Thursday, February 19, 2004
5:09:00 PM EST
Feeling Quiet
Hearing the news in the background
Confederate Colonel David Ridiman
Thursday, February 19, 2004
5:09:00 PM EST
Feeling Quiet
Hearing the news in the background
Confederate Colonel David Ridiman
Dave's membership in the Confederate Stamp Collectors was approved. :-) They sent his membership information addressed to Colonel David Ridiman. Apparently each member of this group of collectors is given an honorary military title in the Confederate Army. He was excited with the book they sent along with the membership that shows the true stamps along with common forgeries. Dave showed me several of the forgeries. During the fall he went up to Columbus for a stamp convention and took Tabitha with him. She picked out several stamps there. For Christmas he bought her a really old stamp she had been wanting that she called "Big Head."
Confederate Stamp Alliance (text taken from website)
About Confederate Philately
Much of the history of that short-lived political experiment, the Confederate States of America, was reflected in its stamps, covers, and other postal mementos. The bitter Civil War spanned the entire life of the Confederacy -- the four years from 1861 to 1865 -- and the marks and record of that great struggle are nowhere found more clearly than in the postal history of the "Lost Cause." All collectors of Confederate stamps come to realize this very early in their pursuit, and this fact has much to do with the fascination that the Confederate collector invariably experiences.
There are hundreds of varieties of stampless, Handstamp Paid and Manuscript covers as well as Provisional adhesive stamps and envelopes used before the Confederate government could issue regular stamps. There are 17 major varieties of regular issue Confederate States stamps -- also minor varieties and endless shades.
There are Prisoner-of-War and Flag-of-Truce covers, Express Company markings, Blockade-Run covers to and from Europe, College covers, Official and Semi-Official envelopes, Packet and Steamboat covers, Patriotic covers with their war mottos, covers showing use of United States stamps in the Confederacy, and many interesting letters.
Nowhere else in philately can one find such strange usages, makeshifts and evidences of desperate shortages. There are envelopes made of wallpaper, envelopes used twice over, and United States stamped envelopes seized and overprinted for the use of the Confederacy.
Today Confederate items are over 135 years old. Some are scarce and hard to find, but many are within reach of all.
More has been written about Confederate stamps and covers -- and still is being written -- than nearly anyother specialized field.
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hestiahomeschool
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