Hotchner: Collecting Prexies

How to Collect the Presidentials of 1938-1954?
by John M. Hotchner

hotchnerA friend recently told me he had accumulated quite a lot of Presidential Series material, and was thinking about what to do with it. He knew of my interest in the issue, and asked me “How do you collect the area? I want to get my material organized and developed into a collection. But I sure don’t want to start out on too grand a scale, and be overwhelmed — or worse, lose interest.”

He also suggested that I turn my response into an article, and I’m happy to oblige. First, let’s acknowledge that this is not an issue for most U.S. collectors. Most of us are pleased to have one Very Fine-or-better mint example of each value and/or one lightly cancelled used example. But over time, many of us acquire a few covers, maybe some color varieties and precancels, and the idea occurs to us that ratcheting up the challenge level might be fun.

prexies1Keep in mind that the Prexies (as they are often called), despite being 78 years young, are relatively modern by collecting standards. Thus, they combine — for 90% of the material — ease of availability with reasonable prices.

Still, a lot of people have gotten involved in “Prexie” collecting in the last 20 years (and the Liberty series after that, and Prominent American, Great Americans, etc.) So, the best material is going up in price, and the scarcer items are getting harder to locate. If you really want to get in on the ground floor of a collecting area, pick one of the more recent definitive series and start gathering material now.

But, back to the Prexies: There are three formats: the sheet stamps from 1/2¢ to $5, the coil stamps of two types (horizontal coils from 1¢ to 10¢; vertical coils from 1¢ to 3¢), and 1¢, 2¢ and 3¢ booklet panes. One approach to the Prexies is to specialize in the coils or the booklet panes. Of the available covers from the period, I would estimate that less than 5% are usages of coils or booklet pane singles or multiples. But the stamps themselves can be a challenge; especially if you enjoy plate number collecting. Miscuts of coils and booklet panes abound, and they are relatively inexpensive as used plate singles and even as mint miscut panes with a part of a plate number. For the 3¢ booklet pane there are 63 different plate numbers that can be found. The 3¢ horizontal coil has 224 plate numbers; while the four values (1¢, 1-1/2¢, 2¢ and 3¢) have a total of only ten plates for all.

There are also various booklet covers for different size booklets, and leader and end strips for coils.

coolidge_prexyRegarding the sheet stamps, meaningful subdivisions include the following possibilities:

    • One or more specific values, or for higher values that were less utilized, in groups such as the 11¢-14¢, or the dollar values. Of course it is possible to add the coils and booklet pane stamps to a specific value collection, too. (The dollar values have an extra dimension as they are bicolors, and thus have registration problems that result in the portrait being registered high and low, to left and to right with respect to the frames).
    • If you collect a specific value or group of values, you will need to look for varieties such as the following:

a. mad_pre_prexyPrecancels — both Bureau-printed (in the high hundreds of locations), and locally-printed (in the thousands of locations).

b. Perfins — the punched holes inside stamp designs that were meant to discourage employees of companies and non-profits from stealing the stamps intended for business use.

c. Socked-on-the-nose cancellations that can be focused on locations or dates.

d. EFOs, including color varieties, wet/ dry printings, misperfs, imperfs, counterfeits, plate varieties, rejection markings, double papers/paper splices, ghost plate numbers, thin papers, and more.

e. Plate numbers — used singles, or mint plate blocks — trying to get one of each number, or matched sets showing all sheet locations.

f. Canal Zone overprints on the 1/2¢ and 1-1/2¢.

You can add any or all of these to a collection by value, or make a specialty out of any one of these, or combine them in unusual ways. For example, I collect precancelled plate singles, and perfin EFOs (doubled, missing, inverted, etc.).

And if this is not enough to whet your appetite, going into the covers arena can be fun. In this realm are

  • Any of the above on cover, by value or groups of values, or by location.
  • The range of services available, from various classes of mail to Air Mail, Special Delivery, Registered, Insured, Postage Due, Special Handling, and more.
  • Solo uses for each stamp in the set.
  • How rates for services changed over the course of the 16 years from 1938 to 1954. This is especially challenging with International Air Mail
  • The progress of WWII as shown by mail sent to and from servicemen and women.
  • sc803eeFidelity1The dangers of transportation of the mails as shown by wreck and crash mail (air, ship, train, mail trucks, etc.)
  • A wide range of cachets on First Day Covers, including a second set of FDCs for Prexie stamps perforated by the new Electric Eye process (as shown on the right; three varieties on one FDC). The conversion took place from 1938 to 1942, and included three types of new marginal markings and plate number locations.
  • Auxiliary markings on Prexie covers showing difficulties and delays in delivery of the mail.
  • The wide range of commemorative and informative slogan cancellations that were used in the Prexie period.
  • The Prexies on envelopes with thousands of different patriotic cachets used during the Second World War.

lincoln_prexyA consequence of getting involved in specialties like the Presidentials is the need for information to explain the things you have found, and to inform your search for new material. Essential to every Prexie collector is the book by Roland Rustad, titled The Prexies, released by the United States Stamp Society (USSS) in 1994. Happily, it is still available from the USSS Executive Secretary, PO Box 6634, Katy, TX 77491-6634 for $24 to members, and $30 to non-members, postpaid.

The USSS is also an excellent resource, and its $25 annual membership fee is well worth the cost. Among its active committees is one devoted to the Presidential series, chaired by Jeffrey Shapiro, PO Box 3211, Fayville, MA 01745-3211.

There are also several other national specialty societies that can be helpful in learning about Prexie material; among them the Auxiliary Markings Club, the Precancel Stamp Society, the Perfins Club, the EFO Collectors’ Club, and the Wreck and Crash Mail Society.

Collectors are sometimes a bit alarmed by the idea of leaving the safety of the printed album page and digging deeper into some aspect of U.S. philately. Let me assure you that the enjoyment of doing so is worth the effort, and there are lots of collectors accessible through the societies noted above, who will be delighted to help you navigate the challenges.


Should you wish to comment on this column, or have questions or ideas you would like to have explored in a future column, please write to John Hotchner, VSC Contributor, P.O. Box 1125, Falls Church, VA 22041-0125, or email, putting “VSC” in the subject line.

Or comment right here.

WSJ: USPS Having A Good Holiday Season

usps_pkgdelivery2You know all that aggressive marketing this holiday season by the U.S. Postal Service? It appears to be paying off.

The Wall Street Journal reports the USPS share of holiday deliveries this year will increase from last year’s 35% to 40%. Volume is already up 15%

WSJ says the agency prepared well, deploying additional package sorting equipment, adding more scanning devices for carriers and clerks, hiring about 30,000 seasonal workers, increasing the number of shifts in some areas from one a day to three — that is, round-usps_pkgs_plantsthe-clock. The USPS is also delivering on Sunday for the equivalent of about 25,000 routes. UPS and FedEx don’t usually deliver on Sundays.

Meanwhile, the Journal also reports that Amazon is looking to become less dependent on United Parcel Service. Right now, Amazon is the biggest customer of UPS.

Among the steps Amazon is taking: Buildings its own freight operation and relying more heavily on the USPS.

More from The Wall Street Journal here and here.

Sweden’s 2016 Stamp Program

January 14
Swedish Museum of Natural History Centennial
Europa 2016 – Think Green
Birds – White-tailed Eagle

March 17
Bridges
Royal Jubilees
Food in Sweden

May 4
The Old Town
Life at the Beach

August 25
Birds – Redpoll
Birds – Hoopoe
Autumn Glow

November 10
Deer
Lund University 350th Anniversary
Northern Lights
Christmas 2016 – Santas

More on the stamp program

Norway’s 2016 Stamp Programme

11 January 2016: Youth Olympic Games

11 January 2016: Harald V – 25 Years as King

19 February 2016: Biathlon World Championship

15 April 2016: Nordic Food Culture

15 April 2016: Sarpborg’s 1,000th Anniversary Kragerø’s 350th Anniversary
Bodø’s 200th Anniversary Grimstad’s 200th Anniversary

9 May 2016: Think Green (Europa stamps)

10 June 2016: Kristiansand Zoo And Amusement Park’s 50th Anniversary

10 June 2016: Norwegian Meteorological Institute Celebrates 150th Anniversary

1 October 2016: Central Bank of Norway’s 200th Anniversary

1 October 2016: Lighthouse

14 November 2016: Johan Sverdrup’s 200th Birthday
Tor Jonsson 100th Birthday

14 November 2016: Christmas Stamps

Taiwan’s 2016 Stamp Program

First Quarter of 2016:

Name of Postage Stamps Category Number of Stamps Denominations Date of Issue note
 

Painting and Calligraphy on the Fan Souvenir Sheets

 

Special Stamps 2 S/S 25,80 2016/01/13
 

Fruits Postage Stamps (Continued)

 

Definitive Stamps 4 1,2.5,5,15 2016/01/28
Famous Church Architecture in Taiwan Postage Stamps Special Stamps 4 5×2,12×2 2016/02/04
120th Anniversary of the Chinese Postal Service Commemorative Souvenir Sheet Commemorative Stamps 1 S/S 17 2016/03/18
Ancient Chinese Paintings from the National Palace Museum Postage Stamps: Immortal Blossoms of an Eternal Spring (First of Two) Special Stamps 8 5×2,7,9,10×2,12×2 2016/03/29

Peter McCann Declares For APS Director-at-Large

McCann,-Peter-#2-smile-5-03-08aI began collecting stamps at the age of 11, and now focus on the philately of the small islands of the Caribbean and South Atlantic. The hobby has been a major part of my life, and I have been active in the APS for the last 20 years, including service as a vice president, and then president from 1999-2003.

Within the hobby, I have served in leadership positions in specialty societies, serve as a Board member of the International Federation of Philately (FIP), and am a long time exhibitor and philatelic judge at both the national and international levels. I was also a Co-Chairman of the Council of Philatelists of the Smithsonian’s National Postal Museum.

Service on the APS Board from 1995-2007, I was first elected in 1995 to the Board of Vice Presidents which is the judicial and disciplinary arm of the APS and in my second term became its Chairman. I also have been on the APS Committee on Accreditation of National Exhibitions and Judges since 1993 to the present, and was Chairman from 1997-1999 until I was elected APS President.

Chairman of the APS International Relations Committee from 1993-1997 which oversees all contacts with all other philatelic federations worldwide as well as interactions with all international stamp exhibitions in which APS Members participated.

On the APS Luff Award Committee from 2009 to the present, and finally was Chairman of the Greater APS Fund Committee from 1994-1997, successfully coordinating APS funding raising efforts in that period.

Some other philatelic activities included President of the American Association of Philatelic Exhibitors (AAPE), President of the American Philatelic Congress, and President of the British Caribbean Philatelic Study Group.

Summary of My Professional Background:
Currently Vice President of Govic Capital of New York- Palm Beach-Sarasota.
President/ CEO of biotech companies (1993-2003) – British Biotech USA, Oncostasis Inc, and Mymetics Corporation.
Research director and executive for world pharmaceutical company now Sanofi-Aventis (1979-1993)
President of the University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute (1998-1999)
Professor of Cell Biology at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine (1984-2013).
A.B. Degree from Columbia University, New York, and Ph.D. in Molecular Biology from Syracuse University.

My prior service on the Board, my extensive contacts in the hobby, knowledge from my professional life in both business management and academia, and my knowledge of the recent history of the APS combine as a set of unique experiences that can help the APS to move in a positive direction into the future.

While it is unusual for a past president to return to a Board position, it is clear that APS is at a crossroads, and with new staff leadership, I believe it is poised for a new era of growth. I want to help to make that happen, and would appreciate your vote.

Dr. Peter P. McCann
Ppm103226706@aol.com

USPS Restricts Shipping Of Hoverboards

hoverboardFollowing reports of hoverboard fires around the country, the U.S. Postal Service will only ship the recreational gizmos by ground transportation, slower than other services.

Hoverboards are skateboards without wheels, first depicted in the films Back To The Future Part II and Back To The Future Part III. In real life, they are self-balancing scooters with wheels at each end of the board.

On Wednesday, December 16, 2015, the federal Consumer Product Safety Commission issued a stern warning about hoverboards, and said it is investigating the problem “to find the root cause of the fire hazard, how much of a risk it might present, and to provide consumers with answers as soon as possible.”

“Every consumer who is riding a hoverboard, who purchased one to give as a gift during the holidays, or who is thinking about buying one deserves to know if there is a safety defect.”

Later in the day, the USPS announced the restrictions:

Out of an abundance of caution and in line with major retailers and the airline industry, the Postal Service is limiting the domestic shipping of mailable motorized balance boards, or hover boards, that contain lithium batteries.

Effective immediately and until further notice, USPS will ship hover boards using only Standard Post/Parcel Select. This product travels on ground transportation, due to the potential safety hazards of lithium batteries.

Also effective immediately, mailable motorized balance boards, or hover boards, will not be sent in international mail shipments, and are also prohibited in shipments to or from APO, FPO, and DPO destinations.

The Postal Service has long-time established rules and regulations regarding the mailing of lithium batteries both domestically and internationally.

USPS rules and regulations pertaining to lithium batteries can be found at the following links:

Note:  these rules do not yet include the limitations and prohibitions on hover boards.

 

No Postal Rate Increase In Canada

[press release]
2016 regulated postage stamp rates to remain at current levels

OTTAWA, Dec 16, 2015 /CNW Telbec/ – Consumer-facing regulated postage stamp rates will not increase in January 2016.

Increases previously announced in July 2015 will not proceed pending a Government of Canada review of Canada Post, as outlined in the mandate letter for the Minister of Public Services and Procurement. As a result, the current rates for Domestic Lettermail, U.S. and can_retailquebeccity2aInternational Letter-post items (letters, cards and postcards destined for the United States and other international destinations) and Domestic Registered Mail will remain in effect for 2016.

PermanentTM stamps for Domestic Lettermail items weighing 30 grams or less will remain at the current rate of $0.85 when purchased in a booklet, coil or pane. The price of a single stamp will remain $1.00.

The regulated postage stamp rates impacted by this decision are largely geared to consumers because they apply to regular letters, cards and postcards. Non-regulated rates for items like parcels, direct mail and large-volume mailings of letters will continue to see competitive rate changes take effect in early 2016.

Canada Post estimates the average Canadian household purchases approximately two postage stamps per month while the typical small business purchases fewer than 250 postage stamps per year.

2016 Stamp Program Of Poste Srpske AD

Poste Srpske is one of three postal agencies in Bosnia-Herzogovina, according to Wikipedia. This program is from a press release:

25 January
125 Years from the Birth of Diana Budisavljevic
Number of stamps: 1
Sheet: 8+1
Nominal value (BAM): 1.70

10 February
700 Years from the Death of the King Dragutin Nemanjic
Number of stamps: 1
8+1
Nominal value (BAM): 0.90

16 March
History
Number of stamps: 8
Sheet: 8+1
Nominal value (BAM): 8 x 0.90

29 April
EUROPA – Think Green
Number of stamps: 2
Sheet: 9 karnet
Nominal values (BAM): 1.50, 1.50, 6.00

16 May
European Protection of Nature
Number of stamps: 2
Sheet: 8+2
Nominal values (BAM): 0.90, 1.70

1 June
International Day of Children
Number of stamps: 1
Sheet: 8+1
Nominal value (BAM): 1.70

10 June
Football
Number of stamps: 1
Sheet: BLOCK
Nominal value (BAM): 5.10

7 July
Summer Sports
Number of stamps: 4
Sheet: BLOCK
Nominal value (BAM): 4 x 1.70

14 September
Endangered Species – Griffin Vulture
Number of stamps: 4
Sheet: BLOCK
Nominal values (BAM): 2 x 0.90, 2 x 1.70

26 October
Medicinal Mushrooms
Number of stamps: 4
Sheet: 16+9
Nominal value (BAM): 4 x 0.90

15 November
Ethnological Treasure
Number of stamps: 4
Sheet: 20+5
Nominal value (BAM): 4 x 0.90

1 December
Composers
Number of stamps: 3
Sheet: 12+4
Nominal value (BAM): 3 x 1.70

Forest Fruits (no details)

Freshwater Animals (no details)