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Stamps and Their Stories ...
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I had a great time at the Gananoque Stamp Show a few weeks ago and got some cool stuff. Just before leaving (as I, to my surprise, still had a bit of money left) I sat down at Graham's boxes to get a bunch of inexpensive covers. I was looking for interesting cancels. One of the one's I found was this one. (that's a lot of ones)
It's an Imperial German postal stationery card used in East Africa. It has an 1894 cancel from Tanga on a 5Pf numerical indicium with a local overprint changing the currency and value to 3 Pesa.
It was addressed to Herrn Dr. Kremser, Tanga, R.P.D. Bundesrath. R.P.D. is the abbreviation for a Reichspost‑dampfer (Imperial mail‑steamer). SS Bundesrath was one of the East‑Africa Line mailboats that shuttled between Hamburg, Tanga and Dar‑es‑Salaam; she happened to be in port, so the card was delivered Herr Doctor aboard.
As far as I can tell, the message reads:
Tanga d. 23 August 94.
Mein lieber Dr.
Werden hiermit freundlichst einge-
laden zum Skat und Süßbier.
Heute Abend 8h.
Mit Gruß
Kaphingst.
[Tanga, 23 August 1894 / My dear Doctor, / Please accept this cordial invitation to join me for Skat and a sweet-beer this evening at 8 o’clock. / Kind regards, / Kaphingst]
Sounds like a local businessman or government worker on shore is making plans to enjoy a card game and German sweet-beer with someone he knows on the steamer -- a passenger or the ship's doctor perhaps.
I spent the morning pouring over my Michel catalogs. I was concerned this was too good to be true for a couple of bucks. However, so far it looks good.
Postal Stationary
German East Africa
Provisional Overprint [Due to Currency Change on July 1, 1893] on Mi.Nr. Germany P36]
Issued on July 1, 1893
Overprint, in black 3 PESA 3 on German P36
3 PESA on 5Pf, Green
Mi.Nr. P1ii
This was a provisional fix, a local press added the 3 PESA 3 overprint to the existing stock of 5Pf cards, first the P30s, then the P36s while waiting for rupee-currency stamps and stationary from Europe.
That it is type ii (OP on P36 vs P30) is indicated by: 194g imprint in lower right corner - P30 cards have no print datum; P36 cards show three numerals + one lower case letter; thick continuous line printed between the 3rd and 4th dotted address lines, only on cards P32 to 36; The word An is 93mm from the left edge of the indicium stamp frame, on P30 it would have been 79mm.
Source: Michel Granzsachen-Katalog Deutschland
I understand that 12,000 of these cards were printed on P30 and 8-10,000 on the P36.
Cancel
Single ring CDS, in black
Inside the ring * TANGA *
Centre: 2[4] 8 / 94
It would appear that the invitation was written on the 23td but that the CDS was not applied until the 24th. Herr Doctor may have missed his card game and beer. Hopefully they got together the next day.
Cheers, Hugh
On the way to the show in Gananoque, we made a side trip to visit the Joyceville post office, located at 2514 Findlay Station Road. This post office is in what Canada Post calls Postmaster Owned Premises. The postmaster built a 10 x 12 foot shed on her property and created an accessible Canada Post retail outlet:
Unfortunately, the postmaster has made the decision to close the post office on Friday, August 15 due to low volume.
06-08-2025, 09:36 PM
Forum: United Kingdom and British Colonies / Commonwealth
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This postcard was mailed from the postal branch office at the Irish National Exhibition in Dublin in 1907:
Canada was represented at the exhibition with a pavilion in which a wide range of products was displayed. This postcard of the pavilion is from the government of Ontario archives:
The exhibition was considered a success by many, but the Irish who supported independence - both in Ireland and emigrants living abroad - viewed it as a scheme of the English royalists. This article in The Gaelic American, a newspaper published in New York City, expresses those feelings (from Villanova University Library digital archives):
Fifty-two acres of land were transformed into the exhibition grounds. An artificial lake was created with a 90 foot high water slide. My postcard has the exhibition postmark, but it is not a picture of the exhibition. The card I would like to find is this one, from the Toronto Public Library digital archives. It shows the view from the top of the water slide:
05-08-2025, 08:25 PM
Forum: United Kingdom and British Colonies / Commonwealth
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The British Postmark Society had a sale for members in July. I got lots of goodies, but shopping was difficult. There were no photos of the items, just a spreadsheet, identifying covers, postcards and real photo postcards with a code. All of the descriptions centred on the postmark in loving detail - almost as if these people don’t care about the picture side of the card!
These two items have slogans to engage the families at home. The first is on a white mailing label affixed to a brown envelope:
SAVE WASTE / PAPER METALS / BONES RAGS
The second slogan appears on a postcard portraying the National Museum of Cardiff. And yes, I would not have been interested in the card if I only saw the picture side, so maybe some of that British “slogan appreciation” is rubbing off on me!
HELP TO WIN / ON THE / KITCHEN FRONT
05-08-2025, 07:24 PM
Forum: United Kingdom and British Colonies / Commonwealth
- No Replies
This postcard has a slogan cancel from 1946 celebrating 30 years of the National Savings Movement. Starting in 1916, the movement was initially meant to raise funds to support the war effort. Between the wars, the plan offered people a simple way to save in accounts with a government guarantee. The movement had about 7 million members at its peak. It fell victim to government cost cutting, when the small number of civil servants supporting the system were redeployed to reduce salary expenses. The plan ended in 1978.
Fun fact: the original “branding” for the National Savings plan used a swastika, which traditionally represented well-being. When that symbol was adopted by the National Socialists in Germany, the Savings Movement replaced it with St George slaying a dragon.
05-08-2025, 11:48 AM
Forum: United Kingdom and British Colonies / Commonwealth
- Replies (5)
A couple of Columbia machine cancels from the Edwardian era.
Stamp: Great Britain
King Eward VII (1901-1910)
Issued on January 1, 1902
1d, Scarlet
SG 219
Manufactured by the US-based Columbia Postal Supply Company, the Columbia single-impression cancelation machine was used in Great Britain between 1901 and 1910. Unlike continuous impression machines the Columbia machine make one impression at a time with every drop of the cancelling head. Each envelope had to be individually positioned. In short, not a very rapid machine canceller. They were used primarily in the large cities - most commonly London.
This example was used in LONDON S.W. (South West) on APR 22 / 5:15PM / 1904. It has a single circle town die with the London district S W centered within seven straight lines as an obliterator. (Whitney 10/75)
This next one is delightful. It was applied in LONDON. M. P. (Mount Pleasant Sorting Office) on Sep 28 / 6 PM / 1904. The single circle die is joined to an obliterator portion with two straight lines above and two below, and five wavy lines in between in three segments separated by two vertical lines after the first and second segment. The central segment has die number 3. Similar to Whitney 10/73.
A great resource, if you don't already have it is ... Collecting British Postmarks by Dr. J. T. Whitney.
05-08-2025, 11:23 AM
Forum: United Kingdom and British Colonies / Commonwealth
- Replies (1)
Great Britain has a fascinating philatelic history since the introduction of the adhesive stamp in 1840. The period before this reform is equally fascinating.
Here's a prepaid cover from Plymouth to London in the winter of 1828.
It was sent to R[obert] S[amuel] Palmer, Esq., 1 New Boswell Court, Lincoln's Inn, London. Robert S. Palmer (1800-1891) was a barrister, originally from Devon, who had chambers on a short cul-de-sac against the west wall of Lincoln's Inn.
On the front of the cover there is a manuscript 11 in red ink. This would indicate that the postal rate of 11d from Plymouth to London was paid in advance. This is confirmed by the handwritten p.p'd' [Postage Paid], written in the lower left corner as well as the red single line tombstone postmark marked C / PAID / 20 JA 28 / [1]828. The C in the postmark would be the sorting desk. The single line indicates that it was applied in the morning. [Whitney, 1/32]
The tombstone postmark has a 'pen cancel'. I wonder if this could be considered an early security measure to ensure that the paid tombstone could not be reused?
The inland rate, at the time, for a single sheet letter travelling 170-230 miles was 11d.
On the back of the cover, there is a postmark from Plymouth in black ink - in an arc PLYMOUTH with JAN 21 / [1]8[2]8 / 218. 218 would be the mile marker between Plymouth and London. Again, confirming the postage as 11d.
There is a remnant of a black, wax seal. The word FIDELITY (mirror reversed on the seal itself) is at the top of the impression. Underneath there is a slim, long-tailed hound a common sigil at that time.
The cover is constructed from a single sheet of folded wove paper 37x23cm (Imperial Post Quarto). Using a light-table a watermark is visible reading B.E.& S., BATH, 1825. This would be the De Montalt Mill, Combe Down, Bath. It was owned by John Bally, William Ellen and George Steart. The artist Joseph Mallord William Turner was known to favour their paper. The firm specialized in fine writing and artists' paper.
The inside sheet contains two letters ... both written on the same day, January 20, 1828, at 1 George Place, Plymouth by Thomas and Mary Colby. The first (2 pages) is a friendly covering note to Robert Palmer. The second is a more formal (1 page) letter providing instruction to their two trustees Palmer and Charles William Johnson (in connection with the estate of a relative (which probably explains the black wax). This second letter The shorter, tells their trustees to “sell out the stock belonging to us in the 3 percent Consols and invest the same in the 3½ percent Reduced.”
Why? In 1827 the Treasury converted part of the National Debt into a new 3½% bond issue. Investors could exchange their low-yield 3% Consols (a perpetual, no-maturity, government bond created in 1751 when Parliament consolidated war debts into a single 'stock'. It paid a fixed 3% interest payment every six months) for the new, higher-paying 3½% at par, improving income without touching capital. The Colbys are simply asking Palmer and Johnson to execute that government-backed swap. The stock itself was just an entry on the Bank of England’s ledger. Ownership was transferred by a clerk writing your name in the ledger book. This was the job that Palmer & Johnson were being asked to do for the Colby's. ['Consols' meant Consolidated Annuities]
A nice little pre-paid cover dealing with the housekeeping of a Regency era trust fund. In short, the government got cheaper debt in the long run while investors enjoyed an immediate boost in income.
That's one of the reasons I like postal history. It's a fossil record of the grand sweep of history and how it affected the daily lives of the people who lived through it.
Cross-writing is when a writer gets to the bottom of a page, or the space available for writing on a postcard, and has more to say. So, he or she turns the page ninety degrees and keeps writing over what has already been written. It one of my collecting interests ... and I'm always looking for new examples.
Here's one I found recently.
It was sent from Hardwick, Vermont to Laconia, New Hampshire on July 16 probably in 1908.
The date is not clear on the duplex cancel .. it looks to me like it's either 1903 or 1908. However, this is a divided back postcard and that format was not allowed in the United States until March 1, 1907. So, I'm going to go with 1908.
Hardwick was a small granite-quarry town on the Boston and Maine railway line. The card was addressed to Mrs. Harry Holbrook. 'Cuz' in the salutation confirms a family connection.
Laconia was about 115 miles south of Hardwick.
Stamp:
US - Benjamin Franklin
Issued on February 3, 1903
1c, green
Sc. 300
The then current domestic postcard rate was 1c.
Cancel: Single Ring Duplex
Outer ring - HARDWICK / VT
Inner - JUL / 13 / 8 PM / 190[8]
Postcard:
A privately published Real Photo Postcard (RPPC) showing a well-dressed couple in a four-wheeled open runabout (buggy). [Sophie and Leroy? See below]
Written on the photo, is the word 'Kernal' ... probably the name of the horse. The man is wearing a straw hat, a sack suit and a bow-tie. The woman is wearing a 'merry-widow' hat with a plume. Kodak introduced the 'Brownie' camera around 1900 and US postal regulations allowed privately printed RPPCs by 1904.
Message:
The message is cross written to add more content but, to make it easier to read, the horizontal portion of the message was written in pen with a dark ink and the vertical portion was written in pencil.
The message reads:
[vertical]
Hardwick Vt.
Dear Coz,
We got home safely. The folks met us at the depot.
Am not feeling very good yet - tired from walking home today.
Went up to the pasture and got my horse this afternoon;
He came right up to me.
Leroy said his boss told him that he thought he had got killed somewhere
[horizontal]
Will write soon.
Love to you both.
From Sophie and Leroy.
Cheers, Hugh
If you're looking for German album pages ... here is a truly amazing resource.
Absolutely stunning pages for Imperial Germany, its colonies, its offices abroad, the Weimar Republic and the period from 1933 to 1945. Official stamps, military .. it's all there. New additional pages on speciality topics (e.g. cancellations) are added frequently and you can download all of it for free. The PDF files come in several types ... with and without photos of the stamps, 8.5x11 as well as several popular album sizes.
I use them myself and I've corresponded with the person who created them. It's his passion ... and it's a fantastic contribution to philately.
Check them out:
https://www.germanstamps.net/germanstamp...bum-pages/

