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Ireland 1943, Douglas Hyde a pleasant little branch, allows the normies to take over an independent Ireland

There was a big movement to get southern Ireland out of the United Kingdom. How to accomplish that without acquiring a new master in the form of the Catholic church was the challenge. Choosing the son of an Anglican Vicar as the first President was a way to walk that line. 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 is a strange stamp. At the time Douglas Hyde was the sitting President of Ireland. Yet the stamp was in recognition of his founding of the Gaelic League 60 years previous. Yes he was quite old. The Presidency was under the Irish constitution of the day was vague on whether the ceremonial post was actually Head of State or whether that was the British King. A stamp showing him above politics was a not so subtle hint that he really was the Head of State.

Todays stamp is issue A16, a half penny stamp issued by Ireland on July 31st, 1943. It was a two stamp issue in different denominations. According to the Scott Catalog, the stamp is worth $1 used.

Douglas Hyde was born in Ireland in 1860 the son of a Church of Ireland (Anglican) Vicar. In is teen years, he befriended a local Irish game keeper. What especially fascinated was the Roscommon form of the Gaelic language that the game keeper spoke and was getting quite rare. He bucked family tradition by studying languages and literature at Trinity University instead of going into the church.

As a member of the Literary Society, Hyde created quite a stir. Under the pen name “A pleasant little branch” he published poetry in Gaelic. Then he went further publishing a manifesto on The Necessity of Deanglicizing the Irish Nation. This argued the Irish were in much danger or loosing their language, literature, style of dress, music and dance if measures weren’t taken to preserve it. This got this discussion going among a high brow group less political and less Catholic.

Hyde then became a cofounder of the Gaelic League to do the above. He tried to keep the group apolitical but was forced out during the Irish troubles as by then politics and religion were front and center.

The Gaelic Society’s early emblem

 

After Ireland formed the Free State, people remembered and respected Hyde and invited him to run and win a seat in the upper chamber of the legislature. After one term, the Catholic Church started a disinformation push to remove people like Hyde from power. The accused him of  being in favor of divorce. He had a life long marriage. He lost his seat and returned to academia humiliated.

In 1937 there was a new constitution that devolved further from Britain and created a ceremonial office of President. The two rival political parties agreed on offering the Presidency to Hyde. He seemed a good choice. There were those that felt Ireland was a confessional state that was a tool of the Catholic Church. Having an Anglican President would diffuse that. Being near 80, it was also thought there would be less threat that he would attempt to become or allow Prime Minister to become a dictator. He was also a learned man who would be taken seriously on the world stage. There was much fanfare around the world in 1938 when Hyde was inaugurated. The exception was in Great Britain where it was thought to be a personal slight to the King.

Despite suffering a stroke and the loss of his wife, Hyde was able to serve a full seven year term as President. He was able to keep Ireland neutral through World War II. The level of anti British feelings were still high and came out on the very last days of the war upon the news of the death of Adolph Hitler. Politicians of many parties up to and including  Douglas Hyde met with Nazi German Ambassador Eduard Hempel to offer the condolences of the Irish people. They found the German distraught and wringing his hands in anguish. Hempel’s wife Eva later claimed it was just that his eczema acting up.

President Hyde (seated) offers condolences to German Ambassador Hempel on the death of Adolph Hitler.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast at least the non political version of the Gaelic Society. Who isn’t a fan of Irish culture? Come again next Monday when there will be another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. Happy New Year!

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Japan 1963, Don’t call it a pre Olympics

Japan was very excited to host the 1964 Summer Olympics. To make sure they were ready, The country decided on a dry run, a pre Olympics to try out logistics and venues. The International Olympic Committee said they don’t do pre Olympics, so this became the Tokyo International Sports Meet. 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.

The Japanese stamp issues around the 1964 definitely give off a Japanese feel with the color choices. Showing the athletes as individuals instead of as part of teams is an interesting choice and I think comports with the original Olympic ideal of a countries best having a chance to show that individually.

Todays stamp is issue A507, a 10 Yen stamp issued by Japan on October 11th, 1963, the first day of the international sports meet. It was a single stamp issue. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents whether used or unused.

Tokyo was originally scheduled to host the 1940 Summer Olympics that did not end up happening. Remember Tokyo was also to host the 2020 games that also didn’t come off. In preparation for the 1940 games, many venues were constructed and were ready  for the 1964 games. Japan worried they were not and so wanted a dry run. The International meet was scheduled exactly a year before to match weather and Japanese diplomats sought out prominent athletes from around the world for an expense paid trip to Tokyo.

Japan was very worried about traffic between the hotel hosting the athletes and the spread out venues but extra traffic cops with simple placards reading stop and go worked very well.

The weather was also a worry. It was thought that Tokyo was too hot in actual summertime to host the Olympics and September was typhoon season so October was chosen. Typhoons were the nightmare of the organizers. On the first day of the meet, Typhoon Kit was heading toward Japan and the weather was already wet and windy. There were two more typhoons behind Kit named Lola and Mamie. Thankfully one by one the typhoons changed course and left the games with nice weather.

At the Daiichi Hotel where the international athletes stayed Japan had arraigned for thirteen house detectives to keep the male athletes off the female athlete’s floor. They were not completely successful. 15 year old Swedish swimmer Elisabeth Ljunggren announced that she had fallen in love with 21 year old German swimmer Hans Joachim Klein. He then said that though of course he liked her, he would not describe their relationship as love. Whatever it was, both athletes won gold medals.

Elisabeth Ljunggren at the meet

It was quite an effort to bring in the world athletes. At the 1952 games in Melbourne Australian Harold Conally hammer thrower had fallen for a Czech discus thrower named Olga. By 1963 they were married, raising a family in Finland. The Japanese delegation visited them in their home to try to get them to  participate in the 1963 meet. Harold was still in competitive form. Olga was embarrassed when she was also invited. She told the Japanese delegation that she was no longer in competitive form so it would be wrong for her to go on the free trip to Tokyo. The Japanese discussed it and said that Olga, as a famous Olympic gold medalist should come anyway and tour Japanese schools exercising with the children  while her husband competed. She went and it was the impetus for Olga to get back into shape for the 1964 Olympics.

The Conollys in Tokyo

The dry run went off quite well. The ceremonies were timed to the minute except the opening ceremonies running three minutes late. In the dry run for the dry run, the dignitaries had been impersonated  by school children and the the children proved faster at getting off the stands for the march out.

Well my drink is empty and heres hoping that the reschedule of the Tokyo Olympics is able to come off. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting

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Saudi Arabia 1987, Saudi Arabia beefs up help for the disabled

In the first years after a windfall, the stamps of a country often show shiny new buildings and factories. When the income proves long lived, we get to see stamps like this, where a society grapples with providing extra help to those among them left behind. A while back, I did an American stamp from the early seventies like that, see https://the-philatelist.com/2017/10/16/how-honoring-challenged-children-can-go-very-wrong/    . Today we can compare what was being done in Saudi Arabia a decade later. 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.

There are too many emblems on this stamp. While some help is directly coming from the government and some is routed though non government organizations that rely on the philanthropy of the Royal family, in Saudi Arabia that is really the same thing. At first glance of this stamp, you might think that Saudis have to rely on the UN for such aid as do poor countries. You can’t let the people think that, especially if it is not true. Where is the King on this stamp?

Todays stamp is issue A217, a 50 Halalas stamp issued by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia on October 3rd, 1987. It was a two stamp issue in different denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth $1.10 unused.

The idea that the disabled are worthy of dignity and help to live a useful life in Arabia dates back to the Quran and the story of Abd-Allah ibn Umm-Maktum. He was a blind man and an early convert to Mohammed. He once approached Mohammed with a question while he was preaching to tribal chiefs in Mecca. Mohammed was annoyed at the interruption until he was rebuked by Allah for not showing extra kindness to the blind man. From then on Umm-Maktum was shown the appropriate accommodation and he responded by volunteering to fight in the 636 AD battle of Qadisiyya were he was a standard bearer and was killed. Apparently Shias don’t interpret this story the same way.

The blind man goes into battle, carrying the flag

In modern times, a high proportion of Saudis face the challenges of a disability. A partial reason for this is the extremely common practice of marrying a first cousin. For males the most common cause of a disability is having been in a car accident. For females, depression grips as many as 46% of them.

Saudi Arabia has over time sought to do more for the disabled. Starting in 1958 children with disabilities were allowed to go to school. By 1962, programs were started to give them extra help once there. In 1972, it was decided to provide a monthly stipend to the disabled tied to them participating in vocational programs. There are now over 350 day care centers in the Kingdom to allow loved ones a break from the care.

In 1992, Saudi Arabia went farther to combat and prevent disabilities. Former Astronaut Prince Sultan founded the King Salmon Center for Disabilities Research. In addition to research, the center funds screenings for unborn babies for 16 different disorders.

Prince Salman is now King

There are those that say that enough is not yet being done. They point to the separate medical facilities for females that are not always accessible and the stigma still attached to mental disabilities.

 

This disabled beggar at Mt. Arafat needs help and perhaps a janitor

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

 

 

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Central African Empire 1977, The Movement for the Social Evolution of Black Africa want you to know more about Charles Lindbergh

When crazy stuff is happening in a country, why do the outsourced stamp makers bother with Charles Lindbergh. Talk about a lost opportunity, 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 is surprisingly a real stamp. It was an issue of aviation pioneers that have some French connection. So here we have Charles Lindbergh’s plane The Spirit of Saint Louis landing in Paris having crossed the Atlantic. What does that from 50 years before have to do with the Central African Empire?

Todays stamp is issue A96, a 50 Franc stamp issued by the Central African Empire on September 30th, 1977. It was a five stamp issue in various denominations that was also available as a souvenir sheet. according to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents cancelled to order. The souvenir sheet is worth $6 unless you let them cancel it which sends the value down to $2.

The Movement for the Social Evolution of Black Africa was formed in 1949 during the French Colonial Period. It had offices in Ubangui in the then Ubangi Chari colony, Brazzaville in the French Congo and Fort Lamy in Chad. It’s goal was to unite all the black people of the world and replace racism, tribalism, and colonialism with cooperation and fraternity. So get rid of the French but do it in a way modeled on the French Revolution. The Party won a majority in the elections at the end of the colonial period and took power as Ubangi Chari became the Central African Republic.

Emblem of the Movement for the Social Evolution of Black Africa

Right before the ascending to power, the movements leader Barthelemy Boganda died in a suspicious plane crash that many in the country blame on his white wife. Wives usually use poison. Anyway the movement found a new leader and nephew named David Draco who proved ineffectual. The country had some potential as the population was small but the country was well endowed with diamonds. Foolishly the movement sought fraternity with the Israelis to handle the diamonds and so that was where the profits went.

The movement was not satisfied and so supported the coup of Cornel Bokassa, the commander of the 500 man Army. The Movement was not having much luck achieving fraternity and cooperation in the country. Bokassa had a plan though. At a Movement meeting, he was declared Emperor Bokassa I and the Central African Republic became the Central African Empire. There followed an expensive Coronation modeled on Napoleons’.

His Imperial Majesty Emperor Bokassa I

This was the time of Amin in Uganda and the fellow in Equatorial Guinea who changed his title to the “Unique Miracle” so Africa was turning into a bad joke. The French were getting nervous at what was happening. In 1979 there was a riot at an important school in Bangui. The students resented having to buy expensive uniforms with Emporer Bokassa’s image on them and sold by a company owned by Her Imperial Majesty one of Bokassa’s 15 wives/Empresses. After rocks were thrown at the Emperor’s Rolls Royce many of the children were arrested. Here the story gets a little rough and unproven. Some of the children were beaten to death and then had their flesh consumed by the Emperor in the Palace. Soon the French launched Operation Barracuda that landed French troops flown in from Chad and Gabon and bloodlessly reinstalled former President Draco. Bokassa went into exile in Gabon. The Movement for the Social Liberation of Black Africa was disbanded a few months later.

The Central African Republic is still a sad and poor place. They have not completely given up bad habits though. Emperor Bokassa I’s son his Imperial Majesty Jean-Serge Bokassa is Interior Minister and has been a Presidential candidate.

Well my drink is empty. Come again tomorrow when there will be another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

 

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USA 1893, A Columbian Exposition brings the worlds eyes on Chicago

Coming up on the 400th anniversary of the voyage of Christopher Columbus, America thought it a great time to celebrate it with a World’s Fair. They further decided to hold it in the west in Chicago to display how far things had come on the “frontier”. 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.

First we should take a little time with this stamp issue. In my opinion a masterpiece of a stamp issue. Rather than just show the World’s Fair. Instead we get a 15 stamp issue taking us through the history of Columbus’s negotiations with Queen Isabella, the highs of the first landing, the difficulties of the new colonies, the lows of Columbus being returned in chains to Spain and even the redemption he experienced in Barcelona late in life when people realized the magnitude of what Columbus accomplished. All this from 1893 when most stamps were royal portraits.

Todays stamp is issue A72, a 2 cent stamp issued by the USA in 1893. It was a 15 stamp issue with denominations as high as $5,( at least $132 in todays money, the CPI calculator only went back to 1913. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 40 cents used. High values in the set seem to stick with unused, never hinged copies especially the few imperforates and those with no gum. The $5 stamp is up at $9500.

It was an ambition of the USA to host a World’s Fair comparable with earlier ones in London and Paris. An earlier one in Philadelphia was unsuccessful. The Columbus anniversary was the excuse and Congress had to decide between bids from New York City, Chicago, and Saint Louis. Financial packages were heavily considered and it was quite the effort but Chicago outbid New York. It was also argued that Chicago had more space, cleaner air, and better represented a country whose center of gravity wasthen moving west.

Chicago also had a great advantage of new urban architects including Daniel Barnham  and Fredrick James Almsted to work on the project. They designed a beau arts style “White City” with a large reflecting pool representing Columbus’s ocean journey. There were 42 pavilions displaying different countries and record producer Sol Bloom designed an amusement park for the kids.

The Reflecting pool and the temporary buildings of the Fair

The fair started as a success. One of the displays was a “street in Cairo” that featured America’s first belly dancer doing the suggestive dance called the Hokky Pokki. The dancer was known as Little Egypt and was really from Syria and married to a local Greek restaurateur. The tune she moved to was composed by Sol Bloom and is today known as the Snake Charmers song.

Dancer known as Little Egypt doing the Hokie Pockey

The Fair ended early after the mayor was assassinated and it was thought more appropriate for the fair to close early. Surprisingly given the time, the Mayor wasn’t killed by an anarchist but a crazy man who thought that railroads were killing too many people at crossings and the Mayor should have fixed it. Clarence Darrow took the assassins’ case hoping to have him declared insane. The prosecution pointed out that he had loaded his revolver for safety by not having a bullet in the first chamber showing a right mind. It was one of Clarence Darrow’s few trial losses.

You can probably gather that the fair would not pass the smell test of the modern politically correct. Even in the period, black civil rights leader Fredrick Douglas wrote a pamphlet complaining that black people’s contributions to Columbus were being ignored. In more modern times the tact changed. Now the idea of an idealized white city is thought racist. The country pavilions were recast as freak shows. Special attention was directed at the Woman’s Pavilion which had a display of woman made Indian, Samoan, and African crafts under the banner of “Woman’s work in savagery”.

The powers that be in Chicago have changed a little since 1893. The Mayor is now a mixed Indian/African American lesbian named Lori Lightfoot. Earlier this year she authorized the removal of the Christopher Columbus statues in Chicago.

Chicago removing statue of Columbus in the middle of the night between protests.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast the people who put fairs together that celebrate progress or perhaps spill it on people that would take it all down. Come again on Monday when there will be another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

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Argentina 1947, Seeking World Peace with children, race car drivers and rainbows

Staying out of a world war is a good way to avoid domestic suffering and even make a little money because both sides will be buying whatever you are selling. What happens after the war when the winning side thinks you a shirker. Time to start a charm offensive. 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 celebrates a Crusade for world peace organized by Peronist Argentina through the schools. There have been stamps like this from east and west and north and south for decades. Look at the iconography of this one. You can almost understand American feelings that there was something off about the Argentines.

Todays stamp is issue A209, a 20 Centavo stamp issued by Argentina in 1947. It was a two stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents used. There is an imperforate version that is worth $10.

Juan Peron was elected President of Argentina defeating a political party called the radical civic union. The radical civic union were nicknamed the oxi-morons of should have been. He faced a severe foreign policy challenge. The USA was angry at Argentina for sitting out the war. How to punish Argentina was the question as there were large American investments in Argentina and the country bought a lot of the USA’s manufactured good exports. The Americans decided on a three prong strategy against Argentina. The would form a security pact with the rest of Latin America that excluded Argentina. They excluded Argentina from the international debt market. Argentine agricultural products were also excluded from the Marshal aid plan, which was how Europe was paying  for the food they were importing.

What was Peron to do? His Foreign Minister Juan Bramulgia favored giving in to American domination. Evita Peron had earlier asked for and was refused Bramulgia’s legal help earlier when Peron had been arrested. Now with him preaching subservience, Evita got her revenge and convinced Peron to fire him. To replace the agricultural exports lost, Peron opened relations and trade with the USSR. The closed foreign financial markets proved a boon. Peron was able to sell bonds on the domestic market that kept the money in the country.

This still left Peron isolated. He decided on a charm offensive. He funded the hosting of international sports competitions in Argentina. Where he found athletic talent, they were funded so they be at their best on the international stage. This included the race car driver Juan Manuel Fangio who won 5 world championships, and boxer Jose Atlio Gatica. Both paid a price later. Gatica was arrested and forced to retire after dedicating a victory to Peron after he was overthrown. Fangio was kidnapped by Castro in Cuba in 1957.

Race driver Fangio in his Mercedes W196 race car

He then decided on a charm offensive in Europe. Evita would go on an elaborate European tour that emphasized her glamour. Time magazine in the USA dubbed it the Rainbow Tour. The USA pressured Europe not to receive her and when that was only partially successful, the USA arraigned some dirty tricks for her in Switzerland. While waving to friendly crowds from her car, suddenly the windshield was broken by thrown rocks. Later while meeting with the Swiss Foreign Minister three tomatoes came her way. They connected more with the Foreign Minister, but Evita was humiliated and flew home early. At least the time in Paris enhanced her sense of style.

A last dance with the Swiss Minister before the tomatoes flew

Peron was not completely able to break out of American isolation but neither was the USA able to starve off the Argentine economy which grew by leaps and bounds in this period. Sometimes kicking the can is all that can be achieved.

Well my drink is empty and I probably should toast the fresh faced kids for peace on the stamps. I won’t, kids like this are being used as tools because they cannot be argued with. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

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Great Britain 1984, The College of Arms, grants and occasionally takes away a Coat of Arms

The College of Arms is something that many want not to exist. In Britain it receives no government funds. Before you say why should it, think of some on the long list that do receive government funds. In Australia the government recognized that many Australians sought British Heraldic recognition of their families, but said the College of Arms had no more authority than a graphic art studio to grant one. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of an adult beverage and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

Though I liked that Britain still thought to do a stamp issue on heraldry in 1984, I don’t agree with how they did it. They seem to be trying to imply the College’s work is a function of the government, such as including the Arms of the City of London. If the government is doing something, it implies inherently that it could decide to stop. The College’s future might be more secure the more the government thought it not their concern. For this issue, why not instead show some of the wild things that get into Coats of Arms, it might inspire young and old to research the process.

Todays stamp is issue A326, a 16 Pence stamp issued by Great Britain on January 17th, 1984. It was a four stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents used.

In the 15th century, even before he was King, Richard III kept roles of arms and had ideas of a more formal organization. In 1484, he issued a Royal Warrant creating the College of Arms to grant and protect coats of arms. At first the King supported the operations directly with his funds. The Charter read in part, in perpetuity, for the time being, the college will keep a list of Arms. He was right to perceive that forever should be tempered for the time being.

King Richard III was killed at the end of the War of the Roses and the Tutor line of Kings began with Henry VII. The College of Arms naturally wondered where this left them. Parliament declared the grants of Richard III to be null and void. The headquarters of the College of Arms was taken away and given to Henry VII’s mother. Henry turned out to be a great fan of pomp and circumstance and the Heralds were given much to do in the new King’s Court. After a few years the College had the courage to petition Henry VII for the return of the headquarters. The request was denied.

The headquarters became an issue again in the 20th Century. The building was heavily damaged in the Blitz, and there was no recourse to government funds to fix it. The land itself had become very valuable and there was a tempting push to sell the land, divide up the money and be done with it. Instead tradition was followed and a public subscription funded repairs. Recently Queen Elizabeth required an office in the department of Justice to maintain accurate records of arms and to keep the list up to date in case the College fails.

Sometimes the College of Arms is asked to settle a dispute. In 1954 the Manchester City Council took issue with the emblem of a theatre in town that resembled theirs and thus implied the city was involved with the theatre. After several court hearings to decide if it still existed and had jurisdiction the College of Arms convened a High Court of Chivalry for the first time in 200 years to decide the matter. It ruled in favor of the City Council of Manchester.

Well my drink is empty. Below is the Coat of Arms of my family. We found it for sale in plaque form at an English gift shop in the 1970s. I hope the High Court of Chivalry doesn’t convene to take it away from me, though I recognize their jurisdiction. Come again tomorrow when there will be another story to be learned from stamp collecting.

Not complete without the motto.
Virtue lies beneath oppression
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Cayman Islands 1970, Remembering Barnaby Rudge, Dickens’ take on the Gordon Riots and the Decrees of King Mob

The great thing about the myriad islands where the British Empire’s sun never set, is we get stamps on some obscure but very British subjects. Here we have the Gordon Riots. 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.

On the occasion of the death century of author Charles Dickens, Cayman Islands shows us the title character of his serialized novel Barnaby Rudge. This is thought of as one of Dickens lessor works. It was written during the time Dickens was transitioning from writing shorts stories for his own magazine, that was called  Master Humphrey’s Clock, to full length stories. There were two interesting things about Barnaby Rudge. It was set in the Gordon Riots, the story of which I will tell below. It also was reviewed by Edger Alan Poe, who liked that the title simpleton carried a raven, seen on the stamp, on his shoulder. He thought the raven under utilized by Dickens, and was inspired to write his masterpiece The Raven.

Master Humphrey’s Clock serial. Boz is a pen name for Charles Dickens

Todays stamp is issue A34, a 1 cent stamp issued by the Cayman Islands on June 17th, 1970. It was a four stamp issue in various denominations showing Dickens characters. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp was worth 25 cents unused.

The Gordon Riots happened in London in 1780. At the time the Empire found itself fighting Catholic France And Spain in an attempt to hold on to the North American colonies of Britain. The fight was not going well and the government was positively considering a change in the law to allow British Catholics to serve in the Army. A “mostly peaceful march” by Catholics was the beginning of the trouble.

the 1780 Gordon riots by artist Charles Green

Scotsman Lord George Gordon, head of the Protestant Association, was strongly opposed to the change. He thought that Catholic soldiers would change sides when sent to fight the Catholic Armies of France or Spain. He organized counter demonstrations and the level of violence increased. Newgate Prison became a center of the violence. The Protestants attempted to breach the prison to set free the prisoners inside to join the cause. When they couldn’t get in they set Newgate on fire and the prisoners were then released. On a stone wall of the prison, graffiti appeared. ” Inmates have been released on authority of His Majesty, King Mob”. The riot was put down forcibly by the Army.

Lord George was tried for treason by the House of Lords but acquitted as his aims were found not treasonous. This was not the end for him as he had stirred the hornet’s nest. Under pressure, the Archbishop of Canterbury excommunicated Lord George. He was then sentenced to jail for defamation of some prominent Catholics. Lord George responded to how his Anglican country treated him  by converting to Judaism and living the rest of his life as an Orthadox Jew. Talk about upping the victim ante!

Lord George Gordon after his Jewish conversion. Yes he was circumcized in adulthood

Perhaps there is some lesson in all of this for modern times. When the government sends out Antifa to promote unpopular ideas in the streets, they should not be surprised to find some Proud Boys.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast Lord George Gordon. Not so much that I agree with everything he said, but it was nice to hear something different. Come again on Monday for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

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Bolivia 1938, The vicuna, provider of the golden sweaters of Inca Royalty

So hear we have an animal that lives 10,000 feet up in the Andes. It’s golden fur is specially adopted to allow the animal to live in freezing conditions. Sounds perfect for royalty in need of sweaters and socks. 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.

Many collectors, including this one, delight in a far off place showing off the exotic, which perhaps was not so exotic there. This issue does that not just with the vicuna, but llamas, toucans and even the vicuna’s natural predator, the jaguar.

Todays stamp is issue A91, a 20 Centavo stamp issued by Bolivia on January 21st, 1939. It was an eighteen stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth $1.25 used. There are imperforate fakes of this stamp and later overstamps to reflect devalued currency that are all too real.

The vicuna is an ancestor of the more common and domesticated alpaca. That the wool is so unique is an adoption to live in such high altitudes. The fur traps warm air close to the animals skin which allows the animal to survive when the furs outer layer freezes. It eats a variety of tall grass that breaks through the snow cap and has adopted to be able to drink water with high salt content. Indeed it likes to lick mountain rocks for their salt content. The animals travel in family herds of one male, 10-15 females, and young.

Local tradition is that the vicuna was much prized by the Inca. Only Royalty was allowed to wear the products of the fur. They believed the vicuna were the reincarnation of young maidens  that had received coats of golden fleece after having consented to the advances of the ugly old king. Every four years the vicuna were shepherded into a lockup where they could be shorn and then released to provide the Royal wool.

I wonder which King the model maiden abandoned her virtue for? In her case, it only earned her a vicuna blend golden coat from Burberry. I won’t sneer too much, I don’t own a $4000 coat.

The story then follows that the Spanish period did not honor the vicuna in the same way and they were heavily poached for their valuable wool. By the 1960s, the wild herd was down to 6000 vicunas. The USA Peace Corps then stepped in. They trained and paid a group of local game wardens and banned internationally the trade of vicuna wool. The vicuna was declared endangered by the World Wildlife Fund. Herd numbers began to recover.

In 1993, the old traditions of the Incas regarding the vicunas were remembered, or was it invented. The rules on trading the wool were relaxed and now wild vicunas are gathered every three years, shorn and released. The proceeds are used to support the habitat areas. So far it is claimed that the trade has not again endangered the animal. They don’t explain of course how the wild animal is to survive the next winter shorn of it’s special, and slow growing fur.

Well my drink is empty. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

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France 1938, Trying to show off Vincennes between notorious prisoners

London has it’s Tower of and France has it’s Vincennes Fortress. Now of course just for the tourists, it is fun to think of people like the Marquis de Sade and Mata Hari who paid for their crimes there. 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.

France post war does such a great job showing off their historic sights with tiny brightly colored, impressionistic images on the stamps. In the pre war, they were still showing the sights but with somber shading. When the subject is an old stone fortress used as a prison, it kind of works.

Todays stamp is issue A86, a 10 Franc stamp issued by France in 1938.It was a six stamp issue showing off various tourist sites. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 1.90. There is a version overstamped with a fifty percent denomination cut, put out during the German occupation. That stamp has the same value. It makes sense the defeat would be deflationary.

The site started has a hunting lodge for French Royalty around 1150 AD. Between the 14th and the 17th century it was expanded into what is shown on the stamp. By the 18th century, the area was becoming an eastern suburb of Paris and the structure was repurposed first for porcelain manufacturing and later as a prison. The first notorious prisoner was Jean Henri Latude. He would send a package filled with poison to aristocratic ladies anonymously and then warn them. This was in hopes of rewards. This worked but often got him arrested. Latute had a remarkable ability to escape both from Vincennes and the Bastille and wrote pamphlets of his exploits and prison life that made him sort of a folk hero at the time of the French revolution.

Mr. Latude about to make his escape

The next notorious inmate was the Marquis de Sade. He was an author of erotic stories and like Latude lived a desicated life. Prostitutes in Paris complained to the police of rough treatment and the police put him under surveillance. Soon he was under arrest and a death sentence but like Latude he escaped Vincennes. It would be years later that he would be punished by Napoleon, this time for the crime of writing his dirty books.

A period depiction of de Sade

The last notorious resident against her will was in 1917 and known as Mata Hari. Her real name was Margaretha Zelle and was born into a well off Dutch family. When her father went bankrupt, her parents divorced and her situation darkened. She ended up in Paris as a cortesan and exotic dancer. Her native Holland was neutral leaning German and she was arrested for spying for the Germans during the war. She admitted taking money to spy but claimed she didn’t actually do it. She was convicted and blew kisses at her firing squad as she was executed. There is a group of mainly Dutch fans of hers that believe she was made a scapegoat.

Margaretha Zelle alias Mata Hari

In the late 1960s, a more urban Vincennes tried to rebrand by opening a large open admission university called University of Paris 8. It was a time of campus radicalism and it did not go well. In 1972, the janitors went on strike and invaded classrooms calling the Instructors scabs and demanding solidarity. A few years later the University lost accreditation when a philosophy professor was caught handing out course credit to random people she met on the city bus. She explained herself by announcing that she was a Maoist and that the University was a capitalist institution and so it was her job to make it function poorly. In the early 1980s France moved the University out of Vincennes.

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