Login to Use StampAuctionNetwork. New Member? Click "Register".
StampAuctionNetwork Extended Features
StampAuctionNetwork Channels
Extended Features
Visit the following Auction Calendars:
Help:
More Useful Information:
Newsletter:
For Auction Firms:
Get Market Data for [United States 2XU1 var.]
3X3, 1845 Baltimore, Maryland 5c Black on bluish, stellar right margin single with full frame lines all around tied on folded letter sheet addressed to Romulus Riggs in Philadelphia by blue Baltimore Mar 10 (1846) cds with another strike below and a matching "Paid" handstamp, additional ms "Paid" and "5" notations, some light vertical file folds incl one through stamp; Fine and rare example without the typical pen cancels plus being tied by the Baltimore postmark (Scott $13,500)
Romulus Riggs (1782-1846) was a banker and real estate investor in the Washington DC area (1812-25) before moving to Philadelphia and engaging in similar activities in addition to founding the Romulus & Co banking firm just prior to his death (6 months after this letter received). Docketing on letter indicates probably sent by Samuel Riggs with comments (in another hand) noting that someone "Wants to buy 25-30000$ Penn...in speculation".
Hayes Census #12; Classics Society Census #20148
Provenance: Alfred H. Caspary (H.R. Harmer Sale 967, Nov 1955, lot 23)
Get Market Data for [United States 3X3]
6X1, Lockport, New York 5c Red on buff, unique complete stamp with margins all around, made from an older oval Lockport cancellation device, center design with red straightline "PAID" and manuscript "5," cancelled by manuscript "X", matching red "PAID" and Lockport "5" integral rate handstamp, March 18, 1846 on folded letter addressed to "Robert Morrell, Esq." in Geneva, New York, later turned and readdressed to sender in Lockport (March 24 Geneva cds and "10" rate handstamp), addressee's name has been cut out of the lettersheet but this does not affect the address panel with the stamp, Extremely Fine, the only complete example of this famous stamp on- or off-cover, and as such one of the greatest rarities in all of American philately, a true icon which ranks alongside other uniquities such as the Alexandria "Blue Boy," the Boscawen provisional, the "Large Beaumont" Confederate provisional, and the Dawson cover, offered publicly for the first time in over 30 years, signed "RHW Co" and 1989 Philatelic Foundation certificate (Scott $300,000 is based on an 1989 auction realization)
When John N. Luff was writing his seminal tome The Postage Stamps of the United States in 1902, he described the Lockport provisional as a stamp "practically without a history." While he was correct in the sense that there is no firsthand written or physical evidence of the stamp's creation, fortunately the ensuing decades have seen research carried out which has shed some light on this fascinating and mysterious stamp.
The Lockport provisional was created during the administration of, and presumably at the direction of, postmaster Colonel Hezekiah W. Scovell. At the time Lockport, located on the Erie Canal in Niagara County, was a city of only approximately 9,000 residents (today its population is just above 20,000). The cover bearing the only surviving example of Scovell's creation was not found until the end of the 19th Century by a collector named M.H. Hoover, who was searching the papers of the Holmes & Moss firm of Lockport, New York. Curiously, as the lettersheed had been folded and reused, the provisional stamp ended up in the city where it had originated and was actually on the inside of what appeared to be a plain stampless cover.
Hoover traded the Lockport provisional cover to the Scott Stamp & Coin Company, who immediately placed it with Count Ferrary. The Lockport cover sold for the equivalent of $8,000 on April 7, 1922; the buyer was Arthur Hind, upon whose death the cover was purchased by Warren H. Colson for Alfred H. Caspary. From Caspary the cover sold to Josiah K. Lilly, then to John R. Boker, Jr., thus completing its tour of arguably the five most important stamp collections of the 20th Century. Its last appearance at public auction was in the 1989 Christie's sale of the Weill Brothers' stock, where it was purchased by Mr. Erivan Haub.
For many years the Lockport cover was subject to scrutiny and suspicion, as its unique nature made it difficult if not impossible to prove its authenticity. This all changed with Scott Trepel's 1989 article in the Chronicle ("The Lockport Postmaster's Provisional," Vol. 41, Num. 3), which not only examined the ink and paper of the complete Lockport cover, but also revealed to the world a second cover with small portions of two Lockport adhesives (offered in the next lot). This, along with the Christie's auction description, are essential reading for anyone with even a passing interest in this legendary cover.
In the century and a quarter since its discovery, the Lockport provisional has been featured in Stamps of Fame (L. N. and M. Williams, 1949), Life Magazine's "World's Rarest Stamps" (1954), Philatelic Gems (Linn's, 1984), and many other publications. Today, with its return to the philatelic market after 31 years, we are certain the Lockport provisional will resume its rightful place alongside other similarly unique and legendary stamps.
Provenance: Count Philipp von Ferrary (Gilbert Sale 3, 1922)
Arthur Hind (Charles J. Phillips Sale 1, 1933)
Alfred H. Caspary (H.R. Harmer Sale 967, 1955)
Josiah K. Lilly, Jr. (R.A. Siegel Sale 312, 1967)
John R. Boker, Jr. (Private Transaction)
Weill Brothers' Stock (Christie's, 1989)
Get Market Data for [United States 6X1]
6X1, Lockport, New York 5c Red on buff, large-size folded lettersheet with two pieces of coarse buff paper attached by adhesive wafers at upper left, the right showing approximately a quarter ("ORT") of the red oval handstamp found on the complete provisional stamp, the left showing a small portion of a manuscript "X" cancellation, two strikes of red straightline "Paid" and matching Lockport "10" integral rate handstamp, contents datelined March 25, 1846, from J.C. Morse at Lockport to the Honorable A.C. Flagg, Comptroller of New York in Albany, message references an enclosure which explains the double-weight rate of 10c, the paper remnants at upper left are perfectly spaced as to indicate a pair of Lockport provisional stamps (pencil notation states "2 copies Lockport prov. removed"), vertical file folds, Very Fine, a tragic cover, sent just a week after the complete Lockport cover offered in the previous lot, which nevertheless proved extremely important in determining the authenticity of the complete Lockport cover, 2020 Philatelic Foundation certificate (Scott $300,000 for complete stamp on cover)
If the stamps were complete, this cover would be amongst the most celebrated and prized covers in philately; in its current state, it is a tragic and sobering reminder of the countless unique and rare covers to have fallen victim to destruction over the decades, whether intentional or accidental. This cover was previously offered alongside the complete cover as one lot in the 1989 Weill Brothers sale. This is the first time it has ever been offered individually at auction, as we believe multiple collectors deserve the opportunity to lay claim to the Lockport provisional in their collections.
Get Market Data for [United States Collection]
Get Market Data for [United States 9X1]
Get Market Data for [United States 9X1d]
Get Market Data for [United States 9X1e]
Get Market Data for [United States 9X2]
Get Market Data for [United States 11X1]
Get Market Data for [United States 11X2]
Get Market Data for [United States 1]
Get Market Data for [United States 9]
Get Market Data for [United States 10A]
Get Market Data for [United States 11A]
Get Market Data for [United States 26]
Get Market Data for [United States 32-33]
Get Market Data for [United States 24, 26]