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East Germany 1971, reforming a German Army

Germany on both sides of the East-West divide were divided on reforming a new German Army. In East Germany, that meant it was all volunteer until later when the army became the only Warsaw Pact force to allow for conscientious objection. 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.

What I like most about this 15th anniversary of the East German Army stamp is the close up shot of a regular soldiers face. Reminding Germans who may not be thrilled with the politics that the regular soldier was still one of you. A wider shot would just be uniform details and get bogged down in how the East German uniforms more resembled the old while the West German Army uniform looked more American.

Todays stamp is issue A400, a 20 Pfennig stamp issued by East Germany on March 1st, 1971. It was a single stamp issue. According to the Scott Catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents cancelled to order.

As early as 1948, East Germany was accepting volunteers in what became known as the Kasernierte Volkspolzei. These troops were trained in a military fashion but lacked heavy weapons. Most were recruited from captured by Soviet Union World War Two German soldiers. It should be remembered that Germany contained many with communist sympathies even among those serving the Third Reich.

In 1956, West Germany formed the conscript Bundeswher. Six months later East Germany formed the all volunteer National Peoples Army. Both armies started with about 75 percent of the officers being veterans of the old Wehrmacht. It was more than 10 years later and the veterans were serving in much higher capacities. After the Berlin crisis of the early 60s, the army added conscription and doubled in size to about 150,000 men.  Interesting very few aristocrats served, the Prussian military tradition was no more. In 1968, the 7th Panzer Division deployed to Czechoslovakia in a non combat role. This was the first post war German deployment outside Germany. Some may remember an earlier 7th Panzer Division lead the 1940 invasion of France under General Erwin Rommel.

At the time of reunification, the East German Army was mostly disbanded. Only 3200 of the 36,000 officers and NCOs were retained, no Coronels or Generals. Those that remained were reduced one rank. The West German Army was itself shrinking with the end of the cold war.  The over 2 million German males that served in the East German Army were not treated well. Their pensions were only token  and their employment records listed the time  as serving in a foreign military. They were also not to allowed to use their military titles in retirement as was customary even for SS officers. 15 years later a court case finally restored some of what was owed.

Well my drink is empty and so I will pour another to toast the veterans and active duty members of all the worlds armed forces. Come again soon when there will be another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2019.

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Netherland Indies 1903, Dutch leadership of Indonesia goes from a cultivation system to an ethical policy to a communist mutiny

After the Napoleonic Wars, the Netherlands needed the Indies to transform into a cash cow. The extent that it did so meant that Liberals could then afford to reevaluate their position regarding natives. What about the natives themselves? Well, it was a different world then. 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.

Todays stamp is a bulk mail issue featuring then Queen Wilhelmina. There is no effort to display the colony on any Netherland Indies stamp prior to 1938. This is perhaps a consequence of decisions for the place being a conversation between Dutchmen alone.

Todays stamp is issue A9, a 10 Cent stamp issued by the Netherland Indies colony of Holland in modern day Indonesia starting in 1903. It was a 10 stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents used.

Indonesia had been under Dutch control for hundreds of years, first as a for profit company and then as a colony. It had been a consistent money loser. After the Napoleonic Wars and with continued troubles in Belgium it became critical the colony begin to turn a profit. A cultivation system was put in place that required either 20 % of a villages land or 2 months of labor on the part of peasants go toward crops for export. In reality this moved the vast bulk of land from food production for locals or non use to export crops. Large, efficient rubber plantations began to generate much revenue both in the Indies and for the Netherlands. The Dutch did a slightly better job than the British in Ireland preventing such an economy leading to famines.

With the financial crisis past, the Dutch began to wonder if enough was being done for natives. In 1903, Queen Wilhelmina announced a new “ethical policy” that intended to open up more educational opportunities at local Dutch schools for natives and much spending on irrigation, roads, and water systems to deal with the rapidly growing population. All this was done very paternalistically but when a nationalistic organization was formed by newly educated natives, the Budi Utomo, it was welcomed by the Dutch.

It was also the Dutch that began the more threatening moves against the colony. Dutch communist activist Henk Sneevliet spent much time in the Indies forming a local communist party open to both left leaning Dutch and natives. It’s goal was Indonesian independence under communism. Sneevliet had much success among seaman and many ships were manned by mixed crews. His work culminated in the mutiny of the Heavy Cruiser HNLMS De Zeven Provincien in 1933. The Dutch naval ship with a mutinous crew of 450 was then bombed by the Dutch air force killing 23. This was quite a story and the ship was renamed to improve its reputation. Still in the Far East, Snievliet worked toward the forming of the mainland Chinese communist party. Later back in Holland, he was arrested during the German occupation. He walked to his 1942 execution singing “The Internationale”.

Henk Sneevliet
HNLMS De Zeven Provincien before the mutiny

Well my drink is empty and I am left with no one to toast. The Dutch never found the ideal formula and the Indonesians themselves in this period seemed largely no shows to the debate. Come again soon for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2019.

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France 1938, remembering Clement Ader for his steam powered bat planes

One of the great things about stamps is that they allow a country to show off interesting things that are going on there. Advanced countries possessed inventors changing the world and imagining the future. Here we have the story of Frenchman Clement Ader and his pre Wright brothers steam powered bat planes. 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 printers and engravers did a good job with this issue. The blue color tint gives Ader’s Avion III plane a more serious look. The reality was that the bat shaped wings were mostly beige linen stretched over a thin wood frame. Lite weight being so important to getting off the ground. By 1938 there were many types of airplanes, the stamp does well in showing how advanced the early work was and then still have room for the man behind it.

Todays stamp is issue A88, a 50 Franc stamp issued by France on June the 16th, 1938. It was a single stamp issue. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth $65 dollars used. There is another version on thicker paper in a darker shade of blue that would up the value to $77.50.

Clement Ader was born in Toulouse France in 1841. Toulouse is the future home of Airbus. He trained in electrical engineering and his early work was in the recently invented by Alexander Graham Bell telephone. He was in charge of installing the first telephone network in Paris in 1880. He went on to design a headset that would allow an audience to listen to an opera being performed with stereo sound. Pretty advanced for the nineteenth century.

In the 1880s Ader turned his attention to trying to achieve  powered flight. For what the machine that gets off the ground might look like he carefully studied the shape of birds, specifically the bat. He designed a lightweight, 112 pound, steam powered 20 horsepower four cylinder engine powering a propeller. His plane the Ader Eole, got one foot off the ground for a distance of 160 feet. It was the first powered takeoff, but the flight itself was not under the control of the pilot Mr. Ader. Ader then attracted funding from the French Defense Ministry for a more developed effort. This plane, still bat shaped but much bigger with a 46 foot wingspan and 2 30 horsepower steam engines wan named the Avion III. This flew in 1897 but was blown off course by the wind. The government declared it a failure and pulled funding.

Ader’s Avion III in flight in 1897.

After a short stint building V8 powered race cars that did not find buyers, Ader continued to have influence on aviation. In 1910 he published a book imagining a future of aerial warfare. Among the imaginations were drawings of what an aircraft carrier might look like, with a large flat deck, ship functions from a small island, and aircraft elevators to take planes to the flight deck from the hanger deck below. The book was spotted by at American Naval Attaché in Paris and sent to America. where they influenced the design of the USS Langley, the first flush deck aircraft carrier.

Ader’s plane name Avion became the French word for air travel. Ader was also honored in his hometown where one of Airbus’s assembly lines was named for him.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast Clement Ader. With the value of this stamp, I can readily afford another round. Come again soon for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2019.