Stamp Collecting During The Pandemic

Most major stamp collecting shows in the U.S. this spring, if not all, have been postponed or canceled.

The international show in Britain this year, London 2020, has been postponed to 2022.

A decision will be made by May 15 on whether to hold the top show in the U.S., the first edition of Great American Stamp Show. It is scheduled for August 20-23 in Hartford, Conn. It is jointly sponsored by the American Philatelic Society, the American Topical Association and the American First Day Cover Society, although APS handles the “logistics.”

The APS is maintaining a comprehensive list of show schedule changes on its website here.

The American Philatelic Society headquarters and the American Philatelic Research Library in Bellefonte, Pa., were ordered closed, as part of Pennsylvania’s shutdown measures. They are now beginning to reopen, slowly, and services which had required on-site handling (such as sales circuits and expertizing) will soon resume.

U.S. first-day (launch) ceremonies for new issues have been postponed or canceled, although the stamps are still being released and put on sale on schedule.

Traffic at stamp collecting websites is soaring: APS reports, by one measure, visits to its stamps.org website gave nearly tripled. The Virtual Stamp Club‘s Facebook group has been getting as many valid new member requests in a day as it got pre-pandemic in a week. Both the APS and VSC are holding periodic “chats” or real-time video conferences.

“Stamp collecting has been here for 180 years,” said APS executive director Scott English is one of those chats, a “Town Hall Meeting,” on May 4th. “It has survived pandemics, such as the influenza epidemic in 1917; economic down times such as the Great Depression of the 1930s; world wars; and more.”

And English and others see this pandemic has an opportunity for stamp collecting to attract new members and bring others back into the hobby.