Thailand Trans Shipment tracking packages and shipments
Keep track of Thailand Trans Shipment parcels and shipments with our free service! All you need to do to track your parcel, is to enter the tracking number, and then the service will keep track of your parcel’s location in real time.
How do I track my Thailand Trans Shipment parcel with 100Parcels.com?
- Find out the tracking number of your parcel;
- Enter the tracking number of your parcel in the field at the top of the page;
- Wait until the service checks the parcel data, it will not take long;
- View the search results and share them with your friends via social networking;
- If you enter your email address, we can notify you automatically of changes to the status of your parcel.
Thailand Trans Shipment - Tracking number format
- U# *** *** *** TH
# - letter; * - digit; ! - letter or digit
Thailand Trans Shipment - information about carrier
Thailand Post (THP) (Thai: ไปรษณีย์ไทย; RTGS: praisani thai), previously part of the Communications Authority of Thailand up until 2003, is a state enterprise that supplies postal services in Thailand.
The Post and Telegraph Office was first developed in 1883 by King Rama V Its very first post office was in a large building by the Chao Phraya River, on the north side of the Ong-Ang Canal. In 1898, by combining with the Telegraph Department, its name was altered to "Department of Mail and Telegraph". The department was abolished in 1977 and the nation's mailing and telegraphing were presumed by the new government-owned business, "Communications Authority of Thailand" (CAT). In 2003, the government separated the communications authority into two business, "Thailand Post" and "CAT Telecom".
THP has 19 logistical centers across the country, 1,300 post offices, and 3,300 post workplace licensees. In 2018 it designated 10 billion baht to build two new automated sorting centers, one in Chonburi Province and the other in Wang Noi District, Ayutthaya Province. Its objective is to totally automate postal and shipment operations along with back-office procedures by 2021.
Prior to the operation of Thailand Post, there was restricted mail service, generally for the royal family. Generally, messages in between the federal government in Bangkok and provincial outposts had actually been brought by "pony express" or by fast boat. Throughout the reign of King Chulalongkorn (r. 1868 - 1910), the Ministry of Interior kept a schedule which defined that messages in between Bangkok and Nong Khai took 12 days, between Bangkok and Ubon Ratchathani, 12 days, and in between Bangkok and Luang Prabang, 17 days outbound and 13 days inbound Domestic mail traveled by messengers while global mail taken a trip by steamboat to post workplaces in close-by nations, such as the Straits Settlements.
The earliest taped mail from Bangkok dates back to 1836 when American missionary Dan Beach Bradley sent out a letter to his dad in a stampless cover. The British Consular Post Office in Bangkok was developed by Great Britain in 1858 as a consequence of the Bowring Treaty signed between Great Britain and Siam (now Thailand) on 18 April 1855, in action to a demand by migrant merchants and missionaries.