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Switzerland
#1

In 2010 I got invited to participate in a auction in Switzerland Peter Rapp Auctions. It was a red carpet event picked up in a Rolls- Royce red carpet from Air plane greeted with champagne To spend a week A free bmw CAR AND A TICKET TO WINE TASTING. Here is a page in one of the 3 hard cover auction catalogues he sent me. Some of the items had not been seen in more then 50 years.


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#2

Sounds like a great event Richard ... did you find anything to your liking? 

Cheers, Hugh

Hugh MacDonald, Wolfe Island
Member: BNAPS. PHSC, Auxiliary Markings Club, Postal Stationary Society, British Postmark Society,
AMG Collectors Club, China Stamp Society, France and Colonies Philatelic Society
ArGe Deutsche Feldpost: 1914-1918 e.V.
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#3

(22-10-2025, 01:52 AM)RICHARD Wrote:  In 2010 I got invited to participate in a auction in Switzerland Peter Rapp Auctions. It was a red carpet event picked up in a Rolls- Royce red carpet from Air plane greeted with champagne To spend a week A free bmw CAR AND A TICKET TO WINE TASTING. Here is a page in one of the 3 hard cover auction catalogues he sent me. Some of the items had not been seen in more then 50 years.

Very interesting! Google Lens makes it so much easier to translate as you browse! But I have to remember not to crop so close if I want to share the translation!


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Janet MacDonald: I found an unexpected love for stamp collecting during a pandemic …
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#4

I like your style Richard if you think that US$130,000 is a 'low' price. It may be lower than US$220,000 but if I had that kind of money to throw around, I certainly wouldn't be buying stamps ... or, at least, one stamp. 

Luckily, as a postal historian, I never worry about the quality of a stamp. I collect historical artifacts. Used, even damaged covers and stamps, are evidence that they served their intended purpose. It's part of their story. Even when a stamp has fallen off a cover (or been taken off by someone more interested in the stamp's 'valuue') it's still fun to try to reason out what stamp was originally on the cover. A fun game to play. 

From time-to-time, on another forum, I do a weekly Postal History Challenge. Earlier this year, I asked people to identify the missing stamp and find out as much as they could about this cover. I bought it for fifty cents from one of Roy's boxes. A world of amusement. 

   


Cheers, Hugh

Hugh MacDonald, Wolfe Island
Member: BNAPS. PHSC, Auxiliary Markings Club, Postal Stationary Society, British Postmark Society,
AMG Collectors Club, China Stamp Society, France and Colonies Philatelic Society
ArGe Deutsche Feldpost: 1914-1918 e.V.
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#5

Hugh that's interesting I think that its missing another same type stamp for the 10 cent air rate. I was rushed to hospital this week but I'm doing fine. Oh that stamp I bid on i bid 130,000.00 I lost it sold for over 300k. Maybe next time. I posted a link to Richard Frajolas board he is selling rare Washington stamps on covers. Every one should check the sale out. I will likely not buy any i only collect the U.S. Columbus set or Columbians to keep and over 50,000 of Columbus Scott 231 types. ill place same link here . If you want to study Washington stamps start with the real known types HERE>>.https://www.rfrajola.com/WFcovers/WFcoversP2.htm
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#6

Hi Richard ... you're correct. The missing stamp is almost certainly another of the same stamps. I assume it just fell off. 

The General Headquarters (GHQ) of the Middle East Forces (MEF) in 1943 was located in Cairo. Then, the question becomes, what was the postal rate for a single letter from Lebanon to Egypt on September 13, 1943 (i.e. the date in the Beruit CDS)?

That's a challenge and a half. Following Vichy / German Administration, a coup, and a British Invasion, Lebanon was under Free French and British Administration overseeing a rising group of nationalists who wanted independence. I found a reference to an official text dealing with wartime postal rates, Arrêté no 1 of the Haut-Commissariat, 15 Jan 1942. It is quoted in the appendix of William C. Robertson's Syria & Lebanon – Free French Censorship WW II 1941-45 (Civil Censorship Study Group, 2011, pp. 122-123). It reports that the rate was “10 piastres” for a 0-20 g letter to Egypt". 

Assuming the rate was 10p, it is, as you say, reasonable to conclude that the missing stamp has to be one with a value of 5p. Most likely a twin to the existing 5p stamp that is still on the cover.

If so, the answer to Q1 would be:

Republic of Lebanon, Under British / Free French Administration
Stone Bridge over the Dog River Gorge [Nair el-Kelb]
Issued in 1940
5p, Blue-green
Sc. 155

The Social Philately aspects of the cover are interesting too. The person who sent the cover, Bayard Dodge, was the president of the American University of Beirut (AUB) 1923-48. He was a celebrated Arabist and a champion of wartime relief.

My favorite part of the cover are the Free French Censorship marks.

The purple, single ring censor mark, with a Cross of Lorraine and C P 2 = Contrôle Postal [Postal Control]; the 2 is the number of the individual examiner / censor desk.
The other purple numbers on the front 17 and back 15 would appear to be workflow codes used at different steps in the process. The word English in the upper right of the front of the cover was also a censor requirement on all mail. The language of the letter needed to be identified to ensure that the item was referred to a censor who could read that language. 

Definitely a cool cover. 

Thanks for your information about the US auction. However, I don't collect US stamps and have very little interest in them.

To each their own. I don't do varieties or worry about grading or shades ... although I have lots of respect for people who do. My own interest is focused on stamps and covers as historic artifacts ... stamps on cover, the contents, the cancels, auxiliary markings, the rates, the routes, the social and other historical context.  

Cheers, Hugh

Hugh MacDonald, Wolfe Island
Member: BNAPS. PHSC, Auxiliary Markings Club, Postal Stationary Society, British Postmark Society,
AMG Collectors Club, China Stamp Society, France and Colonies Philatelic Society
ArGe Deutsche Feldpost: 1914-1918 e.V.
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