Carlsbad letter carrier hangs up mailbag after 58 years

In the sixties, Mack Mata Jr. made ‘special deliveries’ on bicycle

April 25, 2018 



http://www.facebook.com/uspsspacerTwitter @USPS

Mack Mata Jr.

CARLSBAD, CA — It was the fall of 1960. Mack Mata Jr. and his fiancée were downtown when she saw a ‘help wanted’ sign hanging in the post office window. He applied, landed an interview and found himself taking the postal exam along with 200 other potential applicants at Oceanside High School. On November 29, 1960, he was sworn in officially as a postal employee as a Part Time Flexible employee in Carlsbad.

Now some 58 years later, Mata will begin the next chapter in his life – retirement.

On Friday, April 27 at 8:30 a.m., he will be recognized in front of his peers and family by Postmaster Cindy Gibson at the Carlsbad Post Office, 2772 Roosevelt St., Carlsbad, CA 92008.

“It’s not often we celebrate an employee who has served the Postal Service for 58 years,” said Gibson.
“That’s why we are taking a moment of time to honor a man who has given a large portion of his life – his hard work and dedication – to this organization. We want to congratulate and thank him for sharing those years with us at the Postal Service.”

Mata has been a carrier at the Carlsbad Post Office his entire postal career, having worked for every Postmaster at that office. Recalling his days as a mailman, Mata said he would watch kids grow up and move away, only to return and become his customers all over again. He has literally become part of those families, too.

He reminisced about the time there was an older customer on his route who he always checked on. “One day, something told me I should check on her and sure enough, I found her lying on the ground after she had fallen and couldn’t get up. She said, ‘I knew you’d eventually show up to help me.’” Mata was later presented a certificate for his heroism.

According to Mata, a lot has changed over the course of nearly 60 years. Stamps were 4-cents and there was no Internet. He made special deliveries on a bicycle with a big basket to addresses in the vicinity of the post office. And the Postal Service began using ZIP Codes in 1963. But the biggest impact he’s witnessed is the sheer growth of Carlsbad. When he started, there were six mail routes and one auxiliary route in his office. Today, the office has 70 city routes, four rural and one highway contract route. “Sears and Penny’s were the big businesses back then and it took a while to get anything,” he said. “Now there’s Amazon with next-day delivery and package volume has picked up like crazy.”

Earlier in his career, Mata was offered the chance to become a supervisor. “I was 20 years old. All of the guys I worked with were considerably older and I wouldn’t have felt right telling them what to do,” he said. “Now I’m the old geezer, a dinosaur so to speak, who still uses the mail instead of the internet. But I still love what I do. My career has been very fulfilling.”

Mata is not only the longest serving carrier in Carlsbad, but he’s also worked for every Postmaster the city has had. When asked who his favorite was, he quickly responded, “Ben Franklin.”

He is married to Sheila Mata, who works at the Vista Post Office. He has two sons, Kelley and Christopher, and four grandchildren. After retirement, he plans to continue doing lots of gardening with his wife. They will continue traveling and look forward to their next trip to the Holy Land. He also still plans to wake up early – between 4 and 4:30 a.m. “My body is like a clock,” he said. “I don’t even need an alarm to wake up.”

# # #

Please Note: For broadcast quality video and audio, photo stills and other media resources, visit the USPS Newsroom at about.usps.com/news/welcome.htm.

For reporters interested in speaking with a regional Postal Service public relations professional, please go to about.usps.com/news/media-contacts/usps-local-media-contacts.pdf. Follow us on Twitter (twitter.com/usps), Instagram (instagram.com/uspostalservice), Pinterest (pinterest.com/uspsstamps), LinkedIn (linkedin.com/company/usps), subscribe to our channel on YouTube (youtube.com/usps), like us on Facebook (facebook.com/usps) and view our Postal Posts blog (uspsblog.com).

For more information about the Postal Service, visit usps.com and usps.com/postalfacts.

Postal News
 

California Media Contacts