender's address comes from a different state or country, the mail can be directed through the location for easy repayment.
Video Return address
History
The return address has been used on U. S. S. stamps since the 1880s. Because pressure printing became more common in the early 1900s, the label became cheaper and more easily distributed. The profession involved with producing this label is known as lithography. During the 1950s in the United States, more and more letters did not reach the intended recipients, and as a result of a lack of return address, the letters ended in the dead mailing offices. With the increase in this dead letter, the post office requests that people use the sender's address. Even after this, the public still tends to ignore adding the sender's address. This encourages postmasters to inform the public that emails without a returning address will be less a priority than emails with the sender's address. However, the public did not use the sender's address until 1960 when the company began offering bids for pre-printed return labels like 2,500 labels for $ 2.00. They are becoming more popular with the invention of label dispensers. With the invention of personal computers, the software allows people to print their own labels. When e-mail starts to take over a written letter, the sender's address becomes automatic in an e-mail.
Maps Return address
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia