Community Foundation Stamp Aids Children (Canada 2021)

[press release] [click images for larger versions]
Canada Post Community Foundation ramps up 2021 campaign, rolls out grants to improve the lives of Canadian children
100 groups receive $1.2 million in funding as in-store campaign and new stamp launched to meet growing needs across the country

OTTAWA – As the Canada Post Community Foundation launches its 2021 fundraising campaign, 100 organizations across the country have been informed they will receive much-needed funding to support their efforts to improve the lives of Canadian children and youth.

Support for grassroots organizations and Indigenous youth
A total of $1.2 million in grants has been awarded for this year. The recipients include grassroots organizations from every province and territory. Among this year’s grants, 17 – totalling approximately $270,000 – will go to programs that support Indigenous youth. Canada Post is committed to fostering reconciliation with Indigenous peoples, including through funding of community programs that support Indigenous children and youth. A list of all 2021 grant recipients can be found on the Canada Post Community Foundation website.

In-store campaign launched with special stamp to raise funds for next year
Faced with a growing number of applications each year, the Foundation raises money through customer donations in post offices, employee payroll deduction and sale of a special stamp issued annually. This year’s stamp, issued on September 20, will raise funds for distribution in 2022 and is available for purchase. Stamps can be purchased and donations made at local post offices, with funds going to organizations that operate in the province or territory in which they are raised.

$11 million for more than 1,000 initiatives since 2012
Established in 2012, the Foundation is a registered charity that operates at arm’s length from Canada Post. It has granted $11 million to more than 1,000 initiatives for children and youth nationwide, including literacy and language programs; youth outreach services; projects that support Indigenous youth; gender and sexual diversity programs; arts and recreation projects; special education programs; childhood health programs; anti-bullying initiatives; mentoring programs and many others.

About the stamp issue
The 2021 stamp for the Canada Post Community Foundation, designed by Kim Smith of Subplot Design Inc., features an illustration of fireflies in the night sky. The luminous glow of the fireflies is a reminder of the light that shines within each of us. We all have the power to make the world a little brighter for others – especially children and youth. This design was selected by Canada Post frontline retail employees. The stamp is available at Canada Post outlets across the country and online at canadapost.ca/shop.

About the Foundation
The Canada Post Community Foundation provides grants to Canadian schools, charities and organizations in an effort to make a difference in the lives of children across the country. It supports the small, underfunded projects that often go unnoticed, from coast to coast to coast. Through its grassroots, community-based approach, the Foundation plays a critical role in helping Canada Post achieve its purpose, A Stronger Canada – Delivered.

To donate to the Canada Post Community Foundation, purchase a booklet of stamps at a local post office or visit canadapost.ca/community.

[en Francais pour les médias d’information]
La Fondation communautaire de Postes Canada lance sa campagne de 2021 et verse des subventions pour améliorer la vie des enfants canadiens
Cent organismes reçoivent 1,2 million de dollars en subventions alors que la Fondation lance sa campagne en magasin et son nouveau timbre pour répondre à des besoins grandissants au pays

OTTAWA – À l’occasion du lancement de la campagne de financement de 2021 de la Fondation communautaire de Postes Canada, 100 organismes d’un bout à l’autre du pays ont été informés du versement prochain et tant attendu d’une subvention qui les aidera à améliorer la vie d’enfants et de jeunes canadiens.

Soutien pour les organismes communautaires et les jeunes Autochtones
On compte parmi les bénéficiaires des organismes communautaires de chaque province et territoire. Dix-sept des subventions, soit environ 270 000 $, sont octroyées à des programmes qui soutiennent les jeunes Autochtones. Postes Canada est déterminée à favoriser la réconciliation avec les peuples autochtones, notamment en finançant des programmes communautaires qui aident les enfants et les jeunes Autochtones. La liste de tous les bénéficiaires d’une subvention de 2021 se trouve sur le site Web de la Fondation communautaire de Postes Canada.

Lancement de la campagne en magasin et d’un timbre spécial pour la collecte de fonds des subventions de 2022
Le nombre de demandes de subvention augmente chaque année. La Fondation amasse des fonds à l’aide de dons de clients dans les bureaux de poste, du programme de retenues à la source des employés et de la vente d’un timbre spécial émis tous les ans. Le timbre de cette année, qui a été lancé le 20 septembre pour amasser des fonds pour les subventions de 2022, est maintenant en vente. Les timbres sont vendus et les dons sont recueillis dans les bureaux de poste locaux. Les fonds sont versés aux organismes dans la province ou le territoire où ils ont été recueillis.

Onze millions de dollars pour plus de 1000 initiatives depuis 2012
Créée en 2012, la Fondation communautaire de Postes Canada est un organisme de bienfaisance enregistré qui est exploité indépendamment de Postes Canada. La Fondation a distribué 11 millions de dollars en subventions pour plus de 1 000 initiatives pour enfants et jeunes à l’échelle du pays, y compris des programmes d’alphabétisation et de langue, de mentorat, d’éducation spécialisée et de santé visant les enfants, des services d’aide pour les jeunes, des projets qui soutiennent les jeunes Autochtones, des programmes sur la diversité de genre et sexuelle, des projets artistiques et récréatifs, des initiatives contre l’intimidation, etc.

À propos du timbre
Le timbre de 2021 pour la Fondation communautaire de Postes Canada, conçu par Kim Smith de Subplot Design Inc., est une illustration de lucioles qui scintillent dans la nuit. Les lucioles scintillantes rappellent la lumière qui brille en chacun de nous. Nous pouvons tous illuminer la vie d’autrui, surtout celle des enfants et des jeunes. L’image a été choisie par les employés de vente au détail de Postes Canada. La vignette est offerte dans tous les comptoirs postaux de Postes Canada et en ligne à postescanada.ca/achat.

À propos de la Fondation
La Fondation communautaire de Postes Canada verse des subventions à des écoles, des œuvres de bienfaisance et des organismes du Canada dans le but d’améliorer le sort des enfants partout au pays. Elle soutient d’un océan à l’autre les petits projets sous-financés qui passent souvent inaperçus. Grâce à son approche communautaire, la Fondation contribue à ce que Postes Canada réalise sa raison d’être, celle d’être porteurs d’un Canada plus fort.

Pour faire un don à la Fondation communautaire de Postes Canada, achetez un carnet de timbres à votre bureau de poste local ou visitez postescanada.ca/communautaire.

APS and APRL Accepting 2022 Award Nominations

[press release]
We are now accepting applications for the 2022 awards presented by the and the .

The nominating process will continue through December 15, 2021 for:

Each category has its own application. Those may be , or sent via email to awards@stamps.org. Please designate list the name of the award on your envelope or in the title of your email.

In addition, APS and APRL committees will meet to nominate candidates for the following awards:

All awards are subject to the approval of the Board of Directors for the APS and APRL.

Linn’s: US Rate Hikes Twice A Year Soon

The USPS plans its next rate hike for July 2022, and then twice a year, beginning in January 2023, reports Bill McAllister, the Washington correspondent for Linn’s Stamp News in its October 4th issue, which went online Saturday. The USPS said it did not plan a rate increase in January 2022.

The proposed rate increases would be on what the USPS calls its “market dominant” products, or services, such as first-class mail, advertising mail, periodicals, packages, and anything else in which the agency has a monopoly.

It competes with other services on products like Priority Mail and Priority Mail Express (which most customers still call “Express Mail.”

The USPS says it will be “judicious” in how it uses whatever authority to raise rates the Postal Regulatory Commissions gives it, but market conditions are likely to require the maximum increases allowed.

McAllister reports commercial mailers’ groups are protesting the plan, and saying they doubt the USPS will not raise rates as much as it can, because it does have that monopoly.

You can read more of McAllister’s story, without a subscription, here.

AFDCS Honors Its First Editor

[press release]
AFDCS Bestows Long-Overdue Recognition On Strauss

The American First Day Cover Society has given one of its highest honors, the Distinguished Service Award, to Gerald Strauss, the first editor of its journal, First Days. The award is given for performance far above basic duties, to living current members.

The key to any national stamp collecting organization is a successful journal, and especially so for a new society. Strauss, then a college English professor, produced the first issue of First Days, September-December 1955. It was a four-page mimeographed newsletter, but within a year, had grown to a 16-page professionally-printed magazine.

Unfortunately, his workload at the college became too much, and he resigned. He later dropped out of the AFDCS, but continued his philatelic writing and editing elsewhere, particularly for the Washington Press

First issue of First Days

and its catalogues, newsletters and album pages. Although not a member of the AFDCS, he also served as a proofreader for First Days for most of the past decade. He rejoined in the past year.

While editor of First Days, Strauss recruited two young writers whose names are very familiar today: One was college student Alan Warren, whose “Question Box” column has appeared in all but one of the hundreds of issues since that first one in 1955. Warren also writes for many other publications and on other philatelic subjects.

The other was junior member Randy Neil from the Kansas City area, who went on to become a successful writer, editor and publisher, as well as American Philatelic Society president.

The DSA is voted upon only by past recipients of the award; the committee is currently chaired by Allison Cusick.

The American First Day Cover Society is a not-for-profit educational organization. In addition to First Days, the AFDCS also publishes handbooks and catalogues, and promotes the collecting of both modern and “classic” issues and cachets, as well as exhibiting FDCs.

For more information about the AFDCS, visit www.afdcs.org, e-mail afdcs@afdcs.org or write the AFDCS at Post Office Box 246, Colonial Beach, VA 22443-0246.

Topical Group Gives Smith Top Honor

Dale E. Smith, immediate past president of the American Topical Association, has been selected for the ATA’s highest award, Distinguished Topical Philatelist. The award is presented each year to an individual who has provided outstanding service to philately, and especially topical philately — collecting stamps by subject.

Smith has served on the ATA board since 2011, becoming first vice president in 2012 and president in 2016. He is also membership secretary of the Gladstone Stamp Club, near Kansas City, and is active in the Midwest Philatelic Society, based in the city itself. He is a member of six ATA-affiliated study units and three ATA-affiliated chapters.

“Herbert Hoover said, ‘It is amazing what you can accomplish if you do not care who gets the credit,’” said ATA president Dawn Hamman. “That sums up Dale’s incredible contribution to ATA, philately and many other worthy causes in a nutshell. He operates under the radar. He does not seek recognition, and, in fact, gives it to others.”

During Smith’s tenure as ATA president, he invigorated fundraising and was able to secure the organization’s future with financial leadership and by adding to its reserves. He added key leaders to important positions in the group, and was part of the team that organized and implemented the moving of the ATA office from Illinois to South Carolina in 2019.

His wide-ranging interests: stamps on stamps, HIV/AIDS on stamps, pharmacy, winter scenes, Christmas seals, Pony Express and George Washington Carver. In 2002, Dale and his wife Andrea started their topical stamp dealership, Stamp Smith. The main focus of the business has always been topicals.

Smith’s leadership goes beyond philately. A graduate of the University of Missouri, Kansas City, Dale has served as president of its alumni association, and is currently on the dean’s advisory council and the LGBTQ Scholarship Foundation. He has served as president of 15 non-profit organizations over 45 years.

He was presented with the award at the Celebration Banquet of Great American Stamp Show 2021.

Great American Stamp Show 2021 Lives Up To Name

Great American Stamp Show 2021 in Rosemont, Ill., near Chicago, August 11-15, was a very good show, especially considering the circumstances. With the threat of the continuing or even worsening coronavirus pandemic, many collectors decided to stay home.

Still, the American Philatelic Society, the organizer, had 2,500 registrations for GASS. That is several hundred more than APS StampShow 2019 in Omaha. APS StampShow was the predecessor to GASS. The APS would have expected 3,500 to 4,500 for a show in the Chicago area.

The photo shows some of those lined up to enter the show as soon as it opened on Thursday. About half of those attending the show wore masks. Many wore masks sometimes but not all the time. [You can click on the photo for a larger version.]

However, there are no reports of any of those who attended the show contracting the coronavirus as a result of going to Great American Stamp Show.

Whether the show would be held was uncertain until mid-May. Specific planning and arrangements normally begin at least a year in advance, with the show location booked as much as five years ahead. (2024 is already set for Hartford, Conn., for example, and the APS is looking at locations for 2025.)

The 2020 edition was canceled completely, with a “virtual” show instead.

Great American Stamp Show is co-hosted by the APS, the American Topical Association (which was also a partner in APS StampShows 2018 and 2019), and the American First Day Cover Society. All three organizations participated in the 2020 Virtual Stamp Show, but this was the AFDCS’ first time folding its Americover show and convention into the overall national show.

The photo shows about half the AFDCS booth on the second day of the show, Friday, which is usually the quietest day of any four-day show.

“This was our first time as co-host of the big U.S. national show, and it exceeded our expectations,” said AFDCS president Lloyd de Vries. “We picked up more new members than at any recent show, either the GASS predecessor APS StampShow or our own Americover show. First day cover exhibits also earned seven large golds at GASS!”

As part of their agreements with the APS to co-host the show, both the ATA’s National Topical Stamp Show and Americover had their own exhibit competitions. The ATA booth, like the APS and AFDCS booths at the front of the hall, is shown below.

However, “dealer participation for the show was well below what we could expect for a Chicago-area show,” APS executive director Scott English told The Virtual Stamp Club.

Having three stamp societies as co-hosts presented some challenges, such as scheduling the membership meeting for each at different times. Americover had been a three-day show, with the same basic schedule for years: the banquet on Friday night and general membership meetings in two parts, on Saturday and Sunday mornings. At GASS 2021, the AFDCS President’s Banquet was on Thursday night and a single membership meeting Friday morning. A few members missed them.

Also missing was the AFDCS’ usual pre-show tour of local attractions. Between the short lead-time and COVID-19 restrictions, it couldn’t be scheduled.

The show’s organizers vow to work out all the glitches before the next Great American Stamp Show in Sacramento, Calif., August 25-28, 2022. There should also be some new features.

“Our most critical goal for Sacramento is creating virtual access to those who cannot attend the show in person,” said English (left). The APS hopes to have some events live-streamed, and some of the exhibits displayed online. “Our Content Team will be piloting technology at the upcoming UNEXPO in Bellefonte to make sure we can execute the virtual experiences on a large scale.”

When first scheduled several years ago, the 2021 show was supposed to run at the same time as the American Numismatic Association’s “Money Show.” The latter was also held in the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center in Rosemont, and did overlap GASS in part. The philatelic organizers learned that “coin shows and stamp shows can operate in the same venue with excellent results,” said English. “Dealers shared that many ANA members visited their booths and even made purchases. I am hoping we can work with the ANA to hold a similar event in 2025. Stay tuned.”

NOJEX/ASDA 2021 Show Canceled

The following announcement is from NOJEX and the American Stamp Dealers Association:

As a result of the continuing spread of the COVID-Delta variant, and its impact on indoor events in the NJ-NY Metro Area, it will not be feasible to hold our Show which had been scheduled at the Hilton Meadowlands Hotel in East Rutherford, NJ on October 15-17, 2021. The hotel has informed us that all such events in its ballrooms have been cancelled through the end of this year by other organizations.

We regret that it was necessary to cancel the show, and offer our sincere apologies to the collectors, societies, judges, dealers and exhibitors who were looking forward to participating. We all hope for better times when we return October 14-16, 2022.

Stamp Writers Group Invites Web Writers

[press release]
APS Writers Unit 30 To Invite Online Content Providers

Writers Unit 30, the American Philatelic Society affiliate that has represented stamp collecting writers, editors and publishers for more than 50 years, is now encouraging membership for online content providers: The people who write and edit websites, blogs and social media.

Most philatelic writing these days is on the Web. Often, the same material is published in print, on a website and in social media at the same time.

“Writing is writing, whether it is for print, broadcast or the internet,” said WU30 president Lloyd A. de Vries. “The styles may change, but the purpose is the same: To communicate, inform, and exchange ideas. We think including internet content producers in WU30 will be mutually beneficial.”

The APS Writers Unit publishes a quarterly newsletter, The Philatelic Communicator; supports literature competitions; and maintains a “Hall of Fame” for outstanding stamp collecting writers, both in the past and those active today. In addition, new programs are being planned. WU30 was founded in 1967, and meets annually at APS StampShow’s successor, Great American Stamp Show.

TPC issues often include articles on writing itself, layout, opportunities and news.

“30” is the traditional mark that was placed at the end of newspaper copy to indicate to editors and typesetters that it was finished. Not coincidentally, the Writers Unit is Affiliate #30 of the APS.

Membership is open to all who write, publish or edit in philately, from periodical columns to research books, and now, explicitly, to those who write for digital media. Membership is $15 a year anywhere in the world for .pdf copies of The Philatelic Communicator, delivered via email. Membership with a printed journal is $20.

To join, or for more information, visit the WU30 website at www.wu30.org or write WU30 at PO Box 411571, Saint Louis, MO 63141-3571.

Hotchner: A Buck Here, A Buck There

by John M. Hotchner
Click on stamp illustrations for larger versions

Quick – What is the first U.S. postage stamp to have a face value of a dollar or more? What was the first U.S. postage stamp to have a face value of over $10? Are there any U.S. Air Mail stamps with a value of more than a dollar, prior to the 2012 $1.05 Scenic American Landscape issue (“Amish Horse & Buggy on Road, Lancaster, Country, Pennsylvania”)? The answers will be found later on in this column.

There are a surprising number of U.S. dollar-value issues. If we include booklet panes and se-tenant blocks and strips that total to more than a dollar, the list is quite long. So, let’s ignore those for the present. The dollar-value single stamps are a significant challenge by themselves.

Believe it or not, there were 28 different dollar value stamps issued through the end of the Third Bureau Issue (the so-called “Washington-Franklins”). They are not all face-different. There are 16 different major designs, including the same design with different values. The rest are minor design variations, or varieties of watermark, perforation gauge or color.

In mint condition, a complete collection is well beyond the resources of most collectors. It is certainly beyond mine! But owning even a few is a thrill! And many of them are quite reasonable in used condition. Beginning with the 1922 Fourth Bureau Issue, even the mint examples are reasonable, and almost all used copies are not much more expensive than a movie rental, and usually less than their face value.

Let’s skip around a bit and look at some of the dollar stamps of the United States: First, the answer to the first question above. Surprisingly, the first dollar values were issued on January 1, 1893, 46 years after the first U.S. stamps. They were the $1, $2, $3, $4, and $5 commemorative stamps issued to publicize the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois, to be held from May 1 to October 30, 1893; a total of $15.

Beautiful as these stamps were, and they remain popular today, there was considerable public outcry about the length of the set. Remember, back then, a dollar was a prized amount of money. For example, in 1893, a laborer earned about $9.50 for a 60-hour work week! And even though a dollar went a lot further — $1 from 1893 would be equivalent to $29.67 in 2021 dollars — I am certain that the average collector would have had plenty of other uses for $15 in 1893! But it would have been a decent investment for someone on behalf of their great- great- grandchildren, as the Scott Catalogue value for a mint set of the dollar values is now $8,150; $29,300 if never hinged!

A 1901 penny postal card from a dealer in California [above] advertised to buy used Columbians. Note that he is offering 90 cents for each $5 stamp that he accepts. Today, a used $5 Columbian catalogues $1,200!

Moving along, one of my favorite designs from the early years of dollar stamps is the 1894 gem picturing Oliver Hazard Perry; a figure I’d bet precious few college seniors could place in historical context today – if they ever heard of him at all!

There are four versions: Unwatermarked Types I and II, and double-line watermarked Types I and II. [The watermarked versions of this stamp, both Types, were also overprinted for use in Guam and the Philippines.]

The difference between the Types is found in the circles at the lower right and left corners surrounding the $1 denomination. On Type I stamps, the circle is broken where it meets the curved line below “One Dollar.” On Type II stamps the circle is complete. 75% of the stamps produced were Type I; the remainder Type II. It follows that the catalogue values are twice as high for Type II as Type I.

Colors play an important part in the story of the $2 1918 Franklin. The first issued was the $2 “orange red and black” (as listed in Scott, #523), on August 19, 1918. Max G. Johl, in his monumental The United States Postage Stamps of the 20th Century, tells us that the official descriptions prior to release of the stamp, and afterward as well, said that the colors were red and black. Clearly what came off the presses is not red, so the Scott listing of orange-red and black is correct.

But on November 1, 1920, a new printing was released, and these are without question red [which Scott calls “carmine”] and black. They have been given a separate Scott listing, #547. A total issued for both is 791,000, and fewer than 10% of those are #523.

Jumping ahead to the 1938 Presidential issue, there are several color variations of the $1, caused by the fact that production methods and ink composition elements changed during the production period which extended from 1938 to 1956. Over 340.4 million were released. In addition, all the Prexie dollar values (as well as the $5 Fourth Bureau Issue; issued in 1923) were bicolors printed in two passes.

There are no known inverts, but there are plentiful color misregistrations. On the example shown on the left, Wilson’s portrait and other black printing is shifted to the right.

The first Air Mail dollar values are the so-called “Zeppelins” of 1930. Of the three stamps in the set, two (Sc. C14 and C15) are dollar values: a $1.30 and a $2.60. The former was intended to pay the postage on letters dispatched by steamer to Friedrichshafen and then via the Graf Zeppelin to Seville, Pernambuco and Rio de Janeiro. The $1.30 also covered the entire trip, with the addition of Rio to Lakehurst, New Jersey. The $2.60 paid the rate for the entire trip on letters all the way to Lakehurst.

Short of the 24¢ Jenny invert, the Zeppelin set is the key for Air Mail issues, and gives a collector bragging rights when showing off his or her U.S. collection.

In the modern era, dollar value stamps became ubiquitous with the inauguration of Priority and Express Mail. The first high-value U.S. stamp above $5 was the first Express Mail stamp of 1983; a $9.35 jumbo. The first stamp over $10, was issued just two years later when the Express Mail rate was boosted to $10.75. In fact, the Express Mail and Priority Mail rates have changed so rapidly that over 40 face-different stamps have been issued for these services. For a collector of mint U.S. stamps, this represents an expenditure of about $375 as a contribution to the USPS bottom line. Of course, used examples of these large, beautiful stamps cost much less; the challenge being to find examples in good condition with light cancels.

Covers with dollar values are interesting and collectible. In general, they are not scarce, with the exception of solo usages where a dollar-value stamp covers basic postage and additional services; the cost of which tote up to the face value of the stamp.

On-cover usage is often listed in the Scott U.S. Specialized Catalogue, and there can be some nice surprises. For example, the $5 Alexander Hamilton of the Liberty series of 1954 (Sc. 1053) has a used value in Scott of $6.75. It is a fairly scarce stamp in used, well-centered condition with a light cancel.

But find this stamp on the following covers, and you may have a real bonanza:

  • On registered bank tag: $25.00
  • On air parcel-post tag: $75.00
  • On commercial cover: $1,800
  • Single franking on registered cover: $7,000

An unusual usage of the Americana Series $5 (Scott #1612) pays the major part of charges for Air Mail, Special Delivery and Registry (with a return receipt) service from Miami, Florida to Guatemala City, Guatemala. Scott does not yet list a special premium for usages of this stamp, but I am certain that will come, as they are anything but common.

We have hardly scratched the surface of dollar-stamp collecting, but I hope you catch a little of my enthusiasm. It is a worthy challenge as a specialty, and yet, one that at least in the modern era, need not cost an arm and two legs!

Scott Catalogue U.S. Update (September 2021)

5615 (55¢) Western Wear – Cowboy hat
5616 (55¢) Western Wear – Belt buckle
5617 (55¢) Western Wear – Cowboy boot with spur
5618 (55¢) Western Wear – Western shirt
a. Block of 4, #5615-5618
b. Convertible booklet pane of 20, 5 each #5615-5618

5619 (95¢) Ursula K. Le Guin

5620 (55¢) Raven Story
a. Imperforate