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Spain 1964, The Creator of the Peace, finds things not so peaceful

There are a lot of reasons not to like Franco, a claudillo who actually relished the term. Yet this stamp succinctly makes the case for him. He ended the bloody civil war and managed the not easy task of staying out of World War II. Franco understood the value of peace to the average citizen while his opponents constantly upsetting the peace through assassinations. Even in death, Franco cannot rest in peace. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

This stamp is a little more elaborate than the bulk mail Franco issue of the time. 10 Pasetas was high valuation and so we get more colors, a subdued military uniform and his best political slogan presented as a truth. Of course that on a stamp during a politician’s lifetime is a pretty good indicator of a dictatorship.

Today stamp is issue A302, a 10 Pesetas stamp issued by Spain on April Fools Day 1964. It was a 14 stamp issue, this the only one with Franco, celebrating 25 years since the end of the Spanish Civil War. We are now past the 50th and 75th anniversary of the end of the Civil War, No stamps, don’t want to talk of Franco. Trump will have this trouble after he is gone. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 55 cents unused.

Peace has to be the greatest achievement of Franco. Right after the end of the Civil War ended in 1939 World War II started. After France fell in 1940 to Franco’s German friends, Hitler had his eye on Gibraltar the British colony controlling access to the Mediterranean. Operation Felix was formulated that would have seen 2 German Corps pass through Spain. The plan assumed a British response of landing in Portugal followed by a German invasion of Portugal from Spain. Napoleon all over again for the Iberian peninsula. Refusing Hitler could not have been easy but saved Spain.

Lets give Franco a little more of his due. Franco could always point to assassinations carried out by the Left that disturbed the peace. Remember the Spanish Civil War started not when the left won the 1936 election. Jose Calvo Sotelo was the leader of the Right in opposition. He was assassinated leaving a void for Franco to fill and galvanizing the right.

The next assassination to talk about was then Prime Minister Luis Carrero Blanco in 1973. He was attempting to return from Mass when his car, a Dodge 3700, was car bombed. Franco was fading by then  and the Prime Minister was running things day to day. An aside, as car buffs might guess from the name, a Dodge 3700 was a license made Dodge Dart with a slant 6 225 engine. A fairly modest vehicle for a Prime Minister!

Dodge 3700 by now defunct Barreiros. It does look bigger in a Spanish setting

The third disturbing of the peace happened only last year. After Franco won the Civil War he created a “Valley of the Fallen”, to honor the fallen of both sides. As the left doesn’t want to remember a war they lost, it became a center of remembrance for the right side of politics. Indeed Franco himself was laid to rest there. During left wing administrations the complex was usually closed. The current lefty government decided to go further and have Franco’s tomb desecrated and moved by government action. People are more peaceful now, but how could that not galvanize the political right in Spain.

Valley of the Fallen

Well my drink is empty and Franco is too much a mixed bag to toast. I am still thirsty though so perhaps a toast to 25 years of peace. The next 25. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.