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Tristan da Cunha 1987, Remembering castaways hunting sea Elephants for food on Inaccessible Island

You don’t usually see the actual animal being taken down on the rare hunting stamp. When it is the survivors of a shipwreck on an unoccupied island and the prey is a 10 foot tall, 7000 pound sea elephant and the picture is recreated from the account in a survivor’s journal, you are getting a fairly evocative stamp. 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.

Tristan da Cunha was clearly having a good time telling the stories of their shipwrecks through postage stamps. Well there often is a good story to be learned from stamp collecting.  There were 9 stamps out over a three year period telling the story of a different ship wreck.

Todays stamp is issue A60, an 11 Penny stamp issued Issued by Tristan da Cunha, a Dependency of the British Overseas Territory of Saint Helena on April 2nd, 1987. The 1987 tranche of the issue included 3 stamps of various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 55 cents whether used or unused.

Tristan da Cunha is a small volcanic island in the South Atlantic lying on the old east India trade route. It has a population of about 300 many of whom are descendants of the survivors of log ago shipwrecks. There are several completely unoccupied islands nearby including Inaccessible Island that the survivors of the Blenden Hall found themselves marooned on in 1821 after the ship hit underwater rocks.

The Blenden Hall was built in 1811 as a 450 ton armed merchantmen with a crew of 28. In 1813 she set off on a run to Bermuda with three other merchantmen ships and a Royal Navy frigate as this was during the Napoleonic Wars. After a night of of bad weather the cargo ships lost sight of their escort. Soon however they found the French frigate Clorinde. All four ships were taken and their crews were put aboard the merchantman Lusitania and allowed to sail back to England. The French than sank two other ships but in their rush to depart they left Blenden Hall adrift. A British packet ship named Eliza found the ship and put a prize crew of 10 to sail it back to England. Bad weather again struck and Blendon Hall lost sight of Eliza. Then HMS Challenger, a brig, spotted Blendon Hall  and placed it’s own prize crew on it for it’s return to Plymouth. Coincidentally the ship and it’s formally prisoner crew arrived at Plymouth the same day. Ashore there was a court case  between the Eliza crew and the Challenger crew over the prize. The court decided with the Eliza crew as they were on the ship first and the Challenger crewmen were unnecessary to get the ship back to port.

In 1814 the ship changed hands and began to be employed in India trade. In 1821 it was in the south Atlantic ocean making for Bombay with a crew of 24 and carrying 28 passengers including 5 women and three children. The ship struck rocks off Inaccessible Island and two of the ships sailors drowned swimming ashore. The group was stuck on the island for four months. A makeshift raft was constructed and five men set out for Tristan. They were never heard from again. A second raft was constructed and three men this time made it to Tristan. Tristan then sent out two ships to rescue the remainder. After two more months on Tristan a British sloop arrived that was willing to take the survivors to Cape Town. A man and a women from the Blenden Hall  elected to stay on Tristan.

The cottage the survivors were allowed to use on Tristan after their rescue

While on Inaccessible Island, the group ate fish, bird’s eggs and seal meat. Sea Elephants are the largest form of seal. They are still native to the South Atlantic and not endangered. Their genus was not established until several years after the events of 1821 so one can imagine the survivors had no idea what these giant animals were.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour a few more for the survivors, the fallen, and of course the rescuers of the Blenden Hall and also the sea elephants. Come again on Monday when there will be another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

 

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Germany 2011, Remembering Loriot for Wum the talking dog and yodeling diplomas

The idea of putting dignified people in absurd situations and watching them getting flustered is often comic gold. Perhaps less so now as we gradually run out of the dignified. 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.

Talking of this stamp issue is dangerous. The issue appeared shortly before cartoonist Loriot died in 2011. In 2012, his daughter sued those on the internet displaying images of the German stamps. She won, and got a large settlement from the German language Wikipedia. I think I am okay with my wife having taken a picture of a stamp in my personal collection. If not Ms. von Bulow, let me know and I will pull the article down. If the estate didn’t want there to be a series of stamps honoring your late father however, surely the time to act was before they came out.

Todays stamp is issue SP475, a 45 Euro cents +20 cent semi postal stamp issued by Germany on January 3rd, 2011. It was a four stamp issue in various denominations. Those dignified readers out there will be happy to know that I don’t have the one with the cartoon depiction of two naked men in a bathtub. According to the Scott Catalog, the stamp is worth $1.90 whether used or unused.

Vicco von Bulow was born into an aristocratic Prussian family in 1923. After wartime service and university training in graphic design, no not yodeling but really not that far off, he began work as a cartoonist in 1950. His work was released under the name Loriot. This is based on the French word for the oriole bird as it appears on von Bulow’s family crest.

His greatest success came in the 1970s when he created the character of Wum, a talking dog who becomes the mascot of a German protest organization. Wum was voiced by Loriot himself when he got a radio show. Wum/Loriot had a German pop hit in 1972 with the dog singing “I wish I had a little kitty cat” in a half sung/half spoken style called Spechgesang. In 1976 the characters got a German television show that went back and forth between skits acted by Loriot and cartoons drawn by him. among the more famous skits were the protest organization demanding equal treatment of man and women. even if means suckling babies temporarily lose weight. Cue the Cartoon a a baby trying to suckle a man. Another features a bored housewife goes back to an iffly credentialled college to get a diploma in yodeling, convinced that such a waste of time credential will change her lot in life.

You can probably gather this type of thing is not my cup of tea. To each his own. These people who pretend to mock the comfortable when they are really on the inside just protecting them from the notion that it is their charge is to maintain standards in order to prevent the sinking into depravity.

Well my drink is empty and so I will have to wait until tomorrow when there will be another story to be learned from stamp collecting.

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New Zealand 1994, Fonzie jumped the shark, and now stamps get holograms

Fonzie was supposed to be a cool character on 70s tv. He rode a motorcycle and wore a leather jacket. To emphasize how cool he was, there would be motorcycle jumps in the 70s style of Eival Kinevil. In a late season they had Fonzie jump a shark while water skiing. The country reacted strongly that Fonzie was no longer cool but had made himself silly. This matches putting holograms on stamps as New Zealand did in 1994. 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

My stamp is unused so I get to see the hologram in all its glory. You can’t because how could the 3 dimensional effect be photographed. If the stamp was mailed, the cancellation might well blot out the hologram. Further when the collector soaks the used stamp off the envelope, the hologram will be damaged. All a long way of saying that the designers were probably thinking more about wowing each other that interesting the stamp collector. Notice also that the moon landing anniversary being recognized has nothing to do with New Zealand.

Todays stamp is issue A388, a $1.50 stamp issued by New Zealand on July 20th, 1994. It was a single stamp issue remembering the first moon landing by the USA 25 years earlier. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth $2.25 unused.

Holograms were invented in 1960 as a way for a two dimensional image to have a three dimensional effect. A laser beam is split before projecting an image onto film so the image comes from two perspectives. This is indeed how it was done on the first stamps but now the effect can be achieved by computer software more recently. Holograms are very useful in securing currency and credit cards. If stamps required a small one in the corner to avoid fakes, my objections would drop away.

How a hologram is achieved

Austria was first with a stamp with a holographic image in 1988. Over 80 countries have now issued over 450 stamps with holograms. Most of the images are outer space themed. The fad seems to have peaked around the millennium. The stamps are obviously more expensive to print so usually show up on a special issues related to a stamp show. For example, the denomination on this stamp at $1.50 was over three times the going rate to mail a letter in New Zealand at the time, which was 45 cents.

Well my drink is empty and sorry if my take on this stuff annoyed you. Some collectors are quite excited about new technology being adopted to postage stamps. If I thought  the hobby would be saved by involving children I might agree. A big push for kids to collect occurred around World War II. The biggest effect of this is many high end collectors use that war as a cut off date for their collections. It is my belief that the hobbies’ best chance is educated, well travelled mature men who find themselves under utilized by economic and family dislocations. These days many such people are of mixed background so there are often multiple places for whom they feel an affinity. My guess the best way to attract them to the hobby is to assume they are serious people. Come again tomorrow when there will be another story to be learned from stamp collecting.