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Let's Try A Cover A Day Again

Greetings everyone!

I was just thinking that I had very much enjoyed doing the "cover a day" challenge back in the Spring of 2020.  Perhaps there isn't as much motivation to do this as there was then, but I do still miss having conversations with others who like the hobby.

I will set for myself the challenge of posting a cover each day on this thread every day for ninety days.  Anyone who wants to join me and show some postal history may feel free to do so (doesn't matter if its modern, older, US or any other part of the world).

For those who do not remember the prior thread, it is here.

 

 

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Re: Let's Try A Cover A Day Again

@rfaux 

Anyone who would like to share a bit of postal history in this thread is welcome to do so!  Or, if you would rather just lurk and enjoy what I (and others post), good enough!

 

Let me tell you, I have been lurking and thoroughly enjoying your posts!  

Of the long list of things that have interested me in life, philatelics was not one of them. However, it's

truly fascinating.  And your writing is wonderful and so refreshing!  If you are not a professional writer, you certainly could be.  I just spent some time at your website. It's fantastic! I love your "merry chases"!  Just had to let you know.

Message 511 of 608
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Re: Let's Try A Cover A Day Again

                       CHILE AMBULANCE  #118 

 

nadams3_0-1674600570138.jpeg

 

 

The Chanaral – Llanta – Potrerillos line in Chile is one of the most stunning railways in the world. It connects Potrerillos, a now abandoned town and mine in the remote Andes located 2850 meters above sea level, with the filtration plant and workshops in Llanta and Diego de Almagro, where the line connects to the Longitudinal Norte, and continues to Chañaral and the harbor at Barquito. The line was built starting 1916 by the Andes Copper Mining Company to connect the Potrerillos copper mine and smelter with Pueblo Hundido (now called Diego de Almagro), where it connected to the state railway network, which continued to Chañaral. 

 

 AMB 118AMB 118

Message 512 of 608
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Re: Let's Try A Cover A Day Again


@anjie234 wrote:

@rfaux 

Let me tell you, I have been lurking and thoroughly enjoying your posts!  

Of the long list of things that have interested me in life, philatelics was not one of them. However, it's

truly fascinating.  And your writing is wonderful and so refreshing!  If you are not a professional writer, you certainly could be.  I just spent some time at your website. It's fantastic! I love your "merry chases"!  Just had to let you know.


anjie234,

I had a conversation earlier today with a person who told me that they had received a kind letter that had really made their day and I was so pleased for them.  They are a storyteller who has been at it for many, many years, often with minimal appreciation.  I told her I had written a note to someone else just this past week that I had appreciated something they had done and we both agreed that more of this sort of kindness would be a good thing in the world.

 

Then I read this.

 

This is unexpected as I wasn't really thinking about something coming my way.  I was more thinking about trying to tell others how much I appreciate them.

 

Thank you.  This truly came at a good time and is encouragement I needed.

Rob

Message 513 of 608
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Re: Let's Try A Cover A Day Again

nadams3,

Very interesting.  A time period and area I know very little about, so it is always interesting to learn a bit more.  Thank you for sharing this item and the research on the rail line connections.

Rob

Message 514 of 608
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Re: Let's Try A Cover A Day Again

I won't be able to post tomorrow, so I will get my post for that day out there now.  This is an ongoing project "Merry Chase" cover that requires a little more research before I can say I've got it all figured.  Essentially, this was supposed to be an item sent from the US via Prussian Closed Mail to Switzerland, but it somehow found its way in Italy for a while - after going through Switzerland apparently.

It's going to be a fun one!

 

SwitzviaPCMmissent.jpgSwitzviaPCMmissentverso.jpg

Message 515 of 608
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Re: Let's Try A Cover A Day Again

Here's an internal letter (mailed within France for a destination in France) that properly pays the 40 centimes required to get the letter from there to there.   The "O" in a circle was applied because this letter was placed in a rural mail drop box for the carrier to pick up and take to the nearest post office.  Each such box hand a handstamp that stayed in the box.  The carrier would take it out and mark the letters they had taken from the box.  In this case, the "O" in circle was the image applied by the handstamp in this particular box.  It would allow the French postal service to track use of these boxes.

 

 

FR1_dropbox.jpg

Message 516 of 608
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Re: Let's Try A Cover A Day Again

Rob - I think your cover that was supposed to go to Geneva went via Italy because a clerk misread the city name as Genoa. The date stamps show transiting Alessandria, Novi, Genoa (illegible), Turin, Geneva. If a guy put it in a the Italy bag in Germany, it wouldn't have been seen while transiting Switzerland the first time. That's my guess.

 

26 January 1875

Pre-UPU printed matter to Calw, Wurttemberg. PD indicates full payment.

30_1875_01_26 copy.jpg

Message 517 of 608
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Re: Let's Try A Cover A Day Again

For those who have interest, this week's Postal History Sunday is available.  You can view the entire history of PHS by going here, the entries are in most recent first order.

 

And here is the first item featured in the most recent Postal History Sunday, an 1863 envelope mailed from the US to the island of Guernsey.

 

Guernsey.jpg

Message 518 of 608
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Re: Let's Try A Cover A Day Again

Again, reached weekend and missed daily posts. 

27 January 1873

First issue domestic Swiss postal card uprated for international use to Baden. Switzerland had an agreement with Germany States to exchange postal cards, but not France or Italy. This card to Lahr, Baden from Maienfeld.

30_1873_01_27 copy.jpg

Message 519 of 608
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Re: Let's Try A Cover A Day Again

28 January 1915

Detail of cover showing First Day cancel of 1 on 2 centimes stamp, and 13 on 12 which official first day was the next day the 29th. Mailed in Arbon within Arbon.

1915_01_28_fleuron copy.jpg

 

Message 520 of 608
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29 January 1886

1/2d English postal card uprated with 1/2d stamp for international use to Neuchatel, Switzerland. Originating in Edinburgh, Scotland, it transited France, and was transferred to Switzerland via the Pontarlier-Neuchatel railway.

pontartlier-neuchatel_1886_01_29 copy.jpeg

Message 521 of 608
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Love the researchable aspects of your posts.. here are some facts on the S/S Arabia.. 

airbornestamps_0-1675016803614.png

 

Message 522 of 608
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Roger, was that the correct rate on the FDC? 32 centimes seems like an odd rate, but I'm not up on the correct rates for the period.

Message 523 of 608
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Hi Bill - You are correct to see something suspect. The local letter rate for a letter was 5 centimes, so one must guess this was mailed by a collector to himself. No different than many items one sees today in exhibits with modern topics, etc, etc. 😞 >)

Message 524 of 608
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Today's trifecta are the following:

30 January 1901 - Local letter from Chur (razor cancel) to Churwalden.

5.01_1901_01_30 copy.jpg

 

31 January 1901 - Lausanne to St Imier postal card used to collect Fr12.35. Local postage 5 centimes plus 10 centimes per 10 Fr to collect, thus 20 centimes fee. Uncollected after two tries (see bottom of card showing two attempts by mailman)

7.04_1901_01_31 copy.jpeg

 

1 February 1901 - Business postcard fro Bienne to Geneve with Geneve rue du Stand razor cancel used as a receiver. 5 centimes domestic postcard rate.

02_01 copy 2.jpg

 

 

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