31 May 2010

Issue of the week ~ Singapore: Know 10 trees

Trees are important components of a natural landscape. They provide landmark recognition, shade, filter dust from the air, prevent soil erosion, and provide shelter for life forms under their foliage. Trees are long-lived, perennial woody plants, some reaching several hundreds years, forming an important component of our living biosphere.
In Singapore, trees can be found along highways, in parks, neighborhoods and gardens. Without them, the city would be a harsh concrete landscape. "Know 10 Trees" is an National Parks Board initiative aimed at raising the public's awareness of Singapore's most common roadside trees, which are colorfully depicted in this set of stamps. Join Singapore post on this journey of learning to identify, recognize and appreciate these 10 trees (Rain Tree, Angsana, Yellow Flame, Senegal Mahogany, Broad-leafed Mahogany, Tembusu, Sea Apple, Saga, Trumpet Tree and Sea Almond) that accompany our everyday lives.

Technical details
  • Date of issue: 26/May/2010
  • Printing process: Offset lithography
  • Stamp size: 28 mm. x 42.6 mm.
  • Sheets: 10 stamps
Visit Singapore Post‘s online shop.
Notes
1. 2010, Upcoming issues, Singapore Post website. Consulted 25/Apr/10.

26 May 2010

June’s Activities: Move on!

A gently reminder to this month activities. Move on!!!
Date Name Type Place
4-Jun to 6-Jun PIPEX 2010 Exhibition Spokane, Washington, USA
4-Jun to 6-Jun NAPEX Exhibition McLean, Virginia, USA
12-Jun to 20-Jun Salon de Timbre 2010 Exhibition Paris, France
16-Jun Strand Stamp Fair Stamp Fair London, England

10 May 2010

Issue of the week ~ Switzerland: World Circus Geneva 2010

Do you remember your first visit to the circus? Were you so entranced by the acrobats and performing animals that you wondered where the time had gone? A visit to the circus often makes a lasting impression. In a nutshell: it is a spectacle for young and old alike.

There is much more to the circus than "just" a big top, a circus ring and sawdust, though. This year Geneva plays host to this diverse and colourful world. The "World Circus Geneva 2010" events series showcases the circus through a variety of cultural media. Dance and theatre performances, operas, art exhibitions and cinema matinees are planned – all with a touch of circus flair. One of the highlights will be the Geneva Festival, with its traditional fireworks dedicated to the circus ring. Artists from 65 countries will be taking part in the "World Circus Geneva 2010" throughout the year.

Swiss Post is delighted to join in this circus event and is issuing a new special stamp with a "circus look." The stamp, with a face value of CHF 1.40, shows a circus from an unusual angle: It presents a worm's eye view, with the tip of the big top resembling a clown's face.

Technical details
  • Date of issue: 6/May/2010
  • Printing process:
  • Stamp size:
  • Sheets: 20 stamps
Visit Swiss Post‘s online shop.

Notes
1. 2010, Philately & Stamps News, Swiss Post website. Consulted 25/Apr/10.

07 May 2010

Cancellation on PHILALUX 2010

The Organising Committee have announced that the international stamp exhibition and fair PHILALUX 2010 will be postponed to 2011 and will be renamed PHILALUX 2011. The new date for the exhibition will be from April 28 to May 1th 2011.

04 May 2010

Spectacular Auction: Siegel auctioning the Steven C. Walske Collection of special mail routes of the American Civil War

Special mail routes were used to exchange letters in the Confederate States of America (C.S.A.) and those across the military lines or frontiers separating the Confederacy from the rest of the world. These routes developed because the C.S.A. was almost completely surrounded militarily by the United States of America (U.S.), and an important Federal war strategy was to cut off all outside communications with the C.S.A.. These routes were used for mail between the C.S.A. and the U.S., for mail between parts of the C.S.A. separated by Federal military activities, and for mail between the Confederacy and other countries.
Postal history is the study of postal routes, rates, frankings and markings from a particular historical period. The best postal history reference sources are official postal regulations and documentation, such as instructions to postmasters or post office communications. However, the official record is invariably incomplete, so a census of covers relevant to the period can fill in the gaps by showing patterns of postal usages. The combination of a census with postal documentation, historical events and geography can be used to accurately re-create the details of a mail delivery system. This is the approach employed in the formation of this collection and in writing the related book, Special Mail Routes of the American Civil War: A Guide to Across-the-Lines Postal History by Steven C. Walske and Scott R. Trepel (referred to throughout this catalogue as Special Routes).


This collection is organized according to the routes used for across-the-lines mail. This represents a different perspective on the subject, and has resulted in new insights on how the mail was handled. For example, traditional studies have examined prisoner-of-war (P.O.W.) mail from the perspective of the prisons themselves, while this collection arranges the covers according to the routes which carried P.O.W. mail to or from those prisons. Similarly, covers reflecting new discoveries and significant insights are offered for the first time with respect to suspended mail routes, blockade-run mail, trans-Rio Grande mail, and private express mail.
The Civil War began slowly with the peaceful secession of South Carolina on December 20, 1860. At the time, most Americans assumed that the conflict would be resolved relatively quickly and peacefully. Virtually no one could project the four-year bloody struggle that ensued.
South Carolina’s path out of the Union was quickly followed by Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia and Louisiana. Each of these states acted separately, and their status after secession was as independent states. However, the official stance of the U.S. was that these states were still part of the Union. As such, these independent states continued to use the U.S. postal system for mail within each state and to or from external addresses.
Mail sent in the U.S. postal system between these states and the U.S. during their independent state periods should not be considered across-the-lines mail, since there were no impediments to the trans- mission of the mails prior to the suspension of U.S. postal service in the South. Nonetheless, postal uses during the independent state periods are popular with collectors because of the short timeframes (as few as six days in the case of North Carolina) that they were in effect.
Throughout this period, the U.S. continued to operate the C.S.A.’s postal system, but many postal routes between the U.S. and the C.S.A. had to be abandoned due to armed conflict and the threat that the ships, trains or wagons used to transport the mail would be confiscated. The most significant example of this was the closure of the primary north-south postal route which ran between Washington, D.C. and Richmond by the U.S. military occupation of Alexandria, Virginia, on May 24, 1861.
Mail continued to be exchanged along the other major north-south postal route between Tennessee and Louisville until June 1861. Private express companies also carried small amounts of letter mail between the C.S.A. and the U.S. during the February to May 1861 period that the U.S. postal system was still operating in the C.S.A.. Their service supplemented the regular post office service.
The U.S. postal service in the C.S.A. was finally suspended on May 31, 1861, four months after the formation of the C.S.A.. After this suspension, the regular north-south post office routes were replaced by a complex array of special mail routes that expanded as the war grew in intensity and duration. Because of the difficulty and danger in getting mail across enemy lines, many of these routes show great ingenuity, and most carried only small amounts of mail. These special routes fall into the following seven categories, and the collection presented is arranged accordingly:
  1. Suspension of the U.S. Post Office Across-the-Lines Routes (May 1861 until early July 1861) during a transitional period as the Federal government completed the suspension of the regular pre-war Post Office routes between the northern states and the seceded states.
  2. Private Express Company Routes (February 1861 to June 1865) were used to supplement the regular U.S. post office service, and to carry mail within the C.S.A.. Mail carried between the U.S. and C.S.A. prior to June 1861 is not considered to have crossed the lines because there were no obstacles to the transmission of the mail. This special mail service temporarily filled the void created by the discontinu- ance of the U.S. post office across-the-lines routes, but ended with the August 26, 1861 U.S. ban on all communications with the C.S.A..
  3. Flag-of-Truce Routes (September 1861 to June 1865) were maintained by both governments for the benefit of prisoners of war (P.O.W.), and a limited number of civilians. Mail was exchanged at a number of locations, but principally in southeastern Virginia. This mail service did not evolve until regular communication between North and South was prohibited. P.O.W. and parole camp mail which did not cross the lines is included to provide a full treatment of P.O.W. mail.
  4. Trans-Mississippi Routes (April 1862 to April 1865) were used by both private and C.S.A. post office trans-Mississippi expresses after Union control of the Mississippi River in 1862 cut the Confederacy into eastern and western halves. Communication between the separated parts of the C.S.A. required new special mail routes to bypass the Union blockade along the Mississippi River.
  5. Covert Mail Routes (September 1861 to June 1865) were maintained by a number of private across-the- lines mail systems which typically used inland waterways to cross the lines.
  6. Blockade-Runner Routes (May 1862 through May 1865) connected the Confederacy with neutral West Indies ports, and were used by Confederate steamships to penetrate the Federal blockade of the Southern coastline.
  7. Trans-Rio Grande Routes (July 1861 to June 1865) were maintained between Texas and Mexico, and were used to circumvent the Federal blockade.

Source
1. "The Steven C. Walske Collection of special mail routes of the American Civil War". Sale 988. Robert A. Siegel. New York, US, 2010.

03 May 2010

Issue of the week ~ Spain: 100 años de la Gran Vía de Madrid

The Gran Vía is one of the main streets of Madrid from an urban planning, social, economic and cultural point of view and this year commemorates its 100 anniversary. It was on April 4th 2010 when king Alfonso XIII inaugurated the construction works.
In the mid 19th century, Madrid's urban planners decided that a new thoroughfare had to be created, connecting the northeast to the city centre. However it wasn’t until 1861 when the Town Hall decided on building an alternative road to the congested Puerta del Sol with new open spaces and representative buildings. It wasn’t until 1866 that the project drafted by Carlos Velasco was approved and the first expropriations took place but the many difficulties that arose prevented the plan to be implemented. In 1895, the Ley de Saneamiento, Reforma y Ensanche Interior cleared the way for this project to come into force as it was declared of public utility. Three years later, with the Count of Romanones as mayor of Madrid, the project was undertaken by municipal architects López Salaberri and Andrés Octavio and was finally approved in 1904. The project comprised three stretches and the first one began en 1910. The third one was finished by the end of the 20’s although some buildings were built later on.
The Gran Vía, besides being a major communications axis of Madrid, is an ornate and upscale shopping street located in the city centre. This lively street is one of the Madrid’s most important shopping areas, with a large number of hotels, cinemas and theaters; it is also noted for the grand architecture prevalent among many of its buildings such as the Metrópolis, the Grassy, La Estrella, the Círculo de la Unión Mercantil e Industrial, Casa Matesanz, Telefónica, Madrid-Paris, Palacio de la Música, Palacio de la Prensa, Capitol and Coliseum amongst others. The stamp depicts one of the most popular views of the Gran Vía.
Technical details
  • Date of issue: 21/Apr/2010
  • Printing process: Offset
  • Stamp size: 28.8 mm. x 40.9 mm.
  • Sheets: 25 stamps
Visit Correos de España's online shop.


Notes
1. 2010, 100 años de la Gran Vía de Madrid, Correos de España website. Consulted 25/Apr/10.