In Nolinsk Uyezd, which included the village of Bogorodskoye, the zemstvo post was established by a decision of the zemstvo assembly at its first session in 1867. It began regular operation in 1868. Mail in the volost of the present-day Bogorodsky District was delivered along the uyezd Glazov commercial route.
To carry the zemstvo post in the uyezd, 27 zemstvo stations were maintained; one of them was in the village of Bogorodskoye and had 5 horses. A fee was charged for each horse per verst.
By a resolution of the assembly in 1880, the fee for sending ordinary private correspondence was abolished. The abolition of the fee led to an increase in the number of letters sent from the uyezd. If in 1878 there were 94, then in 1880 the number rose to 984, and in 1894 to 7,158. By 1906, 49 thousand private letters were being sent from the uyezd.
The fee was collected again in 1910–17. Stamps were issued in 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 kopecks. They were printed in the uyezd printing house and at a private printing house in Saint Petersburg. On the 1-, 3-, and 5-kopeck stamps of 1915 there is an image of a flying swan. They were printed on both sides of the sheet. Stamps were cancelled with ink (by crossing out) and with circular and oval postmarks. Presumably in the first half of 1918, in connection with changes in zemstvo postal rates, the 1-, 2-, 3-, and 5-kopeck stamps were manually overprinted in black or violet with new denominations of 10, 15, 25, 30, and 50 kopecks. In early September 1918, the post office was closed.