Monday, November 26, 2012

1940 Centenary of World's First Adhesive Postage Stamp

On May 6, 1840, Britain issued the world's first adhesive postage stamp,the "Penny Black", featuring an engraving of a young Queen Victoria.

 


A set of six stamps, designed by H.L. Palmer, was issued to commemorate the centenary of the first postage stamp on May 6, 1940.



The British Postal Museum and Archives website provides a detailed account of the issue's history. This post shows first day covers and commercial usages of the set.


First Day Covers





Bradford to Zurich, Switzerland, May 6, 19403d. surface letter rate + 3d. registration fee



James Chalmers : Inventor of the Adhesive Postage Stamp

Although Sir Rowland Hill is credited with the idea of the adhesive postage stamp, Scottish bookseller and printer James Chalmers is also given consideration for its invention. The first day cover below whose cachet features an image of James Chalmers was cancelled at his birthplace, Arbroath. Scotland.




Bournemnouth 27th Philatelic Congress




Bournemouth - 27th Philatelic Congress of Gt. Britain 
May 6, 1940

Bournemouth : Centenary of Adhesive Postage Stamps Exhibition

The Postal History Society sponsored the exhibition which raised funds for The British Red Cross Society and The Order of St. John.



The Exhibition ran from May 6 to 11, 1940


Bournemouth Adhesive Stamp Centenary
Last Day of Exhibition May 11, 1940
(not a first day cover)


London : The Royal Philatelic Society's Stamp Centenary Exhibition

The Exhibition was held in London from May 6 to 14, 1940, in aid of the Red Cross  St. John Fund.

May 6, 1940 first day of issue

London Red Cross Exhibition to British Expeditionary Force (France)
 May 11, 1940 (not first day)




Received in France May 15, 1949

"Received at Chateau de la Rochere Mulsamme Le Mans"
15/5/40

 Chateau de la Rochere,  located in the north west French town of Mulsanne, 10km from Le Mans was likely requisitioned by British forces. The British were forced to evacuate less than two weeks after the above cover was received. German forces entered Mulsanne on June 20, 1940.


 Stamp Usages : Principal Services

I have reproduced relevant excerpts from The Post Office Guide August 1940 which summarize some of the Inland, Imperial and Foreign charges for principal services.


Several rates had increased on May 1, 1940, days before the release of the Centenary stamps.


Letters



Inland

The inland letter rate was 2 1/2d. for the first two ounces and 1/2d. for each additional 2 oz.


Maidstone to Tonbridge, Kent, May 7, 1940
2 1/2d. inland letter rate
Durham to Darlington, July 4, 1940
2 1/2d. inland letter rate

Southport to Southall, May 20, 1940
2 1/2d. inland letter rate
Shortpaid and taxed 2d., double the deficiency


Imperial

Imperial rates applied to the British Empire generally, territories under British Mandate, Egypt, U.S.A., and the British Post Office in Morocco, except for H.M. Forces and Ships of War Abroad.

The letter rate was 2 1/2d. for the first ounce and 1d. for each additional ounce.


West Ealing to Melbourne, May 6, 1940
2 1/2d. Imperial letter rate
Undeliverable and returned to sender


Epsom to Toronto, July 15, 1940
2 1/2d. Imperial letter rate


Field Post Office 99 (11 Arm. Div. UK) to Toronto, July 1, 1940
2 1/2d. Imperial letter rate 
Ovington (Brighton) to Cairo, October 18, 1940
2 1/2d. Imperial letter rate
Cairo machine censorship
London to Boston, June 18, 1940
2 1/2d. Imperial letter rate
Orange press censor label

 Foreign (UPU)

The letter rate was 3d. for the first ounce and 1 1/2d. for each additional ounce

London to Budapest, Hungary, May 24, 1940
3d. foreign letter rate

Edinburgh to Brive, France, June 15, 1940
3d. foreign letter rate
"NO SERVICE RETURN TO SENDER"



Postcards





Inland

 The single postcard rate was 2d.

Torquay to Exeter, June 9, 1940
2d. inland post card rate


Bracknell to London, July 4, 1940
2d. inland post card rate


Imperial and Foreign

The single postcard rate was 2d.

Woking to Tillsonburg, Ont., Canada, May 13, 1940
2d. post card rate



 Printed Papers



 The Imperial and Foreign first weight printed papers rate was cheaper than the inland rate.


Inland

The inland printed papers rate was 1d. for the first two ounces and 1/2d. for each additional 2 oz.

Woodbridbe to Otley, September 20, 1940
1d. printed papers rate
Shortpaid 1/2d. and taxed 1d., double the deficiency

 Imperial and Foreign

Edinburgh to Pittsburgh, May 18, 1940
 1/2d. printed papers rate


Fernhurst to West Newton, Mass., August 23, 1940
1 1/2d. triple weight (up to 6 oz. )printed papers rate



Registration

 


Inland

The inland registration fee for compensation up to £5  was 3d.


South Molton to Bristol, May 27, 1940
2 1/2d. letter rate + 3d. registration fee



Imperial and Foreign

The registration fee was 3d.

Bradford to Zurich, Switzerland, May 6, 19403d. surface letter rate + 3d. registration fee



Air Mail




South Africa

The air mail rate to South Africa was 1s. 3d. 

London to Capetown, May 9, 1940
1s. 3d. air mail letter rate

United States

The air mail rate to the United States was 1s. 3d.


Farnham to Concord, N.H., July 29, 1940
1s. 3d. air mail letter rate


Saturday, November 24, 2012

HMS "Glory" Carrier Operations Korea

HMS Glory off the coast of Korea circa 1951

 During the Korean War (1950-1953), five Royal Navy light fleet carriers served in the combat area. Their roles were  to carry out strike operations against tactical targets ashore and to enforce a naval blockade. HMS Glory was the carrier that saw the most action during the war. Her aircraft, Sea Furies and Firefly FR5s  destroyed 70 bridges, 392 vehicles, and 49 railway trucks.


Hawker "Sea Fury" Fighter is catapulted from the HMS Glory, during Korean war operations circa June 1951.


HMS Glory served three tours in Korea. The cover below was mailed during her second tour.


"H.M. Ships in Korean Waters"
H.M.S. Glory to Louth England
2 1/2d. concession air mail rate
Posted at London (Martime Mail), February 19, 1952




Reference

Hobbs, David, British Commonwealth Carrier Operations in the Korean War, Air & Space Power Journal, Winter 2004. Retrieved from http://www.airpower.maxwell.af.mil/airchronicles/apj/apj04/win04/hobbs.html

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Kermit Roosevelt to Theodore Roosevelt Jr.

This post deals with a 1939 cover mailed by Kermit Roosevelt (1889-1943), son of former U.S. president Theodore Roosevelt,  to his brother Theodore Roosevelt Jr. (1887-1944).  


Kermit Roosevelt
 
Kermit with his father Theodore Roosevelt, 1910

Kermit Roosevelt was a businessman, explorer, and a writer who served in both world wars. In 1939, he joined the British Army and was discharged on medical grounds in 1941. He returned to the United States and received a commission in the U.S. Army from his distant relative President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Kermit Roosevelt in the British Army, 1939


Kermit Roosevelt to Theodore Roosevelt Cover



Signed on the envelope flap

Kermit Roosevelt had received a commission with the Middlesex Regiment which was stationed at Inglis Barracks at Mill Hill East. London. The cover was mailed at Mill Hill, November 1, 1939, and addressed to Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, Oyster Bay, Long Island, New York.


Theodore Roosevelt Jr,

Ted Roosevelt, like his brother Kermit, fought in the two world wars. He was instrumental in forming the American Legion in 1919, and served as Governor of Puerto Rico and Governor General of the Philippines. In 1939, Ted was a vice-president of Doubleday Doran publishing.  During WWII, Ted achieved the rank of Brigadier General in the U. S. Army and was awarded a Medal of Honor.

Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt Jr.
Oyster Bay, Long Island

Oyster Bay was the location of President Theodore Roosevelt's now historic home, Sagamore Hill. In 1938, Ted Roosevelt Jr. built a house on the property which became known as Old Orchard House.

Old Orchard House is now a museum

Redirection to Doubleday, New York



 The letter was redirected to "D Doran Co" [Doubleday Doran],  New York, where Ted was a vice-president.


For more information on the Roosevelt brothers:

Kermit Roosevelt
Theodore Roosevelt Jr.