Auction Detail
March United States Postal History
Featuring The Leonard Piszkiewicz Collection of Chicago Postal History, The Van Koppersmith Collection of Philadelphia Postal History and The Tony Dewey Collection of Hartford Postal History
- The Van Koppersmith Collection of Philadelphia Postal History (486) Apply The Van Koppersmith Collection of Philadelphia Postal History filter
- The Leonard Piszkiewicz Collection of Chicago Postal History (192) Apply The Leonard Piszkiewicz Collection of Chicago Postal History filter
- The Tony Dewey Collection of Hartford Postal History (150) Apply The Tony Dewey Collection of Hartford Postal History filter
- United States Postal History (90) Apply United States Postal History filter
- Main catalogue (1) Apply Main catalogue filter
- (-) Remove United States of America filter United States of America
- (-) Remove United States Postal History filter United States Postal History
- 19th Century General Issues (45) Apply 19th Century General Issues filter
- Postal Stationery (2) Apply Postal Stationery filter
- Carriers’ and Local Stamps (21) Apply Carriers’ and Local Stamps filter
- Civil War Postal History (6) Apply Civil War Postal History filter
- United States Covers by Topic (4) Apply United States Covers by Topic filter
- British Commonwealth (1) Apply British Commonwealth filter
small brown rate handstamp (Clarke 501c) on incoming folded lettersheet from Nassau, New Providence (Bahamas) dated April 30, 1793, endorsed "p the Molly, Cap't Razor", fine and scarce handstamp type, ex-Lovey
brown rate handstamp (Clarke 501b) on folded cover from Altona, Denmark (now in Hamburg, Germany), contains pre-printed letter in German dated July 24, 1793, endorsed "Cap't Dryburg", very fine and interesting
dark brown Franklin mark on incoming folded letter from Cape Francais (Cape Haitien), Haiti to Newburyport, Massachusetts, dated August 14, 1793, manuscript "22" rate, apparently bootlegged as no ship letter fee charged, fine
brown rate handstamp (Clarke 501b) on incoming folded letter from Bordeaux, France datelined May 12, 1794, endorsed "p Ship America, Cap't. Ewing", fine and scarce
small brown rate handstamp (Clarke 501b) on incoming folded letter from Charleston, South Carolina dated August 27, 1794, endorsed "forw'd by Cap't Grant", very fine and scarce handstamp type, ex-Siskin
brown Franklin mark on incoming folded letter from London to Newbury Port, Massachusetts, dated September 9, 1794, endorsed "p Vigon Cap't Loxley, Via Philadelphia", manuscript "Sh 26" rate for 4c ship letter fee plus 22 inland postage, very fine
manuscript rate (Clarke unlisted) on incoming folded letter from Bermuda dated February 21, 1795, endorsed "p Cap't Peniston, via Baltimore", very fine, the only recorded manuscript "4" rate marking from Philadelphia, ex-Skinner
brown rate handstamp (Clarke 501b) on incoming folded letter from Georgetown, South Carolina, dated July 12, 1795, very fine
brown Franklin mark on folded letter from Manchester, England to New York City dated December 9, 1794, endorsed "Brig Tuley to Philadelphia", manuscript "Sh 14" for 4c ship letter fee plus 10c inland postage, very fine, ex-Siskin
brown Franklin mark on printed folded letter from Hamburg, Germany dated January 1, 1796 and addressed to Boston, Massachusetts, endorsed "Via Philadelphia p the Eliza, Cap'n James Yardsley", manuscript "Sh 24" rate for 4c ship letter fee plus 20c inland postage, very fine
brown rate handstamp (Clarke 501b) on incoming folded letter from Captain Joseph Ingraham in Algiers, Algeria, addressed to "Cap't James Leander Cathcart, to the care of Wm. Robert Montgomery, Esq., American Consul", letter includes contents about a plague in Algiers which claimed the lives of three sailors, disinfection slits, fine and rare, a fascinating and important artifact documenting the prelude to the Barbary Wars
During the early years of the United States, Barbary pirates along the coast of North Africa posed a serious threat to American sailors in the region, taking a number hostage and keeping them under inhumane conditions. A bubonic plague outbreak in the mid-1790s only worsened matters. By June 16, 1796 two Americans (Nicholas Hartford of Portsmouth, New Hampshire and Abraham Simmonds of Cape Ann, Massachusetts) had died of the plague while in prison, followed by the passing of Joseph Keith of Newfoundland shortly before June 16. This letter, from Revolutionary War veteran and Pacific explorer Captain Joseph Ingraham, is addressed to Captain James Leander Cathcart, himself an Algerian prisoner for 11 years who was freed under the Treaty of Tripoli and later served as United States Consul to Tunis, Tripoli, Madeira, and Cádiz.
brown Franklin mark on incoming folded letter from Antwerp, Belgium to New York City dated March 13, 1797, manuscript "Sh 14" rate, very fine