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State of Viet Nam, Annamite Emperors try to provide a Keeper of Greatness solution

Pre colonial Indo China had many feudal Emperors. The French and Japanese left them in place. In a way so did Ho Chi Minh but not Diem in the south. 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 stamp shows the Pagoda of learning in Hanoi. Part of the fallacy that Vietnam had one government. The other fallacy was that the Emperor was not the Emperor but a Head of State in the South and Supreme Advisor in the North. Makes a learned man want to move to Monaco and buy a fancy watch.

During the French phase the area of central Vietnam around Hue was called Annamite. The Nguyen Dynasty ruled from the Purple Forbidden City there. The last of these Emperors was Bao Dai (Keeper of Greatness), who trained in France and chose as his Empress a well off Catholic commoner Vietnamese girl as his Empress Nam Phuong, (Direction of South). Bao Dai was a big believer in marriage and married 2 further Vietnamese, a North Vietnamese from his time in the North, a Hong Kong Chinese girl from an exile there and 2 French girls from his long exile there. Monique, the last is still alive and an Imperial Princess. There were 11 children so plenty of heirs if Vietnam gets the itch.

Bao Dai when he was Emperor of the Annamites.

Toward the end of the Japanese period the area was declared the Vietnamese Empire under Bao Dai. The large armed independence force under Ho Chi Minh convinced the Emperor to abdicate in return for being named Supreme Advisor to the North Vietnam government. Bao Dai did it claiming he would rather be a citizen  of a free people that an Emperor of an enslaved one. A year in Hanoi however convinced him that his advice was viewed as something less than supreme and so he moved first to Hong Kong and then to Paris. The French then saw the Emperor as a way to add legitimacy to the South Government and named him a non Royal Head of State. Again his advise was not followed and his French suggested Prime Minister Diem was openly trying to subvert him. Back to France and Monaco. He separated from Empress Nam Phuong who also moved to France but a Chateau her family maintained there.

Empress Nam Phuong on her wedding day in 1934

As Vietnam sunk into war Bao Dai lived the good life in France/Switzerland/Monaco. He had a special Rolex watch made for him that sold in 2017 for over 5 million dollars. His yacht was one of the largest in Monaco. In 1972 he tried one last time to have an influence on his country. He condemned foreign soldiers fighting on both sides and suggested that both sides put down their weapons and form a unity government that he would be willing to chair. The North sent emissaries to discuss the proposal but not the South Vietnamese. After the war he did not return to Vietnam where he has been cast as tool of the French.

Well my drink is empty and maybe I will check out some fancy watches. Keeping greatness can’t be left to just the Emperors. Come again soon for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.

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Mali 1961, Turning over Timbuktu to Bagabaga Daba, the ant with the big mouth

Timbuktu was famous, both for it’s gold and for its bringing Muslim beliefs and teaching south of the Sahara. Timbuktu had been a Pashalik under the Sultan of Morocco. Then it fell to the African Berber Tuareg tribe. Soon it was French Sudan. Independence had the country looking south and while proclaiming Pan-African ideals but the reality was splintering. Maybe that is what happens when you entrust leadership to an ant with a big mouth. 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 shows well the new Mali National Museum. It had been built 5 years before under a French program to preserve the history of the area. The architecture was in the Arab Sudan style and it contained one of the biggest collections amassed by a prominent Ukrainian archeologist and priest. After independence, the professional staff disappeared and even the collection began to walk out. In 2006 the Aga Kahn Foundation made a big investment and so what remains is still open, above par for the area.

Todays stamp is issue A5 a 2 Franc stamp issued by independent Mali on December 24th, 1961. It was a 15 stamp issue in various denominations showing off the productivity of the new country. Most of the issue shows agriculture, the Timbuktu era was over so no Arab traders and trade routes. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents whether unused or cancelled to order.

The name Mali comes from an ancient kingdom that ruled the area to 1600. It fell to the Berber Tuareg tribe that then moved the capital out of Timbuktu. This then fell to Morocco who set up Timbuktu as a big Arab trading post of gold and slaves with long trade routes back to Morocco and much involvement of Jews relocated from Spain. The city also became a center of Muslim teaching and efforts to convert the Africans. Who knew the Arabs had their own burden?

The distances back to Morocco were long and soon the area fell again to the Tuareg who were more Nomadic. In the late 19th Century came the French whose burden was to stamp out the slave trade and also to provide labor to French coastal outposts in Senegal. Seems a weird combo that and sure enough French Sudan was not a successful colony. The French had trained a few local tribesman and it was to them that now Mali was turned over. For a year there was a federation with Senegal but that ended as President Modibo Keita consolidated power.

Consolidate he did. Keita jailed and then killed his rival. He started a new Mali Franc and consolidated all exports and imports into the country into a company controlled by him. The company might have worked better if there was still things being imported and exported. The people noticed that the new currency wouldn’t buy anything and began to riot. I should say had another excuse to riot. In 1968 there was finally a military coup and it was Keita’s turn to be jailed and then die there.

President Modibo Keita, I don’t think he looks like an ant, though I don’t doubt his big mouth

No Keita’s name was not Bagabaga Daba. It was not legal or safe to satarize what was happening in Mali under Keita. Instead Malian griot Massa Maken Diabate wrote a book about a fictional country of Kouta ruled by a butcher who resembled a ant and had a big mouth. Changing names worked wonders has everybody could laugh, at least the few that could read and Diabate won several pan African book awards.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast the African Griot. It is his job to orally pass down history. Some feel, including Diabate, that the tradition is ruined by those who tell tall tales and puff up whoever pays them. Perhaps, but sometimes the truth is so pathetic that some puffery is welcome. Come again soon for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.

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Pitcairn Island 1983, Looking for seals, Folger’s Topaz finds a functioning settlement

So many of these tiny volcanic islands were at one time occupied by pirates and mutineers. Only on one island group did the castoffs make a go of it. Thanks to John Adams, the last of the mutineers off the HMS Bounty, a functioning settlement of 46 was found 19 years later by a passing American ship. 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 shows John Adams presenting to Topaz Captain Mayhew Folger the ship chronometer from HMS Bounty as a souvenir of his short eight hour visit to Pitcairn in 1808. Captain Folger did not get to keep the memento long. He showed it later to the then Spanish Governor of what is now the Chilean island of Robinson Crusoe. The Governor was so impressed he stole it. The chronometer passed through several Spanish hands before being acquired by the British Museum in 1840.

Todays stamp is issue A43, a 1.20 New Zealand Dollar stamp issued by the British Colony of the Pitcairn Islands on June 14th, 1983. It was a 4 stamp issue in various denominations honouring the 175th anniversary of the visit of the Topaz. According to the Scott Catalog, the stamp is worth $1.10 unused.

Fletcher Christian decided upon unoccupied Pitcairn as his group’s refuge. It took him several months to find it, it’s recorded position was over 100 miles off. His group included 9 Englishmen, 6 Tahitian men, 12 Tahitian females, and one little girl. Everything useful was removed from HMS Bounty and the ship was burned. Early on there was much racial tension with love triangles and the mixed blessing of one of the Englishman rigging up a still that made a brandy from the tri root. It was decided among the Tahitian men to murder all the Englishmen. 5 of the Englishmen were murdered including Fletcher Christian. The Tahitian men did not count on what happened next from the Tahitian woman. All four of them were murdered in their sleep by the widows of the Englishman.

John Adams was now the leader of the half of the settlement that wasn’t drunk all the time and there were soon lots of babies to raise. When the Topaz arrived the settlement was up to 46 mainly children with John Adams the Governor and the last of the 9 Englishmen. The Bounty’s Union Jack flew over the colony. The Topaz, an American ship was not looking for Pitcairn, it had sailed from Boston looking for seals. The next year Captain Folger submitted a report to the British Admiralty. No action was taken due to the amount of time that had passed and the more pressing issue of the Napoleonic wars. Soon after Topaz’s journey, Captain Folger moved to Ohio and took up the noble profession of Postmaster.

HMS Bounty chronometer

Today Pitcairn has 50 residents with a capital called Adamstown. It is administered under the British Governor General of New Zealand. New Zealand also handles the Island’s postal offerings.

Well my drink is empty and with the rest of the world stuck at home in the style of Pitcairn, I will soon have to decide whether I want to join the half that is drunk all the time. Update, I decided mostly against the proposition. Come again soon for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.

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The Gold Coast 1954, listening out for the talking drum

There is an old African tradition among the Yoruba People of communicating between villages though the use of hourglass shaped drums that can be adjusted to mimic the sounds of human speech. There was nothing like this anywhere in the world. The Gold Coast got around to displaying it on their last stamp issue before independence. 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 is an earlier version of this stamp with King George VI and a later version with an overprint recognizing independence in 1957. Queen Elizabeth is still with us but when Charles or William replace wouldn’t it be great if the Commonwealth did a new version with the new King. Talk about continuity and talking drums are interesting in any time period.

Todays stamp is issue A15, a 2 Pence stamp issued by the Crown Colony of the Gold Coast in 1954. It was a twelve stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott Catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents used. Check out the hand cancelation by pen on mine. The George VI version has the same value but the independence overprint adds 15 cents to the value.

Drumming holds a special significance to the Yoruba people. Those of them that still adhere to their legacy religion believe that the first Yoruba drummer was named Ayangalu. It is believed that upon his mortal death, he was deified and became an Orisha. An Orisha is a spirit sent down from higher deities to communicate with mortals, in Ayangalu’s case all future drummers.

The talking drum is hourglass shaped with drums on both ends and many cords down each side. The cords can adjust the pitch between beats. In this way a very skilled drummer can lyrically mimic human speech. The drums became tools of communication as in the right circumstances the sound can carry as far as five miles.

In the poetic verbal tradition of the griots, African verbal historians and poets, the communication is not simple and short like say Morris code, but rather long and stretched out. Go home might be drummed as go where your feet want to take you. This longer phrase is then repeated several times in the hope that it will be properly interpreted by the listener. You can hear an example here, https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=talking+drums+ghana&docid=608034306542275132&mid=1C2F896B5CBDEE7CF2611C2F896B5CBDEE7CF261&view=detail&FORM=VIRE   .

The use of the talking drum as of course declined and fewer and fewer have the skill to play it. The talking drum has showed up in western music including Fleetwood Mac and The Grateful Dead including attempts by their drummers to play live at shows. One wonders if they pray for the blessings of Ayangalu before the attempt. The talking drum also appeared on the soundtrack to the recent movie “Black Panther”. The score for that movie was written by Ludwig Goransson.

Well my drink is empty and I will listen for the drumbeats to decide if I get another. Hearing nothing, away goes the bottle. Come again soon for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.

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Cyprus 1990, perhaps we should update the refugee picture, no better not

Once you have a program for dealing with refugees, they will keep coming. Greek Cyprus had a huge Greek refugee problem in 1974 after the island was divided along racial lines after the Turk invasion. A set of stamps were issued that year to financially support the fellow countrymen refugees. A nice gesture but the stamps just keep coming because so do the refugees, no longer Greek. 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 very long lasting stamp issue. It was not a new design in 1990, and the same design still comes out today with the issue date adjusting in the bottom right corner. They also include the 1974 date to make the sad Greek girl sitting behind the barbed wire less bogus. In my research I read an article on the refugee crisis in modern day Cyprus. The refugee exemplar was a Syrian man who had been a teacher there and had paid smugglers $10,000 to get him to Cyprus in the hope that being in the EU would allow him to go on to Northern Europe and then perhaps on to Canada. He is stuck in an expensive legal limbo in Cyprus. No doubt a sad life but it is hard to make a charity stamp out of that. Wasn’t his duty as a Syrian to try to make his homeland a better place?

Todays stamp is issue PT3, a postal tax stamp issued by Cyprus shown here in it’s 1990 variation. That year it was a single stamp issue although the design has lasted so long that Cyprus has gone through three currencies with it. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 60 cents used.

In 1974 Turkey invaded and carved out a portion of southern Cyprus for the Turkish minority that they felt were not getting a fair shake from the Greek dominated government. Cyprus was and is not officially part of Greece. The aftermath was an ethnic cleansing that left 300,000 Greek Cypriots having to find a new home. There were of course also Turks that had to move, but that is a story for a different stamp. It should be remembered that there are fewer than one million Greeks on Cyprus so moving 300,000 really was a massive undertaking.

With Cyprus being set up as an ethnic state for Greeks, there are legacy refugee rules that have lasted into being in the EU. There is no legal provision for a non Greek refugee to be granted permanent residency. There is only a system for temporary deportation holds until the situation in the native country improves. Even this status only comes after a lengthy legal procedure and there is no provision for further travel to say Canada or Sweden. At some point the Cyprus government could declare the indeed slowly improving situation in Syria good enough and send them back.

You might think that perhaps harsh rules might discourage the flow of refugees. That has not been the case. Over 5 percent of the population are now non Greek refugees and that of course is a massive burden on Cyprus and one that will inevitably change the country.

This modern image wouldn’t do for a sympathetic refugee stamp. With the refugees too lazy to even mow the grass.

Well my drink is empty and so I will have to wait till soon when there will be another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.

 

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Southern Rhodesia 1940, Remembering the British South Africa Company

Administering a large area requires much money. So much so that despite all the mineral wealth brought on stream, the company was not able to pay a dividend until after administration of Southern Rhodesia was turned over. Well speculative companies usually don’t pay. We know that the company succeeded in finding the minerals, but did it lead to great wealth? and whatever happened to it. 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 stamp shows the coat of arms of the British South Africa Company that had administered Rhodesia for 33 of the 50 years. Notice however the two native warriors, one from 1890 and one from 1940. Notice how different they look and think how much work was involved in getting between the two. No wonder the company only made money after offloading administrative tasks. Cecil Rhodes and his backers had a vision that would have required more minerals than even he could find.

Todays stamp is issue A9, a half penny stamp issued by the British Crown Colony of Southern Rhodesia on June 3rd, 1940. It was an 8 stamp issue in various denominations celebrating the 50th anniversary of the founding of Southern Rhodesia under the auspices of Cecil Rhodes and his British South Africa Company. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents unused. The stamp is worth more used unlike the rest of the set. Even 80 years ago 1/2 cent wouldn’t take your letter far.

The British South African Company received a Royal Charter in 1889. Cecil Rhodes was backed by several prominent Jewish financiers and was tasked with discovering  new mineral wealth, negotiating mineral rights from African tribes and bringing it to market. A tall order, but the kind of stock issue that can fluctuate wildly on good or not so good news. It was more than money though to Rhodes. He had visions of a British railroad from Cairo to Cape Town that would have all along it communities of English settlers. He thought the Africans belonged on reservations until civilized.

The gold rush had indeed attracted English settlers especially to Southern Rhodesia and the company financed a train through Northern Rhodesia but stopping short of Lake Victoria, the original goal, where it could connect to the northern African part. It was very expensive to build a railroad, secure and maintain it. Rhodes also had vision that added lands would allow for large families of settlers that didn’t pan out. Since mineral output was below what was hoped and lower margin copper and lead rather than gold the train did not make money. The company continued to administer the railroad until the late 1940s.

A Punch magazine cartoon of Cecil Rhodes when he imagined a telegraph line to go with the railroad from Cape Town to Cairo

After Rhodes death, the area became a British Colony. This was not Rhodes intention, he thought the settlers where still Englishmen who deserved representation in British Parliament. In taking over the colony, the settlers paid half and Britain paid the company half for mineral rights in Rhodesia and the accumulated deficit from the former administration. Finally the company was able to make a profit and pay a dividend. The profits got a lot better in the 30s and 40s as the company brought on stream new copper resources in Northern Rhodesia. Under threat of nationalization, the British South Africa Company sold mineral rights in Northern Rhodesia  to Zambia for 4 million pounds in 1964, again half paid by Britain and half by Zambia. In 1965 the remaining operations were merged into a British engineering company called Charter Consolidated. One third of the shares were still owned by Anglo American, the misleadingly named operation of Cecil Rhodes’ Jewish financial backers. In the 1980s Charter sold off the remaining mining operations, This was then sold in 2012 to Colfax, an American spinoff of the American engineering firm Daneher. When you think of these timelines what comes out is the machinations of finance taking over from Rhodes’ drive to find and build things. One wonders if Rhodes needed better backers or just there were more limits on what could be found than what could be hollowed out.

Well my drink is empty. Rhodes died at only 47 without heirs. If he had lived another say 25 years, would he have had the ability to find enough resources to make his vision for Africa a reality? Not likely, but also unlikely was the manifest destiny of the few English settlements in the then Indian/First Nation territory of North America. Come again soon for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.

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Japan 1980, remembering a red dragon fly at sunset, lost big sisters, and simple life in the village

So many of the stamps I write about display how a far off place is changing. Japan like so many places saw movement of people to big cities and delay of mairage to allow the female to establish a career. A song for children came out of that, perhaps to remind how things once were. 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 from a long issue of Japanese issues celebrating classic Japanese music, one song at a time. What a great idea for a series of stamps, recognizing the culture as a national treasure. This song is called Akatombo, written in 1927, based on a poem from 1921. You can hear the song here, https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=japanese+song+red+dragonfly&docid=608042600148697588&mid=7F1C6AA85CEADCDA3BD57F1C6AA85CEADCDA3BD5&view=detail&FORM=VIRE   .

Todays stamp is issue A982, a 50 Yen stamp issued by Japan on September 18th, 1980. Two stamps from this long series were issued on that day. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents used.

The song imagines from the point of view of a young adult looking back. The fantasy/memory of a toddler boy being carried on the shoulders of his big sister back home in a small Japanese village and spotting a red dragon fly siting at the end of a bamboo pole during the colors of sunset. Adding melancholy to the memory is that the big sister at 15 was about to go off and marry never to be heard from again and the toddler was to grow up into a man who gives up his village himself. The song was part of the 1920-1930s Doyo movement in Japanese children’s music. The Doyo movement sought to address the overemphasis on patriotism and westernization in what was coming in the new public schools’ music curriculum.

The song started as a poem by Rofu Miki. His story was close to the story except it was mama that left the home never to be heard from again when his parents divorced at age 5. After the divorce Miki’s mother became a large force in the Japanese women’s movement. When she was laid to rest in 1962, her tombstone read, “Here lies the mother of the dragon fly”.

The song is still very popular in Japan and not just for children. It is often played on I guess not quite church bells at 5:00 o’clock PM signaling the end of the workday. The home village of Miki also has a monument to the song.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast the village dragonfly. Who of us cannot relate.  Come again soon for another story to be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.

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Buriatia 1990s, off to Siberia for another fake stamp

A while back I did a 1920s stamp from a place called Tannu Tuva in Asian Siberia, see https://the-philatelist.com/2018/07/24/tannu-tuva-1934-the-russian-commissars-extraordinary-have-arrived-and-brought-stamps/   . The idea for the stamps was marketed to the Soviets by a Hungarian stamp dealer. Well the 1990s saw a new round of autonomy seeking, and there were still stamp dealers out to make a quick buck on it. 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.

Comparing this stamp to the Tannu Tuva stamp leaves me preferring the old. Though poorly printed, the stamps showed exotic writing in several languages and alphabets and views of the natives of Tannu Tuva that might expect you to run into Genghis Kahn himself on the next stamp. Whoever is doing Buriatia just shows you topical stamps that could be from anywhere.

This fake stamp is not listed in any catalog but I found the six stamp souvenir sheet of the horses for sale online for $1.99. Even in Buriatia, you cannot use any of the stamps for postage.

In 1923, the Soviets formed the Buryat-Mongol Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic in the same area of Asian Siberia. Most of the people then were Mongol Buddhists. The ethnic makeup allowed for Soviet era studies into the the traits of the three races in the area. Soviets, Mongol Buryats, and those of mixed parentage were studied on guidelines as to how they performed as state workers. The official results were that there was no particular advantage to any of the three ethnicities.

Over time there were ever more Soviets in the area and in 1958 the Soviets reflected that by dropping the Mongol from the title of the region. By 1990 the area was 70 percent Soviet. The Soviet Republic was refashioned into the Buryatia Republic in 1992 that remained within the then organizing Russian Federation. The leader of the republic was for the first 25 years a locally born Soviet. In 2017 President Putin appointed a new leader that was of mixed Buriatia/Russian heritage. Both mens’ career prior to politics were with the railroad, perhaps indicative of how important the Trans Siberian Railroad is to the area. The area has at best a stagnant population.

Here are some of the old Mongol states of the area prior to the Russians. Obviously peoples in desperate need of fake stamps

Well my drink is empty and if I may, I encourage the purveyor of modern fake stamps to do a better job. 99% of the people will have no idea about where your made up place is. What an opportunity to show off the truly exotic. Come again soon for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.

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British Empire Exhibition 1924, One People, One Destiny

The Empire needed a boost after the War. By getting involved in a European land war, great losses had been sustained and the distraction had lead to the loss of Ireland and agreeing to the principle of leaving India in 1917. There was a movement to display what was being achieved and what united the people of the Empire in the hope of reenergizing the endeavor. Only time would tell if energy would be created or just a last gasp from dead enders. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your Earl Grey, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

It may seem strange to modern collectors who come across British commemorative stamps on subjects like not British movies and tv shows, but this stamp was the first British commemorative stamp issue. It came a full 84 years after the first stamp. The British Empire Exhibition was designed to show the Empire in a good light. Stamps are a way for a country to display it’s best self. A new road was being traveled. The stamps design by H Nelson was no great success, the lion seems inadequately evocative and George V’s portrait too large. Where was Manchin when you needed him?

Todays stamp is issue A92, a one and one half D stamp issued by Great Britain on April 23rd, 1924. It was a two stamp issue. According to the Scott Catalog, the stamp is worth $8.00 used. Out of curiosity I checked my Stanley Gibbons “Collect British Stamps” They state the value up much higher at 15 Pounds used.

The idea of an exhibition in the style of a World’s Fair was proposed by the British Empire League as far back as 1902. The League was a bunch of aristocrats, among them Earl Grey, the man not the tea. Wars kept getting in the way. The site chosen was Wembley which was pretty far out of London but the subway was extended to get there. A large Stadium was built and large palaces were built of quick pour concrete that showed off India as a Hindu Temple, British West Africa as a Arab Fort, British Southern Africa as a Dutch styled Palace, and further Palaces to show off Industry and Art. For the young at heart there was an amusement park with bumper cars and a soon famous soap shop called Pear’s Palace of Beauty. In it attractive models posed in glass tubes dressed as great beauties of history. Two of the girls “Bubbles” and “The Spirit of Purity” reminded you to buy some soap. Every night the RAF put on an airshow called “Defending London” where Sopwith biplanes engaged in mock dogfights with blank ammunition and pyrotechnics. There were only 3 empire no shows, the Gambia, Gibraltar, and yes the Irish Free State.

To promote the Exhibition, a world tour of British celebrities was organized. The leader was a somewhat buffoonish would be politician named Ernest Belcher. He would tell wild stories and ended up enraging the celebrities on the tour. In retrospect, Agatha Christie for one thought the tour great fun.

The Exhibition managed to attract 1.7 million paying attendees but that did not prevent a huge financial loss. The Exhibition was extended into 1925 but then only lost more money. Most of the Palaces were torn down quickly after the closing but Wembley stadium lasted into the 21st century. It did little however to preserve the Empire and convince the people of it’s motto “One People, One Destiny”. Even the British Empire League folded up shop in 1955.

Well I suppose this was a failure but heck sometimes why not just throw a party and see who comes. Please come again soon for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.