Auction Detail
January 2023
Our January 2023 sales include the "Erivan" Collection of United and Confederate States Postal History Part VIII, as well as a general sale of United States and worldwide stamps, covers, and collections.
bold strike ties 1861 3c Rose (65, top right corner added and small tear at left) to ca. 1868 cover to Poquonock, Connecticut, matching "West Point Miss Mar 31" datestamp alongside, very fine example of this rare cancellation, 2022 William T. Crowe certificate (Skinner-Eno PO-CR 13)
bold strike ties 1869 3c Ultramarine (114) to all-over embossed Valentine cover to Manchester, New Hampshire, matching "Nashua N.H. Feb 18" datestamp alongside, very fine and attractive (Skinner-Eno FR-M3b 37)
strike in blue ties 1869 3c Ultramarine (114) to cover to New York City, matching "Painted Post N.Y. Sep 17" datestamp, very fine strike and cover (Skinner-Eno FR-M3b 54)
bold, perfect strike on 3c Pink entire (U58) addressed to Ellington, New York, "Dayton O. Jul 5" datestamp alongside, barely reduced at right into cornercard, an extremely fine strike of this wonderful cancel (S-E PH-H 68)
bold strike ties 1861 1c Blue (63) to 1868 locally-addressed cover, matching "Knoxville Tenn Sep 15" datestamp, original enclosure (invitation to "Grand Coronation Ball"), stamp barest trace of gum toning on perforation tips, very fine and attractive (Skinner-Eno PA-H 4)
stamp tied by "Hillsboro N.C. May 27 1861" double circle datestamp to cover to "Priestly H. Magnum, Raleigh, No. Ca.", cover expertly restored and repaired with pencil notations on the front erased, very fine appearance, one of two Hillsboro provisionals known and the unique example used at the 3c United States letter rate, 2022 Civil War Philatelic Society certificate (Scott listed but unpriced)
This cover was first described in a 1984 article by Patricia A. Kaufmann describing the 1861 United States 3c Postmaster Provisionals used in the Confederacy (Confederate Philatelist Vol. 29, No. 5). Although the Confederacy was formed on February 4, 1861, the act prescribing the rates of postage in the CSA did not go into effect until June 1. As Kaufmann explains:
"Postmasters from seceded states which joined the Confederacy found themselves in a very difficult position. While most postmasters were sympathetic to the South and intended subsequently to accept Confederate postmaster commissions, they still were technically under oath to the United States Post Office Department until June 1, 1861. The United States demanded a confirming oath from these southern postmasters be fore they would ship additional supplies of U.S. stamps to them during the period between the formation of the Confederacy and June 1, 1861."
This unique set of circumstances led to the issuance of postage stamps by a small number of Confederate postmasters during this brief window in early 1861. While a Hillsboro 5c provisional (used June 7, under the newly-established Confederate postal service) has been recognized for some time (at least since the 1929 edition of Dietz's book), the cover offered here was not described until Kaufmann's article.
May 27, 1861, the date of this cover, coincides with the date that North Carolina joined the Confederacy (after seceding from the United States a week prior). It was also the date that United States Postmaster General Montgomery Blair ordered the discontinuance of US mail through the seceded states except West Virginia. Both the Richmond Daily Dispatch and Macon Daily Telegraph announced that the Confederate Post Office Department would not be able to furnish new stamps for some time, which (combined with the patriotic fervor of being the newest state in the Confederacy) almost certainly led to the creation of this provisional stamp.
perfect strike of provisional handstamp at upper left of cover to Dawson, Georgia, matching "Albany Ga Feb 8 1862" datestamp at right, extremely fine strikes and cover (Scott $1,000)
Provenance: John R. Hill, Jr. (Private transaction)
full margins including sheet margin at top and right, tied by black "Baton Rouge La Dec 18" datestamp to cover to Donaldsville, Louisiana, cover with vertical and horizontal creases away from stamp, very fine and attractive, 2022 Civil War Philatelic Society certificate (Scott $5,000)
Provenance: Alfred H. Caspary (H.R. Harmer Sale 989, 1956)
Alexander S. Kirkman (H.R. Harmer Sale 1423, 1962)
black handstamp "Paid" with manuscript "5cts" and "J.T. Hall", matching "Demopolis Ala Nov 27" datestamp at top right, addressed to "Hon Moses McGuire, Probate Judge, Tuskaloosa", very fine, the unique Demopolis provisional with manuscript rate and the earliest recorded provisional envelope from Demopolis (Scott lists the three varieties out of chronological order), illustrated by M. Clinton McGee in his 1960 Confederate Philatelist article (Vol. 5, No. 11) which explains the discovery and history of these rare envelopes (Scott $4,000)
double-circle provisional handstamp at top right with matching "Gainsville Ala. Jan 2" datestamp at left on 1862 cover to Lauderdale Station, Mississippi, extremely fine and fresh, one of just seven examples of this envelope recorded in the Crown census (Scott $4,500)
Provenance: Alexander Hall (R.A. Siegel Sale 795, 1997)
four large margins, light cancel, couple trivial thins, extremely fine appearance, one of the most attractive of the few recorded examples of this stamp (Scott $12,000)
Provenance: Alfred H. Caspary (H.R. Harmer Sale 989, 1956)
(Alexander S. Kirkman Sale 1423, 1962)
essentially four margins with portion of adjacent stamp at right, tied by black "Paid" handstamp to folded letter (blue lined paper), additional red pen cancel, endorsed "O.B." and addressed to Captain William Headen in Corpus Christi, Texas, contents dated August 18, 1864, very fine, by far the finer of the two examples of the 10c "Goilad" error on cover and in our opinion one of the most desirable items of Confederate States postal history (Scott $30,000)
Provenance: Alfred H. Caspary (H.R. Harmer Sale 989, 1956)
Josiah K. Lilly (R.A. Siegel Sale 317, 1967)