In the months following the end of World War II, international postal services faced severe disruptions. Transatlantic civilian mail regularly experienced significant delays due to a widespread shortage of transport resources, damaged infrastructure, and heavy backlogs across post-war Europe.
This registered airmail cover from Belgrade perfectly illustrates the transport challenges of that era. What would normally be a routine route turned into a gruelling multiple-week journey across the Atlantic, further complicated by multiple forwarding attempts once the letter reached the United States.


Registered Airmail cover sent from Belgrade (1 August 1945) to Washington, D.C., USA. It is franked at 13 Din (4 Din foreign letter rate, 5 Din registration fee, and 4 Din Airmail fee). The cover was censored in Belgrade with "ЦЕНЗУРИСАНО БЕОГРАД Војни цензор A 1" (Censored Belgrade Military censor A 1) and in Italy with "CENSURA MILITARE POSTA CIVILE 0111". After 67 days in transit, it reached New York on 7 October 1945 and was sent to Washington, D.C. (8 October 1945), where it was forwarded to Poughkeepsie (9 October 1945), then routed back through New York (11 October 1945) to Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania (12 October 1945).