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New Caledonia 1948, we would like to get rid of you, but we need your money.

These strange little islands. The natives can’t quite work out how to be independent, if it means the end of the subsidy. 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 printers did a good job with this one. From the style, I would have guesses that the stamp was 20 years newer than it was. It shows the Kagu bird, an almost flightless bird that is the symbol of New Caledonia and only exists in the wild there.

Todays stamp is issue A23 a 40 Centimes stamp of New Caledonia issued in 1948. It was part of a 19 stamp issue that were the first stamps issued after New Caledonia ceased being a colony and became an overseas department of France. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 45 cents used.

The first inhabitants of New Caledonia were the Lapita people who went extinct around 500 AD. Next came the Kanack, a Micronesian people. The first European to spot the island group was Captain Cook, who thought it resembled Scotland and named it New Caledonia after the Roman name of the Scottish territory beyond their frontier. Contact with Europeans was scattered and often unfriendly. An American whaling ship that landed in 1849 saw their crew captured and eaten. The French gradually took a bigger influence banning slavery and cannibalism, and sent many missionaries. The Kagu bird was a sensation with the French and many were taken for zoos and efforts taken to stop the natives from eating the nearly flightless bird.

The fist economic activity was the sandalwood trade with China but the supply on the island was quickly worked through. In 1864 nickel was discovered and mining started in 1875 and local smelting in 1879. On one hand, the Kanack people claim they were often tricked into contract labor on other islands in a process called blackbirding. On the other hand, they also complain about being excluded from working in the mines or smelters. Of course both could be true at least anecdotally and it must have been annoying to see such lucrative activity going on and the funds from it staying with the French and their colonial authorities that only benefited them in terms of education, healthcare, and the dole.

The Kanacks repeatedly rebelled and their warriors then killed leaving great numbers of orphans for the colonial authorities to look after. One activity they were allowed to be part of was guarding the great number of prisoners that France sent to penal colonies on the island. Unlike Australia, few of the French prisoners stayed in New Caledonia after their prison time ended.

After the war, France granted New Caledonia the status of an overseas department and bestowed French citizenship on all residents of the islands, no mater their ethnicity. Nickel is still 95 percent of the exports of the island but it still relies on over a billion Euros a year in direct subsidies from France. The remaining Kanacks continue to lead an independence movement but they are now less than 40 percent of the population. In 2018, there was a vote on independence and 56% voted to stay French. France has acted happy about that, just as they acted sad after losing a similar vote in the former colony of Djibouti in 1979. The Kagu bird is down to fewer than 1000 in the wild but has been granted endangered status and there is an active breeding program at the local zoo.

Well my drink is empty and so I will flip a nickel to see if I should have another…. I lost, I wonder if whatever small amount of nickel is still in the coin came from New Caledonia. Come again for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2019.

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Wallis & Futuna 1930, local Kings bend but do not break toward France

How to accept European help without forsaking the local culture? It wasn’t an easy question in the 19th century, nor in the 21st. 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 a small group of islands, there is a tendency to try to administer them jointly with similar far off south Pacific French Colonies. Hence the New Caledonia stamp overprinted for postal service in Wallis and Fortuna Island. This of course leaves some potential revenue on the table from the international stamp collector. Since World War II Wallis and Futuna have been well supplied  with farmed out topical stamp issues.

Todays stamp is issue A19, a 1 Centime stamp issued for use in Wallis and Futuna by French colonial authorities based in New Caledonia beginning in 1930. It was a 42 stamp issue in various denominations that came out over 14 years. According to the Scott catalog, this stamp is worth 25 cents unused. A version with a double overprint is worth $200. There are also later rival versions from wartime. A version without the RF in the top left corner means it was issued by Vichy France. These never reached the colony for use. There is a rival version with France Libre overprinted above the existing Wallis and Futuna overprint. These did make it to island service after the islands went Free French and are worth $2.50. The islands initially pledged to Vichy France but changed sides when the USA Marines landed.

The first humans on Wallis and Futuna were the Lapita ancestors of the Polynesians. Futuna was first spotted by the Dutch and Wallis by the British. The first Europeans to land in 1837 were French Catholic Missionaries. The group was lead by Priest and later Saint Peter Chanel. At first Chanel had very little luck but slowly made some conversions. When the King’s son was Baptized that was perceived as going too far as the King saw himself as both King and High Priest of the island. He sent his son in law, a noted warrior, to his son and the two fought. Injured, the son in law sought out Father Peter for help. While Father Peter tended his wounds, other warriors ransacked his house and then bludgeoned Father Peter to death. The areas Bishop than arraigned for a French naval ship to visit to recover the body. The body recovered, the area was now much more willing to convert and three tribal Kings petitioned France to become French Protectorates. Even the son in law now readily converted and even asked that he be buried next to Father Peter Chanel. That way, people trampling over him to pay respects to Father Peter would demonstrate forever his contrition. Chanel was Beatified in 1889, his remains having returned to France. Natives invented a dance called the eke that shows their regret over what happened to Peter Chanel. It includes much whacking of sticks.

Saint Peter Chanel

There have been almost constant clashes between the three native Kings on Wallis and Futuna and the French Colonial authorities. In 2005, King Tomasi Kulimoetoke II’s grandson was involved in a drunk driving incident where he killed a pedestrian on New Years Eve. He was granted asylum in the Palace causing a four month standoff with the police who wanted to try him for manslaughter. The King suggested the French give up the island but instead he gave up his grandson for prosecution.

Wallis King Tomasi Kulimoetoke II

The local Kings are really in no place to dictate to the French. French subsidies are 80 % of the economy and for every native that still lives on the islands there are two that have moved on to greener pastures in France. The islands shrinking population are dependent on these remittances.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast the Dutch and the British explorers who spotted the islands but kept sailing. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.