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Worldwide/Cinderellas & Seals : Christmas seals from 1959

 

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amsd
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Editor, Seal News; contributor, JuicyHeads

09 Jun 2011
10:00:39pm
1959 New Mexico Christmas Seals: Part I

xyz

In a lot of Christmas seals I found two similar envelopes, each franked with a commemorative stamp of the late 50s and a block of four of a 1959 seal (for seal collectors, it’s WX198, the perf 12.5 variety). They were both mailed from Alameda, New Mexico, on December 22, 1959, at 11:30 AM according to the machine cancel that neatly ties the stamp and the seals to the cover.

Some of us collect seals tied to cover. “Tied” indicates that some postal marking links the seal to the envelope to which it’s affixed. For some of us, this is important because, without it, what’s to stop someone from adding a seal at some later date. Anyway, seal cover collectors tend to value a tied seal far more than a seal not linked to the envelope.

These seals are nicely tied. The circular date stamp clearly puts it in the proper year (another important restriction) and during the pre-Christmas season. This particular envelope is especially nice because it represents only one of 11 known covers with New Mexico postmarks. That’s 11 for the entire 104-year history of US Christmas seals. Put another way, I own 18% of all known seals mailed from New Mexico. I imagine some of you are pretty impressed. Enough imagining; back to our story.

But, something is not right with this envelope. I’m going to conclude the article now and, in my best imitation of John Carpenter, ask you to see if you can figure out the problem. Postal historians should have much less trouble; regular Janes and Joes, while able to tell us who Prince Harry married (it was Harry, right?) or list the cast of Dallas or tell us what happened to Laika, will likely shrug their shoulders and get on with life.

I don’t blame you a bit, and I won’t be hurt if you don’t look at the next installment; but think of how empowered you’ll feel at your next cocktail party with the fascinating trivia that awaits your next click: http://juicyheads.com/link.php?PLGMISJN

Of course, I welcome your speculations here. Or any further discussion. But I hope you enjoy it regardless.

David Teisler, writing in Juicyheads in the column: Kicking Mule
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Parkinlot
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Immediate Past President - West Essex Philatelic Society www.wepsonline.org

10 Jun 2011
08:25:22am
re: Christmas seals from 1959

It has a 5 digit zip code. 5 digit zip codes didn't come into being until 1963.

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amsd
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Editor, Seal News; contributor, JuicyHeads

10 Jun 2011
10:03:31am
re: Christmas seals from 1959

he's good and he's fast.

you can still read the second half of the article, in which Bob's deduction is confirmed, if you'd like. Inspired, or is it insipid, writing.

David

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"Save the USPS, buy stamps; save the hobby, use commemoratives"

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Rhinelander
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Support the Hobby -- Join the American Philatelic Society

10 Jun 2011
10:18:53am
re: Christmas seals from 1959

I'd probably also go for the "handback" explanation.

There is no reason why only hand cancelled covers can be handbacks, but not machine cancelled covers. In the late 50's, cancellation machines were in the backroom of every postoffice. Mail was postmarked on the premise; postal centralization was still only in the beginning stages if at all. So there is no reason why a clerk would not take a stack of 50 or 100 prepared covers to the backroom and run them through a cancellation machine --especially a uniform run of like covers, which is perfect for machine cancelling, and also considering that at least two strikes of a hand cancelling device would have been needed here to cancel the stamp and "tie" the seals.

Moreover, I am not even sure what the postal regulations said (if anything) about "cancelling" seals. Maybe it was not even "legal" (or proper) to purposefully cancel non-stamps. So the only way to legitimately tie a seal to the cover might have been by applying a postmark large enough to "incidentally" touch the seal.

The ink smudges on the back are probably not transferred from another cover, but likely come from the machine's transport rolls. The covers show a clear run-off of the machine cancel at the right such that a portion of the wavy lines did not end up on the cover but on the opposing roll pressing the envelope against the canceller. That ink then was transferred onto the back of the next envelope coming through.

Finally, as for peelable address labels in 1959 -- self-adhesive labels were certainly not as common back then as today. I am not saying that it is not possible, but the absence of a return address in combination with the absence of any indication (residue, damage) that a label once was placed on the front prompts me to go with the more likely explanation -- a blank handback cover.

In any event, it is an interesting discussion piece ... Thanks for showing and sharing!

Arno


(Message edited by rhinelander on June 10, 2011)

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snowy12
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18 Feb 2013
04:12:00am

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re: Christmas seals from 1959

Hi All
This is my only tied cover, from Norway in 1970.

Image Not Found

Brian

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amsd
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Editor, Seal News; contributor, JuicyHeads

18 Feb 2013
06:09:38am
re: Christmas seals from 1959

lovely, Brian

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tomiseksj
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18 Feb 2013
07:39:42am
re: Christmas seals from 1959

I David doesn't mind, I'll pile on to what Brian has started and share my only tied seal on this Portland, Oregon cover postmarked November 30, 1944:


Image Not Found

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amsd
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Editor, Seal News; contributor, JuicyHeads

18 Feb 2013
01:47:42pm
re: Christmas seals from 1959

I don't mind at all, Steven, I am, in fact delighted to see it.

My friend George Painter maintains a census of all known tied US Christmas seals, and i'll gladly add this to it.

We know of only 130 (well, now, 131) seals from 1944 tied to covers, and we know that, other than California, Oregon has the most tied seals from the west coast. Yours is a relatively early usage (November 19 is the current EKU for 1944). And yours is a great airmail usage (right when rates went up, for a short span).

One's also got to love the return address on a WWII-era cover: Victory Street.

David

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"Save the USPS, buy stamps; save the hobby, use commemoratives"

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tomiseksj
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18 Feb 2013
05:21:35pm
re: Christmas seals from 1959

David,

Thanks for the background info. I enjoy it when something makes a cover special!

Steve

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"APS Member #130102; SRS Member #1570"

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amsd
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Editor, Seal News; contributor, JuicyHeads

19 Feb 2013
09:10:33am
re: Christmas seals from 1959

First, because the original article has generated some interest, and because we have lost the old images stored elsewhere and because we can't edit them, i am re-illustrating this article here.

Image Not Found

Image Not Found

Image Not Found

The top image is one with address; the middle and bottom are images of a similar cover without address, shown front and back, respectively.

The discussion of their possible creation and importance is carried above.

David

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Login to Like
this post

"Save the USPS, buy stamps; save the hobby, use commemoratives"

juicyheads.com/link.php?PLJZJP
        

 

Author/Postings
Members Picture
amsd

Editor, Seal News; contributor, JuicyHeads
09 Jun 2011
10:00:39pm

1959 New Mexico Christmas Seals: Part I

xyz

In a lot of Christmas seals I found two similar envelopes, each franked with a commemorative stamp of the late 50s and a block of four of a 1959 seal (for seal collectors, it’s WX198, the perf 12.5 variety). They were both mailed from Alameda, New Mexico, on December 22, 1959, at 11:30 AM according to the machine cancel that neatly ties the stamp and the seals to the cover.

Some of us collect seals tied to cover. “Tied” indicates that some postal marking links the seal to the envelope to which it’s affixed. For some of us, this is important because, without it, what’s to stop someone from adding a seal at some later date. Anyway, seal cover collectors tend to value a tied seal far more than a seal not linked to the envelope.

These seals are nicely tied. The circular date stamp clearly puts it in the proper year (another important restriction) and during the pre-Christmas season. This particular envelope is especially nice because it represents only one of 11 known covers with New Mexico postmarks. That’s 11 for the entire 104-year history of US Christmas seals. Put another way, I own 18% of all known seals mailed from New Mexico. I imagine some of you are pretty impressed. Enough imagining; back to our story.

But, something is not right with this envelope. I’m going to conclude the article now and, in my best imitation of John Carpenter, ask you to see if you can figure out the problem. Postal historians should have much less trouble; regular Janes and Joes, while able to tell us who Prince Harry married (it was Harry, right?) or list the cast of Dallas or tell us what happened to Laika, will likely shrug their shoulders and get on with life.

I don’t blame you a bit, and I won’t be hurt if you don’t look at the next installment; but think of how empowered you’ll feel at your next cocktail party with the fascinating trivia that awaits your next click: http://juicyheads.com/link.php?PLGMISJN

Of course, I welcome your speculations here. Or any further discussion. But I hope you enjoy it regardless.

David Teisler, writing in Juicyheads in the column: Kicking Mule

Like
Login to Like
this post

"Save the USPS, buy stamps; save the hobby, use commemoratives"

juicyheads.com/link. ...

Immediate Past President - West Essex Philatelic Society www.wepsonline.org
10 Jun 2011
08:25:22am

re: Christmas seals from 1959

It has a 5 digit zip code. 5 digit zip codes didn't come into being until 1963.

Like
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this post

"APS - AFDCS - GBCC - USSS - SCC - IPDA"

www.hipstamp.com/sto ...
Members Picture
amsd

Editor, Seal News; contributor, JuicyHeads
10 Jun 2011
10:03:31am

re: Christmas seals from 1959

he's good and he's fast.

you can still read the second half of the article, in which Bob's deduction is confirmed, if you'd like. Inspired, or is it insipid, writing.

David

Like
Login to Like
this post

"Save the USPS, buy stamps; save the hobby, use commemoratives"

juicyheads.com/link. ...
Members Picture
Rhinelander

Support the Hobby -- Join the American Philatelic Society
10 Jun 2011
10:18:53am

re: Christmas seals from 1959

I'd probably also go for the "handback" explanation.

There is no reason why only hand cancelled covers can be handbacks, but not machine cancelled covers. In the late 50's, cancellation machines were in the backroom of every postoffice. Mail was postmarked on the premise; postal centralization was still only in the beginning stages if at all. So there is no reason why a clerk would not take a stack of 50 or 100 prepared covers to the backroom and run them through a cancellation machine --especially a uniform run of like covers, which is perfect for machine cancelling, and also considering that at least two strikes of a hand cancelling device would have been needed here to cancel the stamp and "tie" the seals.

Moreover, I am not even sure what the postal regulations said (if anything) about "cancelling" seals. Maybe it was not even "legal" (or proper) to purposefully cancel non-stamps. So the only way to legitimately tie a seal to the cover might have been by applying a postmark large enough to "incidentally" touch the seal.

The ink smudges on the back are probably not transferred from another cover, but likely come from the machine's transport rolls. The covers show a clear run-off of the machine cancel at the right such that a portion of the wavy lines did not end up on the cover but on the opposing roll pressing the envelope against the canceller. That ink then was transferred onto the back of the next envelope coming through.

Finally, as for peelable address labels in 1959 -- self-adhesive labels were certainly not as common back then as today. I am not saying that it is not possible, but the absence of a return address in combination with the absence of any indication (residue, damage) that a label once was placed on the front prompts me to go with the more likely explanation -- a blank handback cover.

In any event, it is an interesting discussion piece ... Thanks for showing and sharing!

Arno


(Message edited by rhinelander on June 10, 2011)

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snowy12

18 Feb 2013
04:12:00am

Auctions

re: Christmas seals from 1959

Hi All
This is my only tied cover, from Norway in 1970.

Image Not Found

Brian

Like
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Members Picture
amsd

Editor, Seal News; contributor, JuicyHeads
18 Feb 2013
06:09:38am

re: Christmas seals from 1959

lovely, Brian

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"Save the USPS, buy stamps; save the hobby, use commemoratives"

juicyheads.com/link. ...
Members Picture
tomiseksj

18 Feb 2013
07:39:42am

re: Christmas seals from 1959

I David doesn't mind, I'll pile on to what Brian has started and share my only tied seal on this Portland, Oregon cover postmarked November 30, 1944:


Image Not Found

Like
Login to Like
this post

"APS Member #130102; SRS Member #1570"

thestampforum.boards ...
Members Picture
amsd

Editor, Seal News; contributor, JuicyHeads
18 Feb 2013
01:47:42pm

re: Christmas seals from 1959

I don't mind at all, Steven, I am, in fact delighted to see it.

My friend George Painter maintains a census of all known tied US Christmas seals, and i'll gladly add this to it.

We know of only 130 (well, now, 131) seals from 1944 tied to covers, and we know that, other than California, Oregon has the most tied seals from the west coast. Yours is a relatively early usage (November 19 is the current EKU for 1944). And yours is a great airmail usage (right when rates went up, for a short span).

One's also got to love the return address on a WWII-era cover: Victory Street.

David

Like
Login to Like
this post

"Save the USPS, buy stamps; save the hobby, use commemoratives"

juicyheads.com/link. ...
Members Picture
tomiseksj

18 Feb 2013
05:21:35pm

re: Christmas seals from 1959

David,

Thanks for the background info. I enjoy it when something makes a cover special!

Steve

Like
Login to Like
this post

"APS Member #130102; SRS Member #1570"

thestampforum.boards ...
Members Picture
amsd

Editor, Seal News; contributor, JuicyHeads
19 Feb 2013
09:10:33am

re: Christmas seals from 1959

First, because the original article has generated some interest, and because we have lost the old images stored elsewhere and because we can't edit them, i am re-illustrating this article here.

Image Not Found

Image Not Found

Image Not Found

The top image is one with address; the middle and bottom are images of a similar cover without address, shown front and back, respectively.

The discussion of their possible creation and importance is carried above.

David

Like
Login to Like
this post

"Save the USPS, buy stamps; save the hobby, use commemoratives"

juicyheads.com/link. ...
        

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