New York Stock Exchange stamp (courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery) The New York Stock Exchange meeting under Buttonwood Tree on Wall Street. Four agents returned their stamps, four quit or were terminated, and one agent claimed they had lost theirs and kept their job. A scandal soon followed, and the agency demanded that the agents return the stamps or face termination (they had been purchased with taxpayer money, after all). Each of the agents kept one stamp for themselves. The agents replaced the rare stamps with regular $1 issues, then sold a sheet with 85 of the inverted rush lamp stamps (plus one damaged stamp) to a collector for $25,000. In 1986, nine CIA agents who noticed the error, purchased the sheet with the 95 remaining stamps at the post office in Mclean, Virginia (the post office had unknowingly sold the other five to be used as everyday postage). Of these, a $1 stamp-depicting a colonial rush lamp and candle holder-was printed as an invert on a single sheet of 100 stamps.
Us airmail 10 cent stamp series#
Between 19, the Post Office released a series of Americana stamps, four of which depicted light sources. Inverted CIA stamp (courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery) The official seal of the Central Intelligence Agency.
In that film, where a Hawaiian Missionary stamp plays a key part in the intrigue, its value is 3 cents, but there was no such thing as a 3-cent Missionary, only 2-cent, 5-cent and 13-cent. Audrey Hepburn fans will recognize a stamp similar to this one from her 1963 picture with Cary Grant, Charade, but there’s a catch. Interestingly, the 2-cent stamp didn’t serve much of a purpose-the only use was for a newspaper or the captain’s fee (ship captains received 2 cents for every letter they carried). Collectors love these stamps for both the rarity of their survival, as well as their fanciful numerals. Yet the Kingdom of Hawaii’s postmaster was American, and Honolulu’s and San Francisco’s post offices were well-connected. In 1963, Life magazine said this stamp “Pound for pound, is the most valuable substance on earth.” The stamp dates back to 1851, when Hawaii was a sovereign nation and a popular destination for American missionaries spreading the gospel.
Us airmail 10 cent stamp movie#
(Credit: Movie Poster Image Art/Getty Images) ‘Blue Boy’ Alexandria Postmaster’s Provisionalīlue Hawaiian missionary stamp (courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery) Stanley Donen’s 1963 comedy Charade, starring Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn. Colonial orators, like Patrick Henry, as well as newspapers, seized on the issue of English tyranny taking the form of taxation without representation, building the wave to revolution some 10 years later. Mob violence and intimidation followed, forcing stamp tax collectors to resign their positions and driving away ships carrying stamp papers at seaports. The colonies were incensed at the notion that they could be taxed by anyone outside their elected assemblies.
While the money demanded by the act was quite low and the act was repealed the following year, the damage was done. The “stamp” was applied to paper to denote that the tax had been paid. It was levied on American paper used for legal, official or everyday useful documents: ship’s papers, business licenses, calendars, declarations, inventory, etc. The Stamp Act, passed by British Parliament in 1765, often cited as one of the immediate causes of the American Revolution, was, in fact, a tax.
(Courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery) The Battle of Yorktown (Credit: Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images)