Skip to main content

Full text of "Canada; its postage stamps and postal stationary"

See other formats


CORNELL 

UNIVERSITY 

LIBRARY 




THIS BOOK IS ONE OF A 
COLLECTION MADE BY 

BENNO LOEWY 
1854-1919 

AND BEQUEATHED TO 
CORNELL UNIVERSITY 




'<^>. 



Cornell University 
Library 



The original of this book is in 
the Cornell University Library. 

There are no known copyright restrictions in 
the United States on the use of the text. 



http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924030133122 






Plate II 




26 



87 






31 








■rrt-KJSTXCKiXT^ 



33 




34 




mdm. 



3J 




36 







40 







41 



4S 



43 



44 




45 



Plate III 



iTV'UT.-w-V'w't, ."t'l^^V^^^ 





47 




v^-w^-fcTW-trv-v-k 'v»M '^■v"V"« 'u"w% 








- - *: >": 









J4 



55 



56 







58 



57 



59- 



60 



Plate IV 












67 





70 







69 







75 




Plate V 




79 





81 





8S 



83 





84 



85 







89 



Plate VI 





^«^.^^" 




90 







^^.^ 




1 

\ 


— -1 


91 



Plate vii ™ 




If. iiiw« m «i 



,^ T^^^f^ (^.J. An^^r^,<^ 








^WBW^HW 




P7 



i.-i'-«*!a!)9»-3Miyii»t- .*■«•«»/?>." ','!''= 



Plate viii 



:^^:^. 



^ 










£), 





Plate LX 





/o/ 




!0O 



ws 



Al 1 1 ■•nmu llniiU ^ 





!03 



104 






LI«I.....IH.^..l«..IILUUI.lHl...aJlH[ 




iiffliaiffiT!BfBn !«i."i-»'j«i«i.ii.'i* 



10 e 



107 



108 



Plate x 




109 






CANADA 


^ 


r#; POSTAGE 1 


e^: ;-* 


f 


fe^i 


. mim 


"MM|rs ,* 


— 









112 



IIS 



i 



.A0^^^1^?^>.. 




npnciALLisE)\irn 




115 



nVZA M MAT TER I 




116 







f .1 9 « n o er 





•4-* • «.<« a O r 







b fk ». *-=* ^ »«* g m ».. 





T" 










» rj^tritvn^'o^i^' ■.r'r^^y"^ 



Plate xii 




»iViinii..iiiiiiniin.iin[iimiii[iiinfcn» 



123 






194 



!S5 



IS6 




1S7 



Plate xiii 



T-^ 



§^:. I 



^JV 



\7 



■^'^ 









>: 




'^. ^ ^ C^ ^^ i^ ^^^a^S- r J^A-^-U^ ' 



W 



7/ 





V 




1S8 













IS 9 




Plate xiv 



wift'^imrwimfymw 



1 



V 



n 










..^ 






/5(3 



/T- 









^ ^^f^^^^ ^oc^ ^/^^ 



fc^'l 1 til Mill 



( 

I 

4 






Cornell University Library 
HE6185.C2 H85 
+ 
Canada: 




3 1924 030 133 122^^^^^ 
olin 






,1^5^,^ 





TV 



-+- 



-iM|ei| 






-4-^ 








THICK 30FT-W0VE. PAPEJ*. . 














Specimen Page: 
From the Collection of Charles Lathrop Pack Eso, 



CANADA 



ITS 



POSTAGE STAMPS 



AND 



POSTAL STATIONERY 





BY 












CLIFTON A. 


HOWES, B. Sc, 


F. 


R. 


P. 


S. 


L. 




PUBUSHED BY 












THE NEW ENGLAND STAMP CO. 










BOSTON, U. S. A. 














1911 














u& 













copyright 1911 

By the New England Stamp Co. 

Boston, Mass. 



Press of 

NEWCOMB & GAUSS 

Salem, Mass. 



CONTENTS 



Key to Plates. 

fobewobd 

Inteoduotion . . 
Chaptee I. 

11. 
III. 
IV. 
V. 
VI. 
VII. 
VIII. 
IX. 
X. 
XI. 
XII. 
XIII. 
XIV. 
XV. 
XVI. 
XVII. 
XVIII. 
XIX. 
XX. 
XXI. 
XXII. 
XXIII. 
XXIV. 
XXV. 
XXVI. 
Refeeenoe List. . 



Page 
.. 4 
. . 9 
. . 11 



J) 



J? 



Preliminary Matters 18 

The Issue of 1851 28 

The Remaining Pence Issues 46 

The Perforated Pence Issues 68 

The Cancellations of the Early Issues 77 

The Issue of 1859 82 

The Dominion of Canada — Preliminary 94 

The Issue of 1868 106 

The Small "Cents" Issue, 1870-1882 122 

The Supplementary Values of 1893 138 

The Jubilee Issue of 1897 145 

The "Maple Leaf" Issue of 1897 161 

The "ITumerals" Issue of 1898-1902 167 

The "Christmas" Stamp of 1898 179 

The "King's Head" Issue of 1903-1908 188 

The "Tercentenary" Issue of 1908 199 

The "Registration" Stamps 205 

The Postage Due Stamps . .215 

The Special Delivery Stamp 217 

The OfficiaUy Sealed Labels ..221 

The Stamped Envelopes 224 

The Wrappers 243 

The Post Cards ' 249 

The Letter Cards 263 

Official Stationery 267 

Precancellation and Permits - . • . .272 

277 



KEY TO PLATES 



Plate I. 



ISTo. 



1. 

2. 


6 pence. 
12 " 


, 1851. 


3. 


10 " 


1855. 


4. 
5. 
6. 


% penny, 1857. 

7% pence, 1857. 

3 " 1851. 


7. 
8. 
9. 


l^ penny 
6 pence, 
3 " 


, 1859. 


10. 


1 cent. 


jj 


11. 


2 cents, 


}} 


12. 


10 " 


>j 


13. 

14. 


121/2 " 

17 " 




15. 


5 " 


» 


16. 


1 cent. 


1868. 


17. 


1/ " 
72 


}> 


18. 


2 cents, 


J5 


19. 
20. 


5 " 
3 " 


1859, variety. 
1868. 


21. 


5 " 


1875. 


22. 


6 " 


1868. 


23, 
24. 


121/2 " 
15 " 





Plate II. 

No. 25. 1 cent, 1870. 

26. 2 cents, 1872. 

27. 1/2 cent, 1882. 

28. 3 cents, 1870. 

29. 5 " 1876. 

30. 6 " 1872. 

31. 8 " 1893. 

32. 10 cents, 1874. 

33. 20 " 1893. 

34. 1/2 cent, 1897, "Jubilee." 

35. 50 cents, 1893. 

36. 1/2 cent, 1897, "Maple Leaf." 

37. 2 cents on 3 cents, "Port Hood Provisional." 

38. 2 cents, 1898, "Map." 

39. 1 cent on 3 cents (pair), "Port Hood Provisional." 



KEY TO PLATES 

40. 1/2 cent, 1898, "Numeral." 

41. 2 cents on 3 cents, 1899, "Maple Leaf." 

42. 2 " "3 " " "JSTumeral." 

43. 1 cent, 1903, "King's Head." 

44. 2 cents on 3 cents, 1899, inverted, "ISTmneral." 

45. 2 " "3 " " " "Maple Leaf." 

Plate III. 
JSTo. 46. 1/2 cent, 1908, "Tercentenary." 
4Y. 1 " " " 

48. 2 cents, " " 



49. 


5 




1) 




50. 


7 




j> 




61. 


10 




jj 




52. 


15 




}} 




53. 


20 




» 




54. 


2 




1875, 


Eegistration. 


55. 


5 




}} 


>} 


56. 


8 




>} 


}> 


57. 


10 




1898, 


Special Delivery. 


58. 


1 


cent. 


1906, 


Postage Due. 


59. 


2 


cents, 


jj 


}} j> 


60. 


5 


)j 


5J 


jj )> 



Plate IV. 

No. 61. 6 pence, 1851, pair. 

62. 12 " " pair from Pack collection, 

63. 6 pence, 1851, pair. 

64. 6 " " " 

65. 12 " " from Worthington collection. 

66. 6 pence, 1851, thick soft paper, from Pack collection. 

67. 7% pence, 1857, wide oval. 

68. 7% " " narrow oval. 

69. 71/2 " " pair. 

70. 10 " 1855, pair, wide oval. 

71. 10 " " " narrow oval. 

72. 6 " 1859, from Pack collection. 

73. 6 " 1851, strip of 3 on very thick soft paper, from Worth- 

ington collection. 

74. 10 cents, 1859, black brown, from Pack collection. 

Plate V. 



pair. 

strip of 3 on very thick hard paper, from Pack 



No. 


75. 


6 pence, 1851. 




76. 


6 " " 




77. 


3 " " 




78. 


6 " " 




79. 


6 " 




SO. 


6 " " 
collection. 



6 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

No. 81. lYz pence, 1857, strip of three. 

82. 12 " 1851, pair from Pack collection. 

83. 12 " " " " " " 

84. 12 " " from Pack collection. 

85. 12 " " pair from Worthington collection. 

86. 12 " 1851, wove paper, from Pack collection. 

87. 6 pence, 1851, split, used on piece, from Pack collection. 

88. 3 pence, 1851, ribbed paper, from Pack collection. 

89. 12% cents, small, from Worthington collection. 

Plate VI. 

No. 90. 12 pence, 1851, on cover, from Worthington collection. 

91. 12 pence, 1851, on cover, from Pack collection (originally in Sey- 
bold collection.) 

Plate VII. 

No. 92. 6 pence, 1851, very thick soft paper, split, used on cover, from 
Pack collection. 

93. 10 pence, 1855, pair, narrow oval. 

94. 10 " " block of 4, wide oval. 

95. 10 " " strip of 3, narrow oval. 

96. 5 cents, 1859, block of 7, upper right corner stamp is variety. 

From Pack collection. 

97. 5 cents, 1859, pair and split, used on piece, from Worthington 

collection. 

Plate VIII. 

No. 98. 6 cents, 1868, split, used on cover, from Worthington collection. 
99. 10 cents, 1859, black brown, split, used on cover, from Worthington 
collection. 















Plate IX. 


No. 


100. 


1 


cent. 


1859, 


block of 4 imperfc 




101. 


5 


cents, 






" 4 " 




102. 


2 


>j 






" 4 " 




103. 


121/2 " 






" 4 




104. 


10 








" 4 " 




106. 


17 








" 4 " 




106. 


20 




1893, 




" 4 " 




107. 


15 




1868, 




" 4 " 




108. 


50 




1893, 




" 4 " 



The above blocks were selected from the Pack and Worthing- 
ton collections and some in the possession of the New 
England Stamp Co. 



KEY TO PLATES 



Plate X. 



No. 109. 10 cents, 1874, block of 4 imperforate. 
1893, " " 4 " 

1872, " " 4 

1897, "Maple Leaf," block of 4, imperforate. 

1898, "Map," " » 4 " 
1903, block of 4 imperforate. 
Registered, pair imperforate. 

"Officially Sealed" Label, 1905. 
" " 1879. 

The above blocks of imperforates were from the same sources 
as noted for Plate IX. 

Plate XL 



110. 


8 




IIL 


6 




112. 


5 




113. 


2 




114. 


2 




115. 


5 




116. 


"0 


ffici 


117. 




» 






No. 118. 10 cents, 1874, strip of 10, marginal imprints. 

119. 1/2 cent, 1868, " " 3, " 

120. 3 cents, 1870, " " 3, " 

121. 1 cent, 1870, block of 8, " 

122. 3 cents, 1870, strip of 3, " 

The above are all from the Worthington collection. 

Plate XII. 

No. 123. 1 cent, 1870, block of 12 imperforate. 

124. 2 cents, 1872, " " 4 " 

125. 3 " 1870, " " 4 " 

126. 5 " 1876, " » 4 

127. 1/2 cent, 1882, " " 12 

Nos. 123 and 127 are from the Worthington collection and the 
other three from the Pack collection. 

Plate XIII. 

No. 128. 3 pence, 1875 ( ?) perforated 14, pair used on cover, from Pack 

collection. 
129. 2 cents, 1872, pair imperforate used on cover, in possession of 
New England Stamp Co. 

Plate XIV. 

No. 130. Stamped Envelope, 5 cents, 1860. 
131. " " 10 " " 

Both the above were in the Seybold collection. 

Plate XV. (Frontispiece). 
A page of six pennies from the collection of Charles Lathrop Pack. 



FOREWORD 

TWENTY years ago the Philatelic Society, London, brought out their 
work on "The Postage Stamps, Envelopes, Wrappers and Post Cards of 
the North American Colonies of Great Britain." This, of course, in- 
cluded Canada, but since that time no special work, treating exhaustively of the 
postal emissions of this important Colony, has been placed before the philatelic 
public. It seems opportune, therefore, particularly in view of the general 
popularity of the stamps of the Dominion, to present this volume for the 
favor of the stamp collecting fraternity and especially of that considerable 
portion which is interested to the extent of specializing in the beautiful 
issues that Canada has given us. 

This work had its inception in the now popular handbook idea, but in 
looking over the ground it was soon realized by the author that there was need 
of and material enough for a much more extended treatment of the subject 
than could be encompassed in the limits of the usual brochure. Plans were 
therefore laid for a thorough study of all available material, and in furtherance 
of this it was found necessary to make a special trip to Ottawa, where, in the 
library of the House of Commons, is to be found the only complete set avail- 
able of the Reports of the Postmasters General of Canada. These naturally 
proved a mine of first hand information which was availed of to its full 
extent; and in this connection must be expressed the deep appreciation of 
the assistance rendered the author by his friend M. Henri R. Landry, through 
whose influence and untiring interest the way was made easy for convenient 
and rapid examination of these invaluable files. Thanks are also due Mr. 
Edward Y. Parker of Toronto, for notes and specimens furnished, as well as 
Mr. A. McKechnie of Ottawa. 

But documents and descriptions are not enough for the thorough study 
of any subject which concerns tangible objects, and three famous collections 
were inspected for first hand information upon the stamps themselves. To 
Mr. Charles Lathrop Pack of Lakewood, N. J., Mr. George H. Worthington 
of Cleveland, Ohio, and the lamented Mr. John E. Seybold, late of Syra- 
cuse, N. Y., are due not only the author's fullest thanks for opportunities 
freely given to examine their magnificent collections of Canada, but the debt 
extends to philatelists in general for thus being enabled to share, through 
study, description, listing and pictorial reproduction, in the results of their 
specializing. Mr. Pack's wonderful array of rarities, beautiful copies and 



10 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

remarkable series of shades has been largely used in the compilation of the 
stamp lists. This collection though since much enlarged and improved, 
obtained the gold medal at the International Philatelic Exhibition in Lon- 
don, 1906. Mr. Worthington's fine collection has also been used in the same 
way and has furnished much information concerning plate numbers and 
marginal imprints. Mr. Seybold's covers were particularly interesting in 
showing the actual use of the stamps, the cancellations employed, and various 
other features to be gleaned from the study of original covers, particularly of 
early date. Selections for illustrative purposes were made from all three 
collections, as will be noted. 

Mr. John N. Morse and Mr. Edwin F. Sawyer, both of Boston, have very 
kindly placed their collections of post cards and envelopes, respectively, at our 
disposal for purposes of study. 

Again, the philatelic press has been diligently searched for articles, stray 
notes, etc., which would illumine the pathway, particularly by throwing side 
lights on various phases of the subject. Prominent among these were the 
articles on Canada by Messrs. C. B. Corwin, D. A. King and J. E. Hooper 
in the Metropolitan Philatelist for 1890-91, and by Mr. Donald A. King in 
Stanley Gibbons' Monthly Journal for 1896-97. 

It can readily be seen from the foregoing that the limits of a handbook 
were soon passed, and the question really became one of a pretentious volume 
which should be all that thorough research could offer and ample means pro- 
duce. A glance at the present work shows that this was no small proposition, 
and to any one with experience in philatelic publishing it was apparent that 
the desired production would mean a heavy balance on the wrong side of the 
ledger. The author does not pose as a philanthropist, but he feels he has dis- 
covered such in the publishers of this volume. With the broad-minded policy 
that whatever helps Philately benefits all, even indirectly, the ISTew Eng- 
land Stamp Company of Boston, having become greatly interested in the 
monograph, accepted the burden and became responsible for the publication 
of the work. The advantages of the co-operation of such a well-known firm 
are manifest, and the author takes great pleasure in acknowledging his in- 
debtedness to this Company, through whose munificence it has been possible 
to produce this volume in its present form, 

C. A. HOWES, B. So., F. K. P. S. L. 
Boston, U. S. A. 

December, 1910. 



INTRODUCTION 

THE DOMHSTION OF CAJSTADA, as we know it to-day, is a confedera- 
tion of the former British Colonies and unorganized territories of ITorth 
America which lie to the northward of the United States. The single ex- 
ception is the Colony of Newfoundland, which so far has resisted all overtures 
looking to its absorption. The Dominion was formed in 1867 by the union of the 
then Colonies of Canada, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, to which the 
others were added subsequently. At that time the Colony of Canada consisted 
of two provinces, Ontario and Quebec, known also as Upper and Lower Can- 
ada respectively. It is with these two provinces that our philatelic story of 
Canada begins. 

But first let us delve a bit into earlier times and trace the development 
of the territory we are going to consider, as it may prove interesting for its 
historical value. Passing by the claims of the Norsemen in the tenth century 
to a somewhat vague exploration of the eastern American coast, we come to 
the discovery of Newfoundland by John Cabot in 1497, and it is upon this 
fact, in part, that England subsequently based her claim to the whole of North 
America. But for the most part the territory included within the well pop- 
ulated portion of the present Dominion was explored and settled by the 
French. In 1534 Jacques Cartier entered the St. Lawrence Kiver and took 
possession of the country in the name of France, and in 1608 the first per- 
manent settlement was made at Quebec by Samuel de Champlain. The name 
of the colony was apparently furnished by the Indians, for in the manuscript 
narrative of Cartier's second voyage,^ under "Vocabulary of the natives," 
is found: "They call a town — Canada." Baxter says: "There can be no 
doubt that the word Canada is derived from Kannata, which in Iroquois sig- 
nifies a collection of dwellings, in other words a settlement."^ French control 
continued until the middle of the eighteenth century when, in the war with 
England, the decisive victory of Wolfe over Montcalm at Quebec, in 1759, 
practically brought it to a close, and by the treaty of Paris in 1763 Canada 
was permanently ceded to Great Britain. 

>In the Bibllotheque Nationale, Paris. 

'A Memoir of Jacques Cartier, by J. P. Baxter, p. 135. 



12 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

Tracing the development of the Colony under English rule, we find 
that by the so-called "Quebec Act" of 1774 it was placed under the adminis- 
tration of a Governor and Legislative Council appointed by the Crovm. Fol- 
lowing the American Revolution, however, there was a large immigration 
of former colonists into Ontario, and because of their English stock, while 
Quebec was French, a separation was deemed advisable. By the "Constitu- 
tional Act" of 1791 this was effected and two Colonies, Upper Canada (or 
Canada West) and Lower Canada (or Canada East) were constituted, each 
with its own separate government. Just fifty years later, in 1841, they were 
reunited under the single name of Canada. This brings us near the opening 
of our philatelic history. The united provinces had an area of about 350,000 
square miles and a population, in 1850, of some 1,800,000 people. The 
Governor was appointed by the Crown and chose his own Executive Council; 
a Legislative Council of life members was also appointed by the Crown; and 
a Legislative Assembly w^as elected consisting of an equal number of repre- 
sentatives for each province. The Governor was made Governor-General of 
British North America. 

The advantages of the union of Upper and Lower Canada gradually 
became so manifest, that a convention was held at Quebec in 1864 for the 
purpose of considering the advisability of uniting all the provinces. The 
result bore fruit in the passage of an Act of Union by the British Parliament 
on March 29, 1867, under which Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick and JSTova 
Scotia were formally united as the Dominion of Canada, the actual event 
being consummated on July 1, 1867. Subsequently, on July 20, 1871, the 
Colony of British Columbia, and on July 1, 1873, the Colony of Prince Ed- 
ward Island, were added to the Dominion. In 1869 the vast territories of 
the Hudson's Bay Company were acquired by purchase, and out of them 
the province of Manitoba was formed and admitted to full privileges in the 
Dominion on July 15, 1870. 

The absorption of the Company's Territories is interesting for, as we 
all know, this was a trading concern whose sole commodity was fur. The 
Arctic and sub-Arctic regions of the continent were the mecca of hunters and 
traippers, and their chief prey from the time the first French explorers be- 
gan to search the Canadian lakes, and later when the Hudson's Bay Com- 
pany succeeded to the French domain, was the beaver. In fact the early his- 
tory of Canada was largely bound up with beaver catching and the sale of the 
skins, and for nearly a century the northern territories, both under French 



INTEODUCTION 13 

and English rule, were organized with a view to this traffic. In the early 
days of the Company the "standard of trade" of the Northwest was a beaver 
skin. Thus the beaver naturally became emblematic, which resulted later in 
its use as the "crest" of the Canadian coat-of-arms, a place that it retains to 
the present day over those of the Dominion. In this connection it would be 
unjust to omit a mention of that other symbol dear to the Canadian heart— 
the maple leaf. Like the rose, the thistle and the shamrock of the Mother 
land, the beautiful tree of the Colony, so widespread, so useful, and so gor- 
geous in its autumn coloring of red and gold — the blazon of the English 
arms — became a favorite emblem of the people. The particular variety that 
is so used is of course the rock or sugar maple {acer saccharinum) . 

Turning now to early postal history, it is necessary to go back to the reign 
of Queen Anne, although Canada was not then under British dominion. In 
the year 1710 an Act was passed by the British Parliament "For establishing 
a General Post-Office in all Her Majesty's Dominions," which not only re- 
pealed all previous enactments but placed the postoffice establishment on a 
new basis. A "General Post and Letter-Office" was established in London 
"from whence all letters and packets whatsoever may be with speed and expe- 
dition sent into any part of the Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, to 
North America and the West Indies, or any other of Her Majesty's dominions, 
or any country or kingdom beyond the seas," and "at which office all returns 
and answers may be likewise received." Eor the better "managing, ordering, 
collecting, and improving the revenue," and also for the better "computing 
and settling the rates of letters according to distance, a chief office is estab- 
lished in Edinburgh, one in Dublin, one at New York, and other chief offices 
in convenient places in Her Majesty's colonies of America, and one in the 
islands of the West Indies, called the Leeward Islands." "The whole of these 
chief offices shall be under the control of an officer who shall be appointed by 
the Queen's Majesty, her heirs and successors, to be made and constituted by 
letters patent under the Great Seal, by the name and stile of Her Majesty's 
Postmaster-Oeneral." "The Postmaster-General shall appoint deputies for 
the chief offices in the places named above." The rates to New York under 
this Act were fixed at 1 shilling per single letter. Other rates were charged 
to other parts of the American continent according to the distance from New 
York. 

In 1753 Benjamin Franklin received the royal commission as Deputy 
Postmaster-General for the American Colonies. No man in America had 



14 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

been so identified with the interests of the Colonial postoffice as he, and from 
173Y he had been postmaster of Philadelphia. All his energies were devoted 
to his new work and when Canada passed by treaty to Great Britain in 1763, 
as already mentioned, his jurisdiction was extended to cover the new terri- 
tory. It is thus curious to record that the (afterwards) first Postmaster- 
General of the United States was also the first Postmaster-General of Canada. 
In the evidence given by Franklin before the House of Commons in the 
year 1766, in regard to the extent of the post-office accommodation in l^orth 
America, he made the following statement: — 

The posts generally "travel along the sea coasts, and only in a, 
few cases do they go back into the country. Between Quebec and 
Montreal there is only one post per month. The inhabitants live so 
scattered and remote from each other in that vast country, that the 
posts cannot be supported amongst them. The English Colonies, too, 
along the frontier, are very thinly settled. 

By 1774, however, Franklin, then in England as the Representative of 
the Colonies, had become obnoxious to the British Government, and on Jan- 
uary 31st of that year was removed from his office. After the Declaration of 
Independence, Mr. Hugh Finlay, who had previously been postmaster at 
Quebec, received the appointment of "Deputy Postmaster-Gieneral of His 
Majesty's Province of Canada." He had in 1791 eleven post-offices under his 
management, one as far west as Mackinaw and one as far east as the Bale des 
Chaleurs. There was a weekly mail between Quebec and Montreal and a 
monthly mail for the Western country. From a Quebec almanac of 1796 it 
appears that there were seven post-offices in Upper Canada and five in Lower 
Canada. At that time mails were despatched monthly to England, and semi- 
weekly between Quebec and Montreal, or Halifax. At the Bale des Chaleurs 
the visits of the postman must have been few and far between, as they were only 
favored with a mail "as occasion offered." 

In 1800 Mr. George Heriot succeeded Mr. Finlay. At this time New 
Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island were all under the au- 
thority of the Canadian administration. The number of post-offices was in- 
creased to twenty-six. 

The following is taken from the advertising column of the Upper Canada 
Gazette in 1807:— 

The mail for Upper Canada will be despatched from the post- 
office at Montreal, on the following days, to wit : 
Monday, 14th January. 
Monday, 13th February. 



mTKODUCTION 15 

Monday, 10th March. 

Monday, 7th April — the last trip. 

A courier from Kingston may be looked for here in 14 or 15 days 
from the above periods, where he will remain 2 or 3 days, and t]ien 
return to Kingston. 

Another courier will proceed from this with the Niagara mail, 
via Messrs. Hatts'. where the Sandwich [So. Essex] letters will be left, 
both from Niagara and this, 'till the courier comes from there to 
return with them. 

Letters put into the post-ofBce will be forwarded any time by 

W. ALLAN, 
Acting Deputy-Postmaster. 

Mr. Herlot resigned in 1816 and was succeeded by Mr. Daniel Suther- 
land who, on his accession to office found Nova Scotia and Prince Edward 
Island withdrawn from Canadian charge. New Brunswick, however, con- 
tinued to be included, but appears to have been withdrawn in 1824, so that 
from that year until the federation of the Provinces in 1867 the Postmaster- 
General was concerned only with Canada proper. Mr. Sutherland established 
a daily mail between Quebec and Montreal and a weekly mail between Mon- 
treal and Toronto. In 1827 there were 101 post-offices and 2,368 miles of 
established post-route, the number of miles of mail-travel being 455,000 per 
annum. The letters that year were estimated at 340,000 and the newspapers 
at 400,000. 

The following extract from the Quebec Mercury, published on July 18, 
1829, conveys some idea of the postal communication with England at that 
period : — 

No later advices have been received from Europe since our last. 
Some further extracts from the London papers, to 31st May, inclusive, 
brought to New York by the Corinthian, will be found in another part 
of this number. 

In the Montreal Courant, dated September 2nd, 1829, was the following 
paragraph, showing the improvement which had been effected in the communi- 
cation between Prescott and that city : — 

Expeditious Travelling: — On Saturday last, the Upper Canada 
line of stages performed the journey from Prescott to this city in 
about 17 hours, leaving the former place at a little before 3 a. m., 
and arriving here a few minutes before 8 in the evening. Not many 
years ago this journey occupied two, and sometimes three days, but 
owing to the great improvements made by Mr. Dickinson, the enter- 
prising proprietor, by putting steam-boats on the lakes St. Francis 
and St. Louis, and keeping his horses in excellent condition, it is 
now performed in little more than one-third of the time. 



16 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

Even so late as 1833, newspaper proprietors found it (particularly in 
the Upper Province) better to employ their own couriers. As a proof of this 
we transcribe from the Queenstown (Niagara) Colonial Advocate of that year, 
the following advertisement: — 

PosT-KiDER Wanted Immediately. 
The proprietor of this newspaper wishes to contract with a 
steady man (who can find and uphold his own horse) to deliver it to 
the subscribers once a week during the winter, on the route between 
York and Niagara, via Ancaster. 

Mr. Thos. A. Stayner succeeded Mr. Sutherland in 1831, at which 
time there were 151 post-offices. Through Mr. Stayner's recommendation a 
uniform rate of Is. 2d. sterling, per half ounce, was adopted in 1841 between 
any place in Canada and the mother country. This resulted from the estab- 
lishment of regular steam communication across the Atlantic in 1840, by 
means of the Cunard Line between Liverpool and Halifax. 

During all this period the carrying of letters was a profitable business. 
There was, for example, a profit of $21,000 in 1824 and of $47,000 in 1831, 
all which sums were duly remitted to England to swell the Imperial revenue. 
The rates, however, were exceedingly high. It cost eighteen cents to send a 
letter from Toronto to Kingston, and thirty cents to send one to Montreal. 
The charge for sending a weekly paper through the mails was a dollar a 
year, as much as the paper now costs, and the postage on a daily was over 
two dollars a year.* 

The net revenues of the post-office given for 1831 must have dropped 
considerably, for we find that in 1845 the surplus of the Canadian Post- 
office was but £7184 ($35,000) against the $47,000 given above for 
fourteen years earlier. This amount rose to £22,188 ($110,000) in 1848, 
fell to £15,725 ($78,500) the next year, and had risen again to a basis of 
£20,000 ($100,000) in the year previous to the introduction of postage stamps 
and the reduction of rates. The inland postage rates then in force, as charged 
under the Imperial Laws, were, for a letter not exceeding /4 ounce in weight: 

For any distance not exceeding 60 miles, 4d. 

Eor any distance exceeding 60 miles and not exceeding 100 miles .... 6d. 

Eor any distance exceeding 100 miles and not exceeding 200 miles. .8d. 

And for every additional 100 miles or fraction an additional 2d. 

'Most of the foregoing information is taken from extracts from thie Canadian Postal Guide, 
published in the Stamp Collector's Magazine for Aug. 1, 1868, and the Halifax Philatelist, II: 138, 



INTRODUCTION 17 

For one hundred and forty years Great Britain had managed her colonial 
posts, or at least directed them, when on 28th July, 1849, the British Parlia- 
ment passed an "Act for enabling Colonial Legislatures to establish Inland 
Posts."^ This was the signal for the voluntary withdrawal of most of the 
colonial postal systems then under Imperial direction, and for the establishment 
of local systems where none had previously existed. Because of its historical 
interest we quote from the provisions of the Act as follows : — 

Whereas under or by virtue of [various Acts'} Her Majesty's 
Post Master General has, by himself or his Deputies, the exclusive 
Privilege of establishing- Posts, collecting, conveying, and delivering 
Letters, and collecting Postage, vfithin Her Majesty's Colonies, and 
the Commissioners of Her Majesty's Treasury have Authority from 
Time to Time to fix the Bates of Postage to be charged vyithin such 
Colonies : And whereas the said Postmaster General and Commis- 
sioners of Her Majesty's Treasury respectively have, in exercise of 
such Privilege and Authority, established Posts and fixed Rates of 
Postage in certain of such Colonies : And whereas it is expedient 
to Authorize the Establishment of Posts and Postage Kates in Her 
Majesty's Colonies by the Legislatures of such Colonies : Be it en- 
acted, therefore, That it shall be lawful for the Legislatures 

or proper Legislative Authorities of Her Majesty's Colonies, or any of 
them, by Acts, Laws, or Ordinances to be from Time to Time for 
that Purpose made and enacted in the Manner and subject to the 
Conditions by Law required in respect of Acts, Laws, or Ordinances 
of such Legislatures or Legislative Authorities, to make such pro- 
visions as such Legislatures or Legislative Authorities may think fit 
for and concerning the Establishment, Maintenance, and Regulation 
of Posts or Post Communications within such Colonies respectively, 
and for charging Rates of Postage for the Conveyance of Letters 
by such Posts or Post Communications, and for appropriating the 
Revenue to be derived therefrom. 

IL IM'here the Postmaster General has actually established posts 
and his power has not "determined" such colonial acts, etc., shall not 
take effect until approved hy Her Majesty and Privy Council, nor 
until such time as the assent may be proclaimed in the Colony, or such 
subsequent time as may be signified.] 

III. [After the establishment of Posts by Colonial Legislatures the 
powers of the Postmaster General shall cease.] 

IV. [The Acts of Colonial Legislatures are to apply only to 
Posts within the limits of the Colony and to rates of postage within 
such limits.] 

Canada lost no time in taking advantage of the above Act, and in the 
next year (1850) passed the required ordinances for the transfer of its do- 
mestic postal system to the control of its own Government. The next chapter 
will therefore start the Canadian postal history proper. 

=12° & 13° Vict. Cap. LXVI. 



CHAPTER I 

PRELIMINARY MATTERS 

THE most important of the British North American Colonies in 1850 
were Canada, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia. Though not united 
politically, they yet had the common bonds of fatherland, of race, of 
mercantile interest, and the mutual dependence that comes, or should come, from 
propinquity under these conditions. It is not surprising, therefore, that all 
three should make provision for assuming control of their domestic postal 
systems in the same year, nor that they should adopt practically identical 
ordinances for this purpose, and should make common postal rates for their 
internal and inter-colonial mail matter. Still less surprising is it when we 
recall that it was but the breaking up into sections of what had previously 
been a homogeneous postal system for the whole of British North America, 
operated under the Imperial Laws as detailed in the last chapter. 

While the project of turning over local postal systems to the colonies 
was taking shape in the British Parliament, Canada "took time by the fore- 
lock" and made preparations for obtaining its own postage stamps. 



"In the Journal of May 21, 1849, there is a message to the legislative 
assembly of Canada relating to the establishing of a general post- 
office for the Province, when handed over by the Imperial government. 
A resolution was brought up in the assembly on May 32, 1849, 'That 
postage stamps for prepayment be allowed and that Colonial stamps 
be engraved.' This finally passed the assembly on May 25, 1849, and 
received the assent of the legislative council on the 36th.'" 



A year later, after the passage of the enabling act by the British Parlia- 
ment, which has been already quoted, the Canadian Parliament took up the 
consideration of the main subject and on the 10th August, 1850, passed what 
is known briefly as The Post Office Act, the provisions of which that are of 
most interest to us being such as follow: — 

'Metropolitan Philatelist, I: 253. 



PEELIMINARY MATTEES 19 

13° & 14° Viotoriae., Cap. XVII. 

An Act to provide for the transfer of the management of the 
Inland Posts to the Provincial Government, and for the regulation 
of the said Department. 

Whereas by the Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, 
passed in the Session held in the tv^elfth and thirteenth years of Her 
Majesty's Eeign, and intituled, An Act for enabling Colonial Legisla- 
tures to establish Inland Posts, the Legislatures or proper legislative 

authorities of Her Majesty's Colonies are empowered to make 

such provisions as [they] may think fit for and concerning the estab- 
lishment, maintenance, and regulation of Posts and Post Communica- 
tions within such Colonies respectively, and for charging rates of 
postage for the conveyance of letters by such Posts and Post Com- 
munications, and for appropriating the Revenue to be derived there- 
from : And whereas it is , expedient that a uniform and 

cheap rate of postage should be established throughout the several Col- 
onies of British North America, and with a view to the estab- 
lishment thereof, the Local Governments of the said Colonies have 
agreed upon certain conditions hereinafter mentioned and forming 
a part of the provisions of this Act, and it is therefore expedient 
to exercise the powers so vested as aforesaid in the Legislature of this 

Province : 

II. And be it enacted. That the Inland Posts and Post 
Communications in the Province shall, so far as may be consistent 
with the Acts of the Parliament of the United Kingdom in force 
in this Province, be exclusively under Provincial management and 
control ; the Revenue arising from the duties of postage and other 
dues receivable by the Officers employed in managing such Posts and 
Post Communications shall form part of the Provincial Revenue, un- 
less such moneys belong of right to the United Kingdom or to some 
other Colony, or to some foreign state ; and the expenses of manage- 
ment shall be defrayed out of Provincial Funds 

V. And be it enacted, That the Provincial Post Master General 
shall be appointed by Commission under the Great Seal of the Prov- 
ince, and to hold his office during pleasure, but the Post Masters 
and other Officers of the Department shall be appointed and may be 
removed by letter from the proper Officer communicating the Gov- 
ernor's pleasure. 

VI. [All privileges, powers and authority of Her Majesty's Dep- 
uty Post Master General are transferred to and vested in the Pro- 
vincial Post Master General.] 

VIII. And in conformity to the agreement made as aforesaid between 
the Local Governments of the several Colonies of British North Amer- 
ica, Be it enacted. That the Provincial Postage on letters and packets 
not being of Newspapers or Printed Pamphlets, Magazines or Books, 
entitled to pass at lower rate, shall not exceed the rate of three pence 
currency, per half ounce, for any distance whatsoever within this 
Province, any fraction of a half ounce being chargeable as a half 



20 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

ounce : that no transit postage shall he charged on any letter or 
packet passing through this Province or any part thereof to any 
other Colony in British North America, unless it be posted in this 
Province and the sender choose to pre-pay it ; nor on any letter or 
packet from any such Colony if pre-paid there ; that two pence ster- 
ling the half ounce shall remain as the rate in operation as regards 
letters by British Mails, to be extended to Countries having postal 
conventions with the United Kingdom, unless Her Majesty's Govern- 
ment in the United Kingdom shall see fit to allow this rate to be 
changed to three pence currency : 

That the pre-payment of Provincial Postage shall be optional : 

That all Provincial Postage received within the Province shall be 
retained as belonging to it, and that all Provincial Postage re- 
ceived within any other of the British North American Colonies, may 
be retained as belonging to such Colony: 

That the British Packet Postage and other British Postage collected 
in this Province shall be accounted for and paid over to the proper 
authorities in the United Kingdom ; but the Colonial Postage on the same 
letters or packets shall belong to the Colony collecting it, or if pre- 
paid to the British Post OfBce, it may be credited to the Colony to 
which such letters or packets are addressed : 

That no privilege of franking shall be allowed as regards Pro- 
vincial Postage : 

That Provincial Stamps for the pre-payment of postage may be 
prepared under the orders of the Governor in Coimcil, which stamps 
shall be evidence of the pre-payment of Provincial Postage to the 
amount mentioned on such stamp, and that such stamps prepared 
under the direction of the proper authorities in the other British 
North American Colonies, shall be allowed in this Province as evi- 
dence of the pre-payment of Provincial Postage in such other Colonies 
respectively, on the letters or packets to which they are affixed, and 
which have been mailed there : 

That the Provincial Postage on Newspapers,, Pamphlets, Maga- 
zines and Printed Books, shall remain such as it now is until it be 

altered by regulation under this Act, Provided always, that one 

copy of each newspaper published in this Province may be sent free 
from postage to any Publisher of another Newspaper in this Prov- 
ince, that all printed documents addressed to the Publisher of any 
Newspaper in this Province shall be delivered to him free, and that all 
Newspapers published in this Province and addressed to Subscribers in 
the United States, shall pass free to the Provincial line, under such regu- 
lations as the Governor in Council shall make to prevent the abuse of 
the privileges hereby granted : 

And, subject to the foregoing provisions of this section and to 
the other express provisions of this Act, the Governor in Council shall 

have full power and authority for establishing the rates of 

postage on Newspapers and Printed Pamphlets, Magazines and Books, 
and for declaring what shall be deemed such, or directing that in 
any case or class of cases they be free of postage, either in the first 

instance or the case of their being re-mailed for the preparing 

and distributing of Provincial stamps for pre-payment, for limiting the 
weight and dimensions of letters or packets to be sent by Post, 



PRELIMINARY MATTERS 21 

for prescribing the conditions and circumstances under wliicli letters, 
accounts and papers relating solely to the business of the Post 
Office, and addressed to or sent by some oiEcer thereof, shall be 

free from Provincial Postage, for providing, vchen he shall 

think it expedient, means for avoiding the risk of transmitting small 
sums of money through the Post, by establishing a system of money 
orders to be granted by one Post Master or officer of the Depart- 
ment on another, and fixing the terms on which such orders may be 
obtained, for establishing a system for the Registering of letters and 

the charge^ be made for such registration for the delivery 

of letters and packets in the larger and more populous Cities and 
Towns, at the residences of parties to whom they are addressed, and 
fixing the limits within which such delivery shall take place, and the 
rates to be paid by the parties who shall prefer to have their letters 
and packets so delivered, rather than apply for them at the Post 

Office : and generally to make such regulations as may be 

deemed necessary for the due and efEective working of the Post and 
Postal business and arrangements, and for carrying this Act fully 
into effect: 

IX. And be it enacted, That subject always to the provisions 
and regulations aforesaid, the Provincial Post Master General shall 
have the sole and exclusive privilege of conveying, receiving, collecting, 
sending and delivering letters within this Province ; and that any per- 
son or party who shall (except in the cases hereinafter excepted) 
collect, send, convey or deliver, or undertake to convey or deliver any 
letter within this Province, or who shall receive or have in his pos- 
session any letter for the purpose of conveying or delivering it, other- 
wise than in conformity with this Act, shall for each and every letter 
so unlawfully conveyed or undertaken to be conveyed, received, de- 
livered or found in his possession, incur a penalty not exceeding five 
pounds currency : [exceptions are letters taken by friends journeying, 
hy special messengers. Court Commissions, etc.] 

XI. And be it enacted. That as well the Colonial, British or 
Foreign as the Provincial Postage on any letter or packet shall (if 
not pre-paid) be payable to the Provincial Post Master General by 
the party to whom the same shall be addressed, or who may lawfully 
receive such a letter or packet, which may be detained until the same 

be paid : and if any letter or packet be refused, or if the party 

to whom it is addressed cannot be found, then such postage shall be 
recoverable by the Provincial Post Master General from the sender 
or such letter or packet : and that all postage may be recov- 
ered with costs, by civil action in any Court having jurisdiction to 
the amount, or in any way in which duties are recoverable. 

XII. And for avoiding doubts, and preventing inconvenient delay 
in the delivery of letters. Be it declared and enacted, That no Post 
Master shall be bound to give change, but the exact amount of the 
postage on any letter or packet shall be tendered or paid to him in 
current coin or in Provincial Postage stamps. 



^sic. 



22 CANADIAJ^ POSTAGE STAMPS 

XIV. [Letters of Soldiers, Seamen, etc., shall lie charged a cer- 
tain fixed sum in place of all British or Provincial •postage.'] 

XV. [Posted letters to 6e property of party addressed.] 

XVI To forge, counterfeit or imitate any Postage 

Stamp issued or used under the authority of this Act, or by or under 
the authority of the Government or proper authority of the United 
Kingdom, or of any British North American Province, or of any For- 
eign Country, or knovs-ingly to use any such forged, counterfeit or 
imitated stamp, or to engrave, cut, sink or make any plate, die or 
other thing whereby to forge, counterfeit or imitate such stamp or 
any part or portion thereof, except by the permission in writing of the 
Provincial Post Master General, or of some ofBcer or person who under 
the regulations to be made in that behalf, may lawfully grant such 
permission, or to have possession of any such plate, die or other thing 
as aforesaid, without such permission as aforesaid, or to forge, coun- 
terfeit or unlawfully imitate, use or diflix to or upon any letter or 
packet, any stamp, signature, initials, or other mark or sign pur- 
porting that such letter or packet ought to pass free of postage, or at 
a lower rate of postage, or that the postage thereon or any part 
thereof hath been pre-paid or ought to be paid by or charged to any 
person, department or party whomsoever, shall be felony, punish- 
able by imprisonment in the Provincial Penitentiary for life. 

The passage of the above Act and its approval by the Queen in Council 
gave opportunity for preparations to be made to carry o\it its provisions, the 
date being set for the 6th April, 1851. Three vs^eeks previous to the appointed 
time the following notice was sent out to postmasters in anticipation of the 
transfer. 

NOTICE TO POSTMASTERS. 

GENEKAL POST OFFICE, 

MONTBEAL, 14th MAECH, 1851. 

Sie:— 

I am commanded by His Excellency the Governor General, to com- 
municate to you the following Instructions, for your guidance in the 
performance of your duties, under the New Post Office Law of the 
13th and 14th Vict., chap. 17, passed at the last Session of the Pro- 
vincial Parliament, which will take effect, and supersede the Im- 
perial Post Office Acts, hitherto in force in Canada, on and from the 
6th day of April next: 

1. From the above date, all Letters transmitted by the Post in 
Canada, with the exception of Packet Letters to and from the United 
Kingdom, will be liable to a uniform rate of Three Pence, currency, 
per half -ounce, for whatever distance conveyed: pre-payment will be 
optional: the charge increasing according to the weight of the Let- 
ter, one single rate for every additional half-ounce, counting the frac- 
tion of a half -ounce as a full rate, thus : 

A Letter, weighing not exceeding % ounce, will be liable to 
3d. Postage. 



PRELIMINARY MATTERS , 23 

A Letter, weighing more than % ounce, and not exceeding 1 
ounce, will be liable to 6 d. Postage. 

A Letter, weighing more than 1 ounce, and not exceeding 1% 
ounces, will be liable to 9d. Postage. 

A Letter, weighing more than li/^ ounces, and not exceeding 2 
ounces, will be liable to 1 s. Postage. 

A Letter, weighing more than 2 ounces, and not exceeding 2% 
ounces, will be liable to 1 s., 3 d. Postage, and so on. 

It will be observed that the above scale differs from that now 
followed, in advancing one rate for each half-ounce after the first 
ounce. 

2. The single Packet rate for Letters by the Atlantic Steam 
Packet Mails to and from England, via the United States, of Is. 2d. 
sterling, if un-paid, and Is. 4d. currency if pre-paid, as also the rate 
on Letters by those mails, via Halifax, of Is-: . sterling, if un-paid, and 
Is. 1% d. currency, if pre-paid, remain unaltered, and the present scale 
of weights is to remain in force as regards such Letters. 

Post Masters must be very careful to observe this distinction 
when taxing Letters, weighing over one ounce, intended for the Eng- 
lish Mails. 

3. The regulations now in force with regard to Letters to and 
from Soldiers and Sailors in Her Majesty's Service, by which under 
certain conditions such Letters pass through the Post on pre-payment 
of a penny only, will remain unaltered. 

5. Letters addressed to New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince 
Edward's Island, or Newfoundland, are to be rated with the uniform 
rate of 3d. per half -ounce. 

6. Letters to and from the United States will be liable to the 
uniform rate of 3d. per half -ounce, between the Frontier Line and 
the place of posting or place of destination in Canada; and until 
further arrangements can be made, this charge on Letters from 
Canada to the United States must be pre-paid at the time of posting. 

7. [Rates and regulations for Newspapers, Pamphlets, etc., to re- 
main as at present.] 

8. [Printed matter addressed to Editors is free.] 

9. The charge on Letters posted at an OfBce for delivery in the 
same City, Town, or Place, and any additional charge made on Let- 
ters delivered at the residences of parties to whom they are ad- 
dressed, are to remain as at present, until further instructions. 

10. No Pranking Privilege is allowed under the New Act except 
with regard to Letters and Packets on the business of the Post OiBce, 
addressed to or transmitted by the Post Master General. 

13. Stamps for the pre-payment of Postage are being prepared, 
and will be distributed for the use of the public at an early date. 

16. [Letters, etc., to Deputy Post Master General to pass free.] 

T. A. STAYNEE, 
Deputy Post Master General. 



24 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

Meanwhile, under the authority given the Governor in Council by The 
Post Office Act, an agreement had been drawn up between the post oiEce De- 
partments of Canada and the United States for the purpose of establishing 
and regulating the interchange of mails between the two countries. This was 
signed on the 25th March, 1851, and was communicated to the Canadian 
post-masters by the first department order, as follows: — 

DEPAETMENT ORDER [NO. 1.] 

LETTERS, ETC., BETWEEN CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES, 
INCLUDING CALIFORNIA AND OREGON. 

POST OFEICE DEPARTMENT, 

TORONTO, 2nd April, 1851. 

Commenomg on and from the 6tli instant, Letters, Newspapers, 
&c., will pass through the Mails between Canada and the United 
States, including California and Oregon, at the Rates of Postage and 
under the Regulations herein mentioned. 

1. Letters posted at any Office in Canada, addressed to any place 
in the United States, except California and Oregon, are to be rated 
with a uniform rate of six-pence, currency, per half-ounce. 

3. Letters posted in any part of the United States, except Cal- 
ifornia and Oregon, addressed to Canada, will be rated there with 
a uniform charge of ten cents, equal to six-pence, currency, per half- 
ounce. 

3. The Postage Rate on Letters passing between Canada and 
California and Oregon, will be a uniform charge of nine-pence, cur- 
rency, equal to iifteen cents per half-oimce. 

4. It is to be understood that the above rates include the whole 
charge for the transmission of a Letter between any place in Canada 
and any place within the United States, including California and Oregon. 

5. The scale for Computing the charge upon Letters weighing 
more than % ounce, will be the same as that for Letters passing 
within the Province. 

6. Pre-payment of Letters passing between Canada and any place 
within the United States, including California and Oregon, will, in 
all cases, be optional. 

7. Newspapers, Pamphlets, &c., posted in Canada, addressed to 

the United States, including California and Oregon, are, to be 

forwarded through the Post at the same rates of charge as if ad- 
dressed to a place within the Province ; the said rates must, how- 
ever, be pre-paid — as, if the ordinary Canada Rate is not paid at the 
time of posting a Newspaper or Pamphlet, &c., it cannot be forwarded 
to the United States. 

8. United States Newspapers, Pamphlets, &c., addressed to places 
in Canada, will be received in the Province with the American Postage 
thereon pre-paid — leaving the ordinary Canada Rate of charge from 

the Frontier Line to the place of destination, to be collected 

by the Post Master who may deliver the same in Canada. 



PRELIMINARY MATTERS 



25 



9- — 10. — 11. IGopies of newspapers or printed documents sent hy 
or to publishers or editors are free of Canadian postage.] 

12. The Canada Postage Stamps, -when used, will be taken in the 
United States as evidence of pre-payment of Postage on Letters going 
from Canada to the United States, and in like manner the United 
States Postage Stamps on Letters coming into Canada, are to be taken 
by Post Masters in this Province as evidence of pre-payment having 
been made in the United States. 

13. The following are appointed to be the Offices in Canada 
through which the Post communication with the United States will 
be maintained, and to which Post Masters are to forward their Mail 
matter for the United States, according to the relative position of 
their several Offices: 



POET SAENIA, 
WINDSOE, 
FOET EEIE, 

QUEENSTON, 



Intended in the mean time to 
be the Channel of Communication 
with the United States for the 
Country West of Toronto. 



NIAGARA, 
TOEONTO, 



COBOUEG, 



•1 



A Communication during Summer 
only, by Steamer to Eochester. 



KINGSTON, 

BEOCKVILLE, 

PEESCOTT, 

MONTEEAL, 

ST. JOHN'S, 

DUNDEE, 

STANSTEAD, 



By Command, 
W. H. GEIPFIN. 



Both the Post Office Act and the above Department Order treat of the 
disposition of periodicals and other printed matter without giving the rates 
of postage required thereon. A subsequent Order gives us these rates: — 



DEPAETMENT OEDEE, [NO. 3.] 

POST OFFICE DEPAETMENT, 

TOEONTO. nth April, 1851. 
Printed Circulars, Price Currents, Bandhills, Pamphlets, Periodi- 
cals, Books, and other Printed Matter transmitted iy Post in Canada. 

1. Upon each Printed Circular, Price Current or Handbill, and other 
Printed matter of a like description, when unconnected with any man- 
uscript or written communication and of no greater weight than one 
ounce, there shall be charged One penny ; and for each additional ounce 
or fraction of an ounce. One penny additional. 

2. Upon each Periodical or Magazine, Pamphlet and Book, bound 
or unbound, there shall be charged a rate of One half-penny per ounce. 

3. Pre-payment of the foregoing rates will be optional, except 
when the Printed matter is addressed to the United States, and in that 
case the charge must invariably be pre-paid. 



26 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

4. On such Printed matter received into Canada by Mail from 
the United States, the above Canada Eates will always remain to be 
collected on delivery in this Province. 

5. [Exchange of one copy between publishers is free.} 

6. [Must be unsealed; if writing is enclosed mil be treated as 
a letter.] 

7. No Book or packet of Periodicals, Magazines, &c., can be for- 
warded through the Post, if exceeding the weight of forty-eight ounces. 

JAMBS MORRIS. Post Master General. 



It is of course understood that the above does not apply to newspapers, 
which were charged to a nominal rate of j^d. each, the term newspaper being 
considered to aply to periodicals issued not less often than once a week. 

A supplementary order was issued, a couple of days later than the pre- 
ceding, which announces a book post with England. It is a bit curious as 
prohibiting the use of postage stamps in prepayment of the charges, at a time 
when their introduction was supposed to be an improvement in the postal 
service. 

SUPPLEMENTARY ORDER. 

POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT, 

TORONTO, 19m April, 1851. 
Book Post with England. 
Under the authority of Her Majesty's Government, an arrange- 
ment will take effect on the fifteenth day of May next, under which 
Printed Books, Magazines, Reviews, or Pamphlets, whether British, Co- 
lonial, or Foreign, may be sent through the Post, between Canada and 
the United Kingdom, at the Following Rates of Postage : 



For a single volume, i. e., Book, Magazine, Review, or Pamplilet, not 

exceeding half lb in weight 
For a single volume, &c., exceeding half lb. and not exceeding one lb. 

" " " one lb. " " two lbs. 

" " " two lbs. " " three lbs. 



Stebliho 

6d. 
Is. 

2s. 



CUREBNOY 

Equal to T^d. 

" to Is. 3d. 

" " 28. 6d. 

" 3s. 9d. 



The above charge must always be pre-paid, on printed Books, 
&c., &c., sent to the United Kingdom under this Regulation, at the 
time of posting in Canada ; and the pre-pajrment must be made in money, 
and cannot be taken in Canada Postage Stamps. 

Postmasters, as with pre-paid Letters for England must rate 
the Books, &c., posted under this Regulation, in red ink, with both the 

sterling rate and its equivalent in currency, — thus, a Book, &c., 

weighing 3% pounds, will be rated : — 

"Paid 4s. sterling — equal to 5s. currency." 
»»♦»»»**»• 

JAMES MORRIS, Post Master General. 



PEELIMINAEY MATTERS 27 

The Department Circular No. 5, published from Toronto on 20th June, 
1851, contains but one paragraph of interest to us. 

Post Masters are informed tliat the transfer of the Post Office in 
the Provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia to Provincial control, 
will take place on the 6th July next, and that from that date the uni- 
form rate of 3d. per % ounce will form the sole charge on a Letter 
transmitted between any place in Canada and any place in New 
Brunswick, or Nova Scotia. Pre-payment will be optional. 

On the 30th August, 1851, the Canadian Parliament passed an Act to 
Amend the Post Office Act. The only section of any particular interest to 
us is the following : — 

14° & 15° Vict. Cap. LXXI. 

XV. And be it enacted, That the Post Master General shall be 
authorized, whenever the same may be proper for the accommodation 
of the public in any city, to employ Letter Carriers for the delivery 
of letters received at the Post Office in such city, excepting such as the 
persons to whom they are addressed may have requested, in writing ad- 
dressed to the Postmaster, to be retained in the Post Office, and for 
the receipt of letters at such places in the said city as the Postmaster 
General may direct, and for the deposit of the same in the Post Office; 
and for the delivery by Carrier of each letter received from the Post Office, 
the person to whom the same is delivered shall pay not exceeding One 
Penny, and for the delivery of each newspaper and pamphlet One Half- 
penny, and for every letter received by a Carrier to be deposited in the 
Post Office, there shall be paid to him, at the time of the receipt, 
not exceeding One Half-penny : — all of which receipts, by the Carriers 
in any city, shall, if the Postmaster General so direct, be accounted 
for to the Postmaster of the said city, to constitute a fund for the 
compensation of the said Carriers, and to be paid to them in such pro- 
portions and manner as the Postmaster General may direct. 

But in the meantime the postage stamps, which will now be our main 
study, were issued to the public, and we will therefore turn back to the period 
of their birth and trace their history, together with the development of the 
post that accompanies it, through the nearly sixty years that have since 
elapsed. 



CHAPTER II 

THE ISSUE OF 1851 

ACCOKDING to all good catalogues, the date of the first issue of stamps 
for Canada is the year 1851. If we find some more precise statement 
put forth in a special article on the subject, the date is apt to be given 
as the 6th April, 1851. If we go back into the dusty archives of the Canadian 
Post Office Department, we find the circular announcing the forthcoming stamps 
is dated a fortnight later than the hitherto supposed correct date for their issue. 
We reproduce it here in its entirety: — 

DEPAKTMENT ORDER [NO. 4.] 

POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT, 

TORONTO, 21st April, 1851. 
Stamps for the pre-payment of Postage on Letters. 

Postage Stamps are about to be issued, one representing the Beaver, 
of the denomination of Three pence ; the second representing the head of 
Prince Albert, of the denomination of Six pence; and the third, repre- 
senting the head of Her Majesty, of the denomination of One shilling; 
which will shortly be transmitted to the Post Masters at important 
points, for sale. 

Any Post Master receiving Stamps from this Department will, by 
the next mail, acknowledge the receipt of the amount. At the expir- 
ation of each Quarter, and with his Quarterly Postage Accounts, he will 
render an account of Stamps on a form which will be hereafter sup- 
plied, charging himself therein with any amount which remained on 
hand at the close of the preceding Quarter, and with the amounts re- 
ceived during the Quarter just ended, and creditinig himself with the 
amount then remaining on hand. The balance of the account so stated, 
representing the amount of Stamps he has sold or disposed of, the Post 
Master will add to the balance due on his Return for the same Quarter 
of Postages. 

Any Letter or Packet, with one or more Stamps affixed, equal in 
amount to the Postage properly chargeable thereon, may be mailed and 
forwarded from any office as a pre-paid Letter or Packet; but if the 
Stamps affixed be not adequate to the proper Postage, the Post Master 
receiving the Letter or Packet for transmission will rate it with the 
amount deficient in addition. — This Regulation concerning Letters 
short paid has reference only to Letters passing within the Province. 

Stamps so affixed are to be inunediately cancelled in the office in 
which the Letter or Packet may be deposited, with an instrument 



THE ISSUE OF 1851 29 

to be furnished for that purpose. In Post Offices not so furnished, 
the stamps must be cancelled by making a cross [X] on each with a 
pen. If the cancelling has been omitted on the mailing of the Letter, 
the Post Master delivering it will cancel the stamp in the manner 
directed, and immediately report the Post Master who may have been 
delinquent, to the Department. Bear in mind that Stamps must in- 
variably be cancelled before mailing the Letters to which they are 
affixed. 

Letters and Packets pre-paid by Stamps must be entered in the 
Letter-Bill separately from other pre-paid Letters, — and in like man- 
ner in the Monthly Sheets. 

J. MORRIS, Post Master General. 

From the above it is plainly evident that the new stamps were noi placed 
in use on April 6th, the day of the transfer of the Post Office to Provincial 
control, as is usually stated. Furthermore, as this order announcing them 
states that the stamps are "about to be issued," it is evident that they did not 
appear concurrently with the order, which is dated April 21st.^ As a matter 
of fact the first supply of the 3 pence stamps was only received by the Depart- 
ment from the manufacturers on April 5th, the day before the transfer, and 
the second supply on April 20th, the day before the above circular was issued ; 
while the 6 pence and 12 pence stamps did not arrive until May 2nd and May 
4th, respectively.^ In a letter to Mr. Donald A. King,^ dated 2d March, 
1904, from Mr. "William Smith, Secretary of the Department at Ottawa, the 
latter states "that postage stamps were issued to the public for the first time 
on 23rd April, 1851." This agrees with the other known facts, and can doubt- 
less be taken as the correct date for the 3d. stamp. The 6d. stamp we have 
no further details for, but it was doubtless in use by the middle of May. For 
the 12d. stamp we have, fortunately, all the details, as will appear subsequent- 
ly, and can give the exact date of issue as June 14, 1851. 

At the time of the transfer, the Postmaster General issued a lengthy 
set of Regulations and Instructions for the Government of the Post Office De- 
partment in Canada, and it is perhaps best to reproduce here such sections as 
may prove of interest in connection with the use of the stamps, various rates of 
postage, etc., etc. 

20. Letters posted to be sent by Mail are to be carefully post- 
marked on the face or address side, with the name of the Post Office, 

'This correction of the date must be noted, for in Mr. King's article in the Monthly 
Journal. VII: 7, it is wrongly given as 1st April, which might lead to erroneous conclusions. 
In the Article by Messrs. Corwln and King, (Metropolitan Philatelist, I: 149), the date is cor- 
rectly given. 

-Metropolitan Philatelist, XVII: 83. 

"London Philatelist. Xni: 153. 



30 CAJSTADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

the montli and the day of the month in which they are posted, and, except 
when they are Prepaid by Postage stamps, with the Kate of Postage 
in plain figures. In performing these operations great care must be 
used to avoid interference with the address. 

23. If the Postage is Paid in Money when the Letter is posted, 
stamp or write the word "Paid" against the Postage rate, and mark 
the rate in red ink; but if the Letter is "Unpaid" the rate is to be 
marked in hlack ink. 

********** 

43. Should the Receiving Postmaster find that any of the Letters 
have been under-rated, that is, not charged with sufficient Postage, — if 
for example, a Letter weighing an ounce has only been charged with one 
rate, he will mark the additional Postage with the words "More to 
pay" and his initials on the Letter. 

44 Letters are to be postmarked on the back or seal 

side with the date of the day on which they arrive 

********** 

58. On Letters not exceeding % oz. in weight between any place 
in Canada and any other place in British North America, including 
Canada, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and Cape 
Breton, the rate is a uniform charge of 3d. 

For every additional weight of half an oz., or any fractional excess 
of half an oz., there shall be charged an additional rate of 3d. 

59. On Letters deposited at an Office for delivery in the same 
place, called Drop or Box Letters, the rate is One half -penny each, to 
be brought to account by Postmasters. 

60. On Letters between any place in Canada and any part of Great 
Britain or Ireland, if conveyed in the Weekly closed Mails through the 
United States, the rate is a uniform charge of Is. 2d. sterling, equal to 
Is. 4d. currency, on a Letter not exceeding y^ oz., in weight. 

62. On Letters between Canada and the United Kingdom, con- 
veyed by the semi-monthly Mails by way of Quebec, New Brunswick 
and Halifax, the rate is : 

On Letters not exceeding % oz., Is. Od. sterling equal to Is. 
l%d. currency. 

On Letters not exceeding loz., 2s. Od. sterling equal to 2s. 3d. 
currency. 

On Letters not exceeding 2 oz., 4s. Od. sterling equal to 4s. 6d. 
currency. 

63. On Letters between any place in Canada and any part of the 
United States, except California and Oregon, the rate is a uniform 
charge of 6d., equal to 10c. per % oz. weight. 

64. On Letters to California and Oregon, the rate is 9d., equal to 
15c. per Va oz. 

67. Letters to Newfoundland may be sent via Quebec and Halifax 
at a Postage rate of 7%d. per % oz. 

68. Letters to British West Indies via Quebec, Halifax and Ber- 
muda will be charged the Canada rate of 3d. and in addition the 



THE ISSUE OF 1851 31 

Packet rate for sea conveyance between Halifax and Bermuda of 4%d. 
currency, making on a letter not weighing more than % oz. a rate 
of TVad. 

69. Letters may also be sent from Canada to the British West 
Indies and Havauah by the ordinary United States Mails to New York, 
and from thence by British Steam Packet to destination, on Prepay- 
ment in Canada of 9d. equal to 15c. per % oz. 

70. Mails are made up at Montreal every fortnight for Halifax, 
Nova Scotia, and despatched for conveyance to Halifax with the Mails 
by the Royal Mail Steamers from Boston to Halifax and Liverpool by 
which Letters may be sent to the following places at the rates men- 
tioned : 

Letters to Halifax and Nova Scotia 7%d. currency. 

Letters to Newfoundland Is. currency. 

Letters to Bermuda and British West Indies Is. currency. 

74 — 75 — 76. ^Almost identical loith first three paragraphs of De- 
partment Order No. 4. describing and prescribing use of postage 
stamps. Vide supra.] 

77. If the Stamps affixed to a Letter addressed to any place in 
British North America or to the United Kingdom be not adequate to 
the proper Postage, the Post Master receiving the Letter for transmis- 
sion will rate it with the amount deficient in addition. 

78. On Letters for the United States when Stamps are affixed rep- 
resenting less than the amount of Postage to which the Letters are 
liable, the Stamps are to be cancelled and the Letters rated with the 
full rate as Unpaid. 

79 — 80 — 81. [Identical with last two paragraphs of Department 
Order No. 4, concerning cancelling, omission of same,, and acco'<unts 
of stamped letters.] 

83. Stamps affixed to Letters coming from either of the British 
North American Provinces, the United Kingdom or the United States, 
and recognized as equivalent to pre-payment at the Office where the 
Letter has been posted — are to be allowed in Canada as evidence of 
pre-payment accordingly, on the Letters to which they have been 
affixed. 

84. [Postage Stamps must he taken when offered in payment of 
postage on delivery of Unpaid Letters.] 

88. [Non-Commissioned Officers, Embodied Pensioners, Seamen 
and Soldiers, tohile employed in Her Majesty's Service, can send and 
receive letters at a rate of \d. each, which must be paid at time of 
posting, and letter must not exceed % on. in weight.'] 

95. [Bate on circulars, price currents, hand bills, etc.. Id. per 
ounce or fraction.] 

96. [Rate on pamphlets, periodicals, magazines and books, Vid. 
per ounce.] 

100. [Limit of weight for periodicals, etc., (596) is 48 o«.] 



32 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

103. [BooTc post to England is 6d. sterling (7%fl!. currency) for 

Vilb., Is. sterling (1«. 3(?. currency) for 1 U., and at 1«. per Ih., rate 

thereafter.'] 

********** 

112. [Postage on newspapers in Canada is Vzd. except on ex- 
change copies, which are free.] 

It strikes one as curious, in glancing over the above, to note the several 
half penny and one penny rates, as well as two at lyi pence, and to realize 
that no stamp of the lowest value, at least, should have been arranged for 
whereby these amounts could have been prepaid by means of stamps. To be 
sure, the 7)4 d. rate could be obtained by halving a three penny stamp in con- 
junction with a 6d. stamp as was the common practice in Nova Scotia, but no 
such combination is known on a Canada cover. 

Of the three stamps issued, the first and most typical of Canada was the 
3d. which was designed, so Mr. 0. N. Robertson of Ottawa tells us, by Sir 
Sanford Fleming, a civil engineer and draughtsman. The central feature is 
a representation of the beaver in its native haunts, above which is the royal 
crown of England resting on a rose, thistle and shamrock, with the letters V 
and R (Victoria Regina) at either side. A reference to figure 6 on Plate I 
makes further description imnecessary. The normal color was a bright red. 

A quite marked variety of this stamp occurs in what is generally known 
as a "double strike" or "shifted transfer." It is not due to accidental light 
contact of the sheet in printing, previous to the heavier impression in a slightly 
changed position, as is often suggested, but is a true plate variety, caused by 
a slight impression of the transfer roller in the wrong position on the plate 
previous to the heavy impression sunk in the proper position. This fact is 
shown by its being found in pairs and blocks with the normal stamp. It is 
recognized by the letters EE PEN" being "doubled" at the top, making it 
appear as if a line had been drawn through the words and giving it the name, 
occasionally used of the "line through threepence" variety. The figure 3 also 
appears doubled at the bottom. Its position in the sheet has not been deter- 
mined, but it occurs on all papers. 

The 6d. stamp is in the usual upright form, containing a portrait of 
Albert, the Prince Consort. It has been impossible to trace the original of the 
picture, though diligent search has been made. The rose, thistle and sham- 
rock again appear on the stamp, at either side of the oval frame and separating 
the inscriptions. Figure 1 of Plate I gives an excellent reproduction of this 
value. The normal color maj be said to have been a slate violet. 



THE ISSUE OF 1851 33 

The 12d. stamp is very similar in design to the 6d. stamp, but contains 
a portrait of Queen Victoria. This beautiful head, so often seen upon the 
early British Colonial stamps, was taken from the full length painting by 
Alfred Edward Chalon, E. A., which was ordered by the Queen for her mother, 
the Duchess of Kent, as a souvenir of Her Majesty's first visit to the House of 
Lords. The occasion was the prorogation of Parliament, on July 17, 1837, 
and the Queen is portrayed in her robes of state, because of which fact the 
painting is sometimes described as "in Coronation Kobes," but this is erron- 
eous.* The stamp is illustrated as figure 2 on Plate I, and it will be noticed 
that the inscriptions in the oval frame are this time separated on either side 
by the royal crown. The color is black. 

The peculiarity in the expression of the value of this stamp as "Twelve 
Pence" instead of "One Shilling," which would seem to be the natural form for 
such an amount in English money, was long a moot question amongst collec- 
tors. It was even suggested as an "error" of the American manufacturers of the 
stamp ! But the controversy has been practically settled by reference to the 
monetary conditions of the period. A glance back at the rates of postage we 
have already qiioted will show that it was generally necessary to give them in 
two forms, "currency" and "sterling." The somewhat depreciated Canadian 
currency required fifteen pence, as will be noted, to equal the shilling sterling 
— a point that is brought out on the two stamps issued subsequently for the 
British Packet rates. Add to this the fact that in l^ew England the "shilling" 
was a current expression for 16% cents (10 pence currency), while in New 
York it represented 12% cents (7% pence currency) and we can readily 
see that in Canadian territory contiguous to these sections the number of 
pence to a "shilling" might often be a debatable quantity. As a matter of fact 
the French Canadians of Lower Canada made general use of the "shilling" 
as reckoned at 10 pence (20 cents) in the old currency, while the "York shil- 
ling" was extensively used in Upper Canada.^ "Twelve pence" was without 
doubt wholly intentional, therefore, as the designation of the stamp, and was 
a happy solution of any ambiguity in its use, even if it has proved a stumbling 
block to the understanding of latter day collectors. 

An interesting essay for this stamp is in existence, being a companion 
for the 3 pence "beaver," inasmtich as the shape of the stamp and the central 
design are the same, though on a larger scale; the inscriptions, however, are 

■■London Philatelist, VI: 147. 
'Metropolitan Philatelist, I: 170. 



34 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

on an octagonal frame around the picture instead of an elliptical one, and the 
value is expressed as "one shilling," with "Is" in each spandrel. It was douht- 
less also a conception of Sir Sanford Fleming, the designer of the 3 pence, and 
it would be interesting to know what the companion 6 pence may have been. 

The three issued stamps were ordered from and engraved on steel by 
Messrs. Rawdon, Wright, Hatch and Edson of New York, who, it will be 
interesting to note, were the engravers of the 1847 issue of United States 
stamps — a fact which very likely may have had its influence on the Canadian 
authorities. The stamps were printed in sheets of 100, ten rows of ten, and 
had eight marginal imprints, two on each side. The imprint reads, "Rawdon, 
Wright, Hatch & Edson, ~New York.", in minute letters of the size known as 
"diamond" in the printing office, and it is placed opposite the third and eighth 
stamjps of the horizontal or vertical row, as the case may be, but always 
with the bottom of the imprint next the stamps. This causes the imprints to 
read up on the left, down on the right, and upside down on the bottom margins 
of the sheets. 

We have found but one item in the departmental accounts for the fiscal 
year 1851-2 referring to the stamps. This reads: — 

Rawdon, Wright & Co., for engraving postage stamps, £31.8.2 

This was doubtless simply a bill for printing, as it is altogether too small an 
amount to account for the engraving of three stamp dies and the making of 
three printing plates. 

The first delivery of the stamps from the manufacturers took place on 
April 5, 1851, according to a valuable summary from official records, pub- 
lished in the Metropolitan Philaielist,^ when 100,000 of the 3 pence value 
were received by the Canadian Government. A second lot, numbering 150,200 
of the 3 pence, arrived on April 20th. The 6 pence value followed on May 2nd, 
to the number of 100,400 ; and the 12 pence two days later, on May 4th, when 
the only consignment ever received from the printers, numbering 51,400, was 
delivered. 

The paper on which the stamps were printed was a thin, tough, grayish 
white variety which we should probably call bond paper, but which at that 
time is said to have been known as bank note paper. It was doubtless hand- 
made, and therefore varies considerably in thickness, the two extremes being 
usually listed as medium or ordinary, and very thin or almost pelure. 

'Metropolitan Philatelist, XVII: 83. 



THE ISSUE OF 1851 35 

It has been the custom to assume that the first deliveries of the stamps 
were probably all upon laid paper, which was borne out by dates on covers or 
postmarked specimens of the stamps used during the first year of issue. But 
by -Tune of 1852, at least, according to Messrs. Corwin and King,'' the 
stamps were beginning to appear on paper which was simply wove, without 
any trace of the laid lines, though in all other respects similar to the first sup- 
plies. Of course a minor detail of manufacture like this would have no oificial 
cognizance, so there is nothing for us to go by in determining the quantities 
printed on one or the other kind of paper, or the dates of issue, save for what 
can be gleaned from dated covers and deductions to be drawn from them. 
The two varieties of paper, however, have been as productive of controversy 
in the case of the 12 pence stamp as the peculiar expression of its value proved. 

But before discussing this question, let us see what we have to work on. 
The first annual report of the Postmaster General, for the year ending 5th 
April, 1852, contains the following information concerning the new stamps: — 

Postage Stamps for the pre-payment of letters of the respective 
values of 3d., 6d. and Is. were procured and Issued immediately after 
the transfer, and have been kept for sale to the public at all the 
principal Post Offices in the Province ; the demand, hovrever, has not 
been great, as will be seen by the foUovring statement, and the sales 
of the last quarter of the year would seem to demonstrate that 
the use of these Stamps in pre-payment of letters, is rather diminishing 
than gaining ground in the community. There were procured from 
the manufacturers, Messrs. Kawdon, Wright, Hatch & Co., of New 
York, during the year ended 5th April 1852 : 

Value. 

250,200 3d. Stamps £3127 10 

100,400 6d. Stamps 2510 

51,000 Is. Stamps 2550 

401,600 £8187 10 

Of these have been issued to Postmasters for sale, to the same date : 

Value. 

217,300 3d. Stamps £2716 5 

63,400 6d. Stamps 1585 

820 Is. Stamps 41 

281,520 £4342 5 

The succeeding annual reports of the Postmaster General, for the years 

'Metropolitan Philatelist, I: 149. 



36 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

ending 31st March, 1853-6, give the following table of postage stamp 
statistics : — 

Postage stamps issued for sale as follows : — 

EEPOKT OF 3 1ST. MAKCH, 1853. 

3d. Stamps 6d. Stamps Is. Stamps 

On hand 5tli April, 1852 33,900 37,000 50,180 

Since received from Manufacturers. . .350,000 

383,900 37,000 50,180 

Issued for sale during year 163,000 3,575 100 

On hand 31st Max-ch, 1853 119,900 34,425 50,080 

PvEPOKT OP 3 1ST. MAKCH, 1854. 

Eeceived from Manufacturers 350,000 

369,900 34,435 50,080 

Issued for sale during year 340,700 10,835 335 

On hand 31st March, 1854 139,200 23,600 49,755 

EEPOET OP 31ST. MARCH, 1855. 

Eeceived from Manufacturers 350,000 50,000 

379,200 73,600 49,755 

Issued for sale during year 355,000 35,800 365 

On hand 31st. March, 1855 34,200 47,800 49,490 

EEPOET OP 31ST. MAECH, 1856. 

Eeceived from Manufacturers 600,300 

634,500 47,800 49,490 
Issued for sale during year 368,700 38,419 

On hand 31st. March, 1856 355,800 9,381 49,490 

In this annual report of 31st March, 1856, is the last account of the 12d. 
stamp, from which it appears that none were issued to postmasters during the 
fiscal year. It does not mean that none were sold or used during that period, 
however, for with the increasing use of stamps this was quite probable. But 
it is evident from the tables given that the stamp was disbursed from head- 
quarters in very limited quantities during the four years from 1851 to 1855 
only; and we are quite fortunate in being able to give the exact details of this 



THE ISSUE OF 1851 



37 



distribution. An anonymous article was published in the Metropolitan Phil- 
atelist in 1902,* from which we have already quoted, that contained a "Val- 
uable summary of the first issue of postage stamps used in this Colony/' The 
statement is made that "it is taken from official records and is absolutely 
accurate." We quote here the information concerning the 

CANADA ONE SHILLING POSTAGE STAMP. 

Total number rec'd. from Contractors 51,000 

Total number issued to postmasters 1,510 

Balance (destroyed) 49,490 

NOTE. — On May 4, 1851, the first and only consignment of the 
Canada 1 shilling postage stamp, to the number of 51,000 (value 
£3,550), was received by the Post Office Department, Canada, from 
the Contractors, Messrs. Eawdon, Wright, Hatch & Edson, New York. 

The issue of this stamp began on June 14, 1851, and concluded on 
December 4, 1854, when the stamp was discontinued. During its 
issue 1510 stamps of that denomination were sent out to postmasters, 
leaving a balance on hand of 49,490, which, on May 1st. 1857, were in 
accordance with the practice of the Department in cases of the dis- 
continuance of stamps, destroyed. As has already been observed, there 
was only the one lot of this stamp received from the contractors. 

DETAILS OE ISSUE. 

Date of Issue. Name of Office. Name of P. M. No. 

June 14, 1851 Hamilton E. Ritchie 300 

Oct. 17, 1851 Chippewa W. Hepburn 100 

Nov. 13, 1851 Thorold J. Keefer 30 

Nov. 25, 1851 Toronto C. Berchy 200 

Mar. 8, 1852 Montreal J. Porteous 300 

Sept. 14, 1853 Ingersoll D. Phelan 100 

Apr. 5, 1853 *Bytown G. W. Baker 100 

Oct. 20, 1853 Sherbrooke Wm. Brooks 15 

Jan. 13, 1854 Smith's Palis Jas. Shaw 50 

Jan. 20, 1854 Bytown G. W. Baker 100 

Feb. 8, 1854 L' Islet Ballantyne 15 

Feb. 37, 1854 Ingersoll Chadvrick 30 

Mar. 23, 1854 Sault S. Marie Jos. Wilson 35 

May 15, 1854 Port, du Fort McLaren 15 

Oct. 31, 1854 Eowan Mills de Blaquiere 50 

Oct. 36, 1854 Melbourne Thos. Tait 50 

Oct. 37, 1854 Montreal A. La Eocque 100 

Dec. 4, 1854 Smith's Falls Jas. Shaw 50 

Total number issued, 1,510 
*Now Ottawa, Capital of Dominion of Canada. 

From the above it is seen that Hamilton and Montreal each received a 
total of 300 copies, Toronto and Bytown each 200, Ingersoll 120, Chippewa 
and Smith's Falls each 100, and so on down. 



■Metropotltan Philatelist, XVII: 83. 



38 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

So much, for the 12d. stamp. The tables of the Post Office reports tell us 
also that the issues of the Gd. stamp to postmasters for these same four years 
totalled 102,600, or only 2200 more than the original number delivered, the sec- 
ond delivery of the 6d. not having taken place until March 21, 1855,* at the 
end of the last fiscal year of the four. If, then, the entire first printings of the 
6d. and 12d. stamps were on laid paper, as is usually claimed, there would be no 
such thing as a 12d. on wove paper, and the 6d. stamp in the same state would 
not be found used (provided proper postmark evidence were forthcoming) 
before the end of March, 1855. During the same period there were at least 
five deliveries of the 3d. stamp, so that several things may have happened to 
that value. But, curiously enough, it is the other two stamps that furnish us 
with our best evidence. 

We now come literally to the "nigger in the wood-pile." The 12d. stamp 
does exist on the wove paper ! Mr. Worthington and Mr. Pack each possess an 
unused copy, and careful examination by the writer has failed to disclose any 
appreciable difference in the color, quality or appearance of the paper, save 
for the impossibility of discovering the laid lines, between these copies and 
those possessing proper credentials as the regular laid paper 12d. of 1851. The 
color of the stamp and its general appearance give no hint of the supposed 
irregularity, and a letter to Mr. Worthington from the well known expert, Mr. 
John N. Luff, gives his approval to the specimen in Mr. Worthington's collec- 
tion. It was formerly considered that the supposed 12d. on wove paper was 
merely a proof, and in the "Catalogue for Advanced Collectors" we find the 
following note concerning it under Canada.-"' 

Althougli the 12p is catalogued by some as existing on thin wove 
paper, we do not believe in it as in every copy on wove paper sent to us 
for examination some traces of the word specimen were to be dis- 
covered thus showing them all to be merely proofs. 

As far as the writer has seen them, specimen copies have been on India 
paper, which is quite distinct from the regular paper of the issue, and they 
have been overprinted with the word "SPECIMEN" in carmine ink, either 
diagonally or vertically upward. The copies referred to in the paragraph 
just quoted probably had been treated with chemicals to remove the red ink 
overprint. 

Of course the desideratum for the settlement of the whole question is to 

'Metropolitan Philatelist, XVII: S3. 

''American Journal of Philately, 2d. Series, III: 121. 



THE ISSUE OF 1851 39 

find a copy of the stamp used on cover ; but masmuch as up to the present time 
but three copies of the 12d. on laid paper are known in this condition, it seems 
a hopeless quest. Nevertheless there appear to be several used copies of the 
wove paper 12d. known, the first mention we find of one being in the report 
of the proceedings of the Philatelic Society of London for 4th May, 1888,^^ 
which reads: "The business of the evening consisted in the revision of the 
Society's reference list of the Stamps of Canada, which was concluded, Mr. 
F. Ransom showing an undoubted postmarked specimen of the 12d. first issue, 
printed upon stout wove paper." Mr. W. H. Brouse, the eminent Canadian 
philatelist, also possessed a cancelled copy of this stamp, which later adorned 
the Ayer collection, it is understood. An editorial in the Dominion Phil- 
atelist thus speaks of it:^^ — "We have received from W. H. Brouse, of Toronto, 

a photograph of a 12 pence Canada on wove paper [which] appears 

to be a beautiful specimen with fine margin and light cancellation." Two 
fine copies, one unused and one used, were sold in the auction of the Mirabaud 
collection at Paris, in April, 1909. 

From the above it is plainly evident that the 12d. on wove paper properly 
exists, in spite of the "first [and only] printing on laid paper" theory, which 
is usually laid dovm as an a priori consideration. Also it appears that it is 
found in a used condition, though this cannot be taken as an absolute test, 
because of the uncertainty that may lurk in a cancellation on a detached speci- 
men of a stamp. Only the discovery of a copy properly used on the original 
cover, as already intimated, can effectually settle the question of its actual issue 
and use. But there is a fact which doubtless furnishes the clue to the seeming 
mystery of its being. We have already noted that the laid paper first used 
varied considerably in thickness, and also that the wove paper next used was 
in all respects similar to the former, but of course without the laid lines. Now 
it happens sometimes that it is quite difficult to distinguish the laid paper, a 
very careful scrutiny or even the extreme resort to the benzine cup being 
necessary to bring out the watermarked lines, and perhaps then only in a 
half suspicious way. If such be the case, it is only a step further to the entire 
disappearance of these "laid lines," and lo, the wove paper! 

Writing to Mr. F. C. Young concerning the 12d. stamp, Mr. John N. 
Luff says:^* — "It is my opinion that both the wove and laid papers are quite 

"Philatelic Record, X: 124. 
"Dominion Philatelist, No. 34, p. 8. 
••Canada Stamp Sheet. IV: 142. 



40 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

genuine and I think it is possible that both varieties might occur though there 
was only one lot sent out by the printers. It does not, of course, follow that 
the entire batch was printed on the same day or that two varieties of paper 
might not have been used. The early printers were not always very particular 
about their paper, provided it was somewhat alike in a general way. Some 
collectors claim that laid paper is often of such nature that the lines do not 
show in some parts of the sheet, and I believe there is evidence to support this 
theory." Finally Mr. Charles Lathrop Pack, in some notes sent the London 
Philatelist, sums matters up in these words :^* — "After a very careful inves- 
tigation I believe that the 12d., on wove paper, was issued, and that the stamp 
was on sale at the Post Office, in Hamilton, Canada West." Mr. Pack vsrrites 
us further: — "When I was a boy I went to school at St. Catherines, Ontario. 
There were keen stamp collectors in St. Catherines at that time, not only 
among boys, but among grown people. That was about 1869 or 1870. I was 
told that part of the 12d. Canada which had been on sale at the Hamilton post 
office were on wove paper and I was convinced that that was the case." 

Concerning the laid and wove papers of this issue Mr. King writes as 
follows:^® — "The texture of these papers is virtually the same, and it is 
indeed often difficult, particularly in the case of the 6d., to distinguish between 
the laid and wove papers. The lines in the laid paper are of a most peculiar 
character, and cannot, as a rule, be brought fairly out by holding the stamp 
between one's eyes and the light. The best way to test these two papers is to 
lay the stamps, face down, on a black surface, and let the light strike them at 
about an angle of fifteen degrees, when the laid lines are brought most plainly 
into view. It is necessary, however, to place the specimens so that the 
light will strike them parallel to their length, as the laid lines run horizontally 
in the 3d., and vertically in the 6d. and 12d." 

We now come to the most interesting and confirmatory part of our evi- 
dence. We have already referred to the fact that Messrs. Corwin & King give 
June, 1852, as the date when the wove paper appeared, and 1852 is given in 
all catalogues and lists as the year of issue for all three stamps on this paper. 
In their article on British North America, the above gentlemen, in discussing 
early dates established by entire covers for the varieties of paper that they de- 
scribe, remark under the caption "Series IV." (the thin wove paper) : "We 
took a six-pence from a letter dated June 25th, 1852."^^ This statement can 

"London Philatelist, XVI: 144. 
"Monthly Journal, VII: 9. 
"Metropolitan Philatelist, I: 149. 



THE ISSUE OF 1851 41 

hardly be questioned, after the careful and minute study that they gave to the 
papers of this issue, and it therefore means just one thing: the Qd. on wove 
■paper came in the first lot delivered, for we have seen that the second supply 
did not arrive until 1855. The fact is therefore established that the first de- 
liveries of stamps in April and May, 1851, included the wove paper, and we 
therefore have here what amounts to the proper credentials for the appearance 
and even use of the 12d. on wove paper. 

As the 3d., having been delivered first, was undoubtedly printed first, 
this value may have been entirely upon the laid paper, particularly as it seems 
to be not especially rare on this paper and has not been recorded on wove 
paper used earlier than the receipt of the 1852 supplies. But this of course 
is negative evidence, and this value may yet be found to have been printed upon 
the wove paper along with the other two values in 1851. 



We have remarked that there were but three covers knovm bearing copies 
of the 12d. stamp. It is with great satisfaction, therefore, that we are able 
to present reproductions of two of them for the benefit of our readers. The 
earliest date is on the cover numbered 90 on Plate VI, which is in the Worth- 
ington collection. This bears the postmark of "Montreal, L. 0. JY 21, 1852" 
in red. The stamp is a little heavily cancelled by the concentric rings type of 
obliteration in black. The word CANADA within the curved frame and the 
word PAID are stamped in red on the cover. This was a requirement of the 
first postal convention between Canada and the United States, signed on March 
25, 1861. Section 9 reads : — 

"The Offices designated for the despatch and receipt of Canadian 
Mails on the side of the United States will stamp 'U. States' upon all 
letters sent into Canada for delivery ; and the Offices designated 
for the despatch and receipt of United States mails on the side of 
Canada will stamp 'Canada' upon all letters sent into the United 
States for delivery." 

The other two covers were both the property of the late John F. Seybold, 
but the one upon which the stamp appears in finest condition now ornaments 
the collection of Mr. Charles Lathrop Pack. This is illustrated as 'So. 91 on 
Plate VI and bears the postmark of "Hamilton, C. W. NO 23, 1853." The 
stamp is cancelled with the concentric rings in blue, and an additional hand- 
stamp appears in red reading "CANADA — PAID 20 Cts" in two lines. The 
"20" is made over from "10" by the use of a pen in changing the first figure. In 



42 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

this cormection it will be remembered that 6d. currency, equal to 10 cents, 
was the single rate for ^oz. letters between Canada and the United States. -"^ 

The third cover is in aU respects a companion piece of the second, bear- 
ing the same marks and (probably) the same address originally, but dated 
from Hamilton on "DE 8, 1853." 

All three of these covers show the particular use of the 12d. stamp — 
simply as a multiple of the 3d. and 6d. in currency rates. That it was not 
issued with any intention of being especially used for the British packet rate 
must be evident, as we have seen that this was Is. 4d. currency if prepaid 
and sent via the United States, or Is. l%d. currency if prepaid and sent via 
Halifax^ ^- — rates that could not be made up by means of the three stamps first 
issued. 

On the other hand the stamp was quadruple the domestic rate, double 
the rate to the United States, and the single rate for the fortnightly mails from 
Montreal via Boston to JSTewfoundland, Bermuda and the British West Indies. ^^ 
Probably letters in the first category were not common, and, as it happens, all 
our specimens fall in the second. The third category doubtless did not entail 
a large correspondence, particularly as the more direct route to the places men- 
tioned, via Quebec and Halifax, was at the lesser rate of 7%d.^° For the above 
reasons, then, the covers as we find them evidently exemplify the usual use to 
which the 12d. stamp was put, and explain why more were not used, as surely 
would have been the case had the stamp been convenient for prepaying the 
packet rate to England, with which there was a large correspondence. 



Having now described the two main varieties of paper common to the 
three values of this issue, let us look at some further varieties of the stock 
used for the 3d. and 6d. values, which, because of their long term of use, were 
subject to quite a number of printings and therefore gave opportunity for the 
variation in paper which is a characteristic of this issue. We have already given 
the statistics of the receipt and issue of 3d. and 6d. stamps for the five years 
from 1851 to 1856,^1 and find they total 1,600,500 for the 3d. and 150,400 for 
the 6d. Erom succeeding reports of the Postmaster General we cull the fol- 
lowing : — 

"See Sec. 63 on page 30. 

>»See Sees. 60 and 62 on page 30. 

"See Sec. 70 on page 31. 

2»See Sees. 67 and 68 on page 30. 

2iSee pages 35-36. 



THE ISSUE OF 1851 43 

EEPORT OP 30TH SEPT., 1857, [including 1 year 6 months, by statute.] 22 

3d. stamps 6d. stamps 

Balance on hand 31st March, 1856 355,800 9,381 

Received from Mfrs. in half-year to 30th. Sept 50^000 

Total 255,800 59,381 

Issued for sale during half-year 186,200 24,781 

Balance 1st October, 1856 69,600 34,600 

Received from Mfrs. year ending 30th Sept., 1857 600,000 50,078 

Total 669,600 84,678 

Issued for sale during yr. ending 30th Sept., 1857 587,900 60,600 

Balance on hand 81,700 24,078 

REPORT OP 30TH. SEPT., 1858. 

Received from Mfrs. year ending 30th Sept., 1858.900,000 100,000 

Total 981,700 134,078 

Issued for sale during year 717,200 82,500 

Balance on hand 30th Sept., 1858 264,500 41,578 

REPORT OF 30TH. SEPT., 1859. 

Rec'd from Mfrs. during 9 mos. to 30th June, 1859 449,900 70,000 

Total 714,400 111,578 

Issued for sale during above 9 months 693,700 94,000 

Balance on hand 30th June, 1859 21,700 17,578 

On July 1, 1859 the stamps in decimal currency were issued, so the above 
remainders represent the last of the 3d. and 6d. stamps. Adding the receipts 
from the manufacturers in the above tables, therefore, to the totals already 
given for the years 1851-6, and then deducting the remainders (which were 
later destroyed), we have for the total issue of the 3d. stamp 3,528,700, and 
of the 6d. stamp 402,900. In these figures are of course included the per- 
forated stamps, which we will consider later. 

It will be seen from the tables that there were at least eight deliveries 
of the 3d. stamps and at least six deliveries of the 6d. stamps, but inasmuch 
as these are totalled by years, and as some of the amounts are quite large 
(e. g. 900,000 of the 3d. in 1858), it seems certain that there were even more 
deliveries and consequently more printings of the stamps than is indicated. 
In no other way can we account for the variety in the paper used, and also 

M20° Vict. cap. XXV. Sec. VH; see page 61. 



44 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

the variety in the color of the 6d. stamp. The 3d. does not vary so much, 
probably because its shade of red did not require much mixing of inks and 
the ingredients vrere such that slight variations in the proportions did not 
greatly affect the tone. The normal color being a bright red, we find it run- 
ning to a deeper, almost brick red in one direction, and to a vermilion in the 
other. As to the normal color of the 6d. it would be almost impossible to 
hazard a guess, if we had simply a series of one stamp of each distinct varia- 
tion in color or shade in which it is found. The common run of shades is 
from a slate violet to a slate or "near black" with a "cast" of violet, of brown, 
or even green. What can one do in trying to describe the "color" of such a 
chameleon stamp with such an uncertain basis to work upon ? The check list 
gives the nearest approximation to the various shades that we have been able 
to translate into color names, but it is almost impossible to so describe some 
of them as to convey the proper idea of the exact shade to the reader. 

For papers used, Mr. King describes no less than fourteen.^* Four of 
these are the two grades of the laid and wove "bank-note" paper already 
mentioned. A third variety of laid paper is described by him as entirely 
different, being a stout white paper in which "the laid lines are most distinct, 
while the paper is of a different texture and color from the regular grey 
shade." Mr. Pack states: "This paper is very rare, and I have never seen 
but very few copies."^* Mr. King's sixth variety is described as "hard, stout, 
grayish wove," but we have included it with the ordinary wove paper in the 
check list, of which it is but a little heavier manifestation. The same may be 
said of his varieties XII and XIII, described as "medium" and "thick, 
hard, white wove paper, very slightly ribbed," respectively, which we have 
classed under "stout, hard, white wove paper." There is an extreme case 
in the 6d. stamp, which comes on a very thick hard paper, concerning which 
Mr. Pack says: — "The unused 6d. on very thick, hard paper is one of the 
greatest rarities of Canada. It is as rare as the 12d. unused. Curiously 
enough, this stamp in used condition is very rare in a pair or strip. So far 
as I know there are only two or three strips or pairs in existence. It is my 
understanding that the very thick hard paper stamps were printed previous 
to those on the soft paper." The last remark refers to the very thick, soft 
paper, almost a card board (Mr. King's variety XIV) which is now well 
known as an exceedingly rare variety. It is distinct, both in paper and 

22Monthly Journal, VII: 9. 
"London Philatelist XVI: 144. 



THE ISSUE OF 1851 45 

color, from any other variety of the 6d. stamp, the shade being a dull purple. 
The same may be said of the thick hard paper stamp, which appears to be in 
a very even shade of slate violet. 

Mr. King's varieties X and XI are both peculiar, the former being a 
"very soft, thin, cream vrove vs^hich is quite fragile and will not bear much 
handling," and the latter a "soft, thick, coarse white wove paper; the surface 
presents a sort of hairy appearance, and the quality is better than series X." 
The 3d. is the only value occurring in these two varieties, which we have placed 
under "soft white wove paper" in the check list. 

Lastly comes the ribbed paper. The first variety is a very soft, thin paper 
on which the 3d. appears. This is Mr. King's variety VII, and he makes a 
variety VIII of the same paper in a "cream" tone. The same value comes on 
a thicker, hard paper, Mr. King's variety IX, and he lists a 6d. in violet 
black as well. 

Erom the foregoing it will be seen that the first issue of Canadian stamps 
furnishes plenty of material for study, and is an extremely difficult series to 
work out and put into proper form for a reference list. Mr. King truly 
says: — "If the papers and shades of this series of stamps are thoroughly 
studied, there are more varieties than in all the other British IN'orth American 
stamps put together; in many cases they are minute, in others more decided, 
but in every case distinct." Some criticism may be made of our not using 
in extenso, the excellent "Reference List"^" prepared by Messrs. King and 
Corwin, but it has seemed wise, in working with the specialized collections 
already alluded to, to condense this list to some extent; nor do we think its 
correctness and usefulness have been impaired thereby. 

We have spoken of the three values of stamps already treated as the 
"first issue" of Canada. Some may cavil at this, for there are three more 
values belonging to the pence series which may be regarded as part of the 
"first issue," inasmuch as they were complementary as well as supplementary 
to the original three. But they did not appear until nearly four or more 
years later, and therefore escaped the laid paper varieties. For this reason, 
and because there appears another important question to solve in connection 
with two of them, we have reserved a separate chapter for these three. We 
may also say that as one of them appears in the perforated series of pence 
values we have left the consideration of these latter stamps until the next 
following chapter. 

2'Monthly Journal, VII: 9. 



CHAPTER III 

THE REMAINING PENCE ISSUES 

AEESUME of the chief happenings of the year and other items of in- 
terest is given in the annual reports of the Postmasters General, 
and a brief summary of these first few years will not be without its 
importance here. It will be recalled that the Provincial Government took 
over the control of its posts on the 6th April, 1851, and by the Act to Amend 
The Post Office Act, passed 30th August, 1851,^ the Postmaster General was 
required by statute to "report to the Governor General of the Province an- 
nually, for the purpose of being laid before Parliament at each Session, First. 
A report of Finances, Receipts and Expenditure of the Post Office Depart- 
ment for the year ending on the fifth day of April previous," etc., etc. Ac- 
cordingly the first annual report of the Postmaster General was rendered on 
the 5th April, 1852. In it we find the following information: — 

Upon the transfer of the control of the Post Office Department 
in this Province, by the Imperial Post Office Authorities to the Provin- 
cial Government, on the 6th April, 1851, the number of Post Offices in 
operation was found to be 601 — the number of miles of established Post 
Route, 7595 — over which the annual transportation of the Mails was 
2,487,000 miles — and the Gross Revenue raised under the authority of 
the Imperial Post Office, at the high tariff of rates then prevailing, had 
been for the year preceding the transfer £93,802 currency, including in 
that sum the collections in Canada of British Packet Postage, estimated 
to have amounted to £10,000 sterling. 

The Provincial Act of the 12th and 13th Vic. cap. 66, providing for 
the management of the Department after the transfer, reduced the 
Postage charges in Canada upon all letters passing between places 
within the Province, or within British Worth America generally, to a 
uniform rate of 3d. per % oz. ; whereas under the tarifE in force pre- 
vious to the transfer, the average charge on each letter was com- 
puted to have been as nearly as possible 9d. per Y^ oz. ; the reduc- 
tion therefore consequent upon the introduction of the uniform 3d. 
rate was equivalent to %, or 66% per cent, on the former average 
letter Postage charge. 

The Postage charge on Box or Drop Letters, and the additional 
charge on letters delivered in the Cities by Letter Carriers, have in 

'14° &, 15° Vict., cap, LXXI, sec. 12. 



THE REMAINING PENCE ISSUES 47 

each case been reduced to one half penny, being one half the former 
rates. 

With regard to newspapers, the Postage charge has been alto- 
gether taken ofE upon several important branches of newspaper cir- 
culation, and papers to and from the other British North American 
Provinces, papers sent to the United States, and Editors' exchange 
papers, pass free of all Postage charge whatever. The rates on 
printed papers, circulars, pamphlets, books, &c., have also been mod- 
ified and reduced. 

The gross receipts of the Department for the year under review are 
given as £71,788 18s. 5d. currency, a drop of over £20,000 from the pre- 
vious year; but this is a good showing after all, for when it is remembered 
that the new uniform rate of postage was but one third the former average 
rate, it is readily figured out that correspondence nearly doubled under 
the new tariffs. This is confirmed by the following comparative statement 
of pieces mailed: — 

One week preceding 5th April, 1851, 'Ko. of letters, 41,000; papers, 
90,000. 

One week preceding 5th April, 1852, l^To. of letters, 86,051^; papers, 
101,000. 

There were 243 new post offices added during the year and 1023 miles 
of post routes. 

"An agreement was concluded vsdth the Post Master General of the 
United States, which has continued in satisfactory operation since April, 
1851, under which letters pass between any place in Canada, and any place in 
the United States, at a Postage rate of 6d. currency, per half oz., except to and 
from California and Oregon, when, the distance being over 3,000 miles, 
the rate is 9d. per half oz. Letters are posted on either side, paid or unpaid, 
at the option of the sender." 

The total correspondence passing between the two countries is given as 
having a postage rating of $85,636.97. 

The second annual report of the Postmaster General is dated the 31st 
March, 1853, and contains little of interest but statistics. 176 new post 
offices were established and 504 miles of new post routes added. The gross rev- 
enue of the Department for the fiscal year is given as £84,866.6.11%, and 
the total postage on the correspondence passing between Canada and the 
United States was $104,966.40. 

^Thls is explained in the report for 1853 as being "a clerical error for 71,726." 



48 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

The third report, of 31st March, 1854, speaks of a large reduction in 
the postal charges upon newspapers circulating within the Province and on 
certain classes of periodical prints, which took place on Feb. 1, 1854, but 
gives no further details. Concerning the British packet postage, however, the 
report says: — 

In March, 1854, the charge on packet letters passing between 
Canada and the United Kingdom and most foreign countries was 
reduced by the Imperial Government from Is. 2d. sterling to 8d. ster- 
ling per V2 oz. when sent in closed mails through the United States, 
and from Is. to 6d. when sent direct from a Provincial Port, Quebec 
or Halifax. 

Further on are the following recommendations: — 

Should no further change be likely soon to take place in the 
charges on the correspondence with England, it would promote the 
public convenience to procure Postage stamps of the value of lOd. 
and 7I/& d. respectively to correspond with the present packet letter 
charges. 

And again: — 

Much unnecessary labor and waste of time is occasioned to this 
Department by the practice now followed of rating and collecting 
Postage on all Government and Legislative correspondence, and it would 
be an improvement, in my belief, very worthy of adoption, to authorize 
by enactment the transmission of all such matter through the mails, 
under proper regulations, free of Postage charge, and that in lieu 
thereof, a certain fixed annual swn estimated to be equivalent to 
the aggregate of the Postage arising upon such correspondence, should 
be paid by the Receiver General to the Post Office, to be accounted for as 
Post Office Revenue. 

Perhaps the most pregnant remark is one short statement: — "The use 
of stamps has materially increased" ; for it will be remembered that the first 
annual report of the Postmaster General was pessimistic with regard to 
the employment of stamps, fearing that their use was diminishing. 

The accounts accompanying the report contain but one item concerning 
stamps : — 

Eawdon, Wright & Co., Postage Stamps furnished Post Office 
Department £13.11.3 

This amount was of course only for printing supplies, evidently for the 
250,000 3d, stamps received during the fiscal year. 



THE EEMAINING PENCE ISSUES 49 

In the fourth report, of 31st March, 1855, there are several items of 
interest. The lowering of the British packet rates proved a popular step, 
naturally, and the report states that "ISTotwithstanding the important reduc- 
tion granted by the Imperial Government in the postage rate between this 
country and the United Kingdom in March, 1854," the results were as 
follows : — 

British Packet Postage collected in Canada in year ending 31 March, 
1855 (postage rate 8d. sterling) £16,449.14.3J4. 

British Packet Postage collected in Canada in year ending 31 March, 
1854 (postage rate Is. 2d. sterling) £17,495.1. 41/2. 

which was a drop of but six per cent, in receipts upon a reduction of 
over forty per cent, in the postal charge. 

Again : — 

In March, 1855 the Imperial Post Office authorized a reduction 
in the charge on letters passing through the English Posts between 
Canada and France, from 3s. 8%d. Currency to Is. 8d. Currency per 
Yi oz. letter. 

The suggestions contained in the report for 1854 concerning the frank- 
ing of official mail matter, and the payment of a fixed annual sum to the 
Post Office Department on this account, were acted upon, and the report 
states : — 

In July last the Act of last Session came into effect, removing 
altogether the Postage charge on the circulation of Provincial News- 
papers and according a franking privilege to the correspondence of the 
Legislature and of the Public Departments of the Government. 

The Act referred to was doubtless the following: — 

18° Vict. Cap. LXXIX. 

An act to abolish Postage on Newspapers published within the 
Province of Canada, and for other purposes connected with the Post 
Office Department of this Province. 

\ Assented to 19th May, 1855.] 

WHEREAS papers devoted to the advancement of Education, Tem- 
perance, Science, Agriculture and other special objects, are now exempt 
from postage ; And whereas it would further materially aid the diffu- 
sion of useful knowledge to remove all postal restrictions on the 
transmission of Newspapers in general, published within this Prov- 
ince, and of all documents printed by order of either House of Par- 
liament: Be it therefore enacted by the Queen's Most Excellent 
Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative 



50 CAITADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

Council and the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada, 
* * * * and it is hereby enacted by "the authority of the same, as 
follows : 

I. All Newspapers published within the Province of Canada, shall 
be transmitted by mail free of Postage. 

rv. All Letters and other mailable matter addressed to or sent by 
the Governor of this Province, or sent to or by any Public Department 
at the seat of Government, shall be free of Provincial Postage under 
such regTilations as may be directed by the Governor in Council. 

V. All Letters and other mailable matter addressed to or sent by 
the Speaker or Chief Clerk of the Legislative Council or of the Legis- 
lative Assembly, or by or to any Member of either of said branches 
of the Legislature during any Session of the Legislature, shall be 
free of Provincial Postage. 

VI. All public documents and printed papers may be sent by the 
Speaker or Chief Clerk of the Legislative Council or of the Legislative 
Assembly, to any Member of either of the said branches of the Legis- 
lature of Canada, during the recess of Parliament, free of Postage. 

VII. Members of either branch of the Legislature of Canada may 
send during the recess of Parliament by mail, free of Postage, all 
papers printed by order of either branch of the Legislature of 
Canada. 

IX. This Act shall come into effect on and after the first day of 
July, eighteen hundred and fifty-five. 

There is a bit of conflict here. The "enactment clause" of the above 
Act makes it operative unequivocally on July 1, 1855. Yet the Postmaster 
General's report, just quoted, which is supposed to be for the fiscal year end- 
ing 31st March, 1855, distinctly states that the provisions of the above Act 
came into effect "in July last," which would seem to be July, 1854. The 
Act itself is not in error, so the discrepancy must lie in the Postmaster Gen- 
eral's report. Probably the report was written much later in the year than 
March 31st., as it was not presented to Parliament until the fall session, and 
therefore gave opportunity to refer back to happenings in July. 

The growth of the Department during the first four years under Pro- 
vincial control is illustrated by the following table : — 

Poat Offices Miles at Letters CorreBpondence 

Date in Post mailed Gross Revenue with 

operation, Koutes. per week the V, S. 

6th April, 1851 601 7,595 41,000 £ 93,802 

5th April, 1852 840 8,618 71,726 £ 71,788.18. 5 $ 85,636.97 

31st Mar., 1853 1,016 9,122 81,896 £ 84,866. 6.11% $104,966.40 

31st Mar., 1854 1,166 10,027 98,350 £ 98,495. 6. 7 $129,931.67 

31st Mar., 1855 1,293 11,193 116,671 £110,747.13. gVa $145,377.69 



THE REMAINING PENCE ISSUES 51 

The number of post offices had more than doubled ; the length of the post 
routes had increased by fifty per cent ; and although the revenue had dropped 
one quarter during the first year, owing to the reduction in postage rates, 
it had increased by half in the next three years ; while the total correspondence 
between Canada and the United States had increased by two thirds in the 
same three years. 

But the item that interests us particularly in this report reads: — 

To promote the general convenience in prepaying letters to the 
United Kingdom at the new rate, postage stamps of the value of 
lOd. Currency, equal to 8d. sterling, were procured and issued for 
sale to the public. 

Thus part of the recommendation contained in the report for the pre- 
ceding year was carried out. 

In the accounts for the fiscal year we find the following entries: — 

1st. Quarter, Eawdon, Wright & Co., Postage Stamps for 

P. O. Dept £12.13.6 

3rd. Quarter, Eawdon, Wright & Co., Making Stamps 43.18.6 

4th. Quarter, Eawdon, Wright & Co., Postage Stamps for 

P. O. Dept 17.13.6 

From this it would appear that the bill for engraving ("making") the 
new lOd. stamp was paid in the third quarter of the fiscal year, corresponding 
to the last quarter of 1854. According to the table of receipts from manu- 
facturers in the "summary" already quoted,* the lOd. stamp was first re- 
ceived by the Post Office Department on Jan. 2, 1855. In Mr. King's "Eef- 
erence List,"* however, the date "Dec. 5, 1854" is given as being "taken 
from used stamps on the original covers," but this must certainly be a mis- 
take. The "summary" also gives the quantities issued to postmasters by 
quarters, and there were none issued (naturally) in the quarter ending Dec. 
31, 1854. In the next quarter, ending Mar. 31, 1855, there were 16,200 
issued to postmasters, so that the first issue probably took place soon after 
receipt, that is, in January, 1855. The total number received from the 
manufacturers in this first delivery was 100,080. 

The plate for this stamp is stated to have been made up for printing 
sheets of 100 impressions in ten rows of ten, like the three values of 1851, 
and also to have had the eight marginal imprints. But there are reasons for 

^Metropolitan Philatelist, XVII: 83. 
'Monthly Journal, VII: 9. 



52 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

thinking it may have been made to print 120 impressions, ten rows of twelve 
each, concerning which more will be said later. Suffice it to remark here that 
the number delivered (100,080) is exactly divisible by 120, making 834 full 
sheets, which is not the case if 100 is used. The normal color of the stamp is 
a very deep blue. 

The design of the new lOd., illustrated as IlTo. 3 on Plate I, corres- 
ponds in general style to the 6d. and 12d. of 1851, but the portrait in the 
central oval is of Jacques Cartier, the explorer and founder of Canada. There 
has been some discussion over the identity of the original, it having been 
claimed that the subject was Sebastian Cabot, the discoverer, just as the por- 
trait on the 6d. stamp has been assigned to Lord Elgin, Governor-General of 
Canada from 1846 to 1854.^ Unfortunately no circular announcing the issue 
of the stamp has come to hand, and, as seen from the quotation already given, 
the report of the Postmaster General does not give us the information. It 
is nevertheless a fact that the portrait represents Cartier, the original being 
a three-quarter length painting in the Hotel de Ville at St. Malo, France, 
the birthplace of Cartier. The inscriptions in the oval frame are in this 
case separated by a small picture of the beaver at the right, and three maple 
leaves at the left. The value is expressed as TEW PEliJ"CE, with the nu- 
merals "10" in the lower spandrels, followed by the letters "cy" for "cur- 
rency." In the upper spandrels is the corresponding value in sterling money, 
expressed as "8d stg". The relation between sterling and currency values 
and their equivalents in the decimal coinage of the United States was fixed 
by law, and the matter seems important enough to reproduce the statute here. 

16° Vict. Cap. CLVIII. 
An Act to regulate the Currency. [Assented to 14th June, 1853.] 
********** 

II. And be it enacted, That the denominations of money In the 
Currency of this Province, shall be pounds, dollars, shillings, pence, 
cents and mills : the pound, shilling and penny shall have, respectively, 
the same proportionate values as they now have, the dollar shall be one- 
fourth of a pound, the cent shall be one-hundredth of a dollar, and the 
mill one-tenth of a cent 

III. And be it enacted. That the Pound Currency shall be held to 
be equivalent to and to represent one hundred and one grains and 
three hundred and twenty-one thousandths of a grain Troy weight 
of Gold of the Standard of fineness now prescribed by Law for the 
Gold Coins of the United Kingdom; and the Dollar Currency shall 
be held to be equivalent to and to represent one fourth part of the 
weight aforesaid of Gold of the said Standard 

^Philatelic Record, X: 50. 



THE REMAINING PENCE ISSUES 63 

IV. And be it enacted, Tliat the Pound Sterling shall be held to be 
equal to one pound, four shillings and four pence, or four dollars, 
eighty-six cents and two-thirds of a cent. Currency 

IX. And be it enacted. That the Gold Eagle of the United 

States, coined after [1st. July, 1834], and weighing ten penny 

weights, eighteen grains, Troy weight, shall pass current and be 
a legal tender in this Province for ten Dollars or two pounds ten 
shillings currency 

Further supplies of the lOd. stamp were not needed for three years, 
the next lot, numbering 72,120, having been delivered during the year end- 
ing 30th Sept., 1858, according to the table of stamp statistics. These two 
lots were the only ones delivered, and the balance on hand when the decimal 
stamps appeared being 31,200, we find a total issue for the lOd. stamp of 
141,000. 

Puzzling questions seem to be the rule with this first series of Canadian 
stamps, and the lOd. is no exception. The stamp occurs, to all appearances, 
in at least two sizes, one of which has been termed the "wide oval" and the 
other the "narrow oval." These are well brought out by illustrations ISTos. 70 
(wide) and 71 (narrow) on Plate IV. Very likely the peculiarity was noticed 
much earlier, but it seems to have been brought to the attention of collectors 
generally for the first time by Mr. W. H. Brouse, in a paper read 
before the London Philatelic Society on Feb. 3, 1894.® We quote this 
entire : — 

"I have carefully read such Philatelic articles or publications 
relating to British North American stamps as have come under my 
notice, but have as yet not come across an3rtMng relating to the 
difference in Canadians that is to be found in the 7%d. Canadian 
currency (6d. sterling), green, and the lOd., blue, and so concluded 
that it may have passed my observation, or, if not, has not yet 
been 'written up.' Will you therefore pardon a short note on the 
subject? 

"Of the lOd,, blue, there are three distinct varieties in design, 
viz., 

First (o) the long and narrow; 
Second (6) the long and broad: and 
Third (c) the short and broad. 

"The outside edges or ornaments are in all three cases the same, 
but the difEerence lies in the fact of the oval or frame around the 
head having been, as the case may be, elongated or contracted, or some- 
times widened out. 

•London Philatelist, III: 34. 



64 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

"The extreme variation in length is about one-sixteenth of an 
inch, which is considerable in a postage stamp. I doubt very much 
if this happened through intention, but rather think that it is the 
result of what might be termed 'engravers' license.' However, what- 
ever it may be, the result is that there are three distinct varieties. 

"It will, I think, be found that the earlier one of these is the long 
and narrow, on thinnish paper ; then the long and broad (which is the 
most common) , on thicker paper ; and lastly, the short and broad, on 
medium paper. The latter is the scarcer, and consequently the 
most valuable. 

"I have for a long time known of the above difEerences, and at 
first thought it pnly an optical delusion, owing to some of the copies 
having had their sides closely trimmed, but on closer observation 
the distinct difEerences, as I have mentioned, were manifest. What 
is said of the lOd. may also be said of the 7%d. (but to a lesser 
degree of variation), only the latter are generally found in the 
long and broad frame or oval. A slight diiference also occurs in the 
6d., violet ; no variation appears in the length of the stamp, though 
I have two specimens in which the oval or frame shows a con- 
traction in width to the extent of about one-forty-eighth of an 
inch, and is quite noticeable. 

"This may be 'piper's news' to some of the members of the 
Philatelic Society, London, but to others it may be of interest, and 
for that reason I beg your indulgence." 

Mr. Castle, in reading the foregoing paper at the meeting of the 
London Philatelic Society, shewed specimens of the stamps described 
by Mr. Brouse, and added a few remarks as under. 

"I venture to think the modest disclaimer on the part of Mr. 
Brouse, in his closing sentence, is hardly borne out in view of the 
interesting communication he has made. To me the information 
was certainly novel, and I could hardly credit that there should 
exist such difEerences in size until I had verified the fact by exam- 
ination of specimens. Owing to the kindness of Messrs. Stanley Gib- 
bons, Limited, and Mr. W. H. Peckitt, I was enabled to inspect a 
number of these pence issues, and I have tabulated the measure- 
ments as nearly as I can: — 

HALFPENNY. 

Size. Paper, 

(o) 23 X 181/2 mm. Medium thick SEVENPENCE-HALrPENNT. 

(h) 22% X 18 mm. Medium thick 

^ ' Size. Paper. 

THKEEPENCE. (o) 22l^ x 18%mm. (bare) Med. thick 

(o) 23% X 18% mm. Medium thick 

(a) 23 (full) X 18 mm. Very thin wove (a) 22% x 18 mm. Medium thick 

(o) 23 X 18mm. Very thin laid (a) 22% x 181/2 mm. Medium thick 

(6) 32V2 X 17% mm. Thin 

(c) 323/4 X 17% mm. Thick TENPENCE. 

SESPENCE. (o) 32% x 17% mm. Thin to very thin 

(6) 23% X 18 mm. (full) Thick 

(a) 23 X 18 mm. Thin wove (6) 32% x 18% mm (bare) Thick 

(a) 32 X 18 mm. Thin Laid (c) 22 x 18 mm. Thin 

(B) 22% X 17% mm. Thick 



THE EEMAINING PENCE ISSUES 56 

"The varieties of the Tenpence are those described by Mr. Brouse 
as (o) long and narrow, (6) long and broad, and (c) short and 
broad. I may add that in the case of this value I have examined 
and measured some forty copies, including a strip of three, as also 
a proof on very thin India paper, v^hich corresponds exactly in 
measurement vyith variety (6) on the thick paper (22% x 18%mm.). 
It is obvious that to be absolutely accurate beyond a half mm. with 
an ordinary gauge is hardly possible, but in several of the given cases 
I have averaged the sizes of several that very closely approximated. 

"As will be seen, I have gone somewhat beyond the lines of Mr. 
Brouse's paper in including the %d., the 3d., and 6d., the variation in 
the former being slight, but in the two latter noteworthy. The ques- 
tion how these varieties have arisen is an interesting one, nor can I 
see that they can be accounted for by shrinkage of the paper, as in the 
case of the lOd. proof above cited, which is on all fours vrith the or- 
dinary stamp on thick paper. In the case of the strip of this value 
I found all three stamps measured the same, and the fact remains that 
variety (c) is short and broad. In any case the existence of these 
varieties is palpable, the question of their origin a genuine philatelic 
problem, and I think that the thanks of us all are therefore due to Mr. 
Brouse for his interesting paper." 



This may have been the first record of the peculiarity in the case 
of the Canadian stamps, but it was at least not the first time that variation 
in the dimensions of certain line engraved stamps, supposed to have been 
produced from the same original die, had been noted and discussed. We refer 
to the case of the early Ceylon stamps, which furnished food for contention 
in the philatelic press for many years. The first mention of a difference in 
the length of these seems to have been in December, 1864.'^ Ten years 
later the reference list of Ceylon prepared by the London Philatelic Society® 
noted the fact that the stamps of 1863 on unwatermarked paper were in 
general about a millimeter shorter in the vertical dimension than the suc- 
ceeding issue on paper watermarked Crown C C, although the engraved 
designs were otherwise absolutely identical. Major Edw. B. Evans, in his 
catalogue," appends a note on the unwatermarked stamps of 1863 as follows: — 



These stamps are apparently (indeed, we may say certainly) from 
the same plates as the other issues, but at the same time the impressions 
on this paper are about 1-16 inch shorter than those on other papers. 
This can only have been occasioned by the paper having shrunk to some 
extent since the stamps were printed 

'The Stamp Collectors' Magazine, 11: 191. 

'The Philatelist, IX: 10. 

>A Catalogue for Collectors, page 39. 



56 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

Later, in 1887, Mr. T. K. Tapling, writing in Le Timhre-Pode,^° claims 
the difference cannot be due to shrinkage of paper because the stamps have 
all shrunk evenly, and attributes it to some defect in the process of making 
the plates. He reasons thus : — 

Les timbres sur les feuilles de n'importe quelle valeur etaient tous 
identlques comma type. lis furent graves sur acler, je pense par MM. 
Perkins Bacon et Co., chaque timbre par un precede de reduplication, 
etant reproduit d'une matrice ; la planche etant ensuite durcie pour 
I'impression. II n'y a par consequent pas de variete de types, les lignes 
des gravures sur les timbres courts etant les memes que celles sur les 

timbres longs, excepte qu'elles sont un tant soit peu contractees 

II me semble plus que probable que la difference en longeur des exem- 
plaires puisse etre attribuee a un leger defaut dans le procede de re- 
duplication des planches de la matrice originale. 

As a matter of fact the stamps did not shrink evenly, but very unevenly. 
Mr. "W. B. Thornhill, writing on these same stamps in 1889,^^ says: — "You 
can hardly find two stamps of exactly the same measurements in the same 
value, though the difference in many cases is too small to signify" ; and he 
proceeds to show the extreme variations in a carefully prepared table in- 
cluding every value on every variety of paper for issues from 1855 to 1867. The 
greatest variation in the vertical dimension seems to be about 1 mm. in 26 mm., 
or roughly 4%, and in the horizontal dimension about % to % mm. in 19 mm. 
or roughly 1% to 2^%. These dimensional differences being so palpably 
existent, therefore, what factors are we to consider in looking for their cause ? 
There seem to be but three: first, an original die or matrix for each different 
size; second, one original die only, whose impressions on the printing plate 
show variations resulting from the process of transferring them; third, a 
printing plate with all the impressions exact duplicates of the one original 
die, but whose reproductions in ink on dampened paper are varied by the 
shrinkage of the paper in drying. 

Mr. ThomhiU convinces himself by inspection that the first proposition 
is untenable; in fact its absurdity is at once apparent on a little thought, for 
the engraving of the original die is a laborious and costly piece of work, and 
that very fact, coupled with the comparative ease of exact reduplication by 
mechanical processes on the printing plate, furnishes the chief reason for 
the employment of this method of producing stamps. Since there is such 

'"Ue Tlmbre-Poste, Num6ro Jubilaire, page XXXV. 
"Philatelic Record, XI: 71. 



THE EEMAINING PENCE ISSUES 67 

a variety in the size of the stamps, therefore, the first theory would indicate 
many original dies, and this we know was not the case. Its refutation 
indeed is seen in the stamps themselves; for each original die, if differing 
in size from its fellows, meant a separate engraving, and it is humanly im- 
possible to make these separate engravings exact duplicates, whereas, on the 
other hand, no appreciable variation in line or dot can be detected on the same 
stamp in its different sizes save the general expansion or contraction of the 
design, which is proportionate in all its parts. The different die or matrix 
theory is therefore thrown out on grounds of impracticability and absurdity. 

Accepting the one original die proposition, then, Mr. Thomhill agrees 
with Mr. Tapling in turning down the shrinkage of paper theory and favor- 
ing the second supposition, that the variation comes on the plates and is due 
to the process of transference. Let us glance at this a moment. The original 
die is engraved on a block of soft steel of very fine and even quality. When 
finished it is tempered to a very great degree of hardness. Next the engraving 
is transferred by tremendous pressure to a transferring roller of similar soft 
steel, which is in turn hardened. In this process there might be an oppor- 
tunity for a slight variation in the size of the transferred impression, due 
to the expansion and contraction of the steel in the tempering process, ifext, 
this hardened transfer roller is impressed upon the printing plate of soft 
steel as many times as there are copies desired. These naturally aU agree 
among themselves and with the transfer roller impression in size. JSTow 
when the printing plate in turn receives its hardening, there may again be 
a chance for a slight difference between the transfer roller and the plate im- 
pressions; but it is wholly unlikely that the plate impressions will vary much 
among themselves, otherwise the perfection of Mr. Jacob Perkins' invention, 
the chief merit of which was exact reduplication, would be impaired. As a 
matter of fact, the high grade and even quality of the steel necessarily em- 
ployed, and the care naturally taken in hardening the plate, preclude any 
other than an even variation, if any, due to the tempering process. This 
means that such variations would be practically constant over the printing 
surface of the plate, and that therefore the impressions would still remain 
practically identical in size. 

Where, then, does this bring us ? With such numerous and well defined 
variations in dimensions in the printed stamps, we should look for the cause 
in the simplest and most natural method by which they could readily be pro- 



58 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

duced, which is furnished by the third theory presented. Concerning this 
we quote from the London Philatelic Society's work on Ceylon :^^ — 

In reference to the variations in the size of the stamps of Issues 
III and V [no watermark and Crown CC], Major Evans, who was the 
first to propound the theory that these variations were due to differ- 
ences in the nature of the paper employed, writes as follows : — 

"The theory of the expansion and contraction of the paper being 
now pretty generally accepted, as accounting for the variations ob- 
served in the size of the stamps of the early issues of Ceylon, it seems 
necessary to explain exactly what that theory is, and how these differ- 
ences are supposed to arise. Previous to printing from plates en- 
graved in taille-douce the paper is wetted, which, as is well known, 
causes it to expand; the amount of expansion varies, no doubt, consid- 
erably in difierent kinds of paper, and it must also vary with the amount 
of moisture in the same kind of paper, for as the paper dries it returns 
to its original dimensions, and, therefore, up to a certain point, the 
wetter it is the greater will be the expansion. In any case the paper 
is in a state of expansion at the time of printing, both from being 
wetted and from being stretched out flat and pressed, and the impres- 
sion when first printed is then, and then only, in all cases the size of 
the engraving upon the plate. It then dries, and in so doing contracts, 
and the greater the amount of expansion the greater will be the amount 
of the subsequent contraction, so that the smallest stamps are those 
printed on the paper which expanded most, and the largest those on the 
paper which expanded least. The minor variations of size may be due 
to the paper being more or less damp when used, but probably a very 
slight difference in the thickness or density of the paper would cause 
some variation in its expansion. The marked difference in size of the 
stamps on thin, uuwatermarked paper, which were the first to attract 
the attention of Philatelists, is no doubt due to that particular variety 
of paper, which is very tough and elastic, and which has been found to 
expand very greatly on being wetted and stretched." 

So much for the Ceylon stamps, which we have discussed in extensoj 
but we have only to substitute in every case a reference to the first Canadian 
issues, particularly the lOd. which we started out with, to make the discussion 
apply with equal force in this case as in the other. The question is the same 
- — the variations occur in the same way, the method of engraving and repro- 
duction is the same, and the varieties in the paper are very similar. 

Major Evans, in a reply to Mr. Thornhill's paper,^^ states that he tried some 
experiments in wetting a thin, tough note paper, and found an expansion of 
three per cent., while by stretching it he increased the expansion to eight 
per cent, without difficulty! Yet the greatest variation in Mr. Thornhill's 
table was only four per cent. Major Evans then tried some of the 1863 

'^Postage Stamps, &c., of British India and Ceylon, page 69. 
"Philatelic Record, XI: 158. 



THE REMAINING PENCE ISSUES 69 

Newfoundland stamps, whicli he judged were on paper of almost the same 
nature as that of the unwatermarked Oeylons of the same year, and they gave 
precisely similar results. 

Mr. Frank 0. Young, who was in the priuting business, also tells of 
similar experiments which he carried still further.^* 

Having provided some twenty-five sheets of paper of different quali- 
ties and thicknesses, each vsras cut into sixteen pieces. Selecting a com- 
mon half tone cut vehich measured exactly 100 x 69 nun. and dampening 
the sheets of paper to different degrees of wetness I proceeded to im- 
press the cut on each sheet, using a common roller proof press. After 
the printed sheets had been allowed to dry it became a matter of a good 
millimeter gauge and careful measurements of the printed impressions, 
not the paper. 

Hardly two sheets of the whole lot were identical in size, nor 

was I able to formulate any table as to how much or how little or which 
way of the paper shrinkage would occur. The only general rule which 
seemed to come out clearly was that thin paper would invariably shrink 
more than thick. In many of the sheets the difference was barely no- 
ticeable, while, on the other hand, such measurements as 96 x 68, 97 x 
68Vi, 99 X 67%, 98 x 68 mm. were fairly conmion, and one sheet, after 
several very careful measurements, was undeniably 951.^ x 69 mm., 
thus showing a shrinkage of 4% per cent, one way and none at all 
the other. This was very thin laid linen paper. 

Contrary to all expectations, more than one impression measured 
more than either the cut or those printed on dry paper, one on thin 
wove paper being fully 101 mm. long. 

Looking back now at Mr. Castle's tables,^^ we find his greatest variations 
in length amount to % mm. in 22 mm., or roughly 3^%, and in width 1 mm. 
in 18 mm., or roughly 51^% — results entirely within bounds according to 
Major Evans' and Mr. Young's experiments, and doubtless settling once and 
for all the reason of the "three distinct varieties in design" of Mr. Brouse. 

As for the paper actually used for the printing of the lOd. stamp, we 
find it a hard, white wove variety varying very much in thickness from a very 
thin, almost pelure quality, through which the design is quite plainly evi- 
dent, to a medium and finally a considerably thicker quality. The pelure 
paper seems naturally to be the one on which the greatest variation in dimen- 
sions occurs, the long and broad size of the stamp coming principally on the 
thicker paper,^^ which is supposed to shrink the least upon drying and there- 
fore keeps the printed impression nearest the size of the plate impression. 
The long and narrow impression, being the commoner variation, was prob- 

"Canada Stamp Sheet, IV: 173. 

i=See page 54. 
"See page S5. 



60 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

ably due to the paper being fed to the press the same way of the "grain" as 
a rule, while the short and broad variation, which is much scarcer, occurred 
by an occasional sheet of paper being fed the other way of the "grain." That 
paper has a "grain" is readily proved by tearing a piece in one direction and 
then tearing it at right angles to the first tearj one will be found much easier 
of accomplishment generally than the other, and this "grain" doubtless has 
its due effect in the amount of shrinkage in one way or the other upon drying 
a dampened sheet. 



One further variety we have to record in the lOd. stamp, this being a 
"shifted transfer" variety similar to that occurring in the 3d. value. In this 
case we find the letters ADA and S of "Canada Postage," and P E N of 
"Pence" showing a distinct doubling at the bottom, the transfer roller evi- 
dently having been set a little too high at first and a very slight impression 
made on the plate. The stamp has not been seen in a pair to prove its char- 
acter absolutely, but it bears all the ear-marks of being a proper plate variety 
and not due to a careless impression when printing. 



To continue again with the Postmaster General's reports. We find in 
that for 31st March, 1856, a note to the effect that the postage on letters to 
France had been once more reduced, this time to lOd. currency per ^4 oz., 
which gave further employment to the new lOd. stamp. There is also some 
information concerning the registry system, but this will be treated later 
under that head. One item is found in the accounts to interest us: — 

Kawdon, Wright, Hatch & Edson, for printing 300,000 postage 
stamps for Post Office Department £15.3.3. 

As only 3d. stamps were received during the year, this of course refers 
to that value, and the price charged is found to be practically one shilling, 
currency, per thousand, or twenty cents American money. 

In June of 1857 the Canadian Parliament made further changes in the 
newspaper rates, etc., according to the following Act: — 

20° Vict. Cap. XXV. 

An Act to Amend the Post-Office Laws of this Province. 

[Assented to 10th June 1857.] 

Whereas it is expedient to amend the Post-OfBce Laws, in the 

manner hereafter provided: Therefore, Her Majesty, by and with the 

advice and consent of the Legislative Council and Assembly of Canada 

enacts as follows: — 



THE EEMAINING PENCE ISSUES 61 

I. [Repeals sections I and V of 18° Vict. Cap. 79.] it 

II. Newspapers printed and published within this Province and 
addressed from the Office of Publication, shall be transmitted from the 
Post-Offlce where mailed to any other Post-Office in Canada, or to the 
United Kingdom, or to any British Colony or Possession, or to Prance, 
free of Canadian Postage. 

III. Newspapers printed and published in the United Kingdom, 
or in any British Colony or Possession, or in France, when received 
in mails addressed to this Province, and directed to any place in Can- 
ada, shall pass through the Post and be delivered at the Post-Office 
addressed, free of Canadian postage. 

IV. For the purposes of this Act, the word "newspapers" shall 
be held to mean periodicals published not less frequently than once 
in each week, and containing notices of passing events, or any such 
newspaper published fortnightly or monthly at the time of the pass- 
age of this Act. 

V. Periodicals printed and published in this Province other than 
newspapers, when specially devoted to Eeligious and to General Edu- 
cation, to Agriculture or Temperance, or to any branch of Science, 
and addressed directly from the Office of Publication, shall be trans- 
mitted from the Post-Office where mailed to any other Post-Office in 
this Province free of postage. 

VI. Letters and other mailable matter addressed to or sent by 
the Speaker or Chief Clerk of the Legislative Council or of the Legisla- 
tive Assembly, or to or by any Member of the Legislature at the seat of 
Government, during any session of the Legislature, or addressed to any 
of the Members or Officers in this section mentioned, at the seat of 
Government as aforesaid, during the ten days next before the meet- 
ing of Parliament, shall be free of postage. 

VII. So much of the twelfth section of the Post-Office Act, 
passed in the session held in the 14th and 15th years of Her Majes- 
ty's Eeign and chaptered 71, as requires the Postmaster General to 
make to the Governor General of this Province, annually, certain Re- 
ports for the purpose of being laid before the Provincial Parlia- 
ment at each Session thereof, for the year ending the fifth day of 
April previous to such Session, is hereby repealed ; and it shall, 
hereafter, be the duty of the Postmaster General to furnish such Re- 
ports annually so that they may be laid before the Provincial Par- 
liament within ten days after the assembling thereof, and such An- 
nual Reports shall be made up to the thirtieth day of September 
previous to each Session. 

X. This Act shall take effect on and from the first day of 
August next. 

Although the enactment clause made the above Act operative on 1st 
August, 1857, because of which we should not expect it to affect the Post- 
master General's report for the year ending 31st March, 1857, yet we find 

"See page .50. 



62 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

this report dated 30tli September, 1857, thus including the year and a half 
from 1st April, 1856. Among other items of interest in this report we find 
the following: — 

There is very material economy of labor to the Department in 
dealing with letters pre-paid by stamp as compared with letters on 
which the postage is collected in money, as well as a manifest gain 
to the public, in the increased facilities which pre-payment by stamp 
enables the Post OfBce to afford for posting and delivering letters 
so pre-paid. 

It is gratifying, therefore, to observe that the use of stamps is 
gradually gaining ground, encouraging as it does the hope that it 
may be found practicable and expedient ere long to make prepay- 
ment by stamp the prevailing rule in Canada, as it has for some time 
been in the United Kingdom, in France, and in the United States. 

A reduction in the charge of Book Post Packets, when not ex- 
ceeding 4 oz., in weight between Canada and the United Kingdom, 
of one half the former rate has been made. 

To facilitate the pre-payment of letters passing from Canada 
tb England by the Canadian steamers, a new stamp bearing value at 
6 pence sterling, or 7% pence currency, being the Canadian Packet 
rate, has been secured and put in circulation. 

A new stamp has also been introduced of the value of one half- 
penny to serve as the medium for prepaying transient Newspapers. 

The above is the only reference we have to the issue of the 7V2d. stamp. 
The accounts for the fiscal year ending 30th September, 1857, contain the 
following item: — 

"Eawdon, Wright and Co., Postage Stamps, £165.9.6" 

which must include the cost of dies and plates for the two new values. There 
is no record of the date of issue of the 7%d. stamp, as far as our research 
has gone. The London Society's work'^^ gives it as June 2, 1857, but upon 
what authority is not stated. It will be recalled that a stamp of this value 
was suggested, in company vsdth the lOd., in the Postmaster General's report 
for 31st March, 1854, as being the reduced rate granted in that same month 
on letters sent "direct from a Provincial Port, Quebec or Halifax," to Eng- 
land. The Halifax Philatelist states:^* — "This stamp was rendered necessary 
on account of the contract between the Canadian Government and the Allan 
Line of Steamers in regard to carrying the mails, and by which contract the 
postage was reduced." It hardly seems to have been very "necessary" when 
it took three years at least to bring the Postmaster General's suggestion to 

"The Postage Stamps, etc., of the North American Colonies of Great Britain, page 14. 
""Halifax Philatelist, II: 74, 



THE REMAINING PENCE ISSUES 63 

a realization. Besides, the Allan Line steamers began their service over a 
year before the appearance of the stamp, and the rate it represented had 
even then been in force for two years, nor was it reduced for many years 
thereafter. 

The Postmaster General's Eeport for 1856 says: — 

The month of May, 1856, was marked by the first voyage to the St. 
Lawrence of the line of Canadian Mail Steamers, under the con- 
tract between Mr. Hng-h Allan of Montreal, and the Provincial Govern- 
ment. These vessels have performed the service for which they 
were bound, with laudable punctuality, and have crossed the Atlantic 
at an average speed which compares successfully with the per- 
formances of the steamers of the Cunard and Collins lines from New 
York and Boston. 

The average time of passage is given as — ^Westward, 12 days, 20% 
hours; Eastward, 11 days, 2 hours. 

The design of the stamp was simply adapted from that of the discarded 
12d. stamp, as will readily be seen from the illustration (ISTo. 5 on Plate I). 
The inscriptions were changed to CAISTADA PACKET POSTAGE, which 
of course referred to the fast mail steamers then known as "packets," and 
not to any "parcel post" as is sometimes erroneously stated; and SIX 
PElSrCE STERLIISTG, a new departure in labeling a Canadian stamp. Like 
the lOd. that preceded it, however, the corresponding values were inserted 
in the spandrels, "6d. stg." in the left hand pair and "T%d. ey." in the right 
hand pair. The stamp is generally listed under its "currency" value to 
conform with the rest of the set and avoid confusion with the regular "six 
pence" stamp. The normal color of the stamp is a dark green. 

The V%d. stamp is known to have been arranged on the plate for print- 
ing sheets of 120 stamps, ten rows of twelve stamps each, this being to facili- 
tate the reckoning in English money. The eight marginal imprints ap- 
peared as on the other values. There was but one supply received, 
on the first order, of 100,080 stamps which, if we divide by 120, gives an 
even 834 sheets. 'Now, if we but glance back at the first supply received of 
the lOd. stamp^" we find exactly the same number, evenly divisible by 120 
but not by 100. The second supply of the lOd. stamp works out in exactly 
the same way, — Y2,120 makes an even 601 sheets at 120 per sheet. Is it not 
probable to suppose, therefore, in the absence of entire sheets or horizontal 

="866 page 51. 



64 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

rows of the lOd. stamp, that the latter was also printed in sheets of 120, as pre- 
viously suggested, instead of sheets of 100 as stated in Mr. King's article ?^^ 

When the issue of the decimal stamps took place, on July 1, 1859, there 
were 17,670 of the 7l/^d. stamps on hand, so that the total issue of this 
value was 82,410 copies. 

As will be gathered from Mr. Brouse's paper, which we quoted in con- 
nection with the lOd. stamp, a similar variation in the width of the oval is 
to be found in the case of the 7V2<i. stamp, but the extremes are not so great 
and it is therefore not so noticeable. A glance at the table of measurements^^ 
will show that the variation in width is confined to a half millimeter and that 
in height to practically the same amount. Of course the discussion and con- 
clusions detailed at length under the lOd. stamp apply with equal force in 
the present instance, and the fact that the 7%d. stamp is not found oH the 
very thin paper probably accounts for the lack of extreme variations. It 
was printed upon paper of the same kind as used for the lOd., but only on 
the medium and thicker qualities. A pair of the stamps in juxtaposition, 
showing the wide oval and the narrow oval, will be found as numbers 67 and 
68 respectively on Plate IV. 

The last — and also least — of the pence issues was the half-penny stamp. 
There had been a need for this value since the introduction of stamps, for 
there were several rates that were impossible to make up with the denomina- 
tions that were issued and which therefore had to be paid in money. Among 
these were the %<i- charge on newspapers from 1851 to 1855, the same 
charge per ounce on magazines and books during the entire period, the l/2<i- 
and Id. carrier's fees, the Id. rate on circulars and on soldier's letters, and 
the several 7%d. rates for letters and for the book post vnth England. But 
the Act last quoted,^^ which restored a charge on transient newspapers, seems 
to have been the direct cause of the belated issue of the half-penny stamp. 
The circular announcing its issue is as follows:^* — 

POSTAGE ON NEWSPAPERS AND PERIODICALS. 

Post Office Depaetment, 

Toronto, 18tli July, 1857. 

Under the Post Office Law of last Session, taking effect from 1st. 

August, 1857, Newspapers printed and published in Canada, and 

^'Monthly Journal, "VII: 8. 

22See page 54. 

2«See pages 60-61. 

2«Canada Stamp Sheet, IV: 184. 



THE EEMAINING PENCE ISSUES 65 

mailed direct from OfSce of Publication, will pass free of Canadian 
Postage. 

Periodicals so printed, published, and mailed when specially de- 
voted to Religious and to General Education, to Agriculture, or Tem- 
perance, or to any branch of Science, will pass free from any one 
Post-OfiBce to another within the Province. 

Transient and re-mailed Papers and Periodicals will pass by Post 
if pre-paid by Postage stamp — one halfpenny on each Newspaper, 
and on each Periodical, one halfpenny, if not exceeding 3 oz., in 
weight, and 2d. if over 3 oz. 

Postage Stamps of the value of one halfpenny each will be sold 
to the public at all the principal Post OfBces (including all Money 
Order OfBces), with a discount of 5 per cent upon purchases of not 
less than twenty stamps, and will be available in prepayment of 
Newspapers and Periodicals, and of Drop and Town Letters. 

K. SPENCE, Postmaster-General. 

The London Society's work gives the date of issue of the V2<i- value 
as 18th July, 185T, and it is clearly seen from the preceding notice where 
the date was obtained. But it is more likely that the stamp was issued on 
1st. August, the day the new rates took effect. 

The new stamp was very plain, as vrill be seen from the illustration, 
'So. 4 on Plate I. The profile head of Queen Victoria was quite evidently 
taken from the head on the British penny stamp. The usual inscription, 
CAISTADA POSTAG-E, occupies the upper part of the oval frame, and 
ONE HALF PENjSTY the lower part, but the value is not expressed by 
numerals in the corners, as on all the other stamps of the issue, the spandrels 
being merely filled in with a reticulated pattern. The stamp was printed 
in sheets of 100, ten rows of ten, with the eight marginal imprints as de- 
scribed for the series of 1851. 

The tables of statistics in the Postmaster General's reports give the 
number of %d. stamps received previous to 1st. October, 1857, as 1,341,600 ; 
during the next fiscal year 1,258,920 were received; and between 1st. October, 
1858 and 30th June, 1859, when they were superseded, 850,100 more arrived, 
making a total stock of 3,450,620. The balance on hand when the decimal 
series was issued was 60,660, which makes the total issue of the %d. stamp 
3,389,960. 

The normal color of the stamp is a deep rose. It is found printed on a 
soft ribbed paper, with the ribbing both horizontal and vertical, as well as 
on the ordinary hard white wove paper of this issue in both the thin and thicker 
qualities. 



66 CANADIAIf POSTAGE STAMPS 

The London Society's work has the following remarks:^® — 

Two soi-disant provisionals have been chronicled; viz., the Half- 
penny surcharged in black— one with an Arabic numeral "1," and the 
other with "8d. STG." The Society can furnish no information con- 
cerning these two stamps; but supposing the surcharges to be gen- 
uine, they are probably only notifications of insufficient postage 
applied after the letters were posted. 

We find that the original chronicle of these varieties was in Le Timbre- 
Poste in 1869. Concerning them M. Moens writes as follows : — 

Un de nos correspondants nous annonce qu'il possede un timbre 
rose % penny, surcharge de la marque: 8 d. stg. Cette emission, 
provisoire sans doute, doit etre le resultat de la penurie momentanee 
de timbres 10 pence, dans un ou plusieurs bureaux secondaires.26 

And in the next issue of the paper: — 

On nous a montre le % p. rose, non dentele, surcharge en noir, 
du chifEre 1, de 20 mm. environ et place dans le sens horizontal. 
C'est probablement encore un timbre emis provisoirement, pour une 
raison qui nous echappe, le 1 penny n'ayant jamais existe. Quant 
au timbre dont nous avons parle le mois dernier, le chi^fre 8 et la 
lettre S ont pour dimension 16 mm.27 

We think all idea of a "surcharge" can be at once dismissed, as the rais- 
ing of the value, particularly to 8d., would be a very foolish and doubtless 
wholly unnecessary proceeding, and certainly some record of such procedure 
would have been found ere this. The impressions were probably from rating 
stamps that were accidentally struck on the postage stamps, or possibly used 
purposely as cancellations. 



The report of the Postmaster General for the 30th Sept. 1858, notes 
the fact that previous to 1854 all newspapers were rated at %d. each, but iu 
that year were granted free transmission. Concerning the new regulations 
it continues: — 

In pursuance of the Act of 1857, limiting free transmission to 
such as are posted directly from the oflBce of publication, a half- 
penny rate, pre-payable by postage stamps, has been taken since 1st. 
August, 1857 on all transient newspapers — that is, papers posted by 
individuals other than the Publishers. 

"The Stamps, etc., of the North American Colonies of Great Britain, page 14. 
»Le Timbre- Poste, VH: 82. 
"ibid, VU: 94. 



THE EEMAINING PENCE ISSUES 67 

The same report states : — "The Department has, from 1st. January, 1859, 
put in operation an arrangement for the conveyance of Parcel Packets be- 
tween any two Post Offices in Canada with the ordinary mails." The charge 
was fixed at Is. 3d. per pound with a maximum weight of two pounds, and 
prepayment was enforced. 

In the Department accounts we find the following: — 

Eawdon, Wright, Hatch & Co., Supply of letter and newspaper 
stamps £99.6.6 

which was simply a printing bill. The last payment for the pence issue of 
stamps appears in the report for 30th Sept., 1859, and is for the deliveries 
during the nine months from 30th. Sept. 1858 to 30th June, 1859, when the 
pence stamps were retired. The charge is given in decimal currency: — 

Eawdon, Wright & Co., supply of letter and newspaper stamps 
$338.69 

The report for 1858 gives an interesting table showing the grovrth of 
the postal business by decades for the thirty years previous. The remarkable 
increase during the last period, within which the Province assumed control 
and the use of stamps was introduced, is to be noted: — 

Number of Miles of Gross Letters Newspapers 



Year 


P. OfSces 


P. Eoutes 


Postage 


Annually 


Annually 


1838 


101 


3,368 


£15,000 


340,000 


400,000 


1838 


380 


5,486 


35,000 


1,000,000 


1,350,000 


1848 


539 


6,985 


65,000 


3,000,000 


3,000,000 


1858 


1,566 


13,600 


151,000 


9,800,000 


13,500,000 



The year 1859 brings us to the end of the pence issues, but before leav- 
ing them there is still one more question to consider, that of the perforated 
varieties, which will form the subject of the next chapter. 



CHAPTER IV 

THE PERFORATED PENCE ISSUES 

THE perforated series of the pence issues of Canada furnishes another one 
of those knotty problems for which these stamps are noted. The first in- 
timation of the improvement that was announced officially appears in the 
Eeport of the Postmaster General for 30th September, 1857, in these words: — 

Moreover, the Department has been led, by the increasing' use of 
Postage Stamps, to take measures for obtaining the Canadian Post- 
age Stamps on sheets perforated in the dividing lines, in the manner 
adopted in England, to facilitate the separation of a single stamp 
from the others on a sheet when required for use. 

One would naturally suppose that the stamps would be ordered in this 
condition from the manufacturers, and we think they were; but no further 
light is thrown upon the matter by the Reports, and other facts that persist 
in intruding themselves have given rise to a theory that the Department either 
bought perforating machines of its own and operated upon the stock on hand, 
or engaged some local concern to perforate the stock in question. This 'might 
have been done, but if so why were the ^^2 ^-nd 10 pence stamps omitted ? 
Again, had such been the case, it is passing strange that the % penny, issued 
unperforated but two months before the date of the report, should be approxi- 
mately twice as common in that state as perforated. In the case of the 3d., 
taking stock on hand the 30th September, 1857, and subsequent deliveries, 
two-fifths of the entire issue should have been perforated, which would make 
the latter stamps almost as conmion as the earlier issues; while in the case 
of the 6d., under similar conditions, almost the same ratio holds, the figures 
being a trifle more in favor of the perforated series. This does not conform 
with facts at all, and it can hardly be explained by supposing that a relatively 
small stock of but three values was operated upon in 1857 and the improve- 
ment then dropped for a couple of years. 

For further proof of the incorrectness of this theory we think the fol- 
lowiag fact speaks for itself. Appended to each Postmaster General's Ee- 
port are various tables of expenditures. One of these statements is headed: — 



THE PERFOEATED PENCE ISSUES 69 

"Sums paid in discharge of Tradesmen's Bills," and in it are found the 
amounts paid to various parties named for all kinds of supplies furnished 
the Department. This is where the payments to the engravers of the stamps 
appear, as well as items for cancelling stamps, post-marks, etc. Now a care- 
ful examination of all items for the years 1857, 1858 and 1859 fails to dis- 
close any payment either for purchase of a perforating machine or for having 
the stamps perforated by outside parties. This may be "negative evidence" 
but we feel that it has its due weight. 

Nevertheless, we find at least two other perforations on stamps of this 
issue besides the regulation gauge 12, which has made it appear to some that 
the Department might have experimented with means of separation before 
settling definitely on the type adopted. The stamp operated upon was the 
3d., probably as being the most commonly employed value, which would 
naturally be the case were the perforations the efforts of private parties. The 
first "irregular" perforation was listed by Major Evans^ as gauging 13, and 
the London Society's work lists it as well, probably following the earlier cata- 
log. But Messrs. Corwin and King state :^ — "This perforation is totally un- 
kno^vn in America, and we doubt its existence." Neither the Pack nor the Worth- 
ington collection contains a copy and we think it can be passed by. 

The next perforation is of gauge 14, and this is well Imown though of 
extreme rarity. Messrs. Corwin and King did not know of over twenty speci- 
mens in 1891. We are fortunate in being able to illustrate a fine used pair 
on piece of cover from the Pack collection as No. 128 on Plate XIII. Most 
unfortunately, however, as will be noted, some vandal out the cover, though 
perhaps unwittingly, just so as to destroy most of the postmark and thus lose 
forever the date and place of mailing. Messrs. Corwin and King state :^ — 

We have lately seen a pair of 3d. perf. 14, upon the original 
cover, but which, unfortunately, presents a, most indistinct dating 
stamp, and, although endorsed by the recipient with date of writing. 
May 30, date of receipt and date of reply, all three year dates are 
so indistinctly written that one is unable to tell whether it is 1857 or 
1859, although we think the former was the date. Should this be 
the case it would seem as though the perf. 14 and another curious 

perforation just discovered were experimental, or provisional, 

pending the receipt from the makers of those perf. 12. Most of the 
few stamps perf. 14 which we have seen, appear cut on one or more 



'A Catalogue for Collectors, page 33. 
'Metropolitan Philatelist, 1: 226. 
sibld. I: 275. 



70 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

sides with the shears, as though the users were not familiar with the 
advantages of perforation as a means of separating the stamps, and ad- 
hering in a measure to the old methods. This is one of the reasons 
which lead us to believe that these stamps, perf. 14, were issued 
before those perf. 12, because the latter are almost invariably sep- 
arated by tearing apart as is proper The writer has in his col- 
lection seven copies of the 3d. perf. 14, and of these four specimens 
show double perforation on one or more sides. It is a rare occurrence 
when a double perforation is found upon any of the stamps so treated 
by the American Bank Note Co. or their predecessors, and when we 
find four out of seven specimens in that condition, we are justified 
in stating that these stamps, gauging 14, were never perforated 
by the makers. 

In another part of the article just quoted is the following:* — 

The American Bank Note Co. and Rawdon, Wright, Hatch and Ed- 
son, their predecessors, have never, according to official information 
from them, employed any other gauge than 13, in fact they call 12 
their standard and only perforation. Allowing that they did per- 
forate the ones found perf. 13 (which are the rule, while those perf. 
14 are the exception), then those perf. 14 must have been certainly 
operated upon elsewhere than in the shops of the Bank Note Co., 
where this perforation is unknown. 

From all the foregoing we can seem to make but one deduction for the 
3d. perforated 14 and that is — unofficial. The dated cover, if 1859, would 
be but a month before the issue of the decimal stamps, and the regular "perf. 
12" stamps were plentifully supplied at that time. It would therefore seem 
that the date must have been 1857, as suggested, which would have been well 
ahead of the appearance of the "perf. 12" issues as we shall see later. Then 
the fact that the manufacturers cannot be held responsible for this perfora- 
tion, and the Department accounts furnish no item of expenditure directly 
traceable to such work, make it seem wholly probable that it was done by 
private parties for their own or customers' convenience. ' 

The "curious perforation" alluded to as just discovered was announced 
by the Scott Stamp & Coin Co. as follows:^ — 

Canada. — In a large lot of pence issues purchased by us lately, 
we have found two copies of 3 pence on grayish wove paper perforated 
13 with oblique parallel cuts. This seems to confirm the theory that 
the pence issues of Canada were not perforated by the manufacturers, 
but either by the Canadian Government or by some persons author- 
ized by them, who most likely experimented with different perforat- 
ing machines, finally selecting the one perforating 13. 

'Metropolitan Philatelist, I: 226. 

'American Journal of Philately, 2d. b'eries, IV: 23. 



THE PERFORATED PENCE ISSUES 71 

With regard to the deductions given, we think that what we have already- 
presented concerning the unofficial character of the gauge 14 perforation 
applies with even more force in the present instance, and we unhesitatingly 
put these two curios in the "privately perforated" class. 

Messrs. Corwin and King give further details as follows :^ — 

As one of them has passed into the possession oi the writer, we 
are able to particularize somewhat with reference to this particular 

perforation Our specimen is from the bottom of the sheet, or else 

the shears have been used, so that we find the perforation as it origin- 
ally existed between each stamp, before separation. This perforation 
consists of oblique curved parallel cuts ; they are not straig-ht, but 
show a very decided curve from right to left, looking at the face of 
the stamp. The other sides of our specimen present, having been 
torn from the stamp on either side, a very well defined saw-tooth 
perforation, very much like that found on the Bremen stamps, but 
much coarser, clearly gauging 13. It occurs to us that, perhaps, this 
is the 13 perforation listed by the London Society, although, had 
a specimen been before the society when the reference list was com- 
piled, the peculiarity of this style of perforation would surely have 
been noted by them. 

To return to the general subject, Mr. Donald A. King in his own article 

says -J — 

It is an open question whether these stamps were delivered to 
the Canadian Post Office Department in a perforated condition or 
not. The manufacturers are wholly unable to throw any light on 
the subject; and while there is much to be said in favor of their 
having perforated the stamps, there are points against it almost as 
strong. In favor of it there is the fact that, at the date that these 
stamps were issued, it was more than probable that a firm like the 
manufacturers would have perforating machines. The normal gauge 
of the perforated set is 12, that being the only size of perforation 
ever used by the manufacturers, or their successors, the American 
Bank Note Company; indeed, they call 12 their standard and only 
gauge. 

The stamps in issue from the time of the announcement of perforation 
in the Report of 1857, to the appearance of the decimal stamps in 1859, were 
the y2d., 3d., 6d., Tl^d., and lOd. values, but only the first three appeared 
with perforations. The first supply of the lOd. stamp, as we know, was 
received in January 1855, and was naturally unperforated. The first and 



"Metropolitan Philatelist, I: 277. 
'Monthly Journal, VH: 9. 



72 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

only supply of the 7^/2(1. stamp was received probably in the second quarter 
of 1857, and these were all unperf orated. The first supply of the %d. stamp 
was doubtless delivered about midsummer of 1857, and these were evidently 
all unperf orated. The other supplies received in the fiscal year of 1857 were 
300,000 of the 3d. in September 1856, and the same number again in March 
1857, together with the 50,078 of the 6d.* Evidently these were still in the 
unperforated class, as they were delivered before either the 7^^ d. or %d. 
supplies. We must therefore look to the supplies delivered after the 30th 
September, 1857, as a basis for reckoning up the perforated series. The 
values and quantities given in the stamp accounts (already quoted) are as 
follows : — 

%d. 3d. 6d. lOd. 
Eec'd, yr. ending 30th Sept. 1858. .1,258,930 900,000 100,000 73,120 
Eec'd. half-yr. end'g 30th June, 1859 850,100 449,900 70,000 



Total, 3,109,020 1,349,900 170,000 73,130 

Balance on hand 30th June, 1859 60,660 31,700 17,578 31,300 

(destroyed) 

Issued 2,048,360 1,338,200 153,423 40,930 

The first thing that confronts us here is a second supply of the lOd. 
stamp in this supposed "perforated period," over half of which was issued 
for sale, and yet the lOd. stamp is practically unknown in a perforated 
condition! We say practically, because the London Society's work^ 
remarks: — "The Seven Pence Halfpenny, green, and Ten Pence, blue, per- 
forated, exist in the collection of a well known Parisian collector. The- 
authenticity, however, of the perforations appears to be doubtful." We think 
it is more than doubtful, as it is practically certain that neither value was 
ever issued in this condition. Messrs. Corwin and King state i^" — "We agree 
with the Society in doubting the authenticity of the 7V2d. and 10 pence, per- 
forated, as these stamps, thus treated, have never been seen in America, nor 
can anything be ascertained from the makers of the Stamps or the Canadian 
Post Office Department concerning them." The last statement is hardly 
convincing, for neither party referred to can give any more information con- 
cerning the other three values that we know were issued. We can heartily 

sMetropolitan Philatelist, XVII: 83. 

"North American Colonies of Great Britain, page 15. 

'^Metropolitan Philatelist, I: 226. 



THE PERFORATED JPENCS ISSUES 13 

subscribe to tbe next remark, however: — "We have no hesitation in pronounc- 
ing them impostors." 

The date usually assigned to the appearance of the perforated stamps 
is January 1858. The London Society gave simply "1857," which is appar- 
ently set down merely because they have just quoted the announcement from 
the Postmaster General's Eeport for that year. Evans and Moens, in their 
catalogs, both name the date as November 1858. Unfortunately no more 
authoritative statement has been found, except that in Messrs. Corwin and 
King's article^^ they say "Mr. Hooper positively states that it took place in Jan- 
uary, 1858." Mr. John K. Hooper was at that time [1890] connected with the 
Canadian Post Office Department at Ottawa and took pains to look up much 
information for the above-mentioned gentlemen. His reasons for the "pos- 
itive statement" are not given, and inasmuch as he is quoted elsewhere as 
saying that "the records of the Post Office Department are silent as to where 
this perforation was performed and by whom,"^^ and also seems a little imcer- 
tain in some other details, we feel that further confirmation is needed. 

In our table above we have given the supplies received after the 30th 
September, 1857, and deducted the remainders so as to have the actual number 
issued. The lOd. has already proved a stumbling block, for it was not per- 
forated at all! 'Next we find the 6d. to the number of 150,000, when the 
total issue, including the laid paper, was but 400,000 ; yet the catalog value 
of the imperforates is some $6 for each variety, and of the perforated stamp 
at least $30 ! Can anyone doubt that all these 150,000 6d. stamps were not 
perforated ? In the case of the 3d. we have one and a third millions to com- 
pare with a total issue of three and a half millions — about a third in the 
supposed perforated class. Yet the catalog value of the latter is $2.50 
against 36 cents for the wove paper imperforate alone. With the %d. stamp 
there are two millions against a total of three and a third millions, or about 
two to one in favor of the supposed perforated stamps, yet the latter are double 
the catalog price of the former! The only conclusion to be dravm from 
these regularly appearing inconsistencies in each value is that all the supplies 
after 30th September, 1857 were not perforated, as the lOd. stamp very glar- 
ingly intimates! 

If this be so, is it not possible that the order to perforate new supplies 
was given to the manufacturers much later than has hitherto been thought to 



"Metropolitan Philatelist, I: 275. 
•^Ibid. I: 226. 



74 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

be the case ? It hardly seems likely that this improvement would be ordered 
for a few supplies and then dropped, only to reappear a year and a half later 
as a permanent feature of the new set. Once adopted it was more than likely 
to be retained. 

Let us see, then, just for curiosity's sake, what the supplies of the last 
six months of issue yield us for data. For the %d. we find 850,000, roughly, 
with 60,000 remainders. Call it 800,000 issued which, if perforated, would 
be a quarter of the total issue of %d. stamps, or a ratio to the imperforates 
of one to three. This is not so far away from the catalog ratio of two to one 
(inversely, of course) in the value of the perforated stamps. With the 3d. 
stamp we have 450,000, roughly, with 20,000 remainders, say 430,000 issued. 
Of a total issue of 3,500,000 this represents one-eighth, or a ratio of one to 
seven. The inverse ratio of seven to one for catalog value comes pretty close 
when we compare $2.50 with 36 cents! In the case of the 6d. there are 
70,000 less 17,500 remainders, or 52,500. This is approximately one-eighth 
the total issue of 400,000, or again a ratio of one to seven. The inverse ratio 
of seven to one for a catalog value would make the perforated stamp list $42 
with the imperforate at $6. But both laid and wove paper 6d. stamps list at 
approximately $6, whereas if all had been issued on but one variety of paper 
we might find perhaps a single list price of say $4. With this as a basis, the 
catalog value of $30 for the perforated 6d. is in as close agreement with our 
supposition as are the others. And, best of all, the second supply of the lOd. 
stamp is disposed of without any difficulty whatever under this hypothesis! 

It may be argued that reasoning thus from catalog prices is too uncertain 
to prove of value. Granted in many cases. But here is an issue from fifty 
to sixty years old; the stamps were regularly used in increasing numbers 
during their years of issue; they have always been popular and eagerly col- 
lected, so that the stock in existence has been pretty well handled and pretty 
well distributed. Under these conditions the catalog prices should by this 
time reflect fairly accurately the relative rarity of the main varieties of each 
stamp at least ; and it is this relative rarity that we are after in order to approx- ' 
imate the original supplies of the main varieties. The result is certainly of 
more than mere interest, the agreement being such that we are tempted to 
lay down the following propositions in regard to the perforated stamps for 
further proof or disproof : — 

First. The regular perforation (gauge 12) was done by the manufac- 



THE PEEFOEATED PENCE ISSUES 7S 

turers and applied to the last requisitions previous to the change to decimal 
stamps. 

Second. The date of the supposed issue of the perforated stamps should 
be changed from January 1858, to November 1858 or January 1859. 

Third. The quantities of perforated stamps issued are placed approxi- 
mately at :— y2d., 789,440 ; 3d., 428,200 ; 6d., 52,422. 

In further support of the above postulates, we must say that every cover 
bearing any one of the three perforated stamps which we have been able 
to get a satisfactory date from has been postmarked in 1869! Not one has 
yet been seen which bore a date in 1858 even, and one 6d. from the Seybold 
collection, which was dated at Brantford, Dec. 29, 1857, turned out to be bad. 
Of course perforated pence stamps are hard to find on original covers, but it 
is curious that so far not one has upset the theory we have laid down. 

There is one point left which perhaps needs some attention. The London 
Society's work lists a 6d. on laid paper, perforated 12, and Mr. King has 
followed by including it in his reference list. This would imply that the 
Canadian Government had perforated its stock on hand, in which might be a 
few remainders of the early laid paper issue, and naturally would go far toward 
confirming that view of the origin of the perforated series. But this stamp 
seems to be an unknown quantity, almost as much so as the 3d. "perforated 
13" of Major Evans' Catalogue. Mr. Pack says:^^ — "I have never heard of 
the 6d. perforated, on laid paper. It is catalogued in the Society's publica- 
tion, but a copy, so far as I can learn, has never been seen in Canada or in the 
United States," 

We have been interested to track this stamp, and have apparently found 
the original located in the Tapling collection, now housed at the British Mu- 
seum. In a catalog of the Canadian portion of. this collection by Gordon 
Smith,^* we find two unused copies listed on laid paper, one marked "perf. 12" 
and the other "forged perf." The sequel is found in the American Journal of 
Philately for 1891^^ in the following note: — 

There is no longer any mystery in regard to the origin of that 
great rarity! the perforated 6 pence on laid paper, these stamps 
having been perforated for four or five years in the shops of Messrs. 
Benjamin Sarpy & Co., Cullum street, London, who openly boast of 
having manufactured and sold those in the collection of the late Hon. 
T. K. Tapling and other prominent collectors. 

"London Philatelist, XVI: 144. 

"The Stamp News, X: 43. 

"American Journal of Philately, 2d. Series, IV: 365. 



76 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

The paper upon which the perforated pence series is found seems to give 
further confirmation to the theory that they came from but one or possibly two 
printings. Outside of the two lower values on ribbed paper, which are rare, 
the series seems to be entirely on a hard, white wove paper, varying in thick- 
ness from a medium to a thicker quality, which is in every way similar to the 
paper employed for the succeeding cents issue. On the thin ribbed paper the 
London Society (1889) and Messrs. Corwin and King (1891) list the %d. 
stamp, but this is not found in the catalog of the Tapling collection already 
referred to, nor in the Pack or Worthington collections; we have therefore 
listed it with a query. The 3d. stamp we have seen, however, and Mr. Pack 
says it "is a scarce stamp even in used condition, but in unused condition I 
find it one of the great rarities of Canada."^® 

As noted under Chapter II, ^'^ the use of split stamps was not usual, as in 
]!Tova Scotia, but Mr. King chronicles the 6d. perforated, in dark violet, split 
diagonally and used as a 3d. in like manner to its unperforated predecessor. 

I'London Philatelist, XVI: 144. 

"See page 32. 



CHAPTER V 

THE CANCELLATIONS OF THE EARLY ISSUES 

A RATHER interesting study, particularly for the collector of entires, 
is that of postmarks and cancellations, and sometimes much assist- 
ance in the solution of knotty questions is rendered by these often 
despised and neglected adjuncts to the proper use of postage stamps. 

The early cancellations of Canada have been the subject of some attention, 
more so, in fact, than the postmarks, as they were required to be used on the 
stamps while the postmark was struck on the cover, where the date and place 
of mailing would be plainly visible. In one of the early volumes of reports 
it is stated that "Office Stamps and Seals were supplied from England on 
21st July, 1851." It is presiuned that this included postmarks and cancel- 
lations. 

It will be remembered, perhaps, that in the circular announcing the issue 
of stamps in 1851^ it was ordered that "Stamps so aiSxed are to be immediately 
cancelled. . . .with an instrument to be furnished for that purpose." The first 
one so supplied was the "concentric rings" cancellation, consisting of seven 
concentric circles and having an outer diameter of 18 mm. This is the most 
common of all, being found from the very earliest dates down to 1870, at 
least, as it occurs on the early shades of the "small" cents issue. It was gen- 
erally struck in black ink, but may occasionally be found in a dull blue. A 
good illustration of this cancellation is seen on the cover numbered 90 on 
Plate VI. 

By 1855, at least, a modified form of the concentric ring cancellation 
was introduced. This had a number in the center in large figures, some 8 mm. 
high, with four concentric circles enclosing it, the outside diameter being about 
23 mm. This type was generally struck in black, but is sometimes found in 
a dull blue also. It can be seen on the strip of stamps numbered 81 on Plate 
V. The numbers, of course, were placed in the cancellations with a definite 
purpose, and a little study of entire covers shows that certain numbers were 

>See page 28. 



78 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

assigned to certain post offices, as might be suspected. !N"umber 21, for in- 
stance, is the most common one and will be found to be connected with Mon- 
treal. Further study will reveal the fact that the names of the post offices 
were taken in alphabetical order, and the numbers assigned to them consecu- 
tively in that way. Still further inspection develops the fact that most of 
the post offices were those in Upper Canada (or Canada West), while but a 
few of the most important ones were included from Lower Canada (or Canada 
East.) 

Mr. Edgar Nelton seems first to have made a study of these numbers in 
an attempt to identify their corresponding post offices, and he published a list 
of some twenty-two as the result of his examination of many original covers.^ 
The numbers run up to 52 at least, and using the facts that we have deduced 
concerning the arrangement of the names, we have endeavored to fill out his 
skeleton list with such offices as it seems possible may yet be identified with the 
corresponding numbers. We have done this with some assurance for the fol- 
lowing reasons: — 

We were fortunately able to examine a Canada Directory for 1857-8, and 
on looking up the postal information given therein, found a list of the money 
order offices then existing. This was in two sections, the first containing 
the names, alphabetically arranged, of 31 offices in "Class l^o. 1," which 
included most of the principal cities and towns; and the second a lengthy 
alphabetical list of offices in "Class 'Eo. 2." The first section had a some- 
what familiar appearance, and inspection showed that a majority of the 
names on Mr. Nelton's list of numbered cancellations were there in proper 
order! But 21 more names were needed, according to the cancellation num- 
bers, to fill out the latter series. The second section was therefore examined 
for such towns as had the largest populations and were presumably most im- 
portant. The result enabled more than one name, already on Mr. ]S"elton's 
list, to be fitted in its proper place! Here, then, was apparently the solution 
of the first series of numbered cancellations, and we hazard a guess that the 
52 names are the original list of money order offices, arranged when the 
money order system was instituted in February, 1855. 

The subjoined table gives the list of post offices and their corresponding 
numbers, which has been worked out along the lines above mentioned. It 
is offered in the hope that more will be done to determine positively the cor- 

^Chlcago Collectors' Monthly, II: 21, 



THE CAiq-CELLATIONS OF THE EAELY ISSUES 



79 



respondence between the two. The names in ordinary type are those that 
have been identified without any reasonable doubt ; those that have been fitted 
m tentatively are in italics. The Roman numeral following indicates the 
Class to which the Money Order OiEce belongs. 



LIST OF NUMBEEED CANCELLATIONS. 



9. 
10. 
11. 
13. 
13. 
14. 
15. 
16. 
17. 
18. 
19. 
20. 
21. 
22. 
23. 
24. 
25. 
26. 



Barrie, V. I 

Belleville, U. C I 

Berlin, U. C I 

Bowraanville, U. C I 

Brantf ord, U. C I 

Brighton, U. G II 

BrocTcville, V. C I 

Chatham, U. C I 

Clinton, V. C II 

Coliourg, V. G I 

Cornwall, U. G I 

Dundas, V. C I 

Gait, U. C I 

Goderich, V. C I 

Guelph, U. G I 

Hamilton, U. C I 

Ingersoll, V. G II 

Kingston, U. C I 

London, U. C I 

Melbourne, L. C II 

Montreal, L. C I 

Napanee, U. C II 

Napierville, L. G II 

Newcastle, U. C II 

Niagara, V. C I 

Oakville, U. C 11 



27. Ottawa, U. C I 

28. Paris, V. G I 

29. Perth, U. C II 

30. Peterborough, U. C I 

31. Picton, U. C II 

32. Port Dover, V. G II 

33. Port Hope, U. C I 

34. Port Sarnia, U. C II 

35. Prescott, U. C I 

36. Preston, U. G II 

37. Quebec, L. C I 

38. St. Catherines, U. C I 

39. St. Hyacinthe, L. G II 

40. St. Johns, L. G II 

41. St. Thomas, V. C I 

43. Sherhrooke, L. G II 

43. Simcoe, U. C II 

44. Smith's Falls, V. C II 

45. Stanstead, L. C II 

46. Stratford, U. C I 

47. Three Kivers, L. C I 

48. Toronto, V. G I 

49. Whitby, U. C II 

50. Windsor, U. G I 

51. Woodstock, U. G I 

52. York, V. G II 



It will be noticed, if Mr. ISTelton's list is compared with the above, that 
there are a few discrepancies. He assigns Toronto to JSTo. 24, which is man- 
ifestly out of place. Owen Sound is given to No. 26, while 28 should be its 
location; the latter must be reserved for Paris, however, which is a first class 
office where Owen Sound is but second class. Richmond is given as iN'o. 42, 
but as St. Catherines, a first class office, has been identified as I^o. 38, there 
seems no place for the second class office of Richmond, which should precede 
it alphabetically. Niagara has been assigned to No. 23, but in such case it 
would necessitate two blanks preceding Ottawa, so it seems that the proper 
number should be 2.5. With these few exceptions no further trouble was 
experienced in working out the list, and since it was drawn up Numbers 



80 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

2, 4, 8, 38 and 49 have been identified and tallied exactly with it! Such 
proof has gone far toward confirming our propositions in regard to it, and 
we hope for more. 

A third cancellation, which was apparently used mainly for newspapers 
and packages, consisted of nine somewhat thick diagonal bars, the whole 
impression having a square outline. This was generally struck in black, but 
occasionally in dull blue. 

Postmarks were supposed to be used only on the cover, where they would 
plainly exhibit the story they were to tell, while the cancellation marks were 
intended to deface the stamp. But sometimes the postmarks are found used 
for the latter purpose. They seem to be mostly of two varieties, both circular 
in outline, a larger one having the town name in a curve above, with U. 0., 
L. C, C. W., or C. E., at the bottom, and arcs of two concentric circles fill- 
ing in the outline between; a second being smaller with a single arc of a 
circle filling in the outline. The first variety is plainly shown on the cover 
numbered 90 on Plate VI, and the second on the cover numbered 130 on 
Plate XIV. The date in the center seems always to be given in full — month, 
day and year. The postmarks are generally in black, as usual, bat some- 
times in dull blue. 

Penmarked specimens are sometimes met with, but not often. 

With the issue of 1859 the duplex mark seems to have been adopted, 
with the postmark (the ordinary complete circle with the usual arrangement 
of name, abbreviation of province and date) and the cancellation mark (a 
series of parallel lines with a circular outline) on the same instrument so 
as to be struck on the letter together. 

With the 1868 issue for the Dominion we of course find the cancella- 
tions of New Brunsvrick and !N'ova Scotia, then British Columbia and finally 
Prince Edward Island, all of which introduce complications. A new can- 
cellation, which seems to have been for the Dominion as a whole, consisted 
of two heavy concentric circles containing a number. It is one of this kind 
that Mr. ISTelton refers to in his article as having the number 627. A notable 
cancellation is one in the shape of a large maple leaf. 

An interesting and rare postmark which was found on the 3 cent of the 
1868 issue, is thus vn-itten up by Mr. E. G. Bing': — 

The stamp had been obliterated with a small thick lined circle 
in which appear the words "WAY LETTER" in large type. Eventually 

sThe Postage Stamp, Vn: 6, 



THE CANCELLATIONS OF THE EARLY ISSUES 81 

a full account of the matter was obtained from the Canadian postal 
authorities. 

Post Office Dbpabtment, Canada. 
Office of the Supbbintendent of the Postage Stamp Beanch. 

Ottawa, 13th March, 1908. 

Deak Sie: — ^Replying to your enquiry on the subject, as to the 
object of the post office mark consisting of a rather thick circle in 
which are the words "WAY LETTER" only, impressed upon a Canada 
postage stamp (3c.) similar to the one you enclosed, and which I 
herewith return, I find on enquiry that previous to the Confederation 
of the Dominion of Canada in 1867, there was in Nova Scotia and 
New Brunswick a regulation requiring mail couriers on the coach roads 
to accept letters for mailing, when these were offered them at a 
distance of not less than one or two miles from the nearest post 
office, to place them in a looked leather pouch provided for the pur- 
pose, and to post them at the first post office, the Postmaster of which 
was instructed to stamp these with the words "WAY LETTER." After 
Confederation this postmark lingered at some of the offices in the 
provinces named, when it was used for general cancellation purposes, 
if not for its primary purpose. It has now, however, wholly disap- 
peared. Some think it lasted up to 1887 or 1891, but I am sorry I 
cannot furnish you with a more definite date as to its extinction. 

Very truly yours, 
E. P. STANTON, Superintendent. 

It will be seen from this interesting letter that the postmark 
was in the first instance applied to the postage stamps of Nova Scotia 
and New Brunswick, and it is quite possible that only upon the stamps 
of these two provinces does it possess its full original significance. 
At the same time it does not follow that the regulations under which 
this cancellation was in use were immediately withdrawn with the 
Confederation of the Dominion of Canada ; and it is more than prob- 
able that the custom based upon these regulations of accepting letters 
from the public at a distance from a post office, and applying the 
special obliteration, would continue long after that date, as it is evi- 
dent that the use of the "Way Letter" postmark was never definitely 
prohibited by the Canadian postal authorities, or the date of its 
extinction would not have been in doubt. It is, however, quite certain 
that only a comparatively small number of letters would be entitled 
to receive this special mark, and its rarity is therefore indisputable. 

Various new varieties came with the "small" cents issue and later, con- 
cerning which there is not so much of interest as in the earlier years of the 
postal service; we therefore pass them by, remarking only on the special 
"jubilee" machine cancellation which was used at Montreal in 1897. This 
was of the "flag" form and somewhat ornate, bearing the name "VIC- 
TOEIA" and the dates "1837" and "1897." 



CHAPTER VI 

THE ISSUE OF 1 859 

WITH two valuations placed upon the cumbrous English monetary 
system inherited by Canada from the Mother Country — "sterling" 
and "currency" — and with the practical illustration of the advan- 
tages of the decimal system manifest in all the transactions with its great 
southern neighbor, whose currency was already legalized in the Province,^ it 
was only a question of time when Canada would adopt a decimal system of its 
own. This was done, but all that interests us is the Decimal Postage law re- 
sulting, which is as follows: — 

22° Vict. Cap. XVII. 

An Act to amend the Post Office Laws. 

\Assented to ith May. 1859.1 

Whereas it is expedient to amend the Post Office Laws, in the 

manner hereinafter provided: Therefore, Her Majesty, by and with the 

advice and consent of the Legislative Council and Assembly of Canada, 

enacts as follows : 

1. There shall be payable on all Newspapers sent by Post in 
Canada, except "Exchange Papers" addressed to Editors and Pub- 
lishers of Newspapers, such rate of Postage, not exceeding one cent 
on each such Newspaper, as the Governor in Council shall from time 
to time direct by regulation, and such rate shall be payable on all 
such Newspapers posted on or after the first day of July next. 

2. So much of any Act as provides that Newspapers posted within 
this Province shall pass free of Postage, in cases other than those 
in which they will be free under this Act, is hereby repealed. 

3. In order to adapt the operations of the Post Office to the Deci- 
mal Currency, the internal letter postage rate shall be changed from 
three pence to its equivalent of five cents, per half ounce — the charge 
for advertising a dead letter from three farthings to two cents — ^the 
charge for returning a dead letter to the writer, from one penny to 
three cents ; and in all cases where a one half-penny or penny rate of 
Postage is chargeable, these rates shall be changed to one cent and two 
cents respectively. 

4. To promote simplicity and economy in the business of the 
Post Office, all letters posted in Canada for any place within the 

^See page 52. 



THE ISSUE OF 1859 83 

Province, and not prepaid, shall be charged seven instead of five cents 
per half ounce on delivery; and on letters posted for the British 
Mails, for the other British North American Provinces, or for the 
United States, when not prepaid, there shall be charged such ad- 
dition to the ordinary rate, not in any case exceeding a double rate, 
as the Post Master General may agree upon with the Post Office 
Authorities of those Countries, for the purpose of enforcing pre- 
payment. 

5. The Post Master General may establish a Parcel Post and 
parcels other than letters and not containing letters, may be sent 
by such Parcel Post, and when so sent shall be liable to such charges 
for conveyance and to such regulations as the Governor in Council 

shall from time to time see fit to make. 

********* 

8. [To inclose a letter in a parcel or a newspaper, posted as 
such, is a misdemeanor.'^ 

From the above Act we see that the transmission of newspapers has 
again been subjected to revision looking toward an increase of revenue, 
all free transmission by post being now limited to exchange copies between 
editors or publishers. The making of prepayment by stamps obligatory was 
another step which had been quite strongly recommended in the last Post- 
master General's report in these terms: — 

No single improvement would be so valuable to the Post OfBce 
service as the introduction of the system of the pre-payment of 
letters by stamp. It is not recommended that pre-payment of 
letters should be made absolutely compulsory, but where stamps are 
readily procurable, pre-payment in that form should be insisted on, 
and the principle of pre-payment should be enforced by imposing 
an additional charge on letters posted unpaid. 

By referring to the Act subsequently passed we see that these recom- 
mendations were carried out to the letter. 

In regard to the fifth section of the Act, concerning the Parcel Post, 
we come across another example of the curious shuffling of dates and apparent 
ex post facto law making which we have previously noted. In quoting the 
Postmaster General's report for 30th Sept., 1858," we found it stated that 
the Parcel Post had been in operation "from 1st January, 1859," and now 
we have the Legislative Act providing for it passed under date of 4th May, 
1859! This is going it one better on "reading history backward" by actually 
making it backward! The reports at least, as we previously deduced, were 
evidently written some time after the dates given them and did not conilne 

2See page 67. 



84 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

their record to happenings previous to those fictitious dates. Confirmation 
of this is furnished by the Postmaster General's report that we have to con- 
sider, that of the Hon. Sydney Smith for the year ending 30th September, 
1859, the report being actually dated 20th February, 1860, 

Further details concerning the Parcel Post are not given until the Report 
for 30th June, 1864, where we read: — 

By means of the Parcel Post a parcel may be sent within the 
Province to or from any place, however remote fron[i the ordinary 
lines of traffic conveyance, on prepayment of a postage rate of 25 
cents per lb., provided that the weight or size of the parcel does not 
exceed the carrying capacity of an ordinary mail bag; and provided 
that the contents of the parcel are not of a character to injure the 
rest of the mail. 

The rate is given in decimal currency, then in use, but at the time of 
the establishment of the Parcel Post the equivalent rate would have been 
Is. 3d. currency. In the Eeport for 1865 it is stated that: — 

The provisions of the Parcel Post have been extended to par- 
cels passing between Canada and New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, 
and parcels not containing letters may now be forwarded by post 
from one end of British North America to the other, on prepayment of a 
uniform rate of 25 cents per lb. 

In the report for 1859, mentioned above, we find the following: — 

The Law of last Session directing the conversion of all postage 
rates into decimals, and the collection of postage in the new^ deci- 
mal currency, was put in operation on the 1st July Decimal 

stamps of the value of 1 cent, 5 cents, and 10 cents for ordinary 
correspondence, and of 12^4 cents for Canadian, and of 17 cents for 
British Packet Postage Rates were obtained in readiness for the 
commencement of the Decimal Postage Law in July, 1859, and have 
from that date been issued in lieu of the stamps previously in use. 

The cents issue of Canadian stamps therefore dates from July 1, 1859. 
The stamps themselves were merely an adaptation of the designs of the pence 
series to the corresponding values of the decimal currency. The ONE CENT 
stamp was unchanged from the half-penny except for the substitution of the 
new for the former value. The FIVE CENTS stamp had these words in 
place of the old denomination, with a quarterfoil ornament separating them 
at each side from CANADA and POSTAGE. Oblique figures 5 were 



THE ISSUE OF 1859 86 

placed in the spandrels on a cross-hatched ground instead of the upright fig- 
ures 3 on foliations. A similar change was made in the TEN CENTS, Ro- 
man numerals X being placed obliquely in the spandrels on a cross-hatched 
ground where upright figures 6 were previously on foliations; while the new 
denomination was substituted for the old. The sole change in the 121^ cent 
stamp was to substitute "12%c." in the spandrels for the former values in 
sterling and currency. The 17 cent stamp had the value in words replacing 
TEN PENCE, but the new value was so much longer that the emblems 
between the old value and CANADA POSTAGE were removed and re- 
placed by two small elliptic ornaments. "8d. stg." still occupies the upper 
spandrels, but figures 17 are placed in each of the lower ones. The central 
designs in each of the above stamps are absolutely identical with those of the 
pence stamps that preceded them — indeed the portrait and surrounding oval 
with inscriptions on the 12^ c. are all unchanged. Erom this it is evident 
that the new dies were "built up" from the old ones, the central portions 
being transferred and the required changes in surrounding inscriptions, etc., 
being newly engraved. This was easy enough of accomplishment since the 
American Bank Note Co., who furnished the new stamps, were the successors 
of Messrs. Eawdon, Wright, Hatch and Edson, the firm name having been 
changed on May 1, 1858, and the dies of the pence issue were of course in 
their possession. Illustrations of the five values wiU be found as Nos. 10, 
15, 12, 13 and 14, respectively, on Plate I. 

There was one addition to the list of values in this set during its period 
of use — a 2 cent stamp. In the Postmaster General's Report for 30th June, 
1864, it is noted: — "A new Postage Stamp, of the value of two cents, was 
added to the other denominations supplied, from the 1st. August last [1864]." 
The Report for the succeeding year has this further to say: — "A provision 
has been made for the transmission and delivery of Canadian periodicals, 
addressed to the United Kingdom, at the reduced rate of two cents each," 
and it was evidently largely on account of this that the new stamp was 
ordered. Its design was immistakably "built up" as with the rest of the set, 
the 1 cent stamp serving as the model, figures 2 being placed in ovals in the 
spandrels and the wording of the value being changed to correspond. (Illus- 
tration No. 11 on Plate I). The stamp was issued as stated on the Ist 
August, 1864. 

All the stamps of this issue were, as before, line engraved and printed 
in sheets of 100, ten rows of ten. The same style of marginal inscriptions as 



86 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

in the first issue is found — "American Bank Note Co. New- York" in minute 
letters of the type known as "diamond," repeated twice in each margin, read- 
ing up on the left, down on the right, and inverted at the bottom of the sheet. 
In the 1, 2, 5 and 12%c. stamps the imprint is placed against the third and 
eighth stamps of each marginal row of ten, but from a block of 10c. at hand 
the inscriptions in the case of this value are apparently "centered" over the 
space between the third and fourth and the seventh and eighth stamps of 
each marginal row, thus bringing them over two stamps instead of one. 
Curiously enough, the I7c. value has no marginal inscriptions at all. 

The same plate variety that occurs in the 3d. stamp — the "shifted trans- 
fer" or "double strike" — is repeated in its successor, the 5c. stamp. That 
it is a true plate variety is abundantly proved by the fine block of seven 
stamps illustrated as No. 96 on Plate VII. The variety will be found in 
the upper right corner stamp, and the doubling of the frame lines at the left 
and of the oval frame line above CANADA will be readily apparent. A 
single copy is illustrated as No. 19 on Plate I. It seems to have been first 
noted by Mr. R. Wuesthoff in the American Journal of Philately for June, 1892. 

A minor variety of the 5c. stamp printed from a worn plate is also to be 
noted, in which the fine lines of the groundwork have almost disappeared. 

The entire series comes regularly perforated 12, the identical normal 
perforation of the pence stamps that immediately preceded it, and which we 
have endeavored to trace to the same source. The abnormal varieties in this 
series are of course the imperforate ones, and of these we present cuts of a 
full set in blocks of four, numbered 100 to 105 on Plate IX. That the 
stamps were actually issued and used in this condition is proved by copies of 
several with the proper postmarks of the period in the Pack collection. Mr. 
Pack writes of them^: — 

I have the Ic. and 5c. postmarked in 1860 and 1861 at Toronto 
and Prescott, Canada West. I also believe that these varieties were 
on sale at Kingston, Canada West, at about that time. I have also the 
2c. and 10c. in undoubtedly early used condition. 

Further varieties are formed by "split" stamps, as before, though these 
were never authorized and seldom used. We are fortunate in being able to 
illustrate two five cent stamps used with half of a third to make up the 12%c. 
packet rate. This is No. 97 on Plate VII. The postmark is unfortunately 
mostly torn away, but is evidently "Montreal," and the last numeral in the 

'London Philatelist, XVI: 144. 



THE ISSUE OF 1859 87 

year figures seems to be an "8," whicii would mean "1868." A 10c. stamp 
also split and used for a 5 c. is shown on the entire as ISTo. 99 on Plate VIII. 
The postmark is "Bowmanville, U. C, Feb. 15, 1860." 

The normal colors for the stamps of this series may be given as 1 cent 
deep rose, 2 cents dull rose, 5 cents deep red, 121/^ cents deep green, and 17 
cents Prussian blue. It will be noticed that we have omitted the 10 cents — 
and with reason. If the 6 pence stamp of the preceding issue was difficult 
to select a normal color for, how shall we find one for its successor? Messrs. 
Corwin and King say* : — "The most surprising fact about this issue is the 
vast number of colors and shades to be found in the 10 cents. We have 
several hundreds of them in our collection, and are continually adding new 
color varieties." They run all the way from a bright red lilac through shades 
of violet and brown to a black brown, which is so dark and distinct that it 
has for years been catalogued separately. 

The paper on which these stamps were printed does not show as much 
variation as in the previous issue. Mr. King'' gives a list of five varieties, aU 
of which vary considerably in thickness. It seems sufficient for our pur- 
poses, however, to list them under three heads as ordinary wove paper, a 
thick, hard wove paper, and ribbed paper. 

These stamps were in issue from the 1st July 1859, until the series 
issued for the new Dominion of Canada appeared on 1st April, 1868. The 
stamp accounts in the various Postmaster General's Reports give the quan- 
tities received and issued, and we present here a summary of these tables as 
their reproduction entire would serve no useful purpose unless to show the 
increase in the consumption of stamps from year to year as the postal busi- 
ness increased. 

Received from manufacturers : Ic. 

quarter ending- 30th Sept. 1859 1,000,400 
year ending 30th Sept. 1860 2,000,050 
j'ear ending 30th Sept. 1861 2,300,100 
year ending 30th Sept. 1862 3,799,900 
year ending 30th Sept. 1863 3,500,300 
9 mos. ending 30th June 1864 3,000,000 
year ending 30th June 1865 3,064,800 
year ending 30th June 1866 3,910,000 

yearending30th June 1867 5,100,000 5,100,500 999,650 399,950 100,000 
yearending30th June 1868 (?) 900,000 3,199,900 400,000 ? 



5c. 


10c. 


ISVac. 


17c. 


1,000,089 


300,000 


200,000 


50,000 


2,499,986 


300,000 


300,000 


50,000 


3,400,300 


499,998 


199,996 


50,000 


3,300,350 


400,000 


399,996 


50,000 


4,300,450 


600,050 


300,000 


100,000 


3,999,999 


800,000 


399,990 


49,999 


4,890,598 


700,000 


676,600 


100,000 


8,100,000 


800,000 


400,100 


50,000 



Totals, 37,475,450 39,793,173 5,799,698 3,176,633 599,999 

♦Metropolitan Philatelist, 11: 3. 
'Monthly Journal, VH: 32. 



88 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

Tlie yearly supplies of the 2 cent stamps, first appearing in the 1865 
accounts, were as follows: — 

1865 360,000 

1866 300,000 

1867 200,500 

1868 50,000(?) 

Total 910,500 

Unfortunately the stamp accounts for 1868 do not separate the sup- 
plies received in the old and new designs, so that in the case of the 1, 2 and 
12^ cent stamps, which appear in both issues, the qviantity delivered by the 
manufacturers is a total which we cannot divide with certainty. An approxi- 
mation may perhaps be made, particularly with the 2 cent stamp. The 
balance of this value on hand 30th June, 1867, was 171,000, and the de- 
liveries in the year ending 30th June, 1868, were 2,050,000. Inasmuch as the 
yearly issue of this value had been some 250,000, the probability is that the 
odd 50,000 delivered belonged to the 1859 series, as this would make 221,000 
for the nine month's supply to 1st April; the even two millions were doubt- 
less the order for the new series. The yearly issue of the 1 cent had been 
some 3^ to 4 millions; if from the 2,900,000 received, according to the 1868 
Report, we take the odd 900,000, we find it makes 3,308,900 when combined 
with the balance on hand in 1867. This gives a sufficient supply for the 
nine months of the old issue and leaves an even two millions again for the 
new series. The 12^ cent presents a slightly different aspect. The yearly 
issue had been some 400,000, and the amount on hand in 1867 was 385,750 
— without doubt a plentiful supply for the nine months preceding the issue 
of the new stamps. It must be remembered, also, in all these cases, that the 
"amount on hand" was that of the Department's stock, and that the post- 
masters were of course in possession of local stocks. It therefore seems prob- 
able that the 500,000 12% cent stamps received in 1868 were of the new 
series alone. The 5 and 10 cent stamps, however, which are lacking in the 
new set, can at once be added to their preceding deliveries, and it will be 
noted that no further supplies of the 17c. stamp were required during the 
year. 

We find in the Department accounts that the American Bank E^ote Oo. 
was paid $1331.70 for "engraving postage stamps" during the fiscal year, 
which was the final settlement with that Company. 



THE ISSUE OF 1859 89 

What became of the remainder of the old issue does not appear, but it 
seems probable that they were largely used up in the course of regular busi- 
ness, as no object would be gained by turning in the relatively small quanti- 
ties remaining, for accounting and destruction, unless it be the 17 cent value, 
which had become rather useless. Curiously enough, the stamp accounts do 
separate the old and new issues in the "balance on hand, 30th June, 1868," 
which was three months after the appearance of the new set. These figures 
are as follows: — 

1 cent 319,900 

2 cents 700 

5 cents 138,400 

10 cents 60,650 

131/2 cents 68,750 

17 cents 33,876 

Glancing now over the Postmaster General's reports for the years 1859 — 
1868, during which the above issue was in use, and which were the last years 
of the strictly provincial control, we find many items of interest. 

In the report for 1859 it is noted that "the issue and use by the public 
of Postage Stamps has increased with great rapidity since last return," and 
the issue of stamped envelopes "for the promotion of public convenience" is 
announced. These will be treated of by themselves in a later chapter. We 
find the experiment was made of placing street letter boxes in Toronto, and 
"with very encouraging results as to the extent to which the number of 
letters posted in these boxes would appear to demonstrate their usefulness. 
These Pillar Boxes are visited, at least twice each day, at suitable hours, by 
Post Ofiice Messengers, in order to convey the letters deposited in them to 
the Post Ofiice." Preparations were also being made to install letter boxes 
in Montreal and Quebec. 

The Department accounts have the following entries: — 

Eawdon, Wright & Co., supply of letter and newspaper stamps.. $238.69 
American Bank Note Co., engraving letter and newspaper stamps 1487.40 

Of course the amounts all went to the same concern, as the firm name had 
been changed on May 1, 1858, as already noted. 

The report for 1860 contains interesting statistical information con- 
cerning the growth of the Department, which it may be well to put on 
record : — 



90 



CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 



Year 

1851 
1853 

1853 

1854 

1855 

1856 
1857 
1858 
1859 

1860 



No. of 
Offices. 

601 

840 

1016 

1166 

1293 

1375 
1506 
1566 
1638 



Miles of No. of letters 



Post 
Route. 

7,595 



by Post 
per auDum. 

2,133,000 



8,618 3,700,000 



9,122 

10,037 

11,192 

11,839 
13,253 
13,600 

13,871 



4,250,000 

5,100,000 

6,000,000 

7,000,000 
8,500,000 
9,000,000 
8,500,000 



1698 14,203 9,000,000 

The Keport continues: — 



Postal Revenue 
(deductine 
dead letters.) 



$330,629.00 

278,587.00 

330,000.00 

368,166.00 

374,295.00 
462,163.00 
541,153.00 
578,426.98 

658,451.99 



Remarks 



First year of account 
under Provincial control. 
Charge on newspapers 
reduced one-half. 

Newspapers conveyed 
without charge. 



Additional 2c. rate on 
unpaid letters and charge 
made on newspapers. 



From the experience of the past, the confident hope may be 
entertained that, by a wise and judicious economy, (and without with- 
holding from newly setttled portions of the country, the Postal 
accommodations without which the settlement of the country cannot 
advance), in a comparatively short space of time the Postage upon 
letters may be reduced from the present five cent to a, three cent 
rate, as near an approach to the Penny sterling postage system 
of the Mother Country as the relative value of our currency will 
conveniently permit. 

It was eight years before these hopes were realized, however. 

The "epistolary intercourse with the United States" is given for the 
same period, but we need only note that the postal value of the total corres- 
pondence exchanged was $85,636.97 in 1852, had increased to $187,469.59 
in 1857, and then dropped gradually to $178,132.39 in 1860. The Eeport 
says : — 

The prepayment of letters passing between the two countries 
continues optional on either side, at the combined rate of 10 cents 
per % oz. from any place in Canada to any place in the United States 
and vice versa, except to or from the States on the Pacific, Califor- 
nia and Oregon, when the rate is 15 cents per % oz. 

The accounts present a charge in favor of the American Bank Note Co. 
of $1697.95 "for engraving Letter and E'ewspaper stamps and Stamped 
Envelopes." Of the latter we shall have more to say in their proper place. 

The Reports of 1861 and 1862 contain nothing special, and the accounts 
show payments of $1451.87 and $1583.63 respectively to the American Bank 
Note Co. 

The Report of 1863 states that in November of that year an agreement 



THE ISSUE OF 1859 91 

was entered into with the United States for the transmission between the 
two countries of seeds, bulbs, etc., at 1 cent per ounce, and also book manu- 
scripts, printers' proof sheets, maps, prints, etc., at the same rate. 

In January 1864, the Imperial Post Office extended to the mails between 
Canada and the United Kingdom regulations conceding patterns of merchan- 
dise and trade samples at the same rates as books and printed matter. 

The American Bank Note Co. was paid $1946.62. 

The next Report is dated 30th June, 1864, instead of the usual 30th 
September, and is therefore for nine months only. This was done to bring 
the fiscal year of the Post Office Department to correspond with the financial 
year of the General Government. 

The enactment which was the cause of the change follows: — 

27°— 28° Vict. Cap. VI. 

An Act to amend the Law respecting the Public Accounts, and 

the Board of Audit. 

(Assented to 30th June, 1864) 

10. It shall be the duty of the Board of Audit to prepare and 
submit to the Minister of Finance the Public Accounts to be annually 
laid before Parliament. 

11. The said Public Accounts shall include the period from the 
thirtieth of June in one year to the thirtieth of June in the next 
year, which period shall constitute the Financial Year 

There is nothing particular in the Report for these nine months to 
quote here, except the payment of the relatively small sum of $619.25 to the 
American Bank Ifote Co. 

The Report for 1865 states that "Regulations have been adopted estab- 
lishing a sample and pattern post in Canada, and packets of trade samples, 
or patterns of merchandise, may be sent by post between any places within 
this Province, on prepayment of one cent per ounce, under certain conditions 
to prevent an abuse of the privilege." It further announces that "Street 
Letter boxes are being placed in all the principal streets of Montreal." 

The Reports of 1866 and 1867 were published together, but contain 
little of interest beyond the statistics we have already used. Payments to 
the American Bank Note Co. were $2630.11 in 1866 and $1699.03 in 1867. 
The final payment to the American Co., which we have already quoted from 
the 1868 report, was $1331.70. We read that "The street letter boxes put 
up in the city of Montreal have worked satisfactorily. The number of letters 



92 CANADIAN" POSTAGE STAMPS 

and papers posted therein weekly, appeared from returns taken to be, Letters 
2400, Papers 500, or at the rate of 150,000 letters and papers per annum." 

Authority to establish letter boxes was given by an Act of Parliament 
which contains several other matters of interest and which we therefore quote. 

390_3o° Vict. Cap. XI. 
An Act to amend the Post Office Act. 
[Assented to 15th August, 1866.] 
Whereas the more effectually to prevent frauds upon the Post 
Office JJevenue, it is expedient to amend the Post Office Act: There- 
fore, Her Majesty, by and with the consent of the Legislative Council 
and Assembly of Canada, enacts as follows : 

1. If any person uses or attempts to use in payment of postage 
on any letter or mailable thing posted in this Province, any postage 
stamp which has been before used for a like purpose, such person 
shall be subjected to a penalty of not less than Ten and not ex- 
ceeding Forty dollars for every such ofEense, and the letter or other 
mailable thing on which such stamp has been so improperly used 
may be detained, or in the discretion of the Postmaster General 
forwarded to its destination charged with double the postage to 
which it would have been liable if posted unpaid. 

3. [To enclose a letter in a parcel, packet of samples or news- 
paper, posted as such, shall 6e an offense punishaMe iy a fine of not 
less than ten or more than forty dollars in each case.] 

3. The Postmaster General may grant licenses, revocable at 
pleasure, to Agents, other than Postmasters, for the sale to the 
Public, of Postage Stamps and Stamped envelopes, and may allow 
to such Agents a commission not exceeding five per cent, on the amount 
of their sales; — and it shall not be lawful for any person to exercise 
the business of selling Postage Stamps or Stamped envelopes to the 
Public unless duly licensed to do so by the Postmaster General and 
under such conditions as he may prescribe : and any person who 
shall violate this provision by selling Postage Stamps or Stamped 
envelopes to the public without a license from the Postmaster Gen- 
eral, shall on conviction before a Justice of the Peace, incur a pen- 
alty of not exceeding forty dollars for each offence. 

5. The Postmaster General may, when in his judgment the pub- 
lic convenience requires it, establish Street Letter Boxes or Pillar 
Boxes for the reception of letters and other mailable matter in the 
streets of any City or Town in this Province, and from the time 
that a letter is deposited in any such Street Letter Box or Pillar Box 
it shall be deemed to be a Post Letter within the meaning of the 
Post Office Act. 

6. [Wilfulhj injtiring such letter taxes is a misdemeanor.'] 

8. The Governor in Council may, by regulations to be from 
time to time made, provide for the transmission through the Mails 
of this Province, of patterns and samples of merchandise and goods 



THE ISSUE OF 1859 93 

for sale, and of packages of seeds, cuttings, bulbs, roots and scions 
or grafts, on such terms and conditions as may be set forth in such 
regulations. 

9. [Wilfully destroying, damaging or detaining any of a'bove 
articles is a 'misdemeanor.'] 



The only other item to quote from the report of 1867 is the following: — 
"On 1st July, 1867 the Union Act came into operation, and brought under 
one central administration the Postal Service throughout the Dominion." 
With this statement we close the account of the Postal history of the Province 
of Canada, and in the next chapter open up the larger one of the Dominion 
of Canada, whose later issues, though not without interest, still lack the 
charm that time can never tear from the simple, yet dignified and beautiful 
stamps of the Province. 



CHAPTER VII 

THE DOMINION OF CANADA 

Peelimiwaet. 

As outlined in our Introductory Chapter, the union of Upper and 
Lower Canada into the single Province of Canada had been so man- 
ifestly advantageous that it started an agitation for the union of all 
the British North American provinces. The result w^as a convention, held at 
Quebec in 1864, which drafted a proposed Constitution that was later embodied 
by the British Parliament in "An Act for the Union of Canada, Nova Scotia 
and New Brunswick, and the Grovernment thereof,"^ which was passed on the 
29th March, 1867. The preamble recites that "the provinces of Canada, Nova 
Scotia, and New Brunswick have expressed their desire to be federally united 
into One Dominion under the Crown of the United Kingdom of Great Brit- 
ain and Ireland, with a Constitution similar in Principle to that of the 
United Kingdom." The Act is cited in brief as "The British North America 
Act 1867," and provides that the Dominion of Canada shall be divided into 
four provinces named Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick ; that 
there shall be a Governor General who may select his own Privy Council; 
that there shall be a Parliament consisting of a Senate, with members ap- 
pointed by the Governor General for life, and a House of Commons of elected 
representatives; that the seat of Government shall be at Ottawa; that each 
Province shall have a Lieutenant Governor appointed by the Governor Gen- 
eral and a local legislature similar to the Dominion Parliament; and making 
provision for the admission of Newfoundland, Prince Edward Island, British 
Columbia and Rupert's Land and the North-western Territory. The Act 
took effect on the 1st July, 1867, which day is annually observed as "Do- 
minion Day." 

The first Parliament of Canada, which convened at Ottawa on Novem- 
ber 6, 1867, was naturally largely concerned in revising and consolidating the 
laws of the various Provinces, and among these of course appeared the Post 
Office Laws. A number of changes were introduced, but many of the provisions 

i30»— 31° Vict. Cap. III. 



THE DOMINION OF CANADA 95 

of former Acts were embodied almost as they stood in the new statute. A\"e 
reproduce its most important features in our line of inquiry. 

31° Vict. Cap. X. 
An Act for the regulation of the Postal Service. 
[Assented to 21st. December, 1867.] 
Her Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate 
and House of Commons of Canada, enacts as follows : 

Preliminary — Interpretation. 

1. This Act shall be known and may be cited as The Post 
Office Act 1867 ; and the following terms and expressions therein shall 
be held to have the meaning hereinafter assigned to them 

The term "Letter" includes Packets of Letters ; 

The term "Postage" means the duty or sum chargeable for the 
conveyance of Post Letters, Packets and other things by Post; 

The term "Foreign Coxmtry" means any country not included in 
the dominions of Her Majesty; 

The term "Foreign Postage" means the postage on the con- 
veyance of Letters, Packets or other things, within any Foreign 
Country or payable to any Foreign Government; 

The term "Canada Postage" means the postage on the convey- 
ance of Letters, Packets and other things by Post within the Do- 
minion of Canada or by Canada Mail Packet ; 

The term "Mail" inchides every conveyance by which Post Letters 
are carried, whether it be by land or by water ; 

The term "British Packet Postage" means the postage due on the 
conveyance of letters by British Packet Boats, between the United 
Kingdom and British North America ; — And the term "British 
Postage" includes all Postage not being Foreign, Colonial or Canadian ; 

■X- * « * * * 4C- * * 

The term "Post Letter" means any letter transmitted or deposited 
in any Post OiKce to be transmitted by the Post ; — And a letter shall be 
deemed a Post Letter from the time of its being so deposited or deliv- 
ered at a Post Office, to the time of its being delivered to the party to 
whom it is addressed 

3. All Laws in force in the Provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia 
or New Brunswick, at the Union thereof on the first of July, one 
thousand eight hundred and sixty-seven, in respect to the Postal 
Service, and continued in force by the "British North America Act 
1867," shall be and the same are hereby repealed. 

Organization and General Provisions. 
7. There shall be at the seat of Government of Canada a Post 
Office Department for the superintendence and management of the 
Postal Service of Canada, under the direction of a Postmaster General. 



96 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

8. The Postmaster General shall be appointed by Commission 
under the Great Seal of Canada, and shall hold his ofBce during 
pleasure. 

10. The Postmaster General may, subject to the provisions of 
this Act: 

1. Establish and close Post OfBces and Post Eoutes ; 



3. Enter into and enforce all contracts relating to the con- 
veyance of the Mails or other business of the Post OfSce ; 

4. [Make regulations concerning mailaMe matter and limits 
of weight and dimensions of such.} 

5. [Establish rates of postage and conditions on matter 
not already provided for.} 

6. Cause to be prepared and distributed Postage Stamps, neces- 
sary for the prepayment of Postages under this Act, also 
stamped envelopes for the like purpose ; 

7. [Make arrangements concerning Posts and Postal business 
with postal authorities outside of Canada.] 



11. Prescribe and enforce such Regulations as to letters di- 
rected to be registered as to him may seem necessary, in re- 
spect to the registration of letters and other matter passing 
by Mail, as well between places in Canada, as between Can- 
ada and the United Kingdom, any British Possession, the 
United States or any other Foreign Country, and to the 
charge to be made for the same ; and also in respect to the 
registration by the officers of the Post Office of letters un- 
questionably containing money or other valuable enclosure 
when posted without registration by the senders of the same, 
and to imposing a rate of two cents registration charge upon 
such letters ; 

14. Establish and provide Street Letter Boxes or Pillar Boxes 
or Boxes of any other description for the receipt of letters 
and such other mailable matter as he may deem expedient, in 
the streets of any City or Town in Canada, or at any Railway 
Station or other public place where he may consider such 
Letter Boxes to be necessary; 

15. Grant licenses revocable at pleasure, to Agents other than 
Postmasters, for the sale to the Public of Postage Stamps 
and Stamped Envelopes, and allow to such Agents a commis- 
sion of not exceeding five per cent, on the amount of their 
sales. 



THE DOMINION OF CANADA 97 

Eates op Postage. 

19. On all letters transmitted by Post for any distance witMn Can- 
ada, except in cases herein otherwise specially provided for, there 
shall be charged and paid one uniform rate of three cents per half 
ounce in weight, any fraction of an ounce being chargeable as a half 
ounce, provided that such three cents postage rate be prepaid by post- 
age stamps or in current coin at the time of posting such letters ; 
and when such letters are posted without prepayment being made 
thereon, then and in such case it shall be lawful to charge upon 
letters so posted unpaid a rate of five cents per half ounce. 

20. On letters not transmitted through the mails, but posted and 
delivered at the same Post OfSce, commonly known as local or drop 
letters, the rate shall be one cent, to be in all cases prepaid by post- 
age stamp affixed to such letters. 

31. [Seamen and Soldiers, etc. in Her Majesty's service, entitled 
to receive and send letters on payment of a certain special sum in 
lieu of all British postage, shall te freed lilceioise from Canadian 
postage.'] 

33. The rate of postage upon newspapers printed and published 
in Canada, and issued not less frequently than once a week, from a 
known office of publication, and sent to regular subscribers in Canada 
by mail, shall be as follows : upon each such newspaper, when issued 
once a, week, the rate for each quarter of a year, commencing on the 
first of January, first of April, first of July, or first of October of each 
year, shall be five cents, when issued twice a week, ten cents, when 
issued three times a week, fifteen cents, when issued six times a 
week, thirty cents, and in that proportion, adding one rate of five 
cents for each issue more frequent than once a week ; and such post- 
age must be pre-paid in advance from the first day of the quarter 
from which the payment commences, for a term of not less than a 

quarter of a year ; provided, nevertheless, that Exchange Papers, 

addressed by one editor or publisher of a newspaper to another editor 
or publisher, may be sent by Post free of charge. 

33. On all newspapers sent by Post in Canada, except in the cases 
hereinbefore expressly provided for, there shall be payable a rate not 
exceeding two cents each, and when such newspapers are posted in 
Canada this rate shall In all cases be prepaid by postage stamp 
affixed to the same. 

34. For the purposes of this Act, the word "Newspapers" shall 
be held to mean periodicals published not less frequently than once 
in each week, and containing notices of passing events. 

25. The rate of postage upon periodical publications, other than 
newspapers, shall be one cent per four ounces, or half a cent per 
number, when such periodicals weigh less than one ounce and are 
posted singly, and when such periodical publications are posted in 
Canada, these rates shall in all cases be prepaid by postage stamps 
afiixed to the same. 



98 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

26. On. books, pamphlets, occasional publications, printed cir- 
culars, prices current, handbills, book and newspaper manuscript, 
printer's proof sheets whether corrected or not, maps, prints, draw- 
ings, engravings, photographs when not on glass, in cases containing' 
glass, sheet music whether printed or written, packages of seeds, cut- 
tings, bulbous roots, scions or grafts, patterns or samples of merchan- 
dize or goods, the rate of postage shall be one cent per ounce ; pro- 
vided that no letter or other communication intended to serve the 
purpose of a letter be sent or enclosed therein, and that the same be 
sent in covers open at the ends or sides or otherwise so put up as to 
admit of inspection by the OiEcers of the Post Office to ensure com- 
pliance with this provision — and this postage rate shall be prepaid 
by postage stamps in all cases when such articles are posted in Canada. 

37. [Foregoing rates suhject to svcli conditions as may he agreed 
upon hetween Canada and any other country.] 

28. [Postage on unpaid letters is due from addressee, or if re- 
fused may 6e recovered with costs by civil action from sender. (See 
13°— 14° Vict. Cap. 17, Sec. 12.)] 

29. In all cases where letters and other mailable matter are 
posted for places without the limits of Canada, on which stamps for 
pre-payment are afHxed of less value than the true rate of Postage to 
which such letters are liable, — or when stamps for prepayment are 
affixed to letters addressed to any place as aforesaid for which pre- 
payment cannot be taken in Canada, — the Postmaster General may 
forward such letters, charged with postage, as if no stamp had been 
affixed. 

30. And for avoiding doubts, and preventing inconvenient delay 
in the posting and delivery of letters, — no Postmaster shall be bound 
to give change, but the exact amount of the postage on any letter or 
other mailable matter shall be tendered or paid to him in current coin 
as respects letters or other things delivered, and in current coin or 
postage stamps as the case may require in respect to the letters or 
other things posted. 

31. [The Postmaster General may make reasonahle compensation 
to Masters of vessels not Post Office Packets for conveyance of ship 
letters from foreign ports to Canada.] 

32. [Postinaster General has exclusive privilege of collecting, con- 
veying and delivering letters, etc.; $20 penalty for infraction. (See 
13°_14° Vict. Cap. XVII, Sec. 9.)] 

****** * * » 

35. [The Postmaster General may employ Letter Carriers, and 
charge two cents for delivery of a letter and one cent for a neivspaper 
or pamphlet. (See 14°— 15° Vict. Cap. LXXI. Sec. 15.)] 

36. It shall be lawful for the Postmaster General, with the con- 
sent of the Governor in Council, to establish in any city, when he 
shall deem it expedient, a system of free delivery by Letter Carrier 
of letters brought by mail and he may direct that from the time that 



THE DOMINION OF CANADA 99 

such system is established, no charge shall be made for the de- 
livery of such letters by Letter Carriers in such city, and further that 
on drop or local letters when delivered by Letter Carrier in such 
city, one cent only per half ounce shall be charged in addition to the 
ordinary local or drop letter rate. 

37. [Postmaster General may estahlish a parcel post. (See 23° 
Vict. Cap. XVII. Sec. 5.)] 

38. [Usual franking of official matter (See 18° Vict. Cap. LXXIX. 
Sees. 4, 5, 6, 7 and 34° Vict. Cap. XXV. Sec. 6), but limited to trans- 
mission in Canada.] 

*** **«»««* 

40. Letters, or other articles, which from any cause remain 
undelivered in any Post Office, or which having been posted, cannot 
be forwarded by post, shall under such regulations as the Postmaster 
General may make, be transmitted by Postmasters to the Post Office 
Department as Dead Letters, there to be opened and returned to the 
writers on payment of any postage due thereon, with five cents addi- 
tional on each Dead Letter to defray the costs of returning the same, 
or such Dead Letters may in any case or class of cases be otherwise 
disposed of as the Postmaster General may direct. 

77. [Stealing mail matter or forging stamps, etc., (see 13° — 14° 
Vict. Cap. XVII. Sec. 16) is a felony. Stealing or damaging printed 
matter, package of merchandise, etc., or enclosing a letter in other 
mail matter, or obstructing mails is a misdemeanor.] 

Sub. sec. 16. To remove with fradulent intent from any letter, 
newspaper or other mailable matter, sent by Post, any postage 
stamp which shall have been affixed thereon, or wilfully, with intent 
aforesaid remove from any postage stamp which shall have been pre- 
viously used, any mark which shall have been made thereon at any 
Post Office, shall be a misdemeanor. 

81. If any person uses or attempts to use in prepayment of post- 
age on any letter or other mailable matter posted in this Province, 
any postage stamp which has been before used for a like purpose, 
such person shall be subject to a penalty of not less than Ten and 
not exceeding Forty dollars for every such ofEense, and the letter 
or other mailable matter on which such stamp has been so improperly 
used may be detained, or in the discretion of the Postmaster General 
forwarded to its destination charged with double postage. 

91. This Act shall come into operation on the first day of April, 
one thousand eight hundred and sixty-eight. 



Although the above Act gives most of the groundwork upon which the 
Post Office Department of Canada has since been operated, save of course the 



100 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

changes in detail that will be noted in their proper places, yet it seems advis- 
able, in spite of some possible repetition, to quote the larger part of the In- 
structions sent out to Postmasters in preparation for the impending changes, 
because of additional details to be found therein. 

To All Postmasters, and Othbb Persons Employed in the Postal 

Service of Canada: 
Department Order No. 3. 

Post Office Department, 

Ottawa, 1st March, 1868. 

The Post Office Act, passed on the 21st December, 1867, for the 
regulation of the Postal Service, will come into operation throughout 
the Dominion on and from the 1st April, 1868. 

A copy of the Statute, and of the General Regulations founded 
thereon, will be forwarded to every Postmaster, whether in charge of 
a regular Post-Office, Way OiRce or Sub-Office, and to every Railway 
Mail Clerk; meanwhile the following summary of the principal pro- 
visions of the Act, as affecting the organization of the Department, in 
relation to the several Provinces of the Dominion, the postage rates 
to be charged from and after the 1st. April, etc., etc., is supplied for 
the information of Postmasters and other persons employed in the 
Post Office Service of Canada. 

Organization of the Department. 

1. The Superintendence and Management of the Postal Service 
of Canada is vested in the Post Office Department, at the seat of Gov- 
ernment, Ottawa, under the direction of the Postmaster General of 
Canada. 

2. Subject to the directions of the Postmaster General, the gen- 
eral management of the business of the Department will be with the 
Deputy Postmaster General of Canada. 

3. The local Superintendence of Post Office business, and per- 
formance of such duties as are assigned to them by the Statute, or 
entrusted to them from time to time by the Postmaster General, 
will be confided to the Post Office Inspectors, of whom there are 
seven, stationed and exercising their powers and functions in the 
undermentioned Postal Divisions. 

Postal Division. Post Office Address. 

Nova Scotia Halifax, N. S. 

New Brunswick and the Bay 

Chaleurs, Coast of Gaspe Frederickton. for the present 

Province of Quebec, as far West as Three Rivers Quebec 

Province of Quebec, from Three Rivers Westward Montreal 

Province of Ontario, as far as Cobourg Kingston 

ProviTice of Ontario, from Cobourg to Hamilton Toronto 

Province of Ontario, from Hamilton Westward London 



THE DOMINION OF CANADA 101 

4. All Postmasters, including Way OfBce and Sub-Office Keepers, 
are continued in Of&ce, and all Bonds and Mail Contracts continued 
in force, subject to the ordinary conditions of such appointments and 
engagements, and to the future action of the Department. 

PKINCIPAL EATES OP POSTAGE. 
li:ttebs. 

5. On letters passing between any two places within the Do- 
minion of Canada, a uniform rate, (irrespective of distance) of three 
cents per % oz., if prepaid ; and five cents per % oz., if posted unpaid. 

6. On letters between any place in the Dominion and any place in 
the United States, 6 cents per % oz., if prepaid; and 10 cents per 
V2 oz., if posted unpaid. 

7. On letters to or from the United Kingdom, in Mails by Canada 
Packets, to or from Quebec in summer, or Portland in winter ; or by 
Mail Packet to or from Halifax, 12% cents per % oz. 

On do. in Mails via New York Packet 15 cents per 1^ oz. 

On letters to Prince Edward Island, if prepaid, 3 " " do 

if posted unpaid, 5 " " do 
On letters to Newfoundland, to be in all cases 

prepaid, 12% " " do 
On letters to British Columbia and Vancouver 

Island, in all cases to be prepaid, 10 " " do 

On letters to Red River, to be in all cases prepaid, 6 " " do 
On letters to Red River, to be in all cases 

prepaid, 6 " " do 

NEWSPAPER RATES. 

8. Newspapers printed and published in Canada may be sent 
by Post from the office of publication to any place in Canada at the 
following rates, if paid quarterly in advance, either by the Publisher, 
at the Post Office where the papers are posted or by the subscriber, 
at the Post Office where the papers are delivered: — 

For a paper published once a week 5 cents per quarter of a year. 

do twice a week... 10 do 

do three times 15 do 

do six times 30 do 

If the above rates are prepaid by the Publisher, the Postmaster 
receiving payment must be careful to have the papers so prepaid sep- 
arately put up, and marked, distinctly, as prepaid. 

When the above rates are not prepaid in advance, by either the 
Publisher at the Ofiace of posting or by the subscriber at the Office 
of delivery, the papers are to be charged one cent each on delivery. 

9. Canadian Newspapers, addressed froia the Office of publication 
to subscribers in the United Kingdom, the United States, Prince Ed- 



102 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

ward Island and Newfoundland, may be forwarded, on prepayment at 
the Office in Canada where posted, at the above commuted rates, ap- 
plicable to such papers within the Dominion. 

10. Exchange Papers passing between publishers in Canada, and be- 
tween publishers in Canada and publishers in the United States, Prince 
Edward Island and Newfoundland, are to pass free — one copy of each 
paper to each publisher. 

11. Transient Newspapers include all Newspapers posted in Can- 
ada, other than Canada Newspapers sent from the Office of publication, 
and when addressed to any place within the Dominion, to the United 
Kingdom, to the United States, Prince Edward Island or Newfound- 
land, must be prepaid two cents each by postage stamp. 

13. Newspapers coming into Canada will be subject to the fol- 
lowing charges on delivery : 

If from the United Kingdom, by mail packet to Quebec, Halifax 

or Portland — Free on delivery. 
By mails via the United States (New York), Two cents each. 
If from the United States, two cents each, to be rated at the 

Canada Frontier, or exchange Office receiving mails from the 

United States. 
If from Prince Edward Island or Newfoundland, when received 

by regular subscribers in Canada from the Office of publican 

tion, the ordinary commuted rates applicable to Canada 

Newspapers. 
Transient Papers — two cents each. 

13. The Canada Postage rates on Newspapers coming or going 
to the United Kingdom and the United States, will thus be the same 
as those charged in the United Kingdom and the United States on 
Newspapers there received from or sent to Canada. 

14. Canada News Agents naay post to regular subscribers in Can- 
ada, British Newspapers free, and United States Newspapers unpaid, 
such papers in the latter case, must be duly rated two cents each for 
collection on delivery. 

PRINTED PAPEES, CIRCULARS, PRICES CURRENT, HAND BILLS, 
BOOKS, PAMPHLETS. 

15. The rate on printed matter of this description posted in 
Canada, and addressed to any place in Canada, Prince Edward Island, 
Newfoundland or the United States, will be one cent per ounce, to be 
prepaid by Postage Stamp ; and a like rate will be payable on delivery, 
when received from the United States, Prince Edward Island or New- 
foundland. 

PERIODICAL PUBLICATIONS. 

16. When posted in Canada for any place in Canada, Prince 
Edward Island, Newfoundland or the United States, the rate will be 
one cent per four ounces. 



THE DOMINION OF CANADA 103 

17. A like rate will be payable on delivery in Canada, when re- 
ceived from the United States, Prince Edward Island or Newfound- 
land. 

18. Periodicals weighing less than one ounce per number, when 
posted in Canada for any place within the Dominion, Prince Edward 
Island, Newfoundland or the United States may, when put up singly, 
pass for one half cent per number, to be prepaid by Postage Stamp. 

19. As the Postage Rates on Periodicals, other than Newspapers, 
will be payable in advance, and as certain classes of such periodicals, 
printed and published in Canada, and sent from the ofBce of publi- 
cation to regular subscribers, have for some time past been exempted 
from postage where exclusively devoted to the education of youth, 
to temperance, agriculture and science, or for other reasons, it is 
ordered, that with respect to periodicals which do now enjoy this priv- 
ilege or exemption, the exemption shall continue until the expiration 
of the current year — that is until the 31st December, 1868, and that 
from the 1st. January, 1869, all such special exemptions and privileges 
shall cease. 

PARCEL POST. 

20. The rate on Parcels, by Parcel Post, will be 13% cents per 
8 ounces, that is to say : — 

On a parcel not exceeding 8 oz 13% cents 

Over 8 oz., and not exceeding 1 lb 35 cents 

Over 1 lb., and not exceeding 34 oz 37% cents 

And so on, to the limit of three lbs. 

BOOK AND NEWSPAPER MANUSCRIPT, AND OTHER 
MISCELLANEOUS MATTER. 

21. On Book and Newspaper Manuscript (meaning written articles 
intended for insertion in a newspaper or periodical, and addressed to 
the Editor or Publisher thereof, for insertion). Printers' Proof Sheets, 
whether corrected or not. Maps, Prints, Drawings, Engravings, Music, 
whether printed or written, packages of Seeds, Cuttings, Roots, 
Scions or Grafts, and Botanical Specimens, the rate will be 1 cent per 
ounce when posted for any place in Canada or the United States, and 
prepaid by Postage Stamp. 

POSTAGE STAMPS. 

32. To enable the Public to prepay conveniently by Postage 
Stamp the foregoing rates, the following denominations of Postage 
Stamps for use throughout the Dominion, have been prepared, and will 
be supplied to Postmasters for sale : — 



104 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

Half Cent Stamps 

One cent do 

Two cent do 

Tliree cent do V All bearing, as a device, the effigy 

Six cent do J ^j g-g^ Majesty. 

Twelve and a 

half cent do 
Fifteen cent do 

23. The Postage Stamps now in use in the several Provinces may 
be accepted, as at present, in prepayment of letters, etc., for a reason- 
able time after the 1st of April; but from and after that date all 
issues and sales to the public will be of the new denomination. 

FKANKING AND FKEE MATTEK. 

The following matter is exempt from Canadian Postage: — 
34. All letters and other mailable matter addressed to or sent 
by the Governor of Canada. 

25. All letters or other mailable matter addressed to or sent by 
any Department of the Government, at the seat of Government at 
Ottawa, under such regulations as may from time to time be made 
by the Governor in Council. 

26. All letters and other mailable matter addressed to or sent 
by the Speaker or Chief Clerk of the Senate or of the House of Com- 
mons, or to or by any Member of either House, at the Seat of Gov- 
ernment, during any Session of Parliament — or addressed to any of 
the Members or Officers in this section mentioned at the Seat of 
Government as aforesaid, during the ten days next before the meet- 
ing of Parliament. 

27. All public documents and printed papers sent by the Speaker 
or Chief Clerk of the Senate or of the House of Commons to any Mem- 
ber of either House during the recess of Parliament. 

28. All papers printed by order of either House sent by Members 
of either House during the recess of Parliament. 

39. Petitions and Addresses to either of the Provincial Legisla- 
tures of Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, or to any 
branch thereof ; and votes, proceedings and other papers, printed by 
order of any such Legislature, or any branch thereof, during any Ses- 
sion thereof, — provided such petitions and addresses, votes, proceed- 
ings and other papers, are sent without covers, or in covers open at 
the ends or sides, and contain no Letter or written communication to 
serve the purpose of a Letter. 

30. Letters and other mailable matter (except that provided for 
as above) addressed to or sent by the Provincial Governments or Legis- 
latures of Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, will be 
liable to the ordinary rates of Postage. 



THE DOMINION OF CANADA 105 

31. Public documents and printed papers sent under the foregoing 
clauses should bear, as part of the address, the bona fide superscription 
of the Speaker, Chief Clerk, or Officer specially deputed for this pur- 
pose to act for those functionaries, or of the Member sending the same. 

33. The privilege of free transmission, as above described, has 
effect only as respects Canada Postage rates. 

33. All letters and other mailable matter to and from the Post- 
master General and the Deputy Postmaster General, and all Official 
communications to and from the Post Office Department, and to and 
from the Post Office Inspectors, are to pass free of Canadian Postage. 

34. All letters and communications on the business of the Post 
Office Department, intended for the Post Office Department at Ottawa, 
should be invariably addressed to "The Postmaster General." The 
branch of the Department for which the letter or communication is 
intended should be written on the left hand upper corner of the letter, 
tihus: — 

'Tor Accountant" 

"For Secretary" 

[etc.] 
as the case may be, but the main direction must be to the Postmaster 
General, or Deputy Postmaster General. 

85. All letters containing a remittance on account of the Public 
Revenue sent by any Postmaster in Canada to a Bank or Bank Agency; 
and all remittances or acknowledgements sent by a Bank or Bank 
agency, on account of Public Revenue, to any Postmaster in Canada, 
are to pass free through the Post, as respects both postage and regis- 
tration charge. 

36. No change is made in the Way or Sub-Office system of Nova 
Scotia and New Brunswick, Quebec or Ontario. 

37. No change is made in the Money Order System. 

38. A system of Post Office Savings Banks will be instituted on 
the 1st. April, and will be extended as quickly as practicable to all the 
principal cities, towns and places throughout the Dominion. 

A. CAMPBELL, Postmaster General. 



CHAPTER VIII 

THE ISSUE OF 1868 

A GLANCE at the new regulations quoted in the last chapter will show 
that there is no five or seventeen cent prepaid rate, and but one at ten 
cents — to British Columbia and Vancouver Island; as a result these 
three denominations are not found in the new set of Dominion postage stamps. 
On the other hand the half cent transient newspaper rate, the three cent letter 
rate, with, its double at six cents, and the new British Packet rate via New York 
of fifteen instead of seventeen cents, necessitated these four additional denom- 
inations in the new series. 

The stamps themselves are as usual line engraved on steel, and present 
more "continuity of design" throughout the set than before. The main fea- 
ture of this design is a circular medallion bearing a diademed profile por- 
trait of Queen Victoria to right, on a horizontally lined ground. Arched 
above this medallion are the words CANADA POSTAGE, and beneath it the 
value, both in words and Arabic numerals, a slightly different arrangement 
occurring on each denomination. Foliations of acanthus pattern fill in the 
remainder of the design, making the outline somewhat irregular. The stamps 
are fairly large, averaging 20 x 24 mm. in size, except the half cent, which 
is considerably smaller, being only 17 x 21 mm. They will be found illus- 
trated as Nos. 17, 16, 18, 20, 22, 23 and 24 on Plate I. 

The stamps were printed in sheets of 100, ten rows of ten, and by the 
imprint we find they were the product of a new concern. This imprint ap- 
pears in colorless capitals on a narrow strip of color with bossed ends, and 
reads BEITISH AMEKICAN BANK NOTE CO. MONTEEAL & OTTA- 
WA. This strip is framed by a very thin parallel line, its entire width being 
but one millimeter, while its length is about 51 mm. It occurs but once on 
a side, being placed against the middle two stamps (numbers 5 and 6) of 
each row at a distance of about 3 mm. (see illustration 107 on Plate IX.) 
The inscription reads up on the left and down on the right, as before, but the 
bottom one is now upright, instead of being reversed. 

In the case of the half cent stamp at least, we find an additional marginal 



THE ISSUE OF 1868 107 

imprint over the second and third stamps of the top row. This consists of 
the words HALF CEISTT, in shaded Eoman capitals 4 mm. high, the whole 
being about 40 mm. long, (illustration 119 on Plate XI). Presumably the 
same thing, varied for each denomination, occurs on other values of the series, 
as we find it does on the succeeding issue ; but a strip from the top of a sheet of 
the 15 cent stamps proves that it was lacking on that value at least. 

The normal colors of the stamps of this series are approximately: — 
% cent, black; 1 cent, brown red; 2 cents, green; 3 cents, deep red; 6 cents, 
dark brown; 12% cents, deep blue; 15 cents, mauve. We say approximately, 
since there is considerable variation as may be noted by a glance at the Ref- 
erence List. Particularly is this the case with the 15 cent stamp. The earliest 
tint is the one we have noted — mauve; but the stamp was in practically con- 
tinuous use down to 1900, and the gamut of shades and colors through which 
it passed in that time is almost equal to the 10 cent stamp of the preceding 
issue. 

Of the approximate dates of issue of some of the more pronounced shades 
of the 15 cent stamp it is possible to give an idea through the chronicles of 
various contemporary magazines which noted them. The original stamp we 
know was in a mauve tint, and was so chronicled in the Stamp Collector's 
Magazine for May 1868 (VI: 71). The Amencan Journal of Philately 
for April 20, 1868, (1:18) describes it as "lilac". The Stamp Collector's 
Magazine in December, 1874 (XII: 182) says it has "just appeared in a 
dull deep mauve." Next M. Moens notes that it has become gray lilac, in 
Le Timhre-poste for March, 1877. Again in the issue for June, 1880, he 
records it in bright violet, while in May, 1881, it is described as a dark slate 
color (ardoise fonce). In the July, 1888, issue of the Halifax Philatelist 
the color is said to have reverted to the mauve tint of the first printings ex- 
cept that it was "more bluish", and once more in May, 1890, the Dominion 
Philatelist states that "The Canada 15c. has again changed color. It is now 
bright violet." Finally, in Mekeel's Weekly for March 12, 1896, under 
"Canadian J^otes", we read that "quite a large stock is still on hand in the P. O. 
Department, but no more are being printed. What are going out now are the 
remainders of various batches. They are coming in all shades; some being 
almost the first issue colors." 

It remains to note two additions to this series. The first was a change 
in color: — the 1 cent and 3 cent stamps were quite naturally found to be too 
nearly alike in shade to properly differentiate them in the rush of post oifice busi- 



108 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

ness. Hence the 1 cent was changed to an orange yellow, appearing in its new 
dress in 1869. The exact date seems not to be available, but we find it first noted 
in The Philatelist for April 1, 1869, in these words: — "The 1 cent and 3 c. 
of this colony have been hitherto almost identical in hue ; that anomaly is now 
rectified by the recent emission of the former value in bright orange." In 
the "Sunmiary for the year 1869", the same paper credits the issue to Jan- 
uary, 1869.1 

The second addition was a 5 cent stamp, which is a bit of an anomaly 
inasmuch as it is a companion in size and design to the 1868 series, but was 
issued on October 1, 1875, after the series in reduced size, begun in 1870, 
had been practically completed. The explanation is simple: the die of this 
large 5 cent stamp had been engraved in 1867 with the other values of the 
first Dominion series,^ but as there were no rates requiring such a denomina- 
tion in the set, it was not issued. When in 1875 the need for a 5 cent value 
arose, the unused die was employed to make a plate for temporary use, 
until a new die conforming in size and design with the small stamps could 
be prepared. The large 5 cent stamp is thus really in the nature of a pro- 
visional, for its smaller and permanent successor followed it in about four 
months. 

The statement is often made that the 5 cent denomination was required 
because of Canada's entry into the Universal Postal Union, which was in- 
stituted on July 1, 1875. The statement has elements of truth in it, inasmuch 
as the indirect results of Canada's application produced the 5 cent rate which 
required the new stamp; but the statement is not exact because Canada was 
not actually admitted to the Postal Union until three years later. The Post- 
master General's Eeports tell the story. The Report for 30th June, 1875 
says : — 

A treaty for the formation of a General Postal Union, and for 
tlie adoption of uniform postage rates and reflations for Interna- 
tional correspondence, was arranged and signed at Berne, Switzer- 
land, in October, 1874, by the representatives of the Post Offices of 
the chief Nations of the world. This agreement took effect between 
all the countries which were directly parties to the Treaty, in July last. 

^The Philatelist, IV: 42. 

In the first series of the American Journal of Philately for June 1, 1868 (I: 25) we read: 
"Tha Canadian Government have had a 5 cent Stamp prepared, engraved of the same type as 
the present set, the most noticeable difference being the circle round the head which Is 
corded. The specimen sent us Is printed in brown on India paper, bearing the Company's im- 
print underneath." 



THE ISSUE OF 1868 109 

The Treaty did not include the British Possessions beyond the sea, 
but Canada has, with the concurrence of the Imperial Government, 
applied for admission as a member of this Postal Union. Meanwhile 
the letter rate of postage between Canada and the United Kingdom 
has, by arrangement with the Imperial Post OfBce, been reduced to 
the International rate of S% pence sterling — 5 cents currency, 
established by the Union regulations ; and this reduction has also 
been made applicable to correspondence passing by way of New York, 
making the rate between Canada and the United Kingdom uniform 
at 5 cents by whatever route conveyed. 

From the Report of 30th June, 1876 we find that the application of 
Canada for admission to the Universal Postal Union was not successful owing 
to the opposition of France. Because of differences with Great Britain in 
regard to admitting Colonies beyond the seas at the same rates as European 
countries, British India and the French Colonies had been admitted with 
a reduced rate of 6 pence per half ounce letter, so as to include cost of sea 
transit. France contended that Canada should be kept to the same terms. 
From the Report of 30th June, 1877 we learn that Canada by treaty had 
obtained the Postal Union rate of 5 cents with Germany, including Prussia, 
Saxony, Hanover, Bavaria, Baden and Wurtemberg. The letter rate with 
Newfoundland had also been reduced from 6 cents to 5 cents per half ounce. 

The Report for 30th June, 1878 brings matters to fruition: — 

At the meeting of the International Postal Congress, which, 
under the provisions of the Postal Treaty of Berne, concluded in 
October, 1874, took place at Paris in May, 1878, Canada was ad- 
mitted to be a member of the General Postal Union from the 1st 
July, 1878, and in consequence the rate of letter postage between Can- 
ada and all Europe became one uniform charge of 5 cents per half 
ounce. Newspapers and other printed matter, and samples and 
patterns of merchandise also became subject to uniform postage 
rates and regulations for all destinations in Europe. Existing postal 
arrangements between the United States and Canada were, by mu- 
tual agreement, allowed to remain undisturbed by the entry of Can- 
ada into the Union, under a provision of the General Postal Union 
Treaty applicable to such a case. 

The last remark refers to the treaty which took effect on 1st February, 
1875, by which letters posted in Canada or the United States could be sent 
to the other country at the single domestic rate of three cents — of which more 
later. 



110 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

This large 5 cent stamp was of course line engraved like the rest of the 
series, and issued in sheets of 100, ten rows of ten. The sheet bore four mar- 
ginal imprints, arranged as before, but of a slightly different type from the 
1868 issue. This new imprint is in capitals and lower case letters on a colored 
strip 56 mm. long and 21/2 mm. wide, with a border of pearls, and reads: 
"British American Bank Note Co. Montreal." Doubtless the words "FIVE 
CElSTTS" in shaded Roman capitals would be found over the second and third 
stamps of the top row if one were fortunate enough to possess this portion of a 
sheet. The stamp is illustrated as 'No. 21 on Plate I, and the marginal imprint is 
of the type shown in illustration l^o. 118 on plate XI. The normal color 
of this 5 cent stamp is an olive gray, and it is perforated 12, as are all the 
other values of the set. 

The paper upon which the series of 1868 was printed was in general an 
ordinary white wove variety which varied considerably from a very thin, almost 
pelure quality to a quite hard and thick variety. Laid paper also makes its ap- 
pearance again in this set. In Messrs. Corwin and King's article* we read : — 
"The 3 cents on laid paper was first brought to attention in the Philatelic 
Record for March, 1882,* wherein it was stated that Mr. Tapling had a copy 
in his collection. The 1 cent was first mentioned in the National Philatelist 
for January, 1883, by Mr. Corwin, its discoverer, in these words : 'Some time 
since I saw noted in the Philatelic Record the existence of a 3 cent Canada 
stamp, emission of 1868, on laid paper. In looking through my Canadian 
varieties, after reading this note, I discovered also a copy of the one cent 
red, same emission, on laid paper' ". The 1 cent yellow is likewise cata- 
logued by the London Society,® but the following remark is added : "The One 
Cent, yellow, on laid paper, is not known to the Society. It is taken from 
The Halifax Philatelist for July, 1888, page 74." Concerning this Messrs. 
Corwin and King state:® "This was inserted in the Halifax Philatelist in 
error; so far as we know this stamp does not exist. The original sin of 
chronicling this stamp, however, rests with M. Moens, for in the Philatelic 
Record for January, 1883, the fact is stated that M. Moens states that he 
knows of the existence of the Ic. orange on laid paper." Mr. Charles La- 
throp Pack adds his testimony against this quondam stamp :^ "I do not be- 

'Metropolltan Philatelist, II; 57. 

'This is an error, for in Le TImbre-Poste for November, 1877 (XV: 84), M. Moens says: 
"M. Fourg nous fait remarquer que le 3 cents ri868] a §t6 imprimg exceptionnellement sur 
papier vergg." 

'North American Colonies of Great Britain, page 16. 

"IVletropoiitan Philatelist, II: 57. 

'London Philatelist, XVI: 144. 



THE ISSUE OF 1868 111 

lieve that the Ic, yellow, exists on laid paper. iN'one of the large collectors 
of Canada or of this country have seen it, and I believe there is no real au- 
thority for listing it." There was none : and now that we have tracked it down, 
the laugh seems to be on the Philatelic Record, and M. Moens is absolved 
from his "original sin." In Le Timhre-Poste for January, 1883, under the 
heading Canada we read: "Semblable an 3 cents, 1868, sur papier verge 
blanc, il existe: 1 cent, brun-orange." This was the information quoted in 
the Philatelic Record,^ but the translator evidently mistook the proper ren- 
dering of the French color name as orange-hrown, and translated it simply 
orange, whence the error spread. We can therefore dispose quite effectually 
of the question and of the phantom stamp in the same breath. 

Concerning the laid paper stamps Messrs. Corwin and King say they 
"must have been among the first issued, as we have seen a copy of the 1 cent, 
red-brown, postmarked ISTovember 2Y, 1868."* That this must have been the 
case is proved by the existence of the 1 cent in brown-red and not in yellow, 
as would have been the case if the paper were used in 1869 or thereafter. 
Meheel's Weehly'^^ also records the 3 cent on a cover bearing date of August 
31, 1868. 

The 15 cent stamp was reported in the American Journal of Philately 
for October, 1892, in these words: "Mr. F. de Coppet has shown us a 15 c. 
of the 1868 issue on thin paper, horizontally laid," and the stamp is described 
as "violet". We have not seen a copy, but if it was in the early "mauve" tint 
it probably was a companion of the 1 cent and 3 cents, the latter being found 
on both thick and thin horizontally laid paper according to Messrs. Corwin 
and King's lists. If the "violet" was of the gray shades, it belonged to a 
later printing and not with the early stamps. Mr. Pack lists another variety 
stilP^ : "I also have a copy of the 15 c. on distinctly soft ribbed paper." This 
stamp is in the lilac gray shade and therefore belongs to later printings as we 
shall see, for this ribbed paper is found in all values of the small stamps of 
the succeeding issue. 

One other variety of paper needs our attention, and that is the water- 
marked paper. The fact of its use was early knovTU to collectors, for in The 
Philatelist for February, 1870, in an article on "British ISTorth America" by 
W. Dudley Atlee, after the "Issue for Confederation" is the following 

'Philateirc Record, IV: 213. 
'Metropolitan Philatelist, II: 67. 
I'Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, IX: 64. 
"London Philatelist, XVI: 144. 



112 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

"]S"ote.— There is also in the last series of adhesives a Three Cent printed on 
paper watermarhed with maker's name ; these were most probably issued after 
the thin paper and before the usual stout paper emissions." Mr. H. F. 
Ketcheson, commenting on the above in 1889,^^ remarks: "the one cent red 
also appears on same paper, as I have two specimens of each in my posses- 
sion." The Halifax Philatelist,'^^ in its contemporary issue, also happened to 
note the discovery of two more values: "Mr. F. C. Kaye has shown us the 
2 cent and 6 cent of the 1868 issue, with large watermarked letters of the 
same type as those in the 1 cent and 3 cent." The 12% and 15 cent were later 
found, but the % cent and 1 cent yellow have never been discovered. This 
latter fact doubtless determines the period when the paper was used, for, like 
the laid paper, if employed in 1869 or later we should find the 1 cent yellow 
instead of brown red printed on it. On the other hand, it could not have 
been used when the first consignments were being printed, probably early in 
1868, or the % cent would be included in the series. This is determined by 
the fact that the first supply of the l^ cent lasted until the fiscal year of 
1871-2, before any further printings were made. The watermarked paper 
must therefore have been used sometime during the course of the year 1868, 
probably the middle, when supplies of all values except the % cent were 
printed. 

For the determination of the character of the watermark we are indebted 
to Mr. John W. Luff, whose thoroughness and acumen when delving into a 
philatelic problem are proverbial. The result of his study was published in 
1895-'* and we take the following extracts from his interesting paper: — 

Most pliilatelic writers, when treating of the Canadian issue 
of 1868-75, give small space to the series watermarked with large 
letters. Most of them make a few speculative remarks as to the 
probable watermark and then drop the subject. So far as I am 
aware, no one has taken the trouble to ascertain what the water- 
mark actually is. The London Society in the North American Col- 
onies of Great Britain says : "Some of the stamps on wove paper have 
been catalogued with a watermark, consisting of various letters. 
It is probable that these letters are portions of the name of the 
papermaker, which most likely exists in the margin of the sheets." 
Other writers are equally superficial. The Catalogue for Advanced 
Collectors says : "Although we catalogue as varieties the stamps on 

"^Dominion Philatelist, I: 5. 
"Haiifax Pliilateilst, III: 8. 
"American Journal of Philately, VIII: 77. 



a 



THE ISSUE OF 1868 113 

watermarked paper, it is very possible that these form a separate 
issue. It may have happened that the printers, having run short 
of the regular paper, replaced it by some similar paper that they had 

in stock, bearing this watermark" 

In the Stamps of British North America, by Messrs. C. B. Cor- 
win and Donald A. King {Metropolitan Philatelist, June 1891), this 
watermark is given more attention. The possibility that it is the 
words "Canada Postage" or "Canada Post Office Department" is dis- 
cussed and rejected, because the authors have found certain letters 
and pairs of letters which do not occur in these words. 

It has seemed to me that it would be of interest, probably of 
value, to know exactly what this watermark is. I have therefore 
given the matter considerable study, and now have the pleasure of 
presenting the result to your readers. The extensive stock of the 
Scott Stamp & Coin Co., being placed at my disposal, together with 
a quantity of stamps from private sources .... I believe I have cor- 
rectly reconstructed the watermark. 

As the broadest letter measures only 13 mm., and the stamps 
are about 23mm. from center to center of perforations, there are 
usually parts of two or three letters on each stamp. I have found 
a large number of single letters, pairs, portions of three letters, and 
in one instance, a pair and parts of two letters. Of many combina- 
tions I have found several examples. I have also found quite a num- 
ber of stamps showing parts of two rows of letters, one above the 
other. 

Taking these in sequence we reconstruct the watermark 





%mw} 




The reader will please bear in mind, that when the stamps are 
viewed from the back, the letters read from right to left (at least 
when the sheets were placed normally in the press) as is usual with 
the Crown and CC, CA and other watermarks. 

* The letters are plain double lined capitals, except the third in 
the first line, C, which is more fancy, having a decided hook at the 
end of the lower curve and the upper curve ending in a point, instead 
of being cut off squarely, as in the case of the other letters. The 



114 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

E and C are followed by periods 31/^ mm. square. The initial cap- 
itals E, C and B are 13 mm. high, the other letters 12% mm. The 
upper row is about 140 mm. long, the lower about 133 mm., and the 
distance between the rows 11% mm. The watermark will thus fall 
on twelve stamps in each sheet of one hundred. But it cannot be 
argued from this that the stamps with watermark are only eight times 
as rare as those without, as we mvist take into consideration the 
proportionately large number of sheets on ordinary unwatermarked 
paper. The sheets were apparently placed on the press without much 
care, as the letters are frequently found reversed and inverted. I 
have not however found any placed vertically, nor have I found any 

other letters than the above 

As to the position of the watermark in the sheets, I believe it 
to be central. Its height, 37 nmi., is great for a marginal water- 
mark, and the fact that none of the letters have been found ver- 
tically, as is so frequently the case with marginal watermarks, is 
also in favor of a central location. We might also expect to find 
stamps on watermarked paper showing, as is not uncommon, the im- 
print of the contractors above or below, if the watermark were mar- 
ginal. I, at least, have found none. 

Mr. Luff considers that the watermarked stamps "are on an unofficial 
paper used temporarily," which is without doubt the case, at least as far 
as the temporary nature goes. He says further: "Compared with the large 
number without watermark, they are sufficiently scarce to indicate a provis- 
ional use of the paper and at the same time there are enough of them to show 
that a considerable number of sheets were printed." 

For other varieties in this series we have the Yo cent on "bluish-white 
wove paper", listed by M. Moens in the sixth edition of his catalogue. Messrs. 
Corwin and King say this "corresponds to our grayish paper, the shade some- 
times being quite intense." But they list the entire series on "thin, soft, 
grayish wove paper", as well as the % cent and 1 cent brown-red on "pelure 
grayish paper". It may be that imperfect wiping of the plates had left an 
extra grayish tint upon the paper of the specimen that Moens singled out for 
cataloguing, just as occurred in the case of most values of the Post Office De- 
partment stamps of the United States. 

Messrs. Corwin and King-^^ give an extremely lengthy reference list of 
this issue on no less than seventeen varieties of paper, with the remark that, 
"every variety we mention is distinct from any other", but, with Major 
Evans, we must remark that "we confess we are unable to follow our friend 

"Metropolitan Philatelist, II: 55 and Monthly Journal, VIII: 236. 



THE ISSUE OF 1868 115 

Mr. King through all the intricacies of these varieties of paper but the 

differences are, perhaps, more real than is indicted in the descriptions." On 
inspection the "seventeen varieties" seem to combine themselves into I: laid 
paper, of thick and thin qualities ; II : watermarked paper ; III : yellowish wove 
paper, very thin to very thick; and IV: grayish wove paper, from pelure to 
very thick. In both of the wove papers are found the differences due to the 
process of manufacture, the even texture of the plain wove variety and the 
mottled texture of the so-called "wire- wove" variety. 

The paper used for this issue is responsible for variations in the size of 
the stamps similar in character and origin to those we have already thoroughly 
discussed in connection with the 71/2 and 10 pence stamps of 1855-7. The de- 
sign of the series is not calculated to render these variations so apparent as in 
the former case, but the extreme variations we have found have been carefully 
noted and are presented in the following list. It will be seen that the variation 
is coniined to a half millimeter in each dimension. 

}/^ cent, 16% X 21)^ mm. 5 cents, 19 x 241^ mm. 

17 X 21 mm. ? ? 

1 cent, 191^ X 24)^ mm. 6 cents, 20 x 24)^ mm. 

20 X 24 mm. 20^^ x 24 mm. 

2 cents, 19)^ x 241^ mm. 12)^ cents, 191^ x 241^ mm. 

20 X 24 mm. 20 x 24 mm. 

3 cents, 191^ x 24^^ mm. 15 cents, 19% x 24)^ mm. 

20 X 24 mm. 20 x 24 mm. 

It is also stated that these stamps exist perforated 11% x 13,^® as well as 
the usual 12 all around. As the perforation was done by guillotine machines, 
this would apparently indicate a machine of 11% gauge used for the vertical 
perforations, and we should expect to find some stamps at least perforated 
12 X 11%, if not 11% all around. Such do not seem to have been reported and 
we have no further information concerning the variety mentioned. 

For imperforate stamps in this series we find the 1 cent, yellow, and the 
15 cents in a peculiar shade of brown violet. The former is known only in 
cancelled condition, we believe, but we are able to illustrate an unused block of 
four of the latter as 'So. 107 on Plate IX. 

The only case of the use of a split stamp in this issue that we have to 
record is of the 6 cent, cut diagonally and used for the ordinary 3 cent rate 
on a letter posted at "Annapolis, JST. S. JY 2,1869." While having no more 
authorization than any other of the occasional Canadian "splits," yet this 

"Monthly Journal, IX: 125. 



116 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

cover is particularly interesting because of its hailing from Nova Scotia, 
where split stamps had been used and recognized for their fractional values 
when the local issue was employed. An illustration of this cover will be 
found as ISTo. 98 on Plate VIII. 

Concerning the quantities issued of the various denominations in this 
series we cannot be quite as exact as in some of the previous cases. No dis- 
tinction was made between the various issues in the tables of amounts re- 
ceived from the manufacturers, provided the denomination was the same. 
In the case of the %? 3, 6 and 15 cent stamps, which were new values, the 
quantities given in the Report for 1868 can be used, but with the 1, 2 and 
121^ cent stamps the last deliveries of the 1859 series and the first of the 1868 
series are lumped together. We have already made a tentative division of the 
receipts for these latter values,-''^ however, which we think is safe enough 
to use for our purposes. It must be recognized that we are approaching 
conditions in the business of the Post Office where the quantity of stamps 
used, particularly if they be of low value and are in service for a number of 
years, mounts to such an enormous total that the actual figures representing 
the numbers issued have practically no philatelic value. While interesting, 
therefore, the totals shovsm. below may be "out" by several per cent without 
appreciably altering their usefulness — or lack of it. 

With these considerations as a basis, we can lay out the series up to 
certain limits as follows: — 

Received Feom Manufactueees. 

ic. Ic. 2e. 3c. 6c. 12Jc. IBc. 

30th June, 1868 1,500,000 2.000,000(?) 2,000,000(? 6,000,000 2,000,000 B00,000(?) 212,600 

" 1869 9,250,000 4,000,000 ' 12,000,000 2,000,000 1,000,000 600,000 

1870 2,300,000 1,300,000 11,300,000 2,230,000 300,000 

1871 1,800,000 3,070,000 734,000 

1872 500,000 3,200,000 2,325,000 

1873-82 4,756,700 

1875-96 1,765,400 



Totals 6,756,700 13,650,000 12,300,000 29,300.000 11,625,000 2,634,000 2,677,900 

The above table shows that the first deliveries of the % cent were suffi- 
cient to last until 1872 ; from that time there were yearly deliveries approx- 
imating a half million up to the issue of the miniature % cent in 1882. The 
figures for that year doubtless included a large quantity of this latter stamp, 
so we can safely approximate the quantity of the % cent of 1868 issued as 
6% millions. The large 1 cent stamp was superseded about March 1870, 

"See page 88.. 



THE ISSUE OF 1868 117 

so the above figures may very likely be reduced by say two millions in 1870, 
leaving ll^/^ millions of the large stamps, but in both brown-red and yellow. 
A large part of the 1868-9 deliveries must have been of the brown-red stamp, 
however, as the yellow one did not appear until January 1869, and from the 
catalog prices the former would seem to be twice as common as the latter. 
The large 3 cent was also superseded about January 1870, so that a consid- 
erable portion of the deliveries of 1869-70 were doubtless due its suc- 
cessor. Some 20 millions or more can without doubt be credited to the 1868 
stamp, nevertheless. 

The 2 cent and 6 cent were both superseded early in 1872, so their totals 
can be reduced probably to approximately 10-11 millions for the former and 
perhaps 10 millions of the latter. 

With the 12% and 15 cent stamps we find no successors, but we do 
find that none of the former was delivered after 1871, so that our total of 
2^^ millions is correct, barring our first approximation. From the lists of 
"Issues to Postmasters" it is evident that the stamp was regularly used, but 
in decreasing quantities, down to 1888, when the last figures "1100" appear. 
A summing up of these issues to postmasters (again allowing for the first 
approximation) gives us a total of 1,944,100 issued; but of these there were 
44,086 returned by the postmasters as unfit for use, the last return (84 
copies) being received in 1893. The result for the 121^ cent stamp is there- 
fore approximately 1,900,000 issued and used, and some 634,000 probably 
destroyed. 

The 15 cent stamp, after the amount received in the 1869 account, 
needed no further supplies until the 1875 account, although it was issued 
to postmasters each year. The changes in rates in 1875 made it again use- 
ful as a multiple of the 5 cent stamp and in connection with registration. 
From that time imtil 1893 it was regularly printed and delivered, but this 
was evidently the end of its usefulness, as the only receipt thereafter was of 
400 in 1896 — undoubtedly a small remainder which the engravers wanted 
to get rid of. It was regularly issued to postmasters, however, up to 1900, 
the last amount, 21,350 appearing in that year's accounts, though 70 copies 
were turned in for destruction in 1901. Some 31,000 all told were returned 
as unfit for use, but the rest were probably all used in the course of business. 

Of the large 5 cent stamp we can only judge as with the preceding. The 
Eeport for 1876 includes the deliveries of both large and small stamps, the 
total being 2 millions. As succeeding deliveries of the small stamp averaged 



118 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

a million or more for several years thereafter, it is highly probable that 
the above total was evenly divided and that the large 5 cent was at least 
printed to the number of a million copies. 



Turning now to the Postmaster General's Reports for the several years 
during which the large sized stamps were the general issue, we find in the 
First Report of the Dominion of Canada, for the Year ending 30th June, 
1868, the following remarks concerning the new order: — 

The Post Office Laws and Regulations of the several Provinces 
of the Dominion, in force at the date of the Union, remained in oper- 
ation under the authority of the Union Act vmtil superseded by the 
statute known as ''The Post Office Act 186T\ passed in the first ses- 
sion of the Dominion Parliament, for the regulation of the Postal 
Service, and which general Act took effect from the 1st. April, 1868. 

By this Act a uniform system of Post Office organization was 
provided for, the ordinary rate of domestic letter postage was re- 
duced from five cents to three cents per half ounce, and the charge 
on letters sent to and received from the United States was at the 
same time lowered from ten to six cents per half ounce weight (the 
latter being the combination of the three cent letter rates of both 
Countries), and lastly, low rates of postage charge were established 
for the conveyance of newspapers, periodicals, printed papers, par- 
cels and other miscellaneous matter by Post. 

In Nova Scotia and New Brunswick the additional newspaper 
postage collected under the new Statute, applying equal charges on 
newspaper matter throughout the Dominion, approximately balanced 
the loss in the reduction of the letter rates, in fact the collections in 
Nova Scotia in the first fiscal year after the change in the postage rates, 
shew a marked improvement on the revenue of the previous year, 
and there has been a material increase in the number of letters pass- 
ing by Post in the Maritime Provinces, as well as in Ontario and 
Quebec. 

******** 

Postage stamps of denominations corresponding to the reduced 
rates of postage authorized by the Post Office Act of 1867, were pre- 
pared by the British American Bank Note Co. at Ottawa, and dis- 
tributed by the Department throughout the Dominion for use on 
the 1st. April. 1868, from which date the new rates of postage came 
into operation. 

Some statistics are also given which it will not be out of place to quote 
here for future comparison. 



THE ISSUE OF 1868 119 

There were 87 new Post Offices established in Ontario and Quebec dur- 
ing the [fiscal] year and 74 Post Offices and Way Offices in ISTew Bruns- 
wick and Nova Scotia. On the 1st January, 1869, there were 3638 Post 
Offices and Way Offices in the Dominion, and also: — 





Miles of 


Letters 


Revenue 




Post Route 


Annually 


(fiscal year) 


Ontario & Quebec 


18,716 


14,750,000 


$906,663.04 


New Brunswick 


3,379 


1,350,000 


53,837.80 


Nova Scotia 


5,579 


3,000,000 


64,319.77 


Totals 


37,674 


18,100,000 


1,034,710.61 



The total correspondence passing between the United States and Can- 
ada is given as $319,352.53, but with no returns from the Maritime 
Provinces. 

The next year's Report, dated 30th June, 1869, gives the revenue as 
$973,056, a drop of fifty thousand dollars, due to its being the first com- 
plete year since the reduction of the postage rates. The total correspondence 
with the United States is also given as $227,699.13, the drop having come 
through, the reduction to a 6 cent rate, although the Maritime Provinces 
were included this time. The Report also notes that "From 1st January, 
1870, the Postal rate to the United Kingdom was reduced from 12^ to 
6 cents per % ounce letter." 

The report for 1870 states that the Postal Packet rate was reduced on 
the 1st January, 1870, but does not give the new rate. It is also said that "meas- 
ures will be taken to organize the whole postal system of the new Province 
of Manitoba on the same footing as the rest of Canada, from an early date." 

The Province of Manitoba, as we have already noted, was admitted 
to full privileges in the Dominion on July 15, 1870, and the former Colony 
of British Columbia came in on July 20, 1871. The Postmaster General's 
Report for 30th June, 1871 says of these: — 

The rates of postage have been made uniform in both newly con- 
federated Provinces with those prevailing in the older sections, as 
well in respect to correspondence passing between British Columbia 
and Manitoba, and the rest of the Dominion, as in regard to the 
transmissions within each of the said Provinces. 

Arrangements have been made with the Post Office of the 
United States, under which mails to and from British Columbia pass 



120 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

in closed bags (tlirougli th.e United States mails) between Windsor 
(Ontario) and Victoria (British Columbia), via San JPrancisco, for 
the conveyance of which through the United States, a transit rate is 
paid by the Dominion to the United States Post OfSce, as in the 
case of similar closed mails passing to and from Manitoba. 

The report for 30th June 1872 states that: — 

Arrangements between Canada and Newfoundland came into 
efEect from 1st. November, 1873, establishing a uniform prepaid rate 
of 6 cents per ^4 ounce on letters passing between any Post OfSce 
in the Dominion and any Post Office in Newfoundland, instead of 
13% cents as before, and providing that Newspapers, Books, printed 
matter and post cards shall be prepaid at ordinary Canadian rates 
and vice versa. 

The postal revenue for the year was $1,193,062, it being the first year 
that the postal business of British Columbia and Manitoba was included. 
The former was credited with 38 Post Offices and the latter with 27 Post 
Offices. 

It will be remembered that Prince Edward Island joined the Dominion 
on July 1, 1873, and the Report of that year credits the former Colony with 
180 Post Offices. 

The report of 30th June, 1874, states that "The System of free-de- 
livery by letter-carriers in the principal cities, of letters and papers coming 
by mail has been commenced at Montreal and Toronto." This was under 
the authority of section 36 of The Post Ojfice Act 1867 which we have 
already quoted.^® The text of a new postal treaty between Canada and the 
United States is given from which we make the following excerpts: — 

Postal Abbangement 
ijetween the dominion of canada and the united states. 

Aet. I. Correspondence of every kind, written and printed 

[mailed in each country and addressed to the other}, shall be fully 
prepaid at the domestic postage rates of the country of origin, and the 
country of destination will receive, forward and deliver the same free 
of charge. 

Aet. II. Each country will transport the domestic mails of the 
other by its ordinary mail routes in closed pouches through its 
territory, free of charge. 

"See page 98. 



THE ISSUE OF 1868 121 

Abt. III. [Patterns and samples, weighing not over 8 oz., un- 
sealed, 10 cents each, prepayment obligatory.] 

Aet. IV. [No further accounts to J>e kept between the two coun- 
tries. 1 

Abt. VIII. The existing arrangements for the exchange of reg- 
istered letters between the two countries shall continue in full force ; 
but the registration fee on registered letters sent from the United 
States to Canada shall be the same as the registration fee charged in 
the United States for domestic registered letters. 

Abt. IX. This arrangement, except so far as it relates to letter 
postage, shall take efEect from the first of January, 1875. The re- 
duced letter rate will come into operation on the first of Febru- 
ary, 1875 

Done in duplicate and signed at Ottawa the 27th day of Jan- 
uary, 1875. 

From the above it is seen that the double domestic postage rate on letters be- 
tween the two countries, and the keeping of accounts of the total correspondence 
passing through the exchange offices, were done away with on the 1st Febru- 
ary, 1875, and since that date all such mail matter has passed freely between 
the two countries at the ordinary domestic rates of each. The figures given 
in this Report were the last for the total correspondence between Canada and 
the United States, and were presumably for the seven months from 1st July, 
1874, to 1st February, 1875: they were $478,516.91, which would represent 
some eight million letters were that the only class included, and all of them 
single letters; this would be at the rate of some thirteen million letters 
per year, a very respectable figure for the intercommunication of the two 
countries. 

Because of further postal changes which came in 1875 and also the fact 
that a new type of stamp had gradually been replacing the large sized first 
issue of the Dominion during the last few years, we will close this chapter 
with the 1874 Eeport. 



CHAPTER IX 

THE SMALL "CENTS" ISSUE, 1870-82 

IN the American Journal of Philately for August 20, 1869 we find the 
following: "Canada is shortly to have a new set of stamps. Taking 

lessons in economy from our own country, it seems they are about 
altering their stamps to make them smaller, so as to save paper. The head 
will still remain exactly the same as now, but the frame and margin around 
the head will be considerably less." The 1869 set of the United States was 
then in use, and it may well be that the smaller sized stamps appealed to the 
authorities in comparison with their own rather large sized productions, 
even though their suggested parsimony had nothing to do with it. The cur- 
rent % cent stamp was taken as the model, and the other values reduced in 
size to correspond with it, while keeping their former colors. The main 
features of the designs were therefore retained. 

ISTo special announcement of the new series was made that we have been 
able to discover, and they were only introduced, apparently, as stocks of the 
large sized stamps on hand were used up. We find the first record of the 
change in the American Journal of Philately for February 20, 1870 : "The 
stamps of the New Dominion have now made their appearance, altered as 
described by us last August." Though not specified, this referred to the 
3 cent stamp, and its actual issue probably took place in January. The 
Philatelist chronicles it in the issue of March 1, 1870, as being of "the same 
colour and general description as before". [Illustration ISTo. 28 on Plate II.] 

The next value to appear was the 1 cent, which was noted in the Stamp 
Collectors Magazine for April 1, 1870 j it was probably issued, therefore, 
some time in March, for the American Journal of Philately records it in its 
issue of April 20, 1870. [Illustration A^o. 25 on Plate II.] 

Two years then elapsed before further additions were made, and lent 
some color to the report in several European journals that the cause of the 
new issue was the destruction by fire in Montreal of the plates of the 1 cent 
and 3 cent of 1868, and that the other values of the set would remain as 
before. The American Journal of Philately learned, however, that only the 



THE SMALL "CENTS" ISSUE, 1870-82 123 

press room of the Bank Note Co. was damaged, and that the plates were 
intact. At last the 6 cent in reduced size made its appearance and was 
chronicled in the American Journal of Philately for February, 1872, to be 
followed in the March issue by the announcement of the 2 cent. The former 
value must therefore have been issued in January and the latter in Feb- 
ruary. [Illustrations jSTos. 30 and 26 on Plate II.] 

Again in the American Journal of Philately for ]!Tovember 20, 1874, 
we find it "reported" that Canada "has issued a 10c. rose", and the next 
issue says it "is printed in a peculiar pale rose, we can not call to mind any 
other stamp of this particular tint." The actual issue therefore, was prob- 
ably about ISTovember 1, 1874. Just what called forth this new value in the 
Dominion series does not appear, unless it be the section in the Postal Treaty 
between Canada and the United States which fijxed the rate on patterns and 
samples at 10 cents for not over 8 oz., with prepayment obligatory.^ This 
rate did not go into effect, however, until January 1, 1875. Of course as a 
multiple of the 5 cent rates which came into force on October 1, 1875, the 
new 10 cent stamp was very useful, but that was nearly a year subsequent to 
its issue. The new stamp is illustrated as No. 32 on Plate II. 

The next of the series to make its appearance was the 5 cent, which was 
noted in the American Journal of Philately for February 20, 1876 as having 
"just been issued." [Illustration No. 29 on Plate II.] This doubtless 
means about the 1st February, so that its large sized predecessor had only 
about four months of life. There were now left in the large sized stamps 
only the 12% and 15 cents. In its issue for May, 1872, the Stamp Col- 
lector s Magazine quoted from the Canadian Philatelist as follows: — "It is 
unlikely that the 12^2 c. small size will be issued, as the large ones are very 
little used, and can now be bought at the post-oiSce at 12 cents." This last 
statement is rather surprising. Nevertheless, it was announced in the 
American Journal of Philately for October, 1879 that "Canada will shortly 
issue the 12% and 15c. values of postals in small size, to correspond with the 
others of the series." This paper seemed to have been usually well informed 
concerning Canadian postal matters, but the expected new stamps did not 
materialize. The dies and plates were undoubtedly prepared, for the 121/2 
cent stamp at least exists in a finished state, but is very scarce. Proofs of 
both values were illustrated in Le Timhre-Poste for November, 1888, with 
the following remarks : "On nous envoie les essais des futurs timbres 12% et 

'See page 121. 



124 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

15 centavos qui doivent completer un peu tardivement, la serie des timbres 
a ce format. iS'os exemplaires sont imprimes, le premier en lilas, le second 
en vert siir papier de la Chine." Commenting on this in the American Phil- 
atetist for December, 1888, Mr. W. 0. Stone says: "We heard of these some 
ten or twelve years ago and saw them both last summer in New York." We 
have been fortunate enough to be able to illustrate the 121^ cent (see No. 89 
on Plate V) from the Worthington collection, and this finished copy, with full 
gum, is in a bright blue as we should expect. We regret that it was impos- 
sible to locate a copy of the reduced 15 cent to illustrate as a companion piece. 
The reasons that the plates of these two stamps were never actually brought 
into use, though evidently prepared with the other values in smaller size, 
were probably these: The 12% cent of 1868, as we have seen, though issued 
to postmasters for several subsequent years, was not printed after 1871, nor 
was the old stock exhausted when its use was discontinued. There was there- 
fore no call for any supply to be printed from the new plate. The 15 cent 
was not printed between 1869 and 1875, and after that in such relatively 
small quantities each year until 1896, that, unless we are greatly mistaken, 
the original plate never wore out, but was used without change to the end. 

The old adage that "history repeats itself" was again exemplified in 
Canadian stamps when in July, 1882, the % cent stamp, for fourteen years 
unaltered, was once more reduced to a smaller size than the regular series. 
The general effect of the design remained the same, but the foliate ornamenta- 
tion gave place to angular outlines. The illustration will be found as No. 27 
on Plate II. 

All of the above mentioned stamps, except the % cent as will be ex- 
plained, were line engraved on steel and printed in sheets of 100, ten rows of 
ten. The marginal imprints turn out to be of three varieties in this series, 
and we have pieced together what information we can concerning them, for 
strips with marginal imprints are extremely hard to find now. The first 
plates made, including at least the 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 cent stamps, and probably 
the 10 cent as well, since that was engraved before the 5 cent, had the de- 
nomination in shaded Roman capitals, 4 mm. high, [Illustration No. 121 
on Plate XI], over stamps 2 and 3 of the top row. Sometimes the shading 
is hardly apparent, as in our illustration, but it can be detected. Beginning 
over stamp 4, extending over stamps 5 and 6, and ending over stamp 7, is the 
inscription we found on the series of 1868 (see illustration 107 on Plate IX), 
"BRITISH AMERICAN BANK NOTE CO. MONTREAL & OTTAWA" 



THE SMALL "CENTS" ISSUE, 1870-82 125 

in colorless Koman capitals in the little strip of color 1 mm. wide and 51 
mm. long. This imprint is also beneath the bottom row of stamps and at 
each side, reading up at the left and down at the right [Illustration ISTo. Ill 
on Plate X]. We have so far not seen this inscription on the 5 cent and 
10 cent sheets, and doubt if it exists on the former at least. 

About 1875 the engraving company seem to have dropped their Ottawa 
branch, for on the large 5 cent stamp, whose plate was made in that year, we 
find the new imprint "British American Bank Note Co. Montreal" in capitals 
and lower case letters on a colored strip 56 mm . long and 2i/2mm. wide, 
having a pearled border. This imprint is found on all four sides of the 
sheet, as before, as reference to Plates X, XI and XII will show, and on the 
plates of all values. In the case of the 6 and 10 cent stamps, and perhaps some 
others as well, the value SIX, TEN, etc. is now found in the shaded Roman 
capitals over stamp number 9 of the top row, but lacking the word CENTS. 
Over stamp number 2 of the top row is the figure of value, 6 mm. high, 
[Illustration No. 118, Plate XI]. A sheet of the small 5 cent stamps which 
we have seen, however, does not follow this arrangement but reverts to the 
first style with FIVE CENTS in the shaded Roman capitals over the first 
three stamps of the top row only, though having the four "Montreal" imprints. 
Again, a sheet of 3 cent that we have examined has the word THREE alone 
in the shaded Roman capitals over the first two stamps of the top row, and the 
"Montreal" imprint at the center of the top and bottom rows only, there being 
nothing at the sides. A sheet of 1 cent presents still another style, having 
the "Montreal" imprint at top and bottom alone, and no other marginal in- 
scriptions. We have seen no sheet or margin of the 2 cent stamp bearing the 
"Montreal" imprint, but it doubtless exists. 

Whether the arrangement of these marginal inscriptions is a special one 
for each value, or whether each style described exists in all values there does 
not seem to be material enough at hand to determine. Probably neither 
statement is wholly in accordance with facts, as there must have been a great 
many plates of the 1 cent and 3 cent stamps, with proportionately fewer for 
the less used values. There seems to have been no system of plate numbering, 
as far as we can discover, though some margins show reversed letters or figures 
about 3 to 4 mm. high in various positions; they do not appear to have any 
special significance, however. 

In regard to the % cent of 1882, which we excepted from the above 
statements, there is a special arrangement to consider. The stamp was of 



126 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

course line engraved on steel, as before, but the plate printed two panes of 100 
impressions each, side by side. These panes were the usual 10 x 10 arrange- 
ment, and were separated by a space of 11 mm. through which they were cut 
into two "post office sheets". The marginal inscriptions were simply the 
"Montreal" imprint [illustration No. 127 on Plate XII] which appeared six 
times — at the top and bottom of each pane, in the right margin of the right hand 
pane and the left margin of the left hand pane, there being no imprint in the 
space between the two panes. Over the top inscription of the right pane is the re- 
versed figure 1, 4 mm. high, and in the same position on the left pane the cor- 
responding figure 2, evidently to designate the panes. 

Once again, and this time the fact was noted in some of the philatelic 
journals, the imprint was changed. The engraving company had been re- 
quired by the Government to do its printing at Ottawa,^ and under "Canada 
IN'otes" in MekeeVs Weekly Stamp News for December 21, 1892, "Canadensis" 
reports : "The new plates of the Canada stamps now bear this imprint : 'British 
American Bank E'ote Co. Ottawa', instead of Montreal. The matrix being 
made from the old die are exactly like the previous issues." The new imprint 
is a copy of the first one we described, with "Montreal &" omitted. It is 40 
mm. long and 1% mm. wide and is well shown in illustration No. 123 on 
Plate XII. These new plates were doubtless the ones heralded in the Domin- 
ion Philatelist for September, 1892, wherein it is stated that "the present issue 
of Canada 3 c. Stamps are being printed and issued in sheets of 200 instead 
of 100 as formerly." And again in the same paper for May, 1893 : "The 
Canada Ic, 2c., and 3c. stamps are now being printed in sheets of 200." This 
new sheet arrangement consisted of ten horizontal rows of twenty stamps each. 
The "Ottawa" imprint appears three times, once in the middle of the top mar- 
gin, over stamps 10 and 11, and twice in the bottom margin, beneath stamps 
5 and 6, and again beneath stamps 15 and 16. There are no imprints at the 
sides. The denomination appears in the top margin at both right and left 
and in a new style of lettering on these larger plates. Thus we find OlSTE 
CEISTT or TWO CENT over stamps 2 and 3 as well as 18 and 19, or THREE 
CEISTT over the first four and last four stamps in plain Egyptian capitals, 
(see illustration No. 120 on Plate XI). 

One other imprint was used on the 2 cent value at least, but we have so 
far seen it on no other. It was 49 mm. long and nearly 2 mm. wide, but 
otherwise is a duplicate of the smaller "Ottawa" imprint. A portion of it 

^See page 128, 



THE SMALL "CENTS" ISSUE, 1870-82 127 

is seen in illustration ISTo. 129 on Plate XIII. The sheet was in the 10 x 10 form, 
and the imprint appeared at top and bottom only, there being no other mar- 
ginal inscriptions. From the sheet form it would seem probable that it pre- 
ceded the use of the sheets of 200 stamps. 

The colors of these small stamps were intended to be the same as those 
of the larger stamps they superseded, and in the main they were so. The orange 
and orange yellow shades of the 1 cent stamp appear to have been the earlier 
ones, while the yellow tints came in the later printings. The 2 cent follows 
the green of its predecessor very closely. The 3 cent, as might be expected, 
is more prolific in the variety of shades presented. The Philatelist chron- 
icled it (March, 1870) in the "same colour as before," while Moens, in Le 
Timbre-Poste, was more specific and gave it as ;red-brown. In May, 1873, 
the Stamp Collector's Magazine lists it in orange-vermilion, while The Phil- 
atelist says vermilion and Le Timbre-Poste bright orange. The 5 cent stamp 
did not vary a great deal except in tone, though Le Timbre-Poste notes it as 
"black-gray" in July, 1877. The 6 cent was also fairly constant in its brown 
shade. The 10 cent appeared at first in what, for want of a better name, may 
be called a rose-lilac. The Stamp Collector's Magazine called it pale rose, and 
the American Journal of Philately said it was a "peculiar pale rose" which 
was a new tint. The latter paper notes it again in a "bright carnation" in 
March, 1876, while Le Timbre-Poste in August of the same year chroniclea 
it in "pale red instead of lilac." 

We have been thus particular in listing the record of early shades be- 
cause of the changes which come later. 

In the January, 1888, issue of the Halifax Philatelist we find the fol- 
lowing note under "Canada": — "The plate of the 2 c. stamp has been re- 
engraved. Color is now dark green". IN'o details of such re-engraving were 
forthcoming, but in the June, 1888, number of the Philatelic Record is a 
paragraph which evidently refers to the same stamp: — "A correspondent has 
sent us a specimen of the 2 cents, green, which he calls a new die. We fail 
to see it; but what we do see is, that the stamp is printed from a lithographed 
transfer." This su^rprising statement seemed to excite no special comment 
save from the sagacious M. Moens, who remarks:' "ISTous avons egalement 
recu ce timbre qui parait lithographic, par suite d'usure de la planche, croyons- 
nous, car la feuille entiere que nous avons annonce que I'impression a ete faite. 



'Le Timbre-Poste. XXVI: 61, 



128 CANADIAJSr POSTAaE STAMPS 

comme anterieiirenieiit, par la British American Bank l^ote Co. de Montreal 
et Ottawa, qui ne s'occupe pas d'impression lithographique que nous saehions." 

Without doubt M. Moens gave the correct explanation, for the imprint 
that he mentions will be recognized as the one to be found on the earliest 
plates of the small stamps, and 1888 was thirteen years at least after the 
second type of imprint with "Montreal" only had been introduced. Hence 
the stamp in question was probably a late print from a worn plate, which 
gave a rather flat and indistinct impression that might suggest lithography, 
though it is certain that Canada has never yet stooped to such a cheap means 
of postage stamp production. A similar case may be recalled with the % 
penny stamp of St. Helena which was issued in 1884, and which presented a 
like appearance. 

Whether the above incident had anything to do with the change of the 
printing company from Montreal to Ottawa, which we have already noted 
in describing the imprints, we cannot say, but it is certain that it was the 
beginning of changes, in shade at least, which affected the whole series of 
stamps. We have the authority of the Postmaster General's Report for 1889 
that the "removal of the British American Bank Note Co. from Montreal to 
Ottawa" had taken place — evidently early in 1888, as will be seen later — so 
that the use of an old worn-out plate might have been a case of temporary 
necessity. Further details are given by the Canadian correspondent of the 
'Weekly Philatelic Era* as follows: "About six years ago the Government in- 
sisted on their contractors doing their printing at the Capital, and the British 
American Bank l^ote Co. erected a handsome establishment on Wellington 
Street, where all postage stamps have since been printed. It may be re- 
membered that the Ottawa printings were signalized by distinct varieties in 
shade from the earlier Montreal issues, varieties that have never been suffi- 
ciently distinguished in the standard catalogues." 

These changes in the stamp shades were soon noted. In March, 1888, 
the Philatelic Record described the 10 cent stamp as "now in carmine-red", 
while two months later it chronicled the 5 cent as changed "from bronze-green 
to greenish-grey." We have already noted the change in the 15 cent to a 
color approximating its original mauve, "only more of a bluish tinge," which 
the Halifax Philatelist recorded in July, 1888. The following October the 
same paper listed the 3 cent in a "bright carmine", and in July, 1889, an- 

<Weekly Philatelic Era, XQ: 23. 



THE SMALL "CENTS" ISSUE, 1870-82 129 

noimced the 2 cent in "blue green". The 6 cent lagged behind the others 
and did not manifest itself until the American Journal of Philately an- 
nounced it in October, 1890, in a "rich brown." Once again, Le Timbre-Poste 
for April, 1892, stated that the 5 cent had "since the 8th March, appeared in 
gray black". The 1 cent doubtless had its special hue of yellow along with 
the other changes, but it was not recorded, probably because not distinct 
enough from the usual run of variations in which it had been appearing. 

That the above changes were hardly of a character to warrant dignifying 
them as a "new issue," which is frequently done, is shown by a moment's 
consideration. The I/2 cent and 1 cent stamps showed no appreciable difference 
in coloring and therefore caused no comment. The 2 cent did not maintain 
its blue green shade unaltered, and the 3 cent soon reverted to its former bril- 
liant red hue, as the Philatelic Journal of America for May, 1889, says that 
"the carmine color recently adopted has been dropped, and the stamps are 
printed in colors similar to the ones in use before the change was made." 
The 5, 6 and 10 cent stamps, however, made permanent changes, but only 
such as might readily be traceable to a new mixing of the inks in the case 
of the first two. The 10 cent can hardly be so easily disposed of, as lake and 
brown-red are of quite different composition from a rose-lilac. But there 
can have been no official intention of altering the shades or colors or more 
definite and permanent changes would certainly have been made throughout 
the set. It remains, therefore, to classify them simply as shade varieties of 
the original set. 

Mr. King gives a list of eight varieties of paper^ for the "small cents 
issues", but we have deemed it sufficient to note a thick and a thin white wove 
paper, and a closely ribbed paper. All values are reported as existing with 
the compound perforation (11^^ x 12) spoken of under the 1868 issue. We 
also find all values occurring in an imperforate condition. The 3 cent was 
first noted in the Philatelic Record for December, 1882 ; the 15 cent we have 
already spoken of under the 1868 issue; and the 5, 6 and 10 cent at least, 
from the shades of the specimens we have seen, belong to the printings sub- 
sequent to the color modifications of 1888-90. Concerning these imperforates, 
we find in a paper on Canada, read before the Eoyal Philatelic Society by 
Mr. M. H. Horsley,® the following note : — 



•Monthly Journal, Vni: 237. 
•London Philatelist, XVI: 88 



130 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

In my opinion, which I have had confirmed by several most com- 
petent authorities, the various imperforated copies which I show you, 
some used and some unused, are absolutely genuine varieties. Im- 
perforated copies of various values were sold over the Post-ofEce coun- 
ter in Montreal about the years 1891-3, at their face value, and have 
been good for postage whenever people cared to use them. The quan- 
tities in this condition are, I believe, extremely small. 

Supplementing this Mr. Pack writes:^ — 

I quite agree with Mr. Horsley in regard to the various im- 
perforate copies of the issues of 1882 to 1895. There are a good many 
specimens of these stamps imperforate, and they were on sale at a 
Canadian Post OfBce. 

The above statements are correct, and we can vouch for them by docu- 
mentary evidence. Not only were the various values of the series we are con- 
sidering on sale in imperforate condition, but also the 8, 20 and 50 cent stamps 
which we are next to consider, and the shade of the 8 cent stamp shows it to 
have been among the earlier printings — probably in 1893. We are fortu- 
nate in being able to present illustrations of all these imperforates in blocks 
of four or more, which will be found on Plates IX, X and XII. 

That these imperforates are perfectly good for postage and are recognized 
by the Canadian Post Office to this day, equally with their perforated pro- 
totypes, has been proved to our satisfaction because we have employed some 
on registered matter addressed to the United States. As this class 
of mail requires to be fully prepaid, any irregularity would at once be de- 
tected and the covers would tell the story. We illustrate a pair of the 2 cent 
imperforate on a registered cover mailed at Como, Quebec, on March 20, 
1905. [Plate XIII, Wo. 129.J 

As before, we find that a few stamps have been "split" and used for half 
their value, copies of the 2 cent and 6 cent having been cut vertically and 
doing unquestioned duty as 1 cent and 3 cent stamps respectively. As this 
practise is unauthorized they can be regarded mearly as freaks that have 
slipped through by carelessness — or favor. 



Turning once more to the Postmaster General's Reports, we begin with 
that of the 30th June, 1875. This notes that: — 

'London Philatelist, XVI: 144. 



THE SMALL " CENTS " ISSUE, 1870-82 131 

The Act passed in the last Session of Parliament for the regu- 
lation of the Postal Service of Canada, came wholly into force on 
the 1st October, 1875. 

1. Letters passing by mail at 3 cents per % oz. 

2. Local or drop letters at 1 cent per % oz. 

3. Post cards 1 cent each. 

4. Canadian newspapers and periodicals, from office of publi- 
cation at 1 cent per pound of bulk weight. 

5. Transient newspapers and periodicals, circulars, books, pamph- 
lets, etc., open, 1 cent per 4 oz. 

6. Newspapers or periodicals weighing less than 1 oz. each, when 
posted singly, % cent each. 

7. Closed parcels not containing letters, 13% cents per 8 oz. 

The Act referred to was "An Act to amend and consolidate the Statute 
Law for the regulation of the Postal Service. [Assented to 8ih April, 
1875.1"^ and was mainly a repetition of The Post Office Act, 1867,^ with 
certain amendments incorporated. The principal changes which interest ns 
are as follows: — 

1. This Act shall be known and may be cited as "The Post Office 
Act, 1875," etc., etc. 

10. — 6. Cause to be prepared and distributed postage and regis- 
tration stamps necessary for the prepayment of postages and regis- 
tration charges, under this Act; also stamped envelopes for the like 
purpose and post-cards and stamped post bands or wrappers for news- 
papers or other mailable articles not being post letters. 

19. [Letter rate of S cents per % oz.] ; and such postage rate of 
three cents shall be pre-paid by postage stamp or stamps at the time 
of posting the letter, otherwise such letter shall not be forwarded by 
post, except that letters addressed to any place in Canada and on 
which one full rate of three cents has been so pre-paid, shall be for- 
warded to their destination charged with double the amount of the 
postage thereon not so prepaid, which amount shall be collected on 
delivery. 

30. [Drop letter rate restricted to "one cent per half ounce 
weight."] 

23. The rate of postage on newspaper and periodical publications 
printed and published in Canada, and issued not less frequently than 
once a month from a known office of publication or news agency, and 
addressed and posted by and from the same to regular subscribers 
or news agents, shall be one cent for each pound weight, or any 
fraction of a pound weight, to be prepaid by postage stamps or 

"38° Vict. Chap. 7. 

•31° Vict. Cap. X. See page 95. 



132 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

otherwise as the Postmaster General may, from time to time, direct; 
and such newspapers and periodicals shall be put into packages and de- 
livered into the post office, and the postage rate thereon prepaid by the 
sender thereof, under such regulations as the Postmaster General may, 
from time to time, direct. 

23. Newspapers and periodicals weighing less than one ounce 
each may be posted singly at a postage rate of half a cent each, which 
must be in all cases prepaid by postage stamp affixed to each. 

24. On all newspapers and periodicals posted in Canada, except 
in the cases hereinbefore expressly provided for, and on books, etc., 
etc., [repeats Sec. 26 of Act of 186T\, the rate of postage shall be one 

cent for each four ounces or fraction of four ounces, and this 

postage rate shall be prepaid by postage stamps or stamped post 
bands or wrappers 

27. [Repeats Sec. 29 of Act of 1867] And when any letter or other 
mailable matter is posted in Canada without prepayment, or insuffi- 
ciently prepaid, in any case in which prepayment is by this Act made 
obligatory, the Postmaster General may detain the same, and cause 
it to be returned, when practicable, to the sender. 

28. [Replaces Sec. 30 of Act of 1867] And for avoiding doubts, 
and preventing inconvenient delay in the posting and delivery of let- 
ters, — no Postmaster shall be bound to give change, but the exact 
amount of the postage on any letter or other mailable matter shall 
be tendered or paid to him in current coin as respects letters or other 
things delivered, bearing unpaid postage, as shall also the exact 
value in current coin as respects postage stamps, registration stamps, 
stamped envelopes or post cards, post bands or wrappers, purchased 
from any Postmaster and the exact amount of postage payable to any 
letter-carrier on any letter or mailable matter delivered by him. 

38. [Repeats Sec. 40 of Act of 1867 concerning dead letters, hut 
lowers the charge for returning to three cents and allows for deduc- 
tion of postage prepaid in the case of insufficiently prepaid matter.] 

87. The foregoing sections of this Act shall come into force and 
effect on the first day of October, in the present year one thousand 
eight hundred and seventy-five, except only in so far as they relate 
to the rates of postage on newspapers and periodicals sent to the 
United States, as to which they shall come into force on the first day 
of May now next 



From the above quotations we see that the new Act made prepayment of 
letters by stamps obligatory, and imposed a fine of double the deficiency if insuf- 
ficiently prepaid; that the unlimited weight of drop letters was restricted to 
% oz. per rate; that newspapers and periodicals were classed together and 
publishers given the low rate of 1 cent per pound; that the rate of 2 cents 



THE SMALL " CENTS " ISSUE, 1870-82 133 

on transient newspapers was reduced to % cent per ounce, and 1 cent up to 
four ounces; etc. 

The Report of 1875 further informs us that the free delivery of letters 
by carrier had been commenced in the following cities on the dates given: — 

Montreal ist October, 1874. 

Toronto 1st March, 1875. 

Quebec 1st April, " 

Ottawa 1st May, " 

Hamilton 1st " " 

St. John, N.B. 1st " " 

Halifax, N.S. 1st July, " 

Previous to the above dates a charge (in addition to the ordin- 
ary postage) of two cents on each letter received by mail, of one cent 
on each letter posted in the city, and of one cent on each newspaper, 
was collected by the letter-carrier on delivery of the same. Halifax 
was an exception, as letters and papers sent out for delivery by let- 
ter-carrier had been delivered without extra charge since 1851. 

The British American Bank Note Co. was paid for 

Engraving and printing postage stamps for Post Office Depart- 
ment, $32,675.50. 

The Keport of 1876 contains no special items not already noted, but that 
of 1877 states that the letter rate of postage with ^Newfoundland had been re- 
duced from 6 cents to 5 cents per % oz., and the same rate had been obtained 
with Grermany from 1st April, 1877. 

The Report of 1878 announces the admission of Canada into the Uni- 
versal Postal Union from the 1st July, as we have already detailed.^" The 
Report of 1879 says: "A reduction has been made, from the 1st September 
last, in the postage rate on closed parcels sent by post within the Dominion, 
from 12^ cents per 8 oz. of weight to 6 cents per 4 oz. Under this change 
small parcels not exceeding 4 ounces in weight are admitted to pass for 6 
cents instead of 12^-^ cents as before." This sounded the death knell of the 
12% cent stamp, which dropped in the number issued to postmasters from 
84,150 in 1879 to 13,400 in 1880 and 4950 in 1881. It was issued in de- 
creasing numbers down to 1888, when it disappears from the accounts. 

Nothing further of importance transpired untU 1881, when a supple- 



»See page 109. 



134 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

mentary agreement touching certain points was signed with the United States 
Post Office Department: — 

Additional Abticles of Agbeemekt Between the Dominion or 
Canada and the United States of Ameeica. 

For the purpose of affording to the public increased facilities 
for the exchange of written correspondence, and also of preventing 
evasions by publishers, of the postal laws and regulations of the 
United States, the undersigned, duly authorized by their respective 
Governments, have agreed upon the following additional articles 
to the Postal Agreement of 27th January and 1st February, 1875 : 

Article I. 
Insufficiently paid letters mailed in the United States and ad- 
dressed to Canada, or vice versd, mailed in Canada and addressed to 
the United States, on which a single rate of postage or more has been 
prepaid, shall be forwarded charged with the amount of the de- 
ficient postage, to be collected on delivery and retained by the Post 
Department of the country of destination. The amount of such de- 
ficient postage shall be indicated in figures, by the despatching ex- 
change ofBce, on the upper left-hand corner of the address. 

Article II. 
When newspapers, periodicals and other printed matter, published 
or originating in the United States, are brought into Canada and 
posted there for destinations in the United States, apparently to evade 
the postage rates or regulations applicable to such matter in the 
United States, the Canada Post Office may require prepayment of the 
same to be made at a rate equivalent to double the Canada domestic 
rates. 

Article IV. 

The present articles shall be considered additional to those agreed 
upon between the two offices on the 37th January and 1st February, 
1875, and shall come into operation on the 1st of May, 1881. 

The Report of Jime 30, 1882 states that newspapers and periodicals 
published in Canada (under certain conditions as to form and manner of 
posting) are transmitted free by Post within the Dominion when posted from 
the office of publication to regular subscribers, from 1st June, 1882. This 
must have been due to a Department Order, as the Statutes of Canada reveal 
no such enactment at this time. The same Report announces the issue of 
reply post cards, but those will be dealt with later. 



THE SMALL "CENTS" ISSUE, 1870-82 136 

Statistics make up most of the Reports until that of 1886, when an item 
of interest in connection with the completion of the Canadian Pacific Railway 
is found: "The first through train left Montreal on Monday the 28th June, 
1885, and arrived at Port Moody, the Pacific terminus of the road on the 
4th July. Mails for British Columbia commenced to pass over the Canadian 
Pacific Railway by this first train." This marked the independence of Can- 
ada from the United States in the matter of transcontinental transportation 
of mails. The distance from Montreal to Port Moody is given as 2892 miles. 

In connection with this event the following note may be of interest :^^ — 

Up to the time the Canadian Pacific Eailway was built, nearly all 
letters from the Northwest bore United States stamps. The North- 
west mounted police took their mail to Bismarck, Dak., and others 
were sent to Fargo, from whence they were sent around to Detroit 
and thence into Canada. The pony express was used in the Canadian 
Northwest, but no system, no stamps and probably no stipulated 
charges were made to get a letter to the frontier of the United 
States. 

The Report of 188T says that: — 

Provision has been made for the transmission by mail between 
all places in Canada, from 1st February, 1888, of small articles of 
ordinary goods and manufactures in packages, open to inspection, on 
payment of a postage charge of 1 cent per oz. Also a new convention 
with the United States Post Office providing that from the 1st March, 
1888, the same class of matter will be admitted to pass between Can- 
ada and the United States, subject to Customs inspection. 

The Report of 1888 announces the extension of free delivery by letter 
carriers to "Victoria, B. C. Since the list of free delivery offices given on 
page 133, there are to be added as well: — 

London, Ontario 24th AprU, 1876. 

Winnipeg, Manitoba, 1st April, 1882. 

Kingston, Ontario, 1st July, 1882. 

The Report of 1889 states that "the Post Office Act of 1889 increased 
the limit of weight of a single rate letter from % ounce to 1 ounce. The 
rate on drop letters at the same time was fixed at 2 cents per ounce." The 



>^Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, II: 32: 2. 



136 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

Act^^ referred to was an amendment to the Post Office Act, (assented to on 
the 2nd May, 1889), and the notice of the changes issued to the public was 
as follows: — 

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC. 



CHANGES IN POSTAGE KATES UNDEE AUTHORITY OF POST 

OFEICE ACT 1889. 



The rate of postage upon Letters posted in Canada, addressed to 
places within the Dominion or in the United States, will be 3 cents 
per ounce instead of 3 cents per half ounce as heretofore. 

Upon Drop Letters posted at an OiBce from which letters are de- 
livered by Letter Carrier, the postage rate will be 2 cents per ounce, 
instead of 1 cent per half ounce. The rate of postage upon Drop 
Letters, except in the Cities where free delivery by Letter Carrier has 
been established, will be 1 cent per ounce. 

The fee for the Registration of a letter or other article of mail 
matter, will be five cents upon all classes of correspondence passing 
within the Dominion. Eor the present and until further instructed, 
the registration fee may be prepaid by using the 3 cent Registration 
Stataps and Postage Stamps to make up the amount. 

Letters insufficiently prepaid will be charged double the defi- 
ciency as heretofore, provided at least a partial prepayment has been 
made. 

Letters posted wholly unpaid will be sent to the Dead Letter Ofiice 
for return to the writer. 
POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT, JOHN G. HAGGART. 

OTTAWA, 8th MAY, 1889 Postmaster General 

The Act also made another change, not noted in the circular, by which 
section 24 of The Post Office Act, 1875, which provided a rate of 1 cent per 
4 ounces on printed matter, seeds, etc., and samples of merchandise, was 
amended so as to limit the weight of printed matter to 2 ounces for the 1 
cent rate. 

The 1889 Eeport also chronicles the "removal of the British American 
Bank JSTote Co. from Montreal to Ottawa," a fact which we have already 
commented upon at length in its results upon the stamps issued after the 
transfer.^* 



1^52° Vict. Chap. 20. 
"See page 128. 



THE SMALL "CENTS" ISSUE, 1870-82 137 

In 1890 we find that "the complaints which were so prevalent some time 
since, of the want of adhesiveness in the postage stamps have almost entirely 
ceased. It is hoped, therefore, that the efforts of the manufacturer to remove 
the cause of complaint have been successful." And agaia in 1891: "Com- 
plaints of defective mucilage would be far less frequent if the public would 
kindly bear in miad that it is the envelope of a letter, or the cover of a packet, 
and not the postage stamp, which should be moistened when stamps -are 
affixed in prepayment of postage. When a stamp is passed over the tongue 
the mucilage is frequently almost wholly removed." They should have had 
these instructions engraved on the margins of the plates, as did the British 
authorities with the old one penny black! 

The Report for 1892 announces the preparation of letter cards, which 
will be treated of later, and also says: "Postage stamps of the value of 20 
cents and 50 cents are about to be issued. These wiU be useful in prepayment 
of parcel post." And this brings us to our next chapter. 



CHAPTER X 

THE SUPPLEMENTARY VALUES OF 1 893 

BEEOEE proceeding with the subject matter of this chapter in detail, 
it may be well to reproduce here a synopsis of the Canadian Postal 
Kates and Regulations as set forth in the Dominion Philatelist in De- 
cember, 1893, and taken from the then current Canada Postal Guide. This 
will give a comprehensive review of the results of the various Acts and Amend- 
ments and Department Orders that we have quoted — and of some of the last 
that we have been unable to obtain. 



1st. Class Matter. — Includes Letters, Post Cards, Legal and Com- 
mercial Papers wholly or partially written, with the exception of 
those specially exempted, and all matter of the nature of a 
letter or written correspondence. 

The letter rate for Canada, Newfoundland and the United States 
is 3 cents per oz., and for all other destinations 5 cents per % oz. 

InsulEciently paid letters posted in and addressed to Canada are 
charged with double the amount of the postage due thereon. 

When posted wholly unpaid they will be sent to the Dead Letter 
Office. 

Insufficiently paid letters for or from the United States, are 
charged with the deficient postage on delivery. Letters for the United 
States must be prepaid at least one full rate, 3 cents. 

Wholly unpaid letters for and from the United Kingdom and 
other countries, are charged double postage on delivery, and insuffi- 
ciently prepaid letters double the deficiency. 

Letters addressed to mere initials, or to fictitious names, will 
not be delivered, unless a street address, the number of a box, or some 
other definite direction is added. 

Letters bearing mutilated stamps, or stamps so soiled and defaced 
as to make it impossible for the sorting clerks to decide whether they 
have been used before or not, will be sent to the Dead Letter Office. 
Post Cards. Nothing whatever may be attached to a post card, 
nor may it be cut or altered in any way. A previously used post card, 
bearing a 1 cent stamp, will not be accepted as a post card. 



THE SUPPLEMENTARY VALUES OF 1893 139 

2nd Class Matter. — For Canada, Newfoundland and the United 
States. — Newspapers and Periodicals posted from the office of pub- 
lication, for regular subscribers in otter places in Canada, New- 
foundland and the United States, pass free of postage. 

Newspapers and periodicals issued less frequently than once a 
month, and addressed to regular subscribers or news agents, and on 
all specimen newspapers, one cent per pound or fraction of a pound. 

British newspapers and periodicals brought by mail to Cana- 
dian booksellers, or News Agents, for regular subscribers in Canada 
are liable to 1 cent per lb. or fraction of a lb. 

Newspapers from offices of publication for city delivery are sub- 
ject to ordinary transient newspaper rates. 

3rd Class Matter. — Addressed to Canada. — 1. Transient news- 
papers and periodicals. Kate, 1 cent per 4 oz. ; prepayment com- 
pulsory; limit of weight, 5 lbs. A single paper weighing not more 
than 1 oz. may pass for % cent. 

2. Book packets. Bate, 1 cent per 4 oz. ; limit of weight, 5 lbs., 
except for a single book, in which case the limit is 7 lbs. 

3. Miscellaneous matter, (o) Printed pamphlets, printed cir- 
culars, etc., and also seeds, cuttings, bulbs, etc. ; rate, 1 cent per 4 
oz. (6) Maps, lithographs, photographs, circulars produced by a 
multiplying process easy to recognize, deeds, mortgages, insurance 
policies, militia, school and municipal returns, printed stationery, 
etc. ; rate, 1 cent per 2 oz. 

Circulars, Prices Current, etc., to pass at 1 c. rate must be EN- 
TIEELY PKINTED. Any insertion in ink is not permissible, ex- 
cept the name and address of the addressee, the name of the sender 
and the date of the circular itself. 

Circulars type-written, or in such form as to resemble type-writ- 
ten, are liable to letter rate. 

All miscellaneous matter must be put up so as to admit of easy 
inspection. The limit of weight is 5 lbs. 

4. Patterns and samples. Rate, 1 cent per 4 oz. ; limit of weight 
24 oz. ; must be securely put up and open to inspection, and boxes 
or linen bags should be used for flour and similar matter. 

Miscellaneous Matter for the United States. — (a) Newspapers 
and periodicals; rate 1 cent per 4 oz. (6) Other miscellaneous matter, 
including books; rate, 1 cent per 2 oz., but a minimum prepayment of 
5 cents is required for legal and commercial papers. 

The limit of weight for patterns and samples is 8 oz., and for 
other matter under this head 5 lbs. 

4th Class Matter. — Parcel Post for Canada. — Parcels must not ex- 
ceed five lbs. in weight nor two feet in length by one foot in breadth 
or thickness. The postage is 6 cents per 4 oz., and the parcel should 
be marked "by PARCEL POST." Parcels may be registered by affix- 
ing a 5 cent Eegistration Stamp thereto, in addition to the postage. 

Insufficiently paid parcels may be forwarded charged with simply 



140 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

the deficient postage, provided one full rate is paid and the deficiency 
does not exceed one rate. 

5th Glass Matter. — Comprises such articles of general merchan- 
dise as are not entitled to any lower rate of postage. Postage 1 
cent per oz., or fraction of an ounce. Limit of weight, 5 lbs. ; of 
size, two feet in length by one foot in width or depth. Matter claim- 
ing to be 5th Class must he open to inspection and there must be no 
correspondence enclosed. Packages of 5th Class matter, including 
Seeds, Bulbs, Cuttings, Eoots, may be sent to the United States for 
the same prepayment as required within the Dominion, but the con- 
tents will be liable to Customs inspection and collection of duty in 
the United States. Sealed tins containing fi^h, lobster, vegetables, 
meats, &c., if put up in a solid manner and labelled in such a way 
as to fully indicate the nature of their contents may be sent as 5th 
Class Matter within the Dominion, but no sealed matter can be for- 
warded to the United States under this head. Liquids, oils and fatty 
substances may be sent to places in Canada and the United States 
as 5th Class Matter, if put up in accordance with the ruling refer- 
ring to such articles in the Canada Postal Guide. Electrotype 
blocks are included in this class. An insufficiently prepaid packet 
of 5th Class Matter may be forwarded charged with double the de- 
ficient postage, provided the deficiency does not exceed 5 cents. 

Parcel Post. — For the United Kingdom and the Countries and Col- 
onies with which the United Kingdom maintains Parcel Post rela- 
tions, and for Newfoundland, Barbados, British Ouiana, Grenada, St. 
Lucia, St. Vincent, Jamaica, Turks Island, Curacoa and Japan. — Par- 
cels securely and substantially packed and closed for the United King- 
dom, and other countries and colonies to which parcels may be sent 
via England, and for Newfoundland, limited in size to 2 feet in 
length by one foot in width or depth. The postage for the United 
Kingdom, which must be prepaid, is 30e. for the first lb. and 16c. for 
each additional lb. or fraction of a pound ; the limit of weight is 11 
lbs. For Japan the postage is 25c., the limit of weight is 7 lbs. For 
Newfoundland, 15 c. per lb., or fraction of a pound. Eor Barbados, 
British Guiana, Jamaica, Grenada, St. Lucia and St. Vincent, 20 c. 
per lb. Parcels for Newfoundland are daily forwarded on to Hali- 
fax, N.S. For Japan, on to Vancouver, B. C. For Barbados, British 
Guiana, Grenada, St. Lucia and St. Vincent, on to St. John, N.B., 
and for the United Kingdom and other countries and colonies by the 
weekly mail and conveyed by the steamers of the Canadian Lines. 
Parcels posted without the formalities required are sent to the Dead 
Letter Office, Ottawa. 

Registration. — All classes of matter may be registered to places 
in Canada, the United States and Postal Union Countries, and the 
sender may entitle himself to an acknowledgement of delivery from 
the party addressed by the payment of a fee of 5 cents in addition to 
the registration fee. 



THE SUPPLEMENTAEY VALUES OF 1893 141 

(A) Commercial Papers, (B) Boolcs and, (C) Samples, for Postal 
Union Countries. 

"Commercial papers" comprise all papers or documents, written 
or drawn, wholly or partly by hand, (except letters or communica- 
tions in the nature of letters, or other documents having the character 
of an actual and personal correspondence), documents of legal pro- 
cedure. Deeds drawn up by public functionaries, copies of, or ex- 
tracts from Deeds under private seal, Way-Bills, Bills of Lading, In- 
voices and other documents of a mercantile character, docmnents of 
Insurance and other public companies, all kinds of manuscript mu- 
sic, the manuscript of books and other literary works, and other 
papers of a similar description. 

"Printed Papers'' include periodical works, books, stitched or 
bound, sheets of printed music, visiting cards, address cards, proofs of 
printing with or without the manuscript relating thereto, engravings, 
photographs, when not on glass or in frames containing glass, draw- 
ings, plans, maps, catalogues, prospectuses, announcements and notices 
of various kinds, printed, engraved, lithographed, printed circulars. 

(A) Limits of weight and size : 5 lbs. for the United King- 
dom, and 4 lbs. for other countries, 18 inches in length and 12 inches 
in width or depth. 

(B) 5 lbs. for the United Kingdom, and 4 lbs. to other countries, 
3 feet long and 1 foot wide or deep. 

(C) United Kingdom, 5 lbs. in weight, 2 feet in length by 1 foot 
in breadth or depth. 

(C) Limits of weight to Austria-Hungary, Belgium, "Egypt, 
France, Hawaii, Italy, Portugal, Eoumania and Switzerland, is 13 ozs., 
limit of size 1 foot in length by 8 inches in width and 4 inches in 
depth. If in form of a roll it may be 13 inches in length and 6 
inches in diameter. 

The limit of weight to other Postal Union Countries is 8 ozs., 
limit of size same as to Austria-Hungary, &c., &c. 

Matter Which Cannot 6e Forwarded Through the Post. — Liquids, 
Oils, etc., not properly put up. Explosive Substances and other matter 
likely to entail risk or injury to the ordinary contents of the mail, 
cannot be sent by post. 

Letters containing Gold or Silver Money, Jewels, or precious 
articles, or anything liable to Customs duties, cannot be forwarded 
by Post to any of the Postal Union Countries except the United States. 

We see from the above postal packet rates where the use of a 20 cent 
stamp would be convenient, which accounts for the announcement of the new 
value in the Postmaster General's Keport last quoted in the preceding chap- 
ter. The 50 cent stamp of course woiild serve a useful purpose in making 
up relatively large amounts of postage. The above rates also show that there 
was still use for the 15 cent stamp in payment of parcels to ISTewfoundland. 



142 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

We find notice of the issue of the new values in the Dominion Phila- 
telist^ as follows: — 

As foreshadowed in the Postmaster General's report, there have 
appeared Canada postage stamps of the value of 30c. and 50c. ; the 20c. 
is a bright deep orange and the 50c. is indigo blue, they are of similar 
design and resemble very much the third issue bill stamp and may be 
described as follows : head and shoulders of Queen to left, with 
widow's cap and chin resting on right hand, enclosed in a circle ; above 
the circle the words "Canada Postage", below the circle at either side 

the value in figures and across the bottom the value in words 

The above were all placed on sale Feb. 33nd. The 30c. and 50e. stamps 
were intended for parcel post. 

The somewhat ambiguous description will be more readily understood 
by reference to the illustrations, numbers 33 and 35 on Plate II. 

The stamps, as stated, are very evidently copied from the design of the 
dollar values of the Bill Stamps issued in 1868. The portrait of the Queen 
in her widow's weeds, in fact, is doubtless reproduced directly from the 
original die engraved twenty-five years previously. The stamps were of 
course line engraved on steel, and printed in the usual sheet arrangement of 
100, ten rows of ten. The plates of course emanated from Ottawa, but bear 
a new imprint, similar to the second one used in Montreal. The colored 
strip is now 38 mm. long and 2% mm. high with square ends, and bears the 
legend: "British American Bank l^ote Co. Ottawa." within a pearled border. 
It appears only twice, in the center of the top and of the bottom margins, 
and can be seen in illustrations Nos. 106 and 108 on Plate IX. The colors 
are not exactly as described in our quotation, the 20 cent being a vermilion 
or bright red, similar to the colors of the 3 cent, and the 50 cent a deep bhie, 
but not indigo. According to the advices of the American Journal of Phil- 
ately (VI: 102) the stamps were issued on the lYth Pebruary^ — five days 
earlier than the above quotation states. 

Both values were printed on a medium white wove paper and perforated 
12. Both were ordered to the number of half a million copies in 1893, and 
in 1895 25,000 more of the 20 cent and 30,000 more of the 50 cent were de- 
livered, with a final 200 copies of each in 1896. These -quantities were suffi- 
cient to last until the 20 cent was superseded by the newer type in 1901, and 
the 50 cent by the King's head stamp in 1908. Some 1500 of the 20 cent 
were returned for destruction and about 10,000 of the 50 cent! 

^Dominion Philatelist, V: 31, 



THE SUPPLEMENTAET VALUES OE 1893 143 

Both these stamps are found imperforate and in this condition are to be 
classed in the same category as the imperforates of the "small cents issue," which 
we have already considered.^ Illustrations of blocks of four of each will be found 
as numbers 106 and 108 on Plate IX. The 50 cent is in a peculiar black 
blue shade. 



In the preceding chapter we quoted a circular from the Postmaster Gen- 
eral which called attention to the changes made by The Post Office Act, 1889. 
A uniform registration fee of 5 cents was one of these, and to enable the 2 
cent registration stamps to be used up permission was given to make up the 
difference by postage stamps when registering mail matter. Four years later 
it was decided to discontinue the use of the special stamp for the registration 
fee, and to permit its prepayment by ordinary postage stamps. As the com- 
bined letter and registration rate was eight cents, a stamp of this value for 
use on registered letters was deemed advisable. We read under "Canadian 
Notes" in Meheel's Weehly Stamp News for August 10, 1893 : — 

The following orders were posted up in all the Canadian post-offices 
on Augnst 1st : 

"A new postage stamp of the value of 8c. is now being put into cir- 
culation. This stamp will be available for the prepayment either of reg- 
istration fee and postage combined, or of postage only. The 5c. registra- 
tion stamp, when the present supply is exhausted, will be withdrawn." 

The new stamp reverted to the small size and general design of the 
"small cents issue", but with the important difference that the head was 
turned to the left instead of the right, as with all the others of that series. It 
was line engraved on steel, as usual, and the only entire sheet we have seen 
was of 200, in ten horizontal rows of twenty stamps, but without a sign of any 
marginal imprints. The perforation variety 11% x 12 is reported as occurring 
in this value also, as well as the regular gauge 12. The color was at first a 
bluish gray, which soon darkened and ran through a series of shades as if in 
emulation of the old 6 pence stamp. Mr. Horsley states^ that it appeared in 
slate-blue in October of 1893, and slate in 1895. Alfred Smith's Monthly Cir- 
cular for December, 1895, records it in a "dark slate-black," and the WeeMy 
Philatelic Era for ISTovember 30, 1895, says that "a peculiar feature in connec- 

^See page 130. 

'London Philatelist, XVI: 88. 



144 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

tion with the new shade of the current eight cent Canada postage stamp is that 
upon being put in water and left there for a few minutes the paper becomes of 
a pinkish tint which after the stamp becomes dry still remains." This "new 
shade" was doubtless the dark slate color referred to, which must have been 
issued, therefore, in October or November of 1895. In December, 1897, the 
Monthly Journal notes it in a "deep purple", similar in shade to the 8 cent 
Jubilee stamp, and very likely printed from the same mixing of ink. 

The stamp was printed upon a medium white wove paper, and is found 
in imperforate condition like the other values of the then current stamps, 
which we have already described.* The imperforates are in the early bluish 
gray color, so that it is fair to suppose they were from the first printings in 
1893. A block of four is illustrated as number 110 on Plate X. 

The first delivery of these stamps — and of course the first printing — 
was of 100,000, as recorded in the stamp accounts for 1893. As these ac- 
counts were made up to 30th June, and there is no record of any "issue to 
postmasters," the stamps were doubtless delivered just before the accounts 
were closed, so that opportunity had not been given to distribute the new 
value. For the next few fiscal years the amount received from the manufac- 
turers averaged over a million and a half annually, so that by the time it was 
superseded it had been printed to the number of at least Y% millions. 

There is nothing of special importance concerning postage stamps in 
the Postmaster General's Reports from 1893 to 1897, but we glean an item 
of interest from Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News of December 3, 1896 : — 

A new regulation has been put in force by the Canadian post- 
office department. Until a few days ago it was unlawful for any per- 
son to sell unused current Canadian stamps without a government 
license [as a stamp vendor]. Merchants and others who received a 
great many unused stamps as remittances, have heretofore been com- 
pelled to send them to the department at a discount of five per cent. 
or dispose of them by illegitimate means, running the risk of being 
prosecuted for selling without license. A great deal of complaint was 
made to the department concerning this matter, and last week Hon. 
Mr. Mulock announced that thenceforth all unused Canadian stamps 
would be cashed at one per cent, discount in amounts of over $1.00. 
The stamps may be pasted on paper, as they will not be put in circu- 
lation again. 

'See page 130, 



CHAPTER XI 

THE JUBILEE ISSUE OF 1897 

THE so-called "Diamond Jubilee" of the accession of Queen Victoria, 
who had then been on the throne of the United Kingdom for sixty 
years, occurred on the 20th June, 1897, and several of the British 
Colonies, as on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary, considered it fitting 
to celebrate the event with a commemorative issue of postage stamps. Prob- 
ably no proprieties would be violated were it observed, sub rosa, that the pe- 
cuniary gains connected with such issues were probably more of a factor in 
determining their birth than the superabundance of jubilation over the auspi- 
cious occurrence. Such a suspicion is quite readily aroused when consider- 
ing all the facts in connection with the special set of stamps that Canada 
felt it necessary to put forth at this time. 

But the story runs a little farther back and hinges on other changes. 
What proved a prophetic utterance appeared under "Canadian IsTotes" in the 
WeeMy Philatelic Era of August 1, 1896, as follows: — 

For the first time in 18 years a Liberal, or Eeform government has 
full control of the Dominion Mr. William Mulock, J. C, of To- 
ronto, is the new Postmaster General and I am informed that consider- 
able pressure is being brought to bear upon Mm to have an entirely 
new set of stamps issued to replace those which have been in use in 
Canada for something over a quarter of a century. 

Under the same "Notes" in the issue of the above paper for January 
23, 1897, we find the resiilt of the "pressure": — 

The British American Bank Note Company, which for so many 
years have had the contract for printing Canada's paper currency and 
postage stamps, have been notified that their services will no longer 
be required. The shareholders in that company were not of the right 
political stripe for the new Government. The contract has now been 
given to the American Bank Note Company of New York. This com- 
pany will have to establish a branch office at Ottawa and all the work 
will have to be done in Canada. 



146 CANADIAiT POSTAGE STAMPS 

Mekeel's WeeMy Stamp News gives further details in a clipping from 
the Montreal Herald, dated "Ottawa, Jan. 11," [1897] i^— 

The contract for the Government engraving, for which tenders vrere 
called two months ago, has been awarded to the American Bank Note 
Company, of New York, for a period of five and a quarter years. The 
contract is worth $600,000, and may be renewed for a similar period. 
The work consists of engraving Dominion bank notes, revenue and 
postage stamps, postal cards, etc. At present the British American 
Bank Note Company, better known as Burland and Company, formerly 
of Montreal, have the contract. They tendered this time, but the New 
York company was the lowest. The New York company is one of the 
largest and best known in the world. The firm engraves notes for 
some of the banks in Canada, including the Canadian Bank of Com- 
merce. Under the terms of the new contract, the Company will re- 
quire to establish a place in Ottawa to do the work, where the Gov- 
ernment can have supervision of it. As compared with the prices paid 
under the Burland contract, the Government will efEect a saving of 
$120,000 by the new contract. 

The next step appears in the WeeMy Philatelic Era of January 30, 1897, 
where we read under "Canadian Notes" : — 

Many suggestions are being made and many plans laid for the fit- 
ting celebration of the sixtieth year of Her Majesty's reign. In Canada 
this celebration is being coupled with that of the four hundredth anni- 
versary of Cabot's discovery of America. In this connection a proposal 
has been made and an agitation started for the issue of a commemora- 
tive set of postage stamps by the Dominion government .... It has been 
suggested that the hew stamps be made a trifle larger than the present 
ones, that a somewhat recent picture of Her Majesty replace the pres- 
ent one, and that the fig-ures and colors be made more pronounced. If 
possible some reference to the combined celebrations will likely be 
made. The agitation for a new issue is quite pronounced and is by no 
means confined to philatelists. There appears to be general desire on 
the part of the people to have a change. 

A step further is recorded in the Era for March 27th, as follows: — 

The Toronto World in its edition of March 15th, contained the fol- 
lowing as one of its leaders : "Here is good news for postage stamp col- 
lectors. The Postmaster-Genex-al proposes, as far as his department is 
concerned, to commemorate Her Majesty's diamond jubilee by the issue 
of a new 3-cent postage stamp appropriate to the occasion. It will have 

^Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, IX: 25. 



THE JUBILEE ISSUE OF 1897 147 

a limited circulation only, probably for a period of montis covering the 
jubilee celebrations during tbe coming summer. When the sale is 

stopped the present 3-cent stamp will be put in circulation again 

So far the design of the new stamp has not been made public although 
the Hon. Mr. Mnlock, the Postmaster-General, has sent a sketch of it 
to the British-American [sic] Bank Note Company to be engraved. It 
it said to be oblong and nearly as large as the Columbian issue" 

If only this original intention had been adhered to! 

More precise information finally appeared in the Era for May 29th: — 

During the last week the Canadian papers have been full of Can- 
ada's Jubilee issue, which has now been definitely decided upon. 

The Toronto Evening Telegram of a few days ago has perhaps the 
most to say concerning the stamps, and it is to that paper that your 
correspondent is indebted for the following. The new Jubilee stamp 
will be issued in another month. The design represents Her Majesty 
at two important eras in her life, namely at her accession on the 30th 
of June, 1837, and within a few weeks of her Jubilee in 1897. The 
first vignette, showing her on her coronation day, is from a well 
known portrait of that period. It is a full faced portrait and her 
Majesty wears the crown. Looking at the stamp this vignette is at the 
left side. To the right is a picture of Her Majesty as she appears to- 
day; the face is profile looking toward the vignette of 1837. The latter 
picture represents Her Majesty wearing the Empress crown. Between 
and above the two vignettes is a beautifully executed copy of the Im- 
perial crown of England and under it the letter "V" with the letters 
"E. I." in the fork of the "V". The three letters meaning Victoria 
Eegina (Queen), Imperatrix (Empress). In the semi-circle or upper 
part of the vignette are the words "Canada Postage" and underneath 
these are respectively the dates 1837-1897 and between the vignettes are 
ornamentation of maple leaves, while in the lower corners of the stamps 
are also maple leaves, and between these and at the base of the stamp 
is its denomination in black letters on a white ground. There will be 
sixteen varieties of the new stamp and a post card. 

»»** *** » 

The first set of stamps printed will be sent to H. R. H. the Prince 
of York [sicl, who is an enthusiastic stamp collector. The second set 
will be presented to Her Excellency Lady Aberdeen (wife of the Cana- 
dian Governor General) . 

The same paper credits the suggestion of the general idea of the Jubilee 
design to Mr. Pareira, an official of the Interior Department. 

A few days later the matter of the proposed issue came up in Parliament, 
and the Postmaster General was interpellated in the House of Commons. His 



148 



CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 



reply was published in the Canadian Hansard, the official record, of 20th May, 
1897, as follows:— 

The Postmaster-General (Mr. Mulock) : It is the intention of the 
Government to issue a set of Jubilee postage stamps. Such stamps will 
be put into public use by being delivered to postmasters throughout 
Canada for sale to the public in the same manner as ordinary postage 
stamps are sold. There will be a limit to the quantity to be issued. 
The denominations of Jubilee stamps, and the total number of such 
Jubilee stamps to be issued, are set forth in the following schedule: — 

Schedule shov/ing the Denominations and Total Number of Jubilee 
Stamps to be issued : 



Number to be issued. 

150,000 

8,000,000 

2,500,000 

20,000,000 

750,000 

75,000 

200,000 

150,000 

100,000 

100,000 

100,000 

25,000 

25,000 

25,000 

25,000 

25,000 

7,000,000 

Total value of one stamp of each kind, $ 16.21%. 
As soon as the total number of stamps mentioned in said schedule 
is issued the plates from which they will have been engraved will be de- 
stroyed in the presence of the head and two officers of the department. 
On the 10th June the Post Office Department will proceed to supply 
Jubilee postage stamps to the principal post offices in Canada, and 
through them the minor post offices will obtain their supply until the 
issue is exhausted. If this Jubilee issue were to wholly displace the 
ordinary postage stamps it would supply the ordinary wants of the 
country for between two and three months, but as the use of the ordi- 
nary postage stamps will proceed concurrently with that of the Jubilee 
stamps, it is expected that the Jubilee stamp will last beyond the 
three months. Inasmuch as the department is already receiving appli- 
cations for the purchase of Jubilee stamps, it may be stated that the 
department will adhere to the established practice of supplying them 
only to postmasters, and through them to the public, who may pur- 
chase them on and after the 19th June, 1897. 



Denomination. 
% c. stamps 
1 c. 
3 c. 
3 c. 

5 c. 

6 c. 
8 c. 

10 c. 

15 c. 

20 c. 

50 0. 
$ 1 00 
$ 3 00 
$ 3 00 
$ 4 00 
$ 5 00 

1 c. post cards. 



THE JUBILEE ISSUE OF 1897 149 

Promptly, "as advertised", the stamps were placed on sale throughout 
the Dominion on the morning of Saturday, the 19th of June. The natural 
result followed: an expectant populace, for various reasons but with one main 
object, literally beseiged the post offices for the coveted treasures. The ad- 
vance publication of the quantities of the various denominations to be issued 
gave speculators the hint as to the most desirable values to "corner", and as 
a result the % cent and 6 cent stamps were a special mark in all quarters. 
This action seems to have been more or less anticipated, for these values were 
doled out in very small quantities, if at all, in spite of the large orders that 
were everywhere given for them. This was doubtless largely due to the follow- 
ing circular, sent out with the initial supply of the stamps to all post- 
masters •? — 



N. B. — Eequisitions for /«JJ seti of the Jubilee stamps will be iilled 
until the issue is exhausted. — E. P. S. 

POST OFFICE DEPAKTMENT, CANADA, 
POSTAGE STAMP BEANCH, 

OTTAWA, June, 1897. 
Sib, — I am directed by the Postmaster-General to send you here- 
with a supply of the Jubilee stamps and 1 c. post card, equal to one 
month's ordinary requirements of your ofEce. Should this quantity 
prove insufBcient it will, on your requisition addressed to this branch, 
be supplemented; but as the Jubilee issue is limited, it would be nec- 
eessary for you to apply early in order to secure further supplies of 
the same. 

I am also to instruct you not to sell any of the accompanying 
stamps or post cards before the opening of your ofBce at the regular 
ofBce hours on the 19th June instant^the eve of the anniversary they 
are intended to commemorate. 

These stamps and cards are, of course, like the ordinary issues, to 
be sold at face value. 

I am, Sir, your obedient Servant, 

E. P. Stanton, Superintendent. 
THE POSTMASTEK. 

p_ s. ^As there appears to be a somewhat general desire on the 

part of many persons to purchase, for souvenir purposes, complete sets 
of the Jubilee stamps, it is hoped that you will so manage the sale of 
such stamps that persons applying to purchase full sets may be able to 

get them. 

E. P. S. 



•Monthly Journal, Vm. 177. 



150 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

The conditions that developed when the stamps were actually issued 
seem to have surprised the Department, and caused additional measures to 
be taken for an equable distribution. We quote Mr. F. W. Wurtele:^ — 

The experience of tlie first day's sale eonvinced our government 
that halves and sixes would very soon be bought up by speculators un- 
less some action was taken to further restrict their sale; they there- 
fore came to the conclusion that those persons who were willing to 
contribute to the revenues of the Canadian Government to the extent 
of $16.33 for a complete set of jubilee stamps were entitled to protec- 
tion, and decided that they at least should not pay more than face 
value for their % and 6. In consequence the following circular was 
issued by the post-office department, and no more of these values could 
be obtained from any licensed vendor. 

POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT, CANADA, 
POSTAGE STAMP BRANCH, 

OTTAWA, 36th June, 1897. 

SlE, — ^With reference to the numerous demands upon this ofiBce for 
the % c. and 6c. Jubilee stamps, I am directed to explain that the re- 
spective quantities of Jubilee stamps ordered bear, relatively, the same 
proportions to the actual requirements of the Postal Service, but the 
tendency to exhaust the HALVES and SIXES has increased to such a 
degree, that it has become necessary to restrict their sale to the pur- 
chasers of full sets. Hence I am to express the Postmaster-General's 
regret that he is unable, having regard to the limited character of the 
Jubilee issue, to comply with any requests for the %c or 6c denomina- 
tion, apart from those for full sets. These sets may be obtained as 
long as the series of Jubilee stamps lasts, but as the demands upon it 
are unusually heavy, it would be advisable to apply for full sets at the 
earliest possible moment. 

When Postmasters obtain such sets to ~fill orders actual or pro- 
spective at their respective offices, they must not, in any case, break 
the sets. 

I am. Sir, your obedient Servant, 

E. P. STANTON, Superuitendent. 

P. S. — Under no circumstances will there be any issue of Jubilee 
stamps, beyond the limits mentioned in the accompanying extract 
from Hansard, containing the Postmaster-General's statement on the 
subject. 



It was necessary to print 3,000 copies of the foregoing circular in 
order to reply to all the demands on the department at Ottawa for 
% c. and 6 c. 

■Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, X: 64. 



THE JUBILEE ISSUE OF 1897 151 

Not only were the sales of the % and 6 cent stamps thus restricted, but 
notices were posted in the offices that none of the %c., 6c., 8c., $1.00, $2.00, 
$3.00, $4.00, or $5.00 stamps would be sold unless the whole set were taken. 
This proceeding naturally resulted in considerably more protest on the part 
of stamp collectors and the public ( ?). Rumor had it just after the issue 
was placed on sale that the 8 cent stamp had been withdrawn, which prob- 
ably accounts for the "run" upon that value and its inclusion in the above 
restrictions. In fact a correspondent of MekeeVs Weekly Stamp News, writing 
from Winnipeg, Man., on 25th June, stated that "a sensation was caused 
amongst those interested by the government on Tuesday [22nd June] recall- 
ing, by wire, all the 8c. stamps of the new issue on hand at this office." This 
was later explained by a letter published in the Weekly Philatelic Era:* — 

POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT, CANADA, 
POSTAGE STAMP BRANCH, 

OTTAWA, 39th July, 1897. 
SIR,— In reply to your letter of the 36th Inst., I am directed to 
say that the question of issuing partial sets of Jubilee stamps is now 
under the consideration of the Department. In respect to the recall of 
the 8 c. Jubilee stamps, I may say that it was but a partial one, and 
intended to render possible a re-distribution of that stamp on a basis 
more in accordance with the actual demand therefor. 
» « » • 

I am, Sir, 

Your obdt. servant, 
E. P. STANTON, 
Superintendent. 

Under date of 31st July it was announced from Ottawa that "the demand 
for complete sets has been very large, about nine thousand sets having already 
been issued".^ The "partial sets" referred to in the above letter were the 
next step in the unbending process, the decision to put them on sale 
having been reached on 31st July, and their issue to the public beginning on 
4th August. Concerning this concession Mr. Donald A. King says:® — 

So soon as the demand for these [complete] sets was, to some 
extent satisfied, the department yielding to another class of enquiries 
and requests for sets up to and including the 50 cents and $1.00 re- 
spectively, made a distribution of such sets, the numbers being appor- 



'Weekly PhllateUc Era, XI: 416. 
"Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, XI: 78. 
•Monthly Journal, Vin; 178. 



152 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

tioned upon a basis of the revenue of each money order office through- 
out the Dominion. Between 30,000 and 40,000 sets were thus dis- 
tributed, and rapidly sold, as a very large number of requests for 
further supplies came in from the different offices. The following is 
the circular sent to postmasters regulating the sale of these partial 
sets: 

POST OFFICE DEPAETMENT, CANADA, 
POSTAGE STAMP BKANCH, 

OTTAWA, [August] 1897. 

SIE. — I am directed to transmit to you the accompanying partial 
sets of Jubilee stamps. These sets consist of two kinds : one from a 
%c. to $1.00 (value $3.20%), the other from %c. to 50c. (value $1.30%). 
You are instructed to sell these stamps as sets, and as sets only, rep- 
resentations having been made to the department that in various parts 
of the Dominion there is a desire to obtain such sets for souvenir pur- 
poses. You must not, under any circumstances, break a set ; for, be- 
sides the disappointment that such a course would cause, you would 
render yourself liable to loss, the department having decided not to 
allow credit for any broken sets returned to it by a postmaster who, 
notwithstanding the instructions herein given, sells any denominations 
of the stamps making up a set apart from the rest. 

I am also to ask you to use your best judgment in the sale of these 
sets, checking, as far as possible, any attempt on the part of specula- 
tors to monopolize them, and thus securing as general a distribution 
of such sets in your vicinity as the circumstances may permit. To 
enable you to make change in connection with the sale of the enclosed 
sets I include a sufficient quantity of ordinary % c. postage stamps. 

I may add that the accompanying supply has been based strictly 
upon the annual revenue of your office, and, having regard to the total 
number of sets available and the extent of their distribution, repre- 
sents that proportion to which you are entitled. 

I am. Sir, your obedient Servant, 

E. P. STANTON, Superintendent. 

THE POSTMASTER. 

For dismgemiousness, for pathetic regard for the public and the post- 
master, and yet withal a keen eye for the "interests" of the department, this 
circular is a model which should be preserved for posterity — and "business- 
like" post office departments. 

Mr. King continues: — 

The demand for the small sets was so great that the supply was 
exhausted almost all at once, and in reply to repeated requests for more 
sets the department issued the following circular : — 



THE JUBILEE ISSUE OF 1897 153 

POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT, CANADA. 
(Oifice of the Superintendent of the Postage Stamp Branch). 

Ottawa 1897. 

SIE, — The partial sets of Jubilee stamps already issued to your 
ofBce constituted its share of these sets, having regard to their limited 
number and the area of their distribution, which comprised all the 
money order ofBces in the Dominion. 

Except a reserve for complete sets (from %c. to $5.00 inclusive, 
cost $16.20%) there is not a Jubilee stamp left in the department — all 
having been issued to postmasters. The plates, I may add, were de- 
stroyed on the 10th September instant. 

I am, Sir, your obedient Servant, 

E. P. STANTON, Superintendent. 

THE POSTMASTER. 

Such is the history of the Diamond Jubilee set of Canadian stamps. We 
make no comment on it — it seems as if none were necessary and that the 
presentation is amply sufficient for each to judge for himself concerning it. 
We will only add Major Evans sapient remark'': "All the trouble was the 
natural result of pretending to treat a commemorative and limited issue as if it 
had been an ordinary and permanent one. Ordinary common sense should have 
suggested the issue of large supplies of the lowest value, and a certain num- 
ber of all values to every office." 

To revert to the stamps themselves. We have already given a description 
of the design in one of our previous quotations, but it needs to be amended in 
one or two particulars. The portrait of Queen Victoria labelled "1837" on 
the stamp will be recognized as identical with that on the old 12 pence and 
later 7% pence values. In fact Mr. Wurtele tells us® that a prominent Mon- 
treal collector, whose advice was asked when the issue was under consideration, 
gave the government a magnificent unused copy of the 7%d. green, to be 
used in engraving the picture. It does not, as stated, show Her Majesty on 
her coronation day, but is from the painting representing her on the occasion 
of the prorogation of Parliament, on 17th July, 1837, as already described.® 
The portrait labelled "1897" is from a full length painting executed by com- 
mand in 1886 by Prof. Von Angelo of Vienna. It represents Her Majesty 
as she appeared on the assumption of the title "Empress of India", and the 
curious may find the entire figure copied on the 3 pence post card of Great 



'Monthly Journal, VIH: 230. 
sMekeel's Weekly Stamp News, X: 63. 

"See page 33. 



164 



CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 



Britain issued in 1889, and also on the 1 penny card of 1892. This State 
portrait of the Queen is now in Buckingham Palace. The crown at the top 
center of the stamp is not the Imperial State Crown of Great Britain but the 
so-called Tudor Crown. The Imperial Crown is well illustrated on the 3 
pence and 5 cent "beaver" stamps, and a comparison with the Jubilee issue 
will plainly show the difference in the "style" of these two crowns. 

Our illustration (No. 34 on Plate II) shows a sample of the whole set, 
the only variation, outside of the color, being the denomination in the label 
at the bottom. This is in each case expressed in words. The stamps are beau- 
tifully engraved on steel as usual, and are printed on stout wove paper and 
perforated 12. The values from % cent through 5 cents were printed in 
sheets of 100, ten rows of ten. Above the 5 cent, that is from 6 cents through 
5 dollars, they were printed in sheets of 50, ten horizontal rows of five stamps 
each. The marginal inscriptions are very meagre, consisting merely of 
"OTTAWA — JSTo — 1" (or some other plate number) in hair-line Roman cap- 
itals 2^mm. high, at the top of the sheet only. The inscription is 40 mm. 
long, being centered over stamps 5 and 6 of the top row in the sheets of 100, 
and over stamp number 3 in the sheets of 50. This is the first time that 
plate numbers appear on the sheets of Canadian postage stamps, and it is well 
to record them. Taking them serially we find the plates of the various values 
were made as follows: — 



Plate 



10 

11 

12 
13 
14 
15 
16 



3 cents 
3 
3 
3 
1 
1 
3 
3 
% 
5 
3 
3 
3 
3 
1 
1 



Plate 



17 . . 


6 


cents 


18 


15 


" 


19 . 


. 10 


s» 


20 . 


8 


)» 


21 . 


. 20 


)» 


32 . 


4 


dollars 


23 . 


. 50 


cents 


24 . 


3 


dollars 


25 . 


5 


" 


26 . 


. 2 


" 


27 . 


1 


»» 


28 . 


. 3 


cents 


29 . 


. 3 


>» 


30 . 


. 3 


>» 


31 . 


. 3 


)» 



The colors, which will be found in the Reference List, are quite con- 
stant, as would be expected. The principal variation is only one of tone in 
in a few values. 



THE JUBILEE ISSUE OF 1897 155 

A newspaper despatch from Ottawa tells us that "A return brought down 
to-day shows that the cost of printing the jubilee stamp was 20 cents per 
thousand."^" 

Considerable criticism was naturally aroused by the inclusion of the 
values from one to five dollars, and outside of the palpable attempt to "make 
capital" from stamp collectors and others, it was claimed that the four and 
five dollar values were useless, as the "highest amount that can possibly be 
required on a parcel sent by mail from Canada is $3.59 (including registra- 
tion). This owing to limitations of weight, etc., and the highest amount that 
can be required on a letter is $1.65".-^^ An. "official" replied^^ that "very fre- 
quently parcels leave the Toronto Post Office with $15 and $20 postage on 
them, and in some cases the postage has reached the amount of $63. There 
is another way in which the $4 and $5 stamps may be used, viz. : — in second 
class rate books. Canada does not issue Newspaper or Periodical stamps so 
these two high values can be used in this way." 

Someone wrote the Postmaster General, quoting the above letter and asking 
further particulars. The reply stated^^ that "the regulations do not fix any 
limit to the weight of letters. . . . According to the regulations of this De- 
partment 'Second Class Matter' comprises newspapers and periodicals ad- 
dressed to regular subscribers, (including sample copies) and that, postage 
being payable upon such matter at a bulk rate of Ic. per lb., the stamps re- 
quired for prepayment are not affixed to the packages, but are placed in small 
books and cancelled. The books for this purpose are supplied by the De- 
partment to all Post Offices where they are required." This was analogous 
to the practice in the United States, only regular postage stamps were em- 
ployed instead of special newspaper and periodical stamps. As a matter of 
fact the high value Jubilee stamps, which later became a drug on the market, 
were largely used for this purpose. Mr. King confirms the fact of large 
postage payments :^* "I have seen packages originating at and passing through 
the post office here [Halifax] that had from $12.00 to $15.00 postage on 

them and the case can be recalled of a letter on which $40 was prepaid." 

The question of the unlimited validity of the Jubilee stamps for postage 
was also brought up, doubtless because of the temporary nature of their issue. 



MPost Office, IX: 37. 

"Weekly Philatelic Era, XI: 383. 

i^ibld., XI: 406. 

"ibid., XI: 426. 

"Monthly Journal, VIH: 177. 



156 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

and a special circular was issued touching this point, of which the following 
is a copy:^^ — 

POST OFFICE DEPAETMENT, CANADA. 
POSTAGE STAMP BRANCH. 

OTTAWA, 24th June, 1897. 
SIE, — I am directed to send you for your information and guid- 
ance, the following statement, which has just been given to the press : 
"Enquiry having been made at the Post OfBce Department as to 
whether the Canadian Jubilee Postage Stamps would continue good as 
postage for a limited period only, it has been officially stated that the 
Jubilee stamp will remain valid for postage purposes so long as they 
may continue in circulation. They will not, however, 6e redeemed by 
the Department, a distinction being drawn in this respect between them 
and the ordinary postage stamps." 
I atQ Sir, 

Your obedient Servant, 
E. P. STANTON, 

Superintendent. 

A curious case of splits is recorded from the Sussex, N. B., Newsi^^ — 

The Railway News last week on account of not receiving permis- 
sion from the Post-Master General to allow papers to go through the 
mails free, was compelled to pay postage. No half cent stamps being 
available, the post office department allowed one cent stamps to be cut 
in halves for postage. This is the first time on record we believe where 
such was allowed and the stamps have been eagerly sought after, one 
dollar being paid for a single stamp with the post office stamp on it. 
The News will pay twenty-five cents each for the one cent Jubilee 
stamps cut in halves bearing the post office stamp of November 5th, 
6th, or 8th, which was allowed to pass through the mails on that date 
owing to there being no regular half cent stamps obtainable. 

The 1 cent ordinary also did duty at some offices for like reasons, but 
the practice was not approved from headquarters, as postmasters were officially 
instructed in such cases to use whole 1 cent stamps and get a refund on the 
difference in value. 



It may be recalled that one of our quotations stated that the first set of 
Jubilee stamps printed would be presented to the "Prince of York" — a slip 
for the "Duke of York," afterwards Pruice of Wales, and now His Most 

"Weekly Philatelic Era XII: 210. 
M|bld., XII: 96. 



THE JUBILEE ISSUE OF 1897 157 

Gracious Majesty King George V. An account of this presentation set may 
not be without interest here:^^ — 

A very unique and handsome piece of work is the postal portfolio 
which is to be presented to His Eoyal Highness, the Duke of York, by 
the Dominion Government, and which is on exhibition in the window 
of Kyrie Brothers, Jewelers, Toronto. The portfolio is in the form 
of an album, the cover of which is of royal blue morocco leather, 
handsomely decorated in gold. In the center of the front cover is a 
raised shield in white on which are the words in gold letters, "Domin- 
ion of Canada, Diamond Jubilee Postage Stamps, 32nd June, 1897." 
The corners of the portfolio are decorated with guards of Canadian 
gold made from British Columbia and Kamey district ore. The right 
hand upper corner decoration is a design of maple leaves, and the 
lower corner of English oak leaves and acorns. The portfolio is fast- 
ened with a clasp of Canadian gold in the form of oak leaves, while the 
bracket on the front holding the clasps in position is entwined with 
maple leaves with the monogram of H. E. H. the Duke of York — 
G. F. E. A. — George Frederick Ernest Albert. On the third page is the 
inscription, "This collection of postage stamps issued at Ottawa by the 
Dominion of Canada in commemoration of the Diamond Jubilee of Her 
Most Gracious Majesty Queen Victoria is presented to H. E. H. the 
Duke of York, K. G., by the Government of Canada, 1897." The last 
page of this unique stamp album -will contain the certificate of the 
destruction of the dies and plates in the presence of Hon. Wm. Mulock, 

postmaster-general of Canada This is probably the dearest stamp 

album in the world, and contains only a single specimen of each de- 
nomination of the jubilee issue. 

It will be noted that the Superintendent's last circular concerning the 
exhaustion of the Jubilee stamps stated that the plates had been destroyed. 
An eye witness sent MekeeVs Weekly Stamp News (X: 166) an account of 
the process which is interesting enough to reproduce. 

On Friday afternoon, Sept. 10th, ... I presented myself at the 
Post-OfBce Department and joined a party who were just leaving the 
building to go over to the American Bank Note Go's, building, a couple 

of blocks away Arriving, we were conducted to the top floor by the 

manager. The plates, dies, etc., were brought out by those in charge, 
and the seventeen original dies after inspection by those present were 
placed one by one under a press and an obliterating roller passed over 
them several times : proofs were then pulled which faintly showed the 
outline of the ovals, etc., but the words showing the value could not 
even be made out. Next the rolls for transferring the impression from 
the dies to the plates came in for their share of attention. There were 
nineteen of them, and a. few burns from an emery wheel quickly put 

"Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, X: 2S. 



158 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

each one "out of sight". The plates, 31 in number, were subjected to the 
same treatment as the dies and the total time occupied in the destruc- 
tion of the various parts occupied almost two hours. 

The Postmaster General's Eeport for the 30th June, 1897, reprints the 
extract from the Canadian Hansard of 20th May, which we have already 
given. ^® The stamp accounts show a few curious things. In the first place 
the announcement of the issue gave the quantity of 8 cent stamps as 200,000. 
The accounts for 1897 give the number received from the manufacturers as 
240,000, and we find in the column headed "Keturned by Postmasters as unfit 
for use," 40,000 copies, and in the column headed "Stamps destroyed as unfit 
for use", a like amoimt! When the Post Office Department estimates for the 
ensuing year were being discussed in Parliament in May, 1898, the following 
interpellation occurred and was replied to by the Postmaster General :^^ — 

Mr. Ingram. I notice that 40,000 eight cent stamps were returned 
by the postmasters as unfit for use, and that 40,000 were destroyed as 
unfit for use. 

The Postmaster-General. The explanation of that is this : The total 
number issued was limited to the schedule mentioned in the answer 
that I gave to Parliament. By a mistake a, larger quantity was de- 
livered t<» the department, and before it was discovered the department 
had distributed a larger quantity than was mentioned in the schedule.20 
They discovered it when the mail had gone out, and at once recalled the 
over-issue. Of course they were at once destroyed, so as to keep the 
amount within the figure named by Parliament. 

Mr. Ingram. Then it was not through stamps being unfit? 

The Postmaster-General. I do not know how it is worded there; 
"Unfit for use" is not a proper description. There was not one stamp 
in excess of the limit stated in Parliament that got into the hands of 
the public. There was that little error I speak of, but it was detected 
at once and corrected, and of course the extra amount was at once 
destroyed — I suppose by the Auditor-General and by Mr. Stanton of 
the stamp department. 

Well, perhaps the excess did not reach the public, but the stamp accounts 
exhibit a peculiar coincidence in connection therewith. The tables of receipt 
and issue of stamp supplies for 1897, as already stated, contain the memos of 
the return of 40,000 8 cent stamps, by postmasters, and their destruction. The 

"See page 148. 
'"Monthly Journal, VIII: 230. 

2"The stamp accounts show that 223,600 8 cent stampa had been "Issued to postmasters" 
previous to 30th June, 1897. 



THE JUBILEE ISSUE OF 1897 159 

tables for 1898 contain two columns, one of stamps returned by postmasters, 
"unfit for use", and the other "fit for use". The former were supposed to be 
destroyed, the latter placed in stock again. ISTow note: the values from % 
cent to 50 cents inclusive, "fit for use", were returned in quantities varying 
from 200 to 250 copies, with two exceptions; the dollar values in quantities 
from 400 to 675. The two exceptions were the 6 cent at 1,148 copies, and 
the 8 cent at li.2,300 copies! ! This last figure looks so familiar that we can- 
not help wondering whether a second call had been sent out for the return of 
40,000 more of the 8 cent, subsequent to the closing of the 1897 accounts, or 
if (which seems more probable) the first return had not been slipped into 
stock instead of being actually destroyed, and reappeared thus in the 1898 
accounts! Quien sahe? 

All the other values to and including the 2 dollars, were received in their 
proper amounts and were all issued to postmasters, the last record of the 
series from % cent to 1 dollar, inclusive, appearing in the 1900 Report. The 
figures for the dollar values prove rather interesting so we give them here: — 

1905 Eet'd and 
1897. 1898. 1899. 1900. 1901. Total. On hand. Destroyed. 

$1.00 received 7,500 15,000 2,400 100 25,000 94 

issued 5,830 16,771 3,599 500 26,700 

$2.00 received 7,500 5,000 6,000 6,500 25,000 66 

issued 5,830 4,334 888 7,225 8,775 27,053 

$3.00 received 7,500 5,000 500 1,000 14,000 2,650 1,835 

issued 5,830 4,044 591 1,700 1,250 13,415 

$4.00 received 7,500 5,000 500 2,000 15,000 3,050 2,013 

issued 5,830 3,945 640 1,675 1,775 13,865 

$5.00 received 7,500 5,000 500 3,000 16,000 2,100 1,240 

issued 5,830 3,844 689 2,075 3,335 15,763 

Comment: — The three highest dollar values were apparently never de- 
livered to their full requisition — 25,000 each. All but the 1 dollar were 
issued in goodly numbers in 1901, — four years after their first appearance! 
The 1 and 2 dollar stamps were both issued to an amount of about 2,000 more 
than were received from the manufacturers, but this excess is easily explained 
by the reissue of stamps returned by postmasters and placed again in stock. 



160 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

The entire issue drops out of sight with the 1901 Keport, but the 1905 Eeport 
suddenly presents the figures given for the three high values still on hand, 
and records 30 of the 5 dollar stamps turned in for destruction. Once more, 
in the 1909 Eeport, we find 1,783 of the 3 dollar, 1,954 of the 4 dollar and 
1,151 of the 5 dollar stamps returned for destruction, so that allowing for 
the total number destroyed and the amount on hand (which may be) we have 
for the actual issue of the three high values, instead of 25,000 each, but 
9,515 of the 3 dollar, 9,937 of the 4 dollar and 12,660 of the 5 dollar stamps. 



CHAPTER XII 

THE "MAPLE LEAF" ISSUE OF 1897 

RUMORS of a new issue, as we know, had been "in the air" ever since 
the change in the contractors for supplying stamps had been announced. 
Of course the Jubilee issue was a special affair, and for a time side- 
tracked other considerations. A new permanent series was not forgotten, 
however, and under "Ottawa Notes" in the Weehly Philatelic Era for Octo- 
ber 9, 1897, we find the following advance information concerning it: — 



A new general issue of Canadian postage stamps is imminent, being 
necessitated by the fact tbat the present Liberal g-overnment has en- 
tered into a new contract for engraving and printing Dominion treas- 
ury notes, postage and revenue stamps, and in short, all government 
matter. The previous contractors were the British American Bank 
Note Co. of Montreal .... When the bids for a renewal of the engrav- 
ing contract were opened last winter, it was found that the American 
Bank Note Company of New York were the lowest bidders, and that 
they bound themselves in the event of the acceptance of their tender to 
build and equip a printing establishment in Ottawa, in compliance with 
the conditions of the bids. Their tender was accepted and they have 
carried out their undertaking by building a commodious and fully 
equipped establishment near that of their rivals on Wellington Street. 
Of the new presses the Jubilee issue of postage stamps were the first 
fruits. The impending general issue will be required as soon as the 
existing stock of the current issue is exhausted, and it is rumored that 
the supply of some values is running low. 

This much is announced, — that the design for the new issue has 
been decided upon ; that the center of the stamp will contain a portrait 
of the Queen taken at the time of the Jubilee, approved and signed by 
the Queen as the best existing likeness of her, and that our national 
emblem, the maple leaf, will appear in the corners — not the unnatural 
and misshapen leaf that appears on the Jubilee issue, but the real arti- 
cle, copied from actual leaves gathered on Parliament hill. This would 
indicate that there will be only one die for all the values, but I have as 
yet no information as to size, colours, or details. 



162 CAITADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

A couple of weeks later a circular was sent to postmasters announcing 
the new stamps, etc., of which the following is a copy :^ — 

Circular to Postmaster. 

NEW ISSUE OF POSTAGE STAMPS, ETC. 

The Postmaster-General has made arrangements for a new issue of 
postage stamps, letter cards, stamped envelopes, post cards and post 
bands. These will be supplied to postmasters in the usual way. 

Postmasters are, however, instructed not to sell the stamps of any 
denomination of the new issue until the stamps of the corresponding 
denomination of the present issue are disposed of. The filling of requi- 
sitions by the Postage Stamp Branch will be regulated by the same 
principle — that is to say, no item of the proposed issue will be sent out 
until the corresponding item of the present issue has been exhausted. 

To conform to the requirements of the International Postal Union, 
the color of the new Ic. stamp will be green and that of the 5c. stamp 
a deep blue. 

R. M. COULTER, 

Deputy Postmaster-General. 

Post-OfBce Department, Canada. 

Ottawa, 35th October, 1897. 

These instructions were followed out, and the issue of the new series 
was thus stretched over a considerable length of time. The first to appear was 
the % cent, two weeks after the date of the above circular. The circumstances 
of its debut are told under "Ottawa ISTotes" in the Weekly Philatelic Era-? — 

The half cent stamp of the new issue was placed on sale today 
[9th November, 1897], its appearance having been precipitated by 
events over which the postal authorities had no control The phil- 
atelists, anticipating an early exhaustion of the old half cent stamp, 
helped the thing along by quietly but assiduously buying in every copy 
in sight. As a consequence the stock ran down much faster than that 
of other values, and a few weeks ago orders were issued that no more 
were to be sold to the public, but that publishers entitled to the half 
cent rate should take their papers to the post-offices and there have the 
stamps affixed by the staS. Even that did not save the distance \,sic'\. 
I hear that in Montreal it was found necessary to use cent stamps to 
prepay the half cent rate. 3 Fortunately for the reputation of Canadian 
stamps, these stamps were not over-printed with new value, and we 
have been spared a surcharge. However, the postal authorities hurried 

^American Journal of Philately, 2n(J Series, X: 502. 

^Weekly Philatelic Era, XII: 86. 

'See page 156. * 



THE "MAPLE LEAF" ISSUE OF 1897 163 

forward the printing and circulation of the new issue, in that value 
at least, and it is an accomplished fact. 

The next value to appear was the 6 cent, which was announced in the 
WeeUy Philatelic Era under date of 4th December, 1897 as having been put 
in circulation. Following closely upon this came the 1, 2, 5 and 8 cent stamps, 
and in January, 1898 the 3 and 10 cent. 

The new stamps were very simple in design, the central oval containing 
a portrait of Queen Victoria copied from a photograph by W. & D. Downey 
of London, taken at the time of the Diamond Jubilee celebrations. CAISTADA 
POSTAGE and the value in words only appear in Egyptian capitals on the 
oval frame to the portrait, and each spandrel is occupied by a maple leaf. 
Much criticism was engendered by the fact that the portrait was too large 
for its frame, making the design appear cramped and thus giving a disap- 
pointing effect to what otherwise might have proved a most neat and effective 
stamp. [Illustration No. 36 on Plate II]. 

The stamps were as usual line engraved on steel, and printed on the same 
stout white wove paper that was employed for the Jubilee issue, as well as on 
a thinner and more brittle quality. The 5 cent, for the first time in Canadian 
philatelic history, appeared on a colored paper, the stock having a decidedly 
bluish tint. The perforation was the regulation gauge 12. But one irregu- 
larity seems to be known, and that is the 5 cents imperforate, a block of four 
of which we are able to illustrate as N'o. 112 on Plate X. 

The sheet arrangement was intended to be the usual block of 100 impres- 
sions, ten by ten, but the Ottawa correspondent of the Weehly Philatelic Era 
tells us that in the case of the % cent stamp the first plate was twice this size. 

By some misunderstanding the contractors, the American Bank 
Note Co., set the sheet up with 300 stamps, and the first five hundred 
sheets were so printed. The sheets were afterwards cut in two through 
the imprint, and we have these half sheets with a close imperforated 
margin on either the left or right edge. Afterwards sheets of 100 
stamps were issued, all the stamps perforated on all four sides. Plate 
number collectors will find the earliest sheets difBcult to obtain. Both 
sheets bear the plate number 1.* 

The imprint on the sheets was the same as that on the Jubilee sheets, 
OTTAWA — 'No — 1, etc., but instead of numbering the plates all consecutively, 

'Weekly Philatelic Era, Xn: 132. 



164 



CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 



each denomination began its own series with "l^o 1." The imprint is placed 
in the top margin only, over the middle two stamps (5 and 6) of the top row. 
In the case of the % cent stamps each style of the first two plates was num- 
bered "1". The plate of 200 impressions was arranged in ten horizontal rows 
of twenty stamps each, thus bringing the imprint over stamps 10 and 11 of 
the top row, and as it was between these that the large sheets were severed, the 
imprint was cut in two in the process. All the other values were made up in 
sheets of 100 only. 

For the information of plate number collectors we give a list of such 
numbers as we have been able to ascertain, 

% cent, No. 1 (2 plates). 



1 


Nos. 1,2. 


2 


Nos. 1,2,3. 


3 


Nos. 1,2,3,4,5,6 


5 


No. 1,. 


6 


No. 1. 


8 


No. 1. 





No. 1. 



The quantity of each value issued before they were replaced by the stamps 
vfith numerals is stated to have been as follows:® — 



14 cent 


2,000,000 


1 


» 


34,000,000 


2 


' 


12,000,000 


3 


> 


44,000,000 


5 


» 


3,500,000 


6 


* 


500,000 


8 


) 


1,400,000 


10 


» 


500,000 



A similar variation is found in the dimensions of these stamps to that 
occurring in the 7% d. and lOd. stamps and the issue of 1868, and has caused 
quite a little comment from those unfamiliar with this phenomenon. As 
much as % mm. in the vertical measurements can be found between many 
stamps. The cause is of course the uneven shrinking of the dampened paper 
when drying after being printed upon. This was fully discussed in an earlier 
chapter.® As the paper in the present instance is very similar in quality to 



'Metropolitan Philatelist, X: 117. 
'See page 53 et seq. 



THE "MAPLE LEAF" ISSUE OF 1897 165 

that used for printing the United States stamps, in which the same peculiarity 
occurs, we will quote Mr. Melville's comment on the subject :'^ — 

As we have said, the paper is impressed when damp. . . . This wet- 
ting-down business has another efEect which has always puzzled phil- 
atelists. The wet paper is taken into a hot room to dry, and in drying 
it contracts. The contraction is not uniform and the philatelist in 
trying to prove the existence of more than one original die will pin 
his faith to the idea that if the varieties noticeable were due to con- 
traction of the paper the contraction would be proportionate on all 
Bides of the stamp. This is not the case however. 

Paper, when absorbing moisture, expands more in one direction 
than the other. The direction of greater expansion is what is techni- 
cally known as the "cross direction", and is the direction across the 
flow of pulp in the paper making machine. During the flow of the pulp 
the bulk of the flbres lie parallel with the movement of the wire gauze, 
and it is a scientific fact that the diameter of a fibre is increased by 
absorption of water much more than is the length. The subsequent 
shrinking on drying also is uneven. 



The Postmaster General's Eeport for 1897 says: — 

The contract with the British American Bank Note Company ex- 
pired on the 33nd April, 1897, and a contract was entered into with the 
American Bank Note Company for the manufacture and supply of 
postage stamps &c. An estimate of the probable ordinary requirements 
for the next fiscal year and the comparison based thereon between the 
old and the present rates show that, under the new contract, stamp 
supplies will cost the department, say, $10,000 per annum less than un- 
der the old contract, a reduction in outlay of about 20%. 

It is also noted that during 1896-7 electric cancelling ("mail marking") 
machines were introduced, six of which were rented and installed in the Mon- 
treal Post Office and one at Ottawa. 

The reduction in the domestic letter rate from 3 cents to '2 cents per ounce 
is forecasted, as well as a proposed reduction from 5 cents to 2 cents per 3/^ 
ounce on letters between Great Britain and many of her colonial possessions. 
This will be more thoroughly discussed later. 

Concerning the postal changes we have been considering the report says: — 

Owing to the change of contract for the manufacture and supply of 
postage stamps, a new series of stamps became necessary at the begin- 



'Unlted States Postage Stamps, 1894-1910, page 16. 



166 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

ning of the present fiscal year. New stamps ranging in value from the 
% cent to the 10 cent denomination (inclusive) were printed, and the 
first supplies thereof sent out to postmasters as the corresponding de- 
nominations of the old stamps became exhausted. A considerable quan- 
tity of the higher values of that series (15 cents, 20 cents and 50 cents) 
remaining over from the late contract, these three stamps continued to 
be issued, so that the department, previous to the introduction of the 
same denominations in the new series, might, in accordance with the 
universal practice, dispose of the old stamps in each case before issuing 
any of the new. The design of the new stamps is of a uniform charac- 
ter, arid consists of an engraved copy (reduced) of an authorized 
photograph of Her Majesty taken during the Diamond Jubilee year. 
This, placed within an oval bearing the usual inscriptions, is enclosed 
in a rectangular frame, a, maple leaf on a lined ground occupying each 
of the triangular spaces between the two frames. To conform to the 
regulations of the Universal Postal Union, the colour of the new 1 cent 
stamp is green, and that of the 5 cents a deep blue. This necessitated 
corresponding changes in the colours of the other stamps of the new 
series ; for example, purple, instead of green, being selected for the 2 
cent denomination, and orange instead of slate for the 8 cent. 

The special delivery system was also introduced, and will be treated of 
later. 



CHAPTER XIII 

THE "NUMERALS" ISSUE, 1898-1902 

HAEDLY had the "maple leaf" issue gotten generally into use before 
complaints began to be heard about the difficulty of distinguishing 
the different values. The Weeliy Philatelic Era for June 4, 1898, 
quotes a plaint of this character as follows: — 

The Toronto World says : "We take the liberty of suggesting to the 
Postmaster-General that we have a large figure indicating the value 
in cents of the various issues of Canadian stamps. It is hard to make 
them out at present." 

This is only one of the numerous complaints made daily against 
our new issue. Some changes ought to be made. 

But the Metropolitan Philatelist in its issue for April 2, 1898, had 
already given information of an impending change which in the main proved 
correct. It says: — 

Much dissatisfaction is expressed by the French speaking inhabi- 
tants of the rural parts at the lack of figures of value on the stamps, 
the denomination in all cases being printed in English which they are 
unable to understand. It has, therefore, been decided to alter the new 
stamps by removing the maple leaves from the lower corners and in- 
serting large numerals of value in their place. The space occupied by 
the head will also be somewhat enlarged and the value will be placed 
on a straight band below. 

All of which transpired save the placing of the value on the "straight 
band". In the issue of the American Journal of Philately for June 1, 1898, 
a Canadian correspondent reported: "I saw yesterday the proof of the new 
Canadian stamps. The frame is slightly changed and the value in figures 
is at the bottom on each side of the stamp, in place of the maple leaves." No 
date is given, but it was doubtless early in May. Finally MeJceeFs Weekly 
Stamp News reported the actual issue of the 1 cent and 3 cent stamps, stating 
that a Montreal correspondent had purchased them at the post office on June 
21st, which was doubtless their approximate date of issue, 

ISTo further news of the numeral set is recorded until the issue of the 



168 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

I 
Weehly Philatelic Era for September 17th, wherein its Toronto correspondent 

says that "Last week the 2c. purple with numerals in lower corners made its 
debut, a few days later the 1/^c arrived similarly altered, followed closely by 
the 6c." This evidently puts the issue of these three values within the first 
ten days of September. The 8 cent was recorded in the same paper for Oc- 
tober 15th, so that it must have been issued about the first of the month. The 
10 cent did not make its appearance until November, being noticed under 
the "Toronto Letter" in the WeeMy Philatelic Era for November 19th, so 
that again it was doubtless the early part of the month that saw its advent. 

For six months nothing further was heard of new "numeral" stamps, 
when finally the 5 cent, which was the one value lacking to complete the set 
in its altered form, made its appearance on July 3, 1899, according to a cor- 
respondent of Meheel's Weekly Stamp News.^ 

The new type of stamp, as already stated, was merely an alteration of 
the preceding "maple leaf" design, due to two criticisms — that no numerals 
were shown, making it often difficult without a close look to tell the denomi- 
nation, and bothersome to the large population of French origin who did not 
speak English; and that the portrait was too large for its oval frame, giving 
a somewhat cramped effect. In the new design, illustrated as number 40 on 
Plate II, the first objection was met by placing the proper numerals iu small 
squares in the lower comers, which necessitated the removal of the maple 
leaves from the lower spandrels ; and the second objection was met by enlarg- 
ing the oval frame containing the portrait, thus giving a much better effect. 
To do this the oval was extended to the outside of the stamp, cutting the 
rectangular border lines instead of lying whoUy within them, as in the design 
it superseded. 

The stamps were of course line engraved on steel and printed in the 
usual sheets of 100, ten rows of ten. The imprint was the same as on the last 
issue, and the plates again began with No. 1 for each denomination. As far 
as we have been able to ascertain, the plate numbers are as follows : — 



V2 


cent 


No 




1 




)> 


1, 3, 3, 4, 5, 6 


2 




" 


1, 2, 3, 4. 


3 




" 


1, 2, 3, 4. 


5 




»» 


1, 2, 3. 


6 




»» 




8 




9> 




10 


99 


1* 





iMekeel's Weekly Stamp News, Xm: 266. 



THE "NUMEEALS" ISSUE, 1898-1902 169 

There were of course many more plates of the 1 cent stamp, at least, 
which remained in use for five years, and probably several more of the 2, 3, 
and 10 cent, but there seems to have been very little interest in Canada in 
keeping track of these. 

But during the life of this series there were important changes taking 
place which were reflected in the stamp issues, and we must keep track of 
them. 

In the first place, the Hon. William Mulock, the Canadian Postmaster- 
General, was a firm believer in and an active agitator for Imperial Penny 
Postage. At the Imperial Conference on Postal Rates in London, in July, 
1898, the project was carried through, and a rate of one penny (2 cents) per 
half ounce established by certain colonies in connection with the Mother 
Country, to take effect on Christmas Day of 1898. Concerning this we shall 
have more to say in the next chapter; but meanwhile Canada's domestic rate 
stood at 3 cents per ounce or fraction, in spite of attempts to reduce it, par- 
ticularly since the United States had lowered its internal rate in 1883. The 
anomaly would be presented under such conditions of a letter mailed from 
one town to another in Canada costing three cents, even if weighing a half 
ounce or less, while the same letter could cross to Great Britain and travel 
to Cape Colony, for instance, on payment of but two cents postage. 

The agitation and the London conference evidently had their effect, for 
on the 13th June, 1898, a bilP in amendment of the Post Office Act was 
assented to in Parliament which substituted 2 cents for 3 cents as the domestic 
postage rate per ounce weight. It also provided that the new rate should not 
take effect until a date to be named by the Governor General. After the date 
for the inauguration of Imperial Penny Postage was fixed, the Governor 
General named New Tear's day following as the date for the change in Can- 
ada's domestic rate. The following notice was published in the Canada Ga- 
zette :^ — 

Order in Council, 

Post OfBce Department. 

By Proclamation dated the 39tli day of December, 1898, in virtue 

of tlie Act further to amend the Post OfBce Act (61 Victoria, chapter 

20) and of an Order in Council in accordance therewith, it was declared 

that the postage rate payable on all letters originating in and trans- 



'61 Vict. Chap. 20. 

•Canada Gazette, XXXH: 1223. 



170 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

mitted by post for any distance in Canada for delivery in Canada, 
should be one uniform rate of two cents per ounce weight, from the 
1st January, 1899. 

This of course had the immediate effect of vastly increasing the con- 
sumption of 2 cent stamps and also of rendering the 3 cent stamps practically 
useless. Another point would be that whereas the Postal Union requirements 
named red as the color for the stamp used for domestic postage, and the 3 
cent had been in its proper hue, the stamp for the new internal rate was 
printed in purple and would therefore have to be changed. This change was 
not forced, however, the Post Office Department as usual preferring to use up 
the stock on hand of the current 2 cent stamp before issuing the new one. It 
took considerable time to do this, so that the 2 cent carmine did not make its 
appearance until the 20th August, according to a correspondent of MekeeVs 
WeeMy Stamp News.* It was of course the same stamp as before but printed 
in the color of the 3 cent value, and we have to record plate numbers 3, 4, 5, 
G and 7, though there were doubtless many more. 

But the 3 cent stamp still remained on hand in large quantities, and in 
order to use them up more quickly and perhaps save confusion between them 
and the new 2 cent stamps, the Post Office Department decided upon sur- 
charging the stock on hand down to 2 cents, thus making Canada's first 
offence in this line. The notice concerning this change and some others that 
were decided upon was as follows: — 

Department Circular. 

POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT, CANADA, 

OTTAWA, 1st July, 1899. 

Owing to the reduction in the Domestic letter rate of postage, the 
issue of the 3 c. letter-card, the 3c. stamped envelope and the 3 cent 
postage stamp from the Department has ceased. Any unused 3c. letter- 
cards, 3c. stamped envelopes or 3c. stamps, still extant, will, however, 
continue available for postage purposes, or may be exchanged at any 
Post OfBce, at their full face value, for postage stamps of other denom- 
inations. 

The color of the Domestic-rate postage stamp, as prescribed by 
the Universal Postal Union, is red, and it is intended to discontinue 
the issue of the ordinary two cents purple colored stamps as soon as the 
present supply on hand is exhausted. This will be about the 20th July, 
1899. Thereafter the Department will issue two cents stamps in red, 

*Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, XIII: 324. 



THE "NUMEEALS" ISSUE, 1898-1902 171 

first, however, surcharging down to two cents the unissued remnant of 
the three cents stamps in red, now in the possession of the Department, 
and as soon as the supply of such surcharged threes is exhausted, the 
issue of two cents stamps in red will begin. The surcharged stamps 
Mill be issued to Postmasters as 2c. postage stamps and be recognized 
as postage stamps of that denomination. 

Postmasters are requested to exchange, as above mentioned, all 
unused 3c. letter-cards, 3c. stamped envelopes and 3c. stamps which may 
be offered them to be exchanged for other postage stamps of an equal 
value. 

Postmasters, who as a result of such exchange, may find the 3c. 
stamps, etc., unsaleable, are at liberty, in the case of an Accounting 
Post Office, to send them direct to the Department for credit; and in 
the case of a Non-Accounting Post Ofjflee, to send them to the City 
Post Of&ce from which it obtains its supplies, asking in lieu of those 
returned other stamps to an equal value. 

It is especially requested that, in the case of stamps sent direct to 
the Department, under this authority, that is to say, 6j/ Accounting 
Post Offices, — Postmasters will be so good as to carry out the follow- 
ing instructions : — 

(1) Each transmission should be registered, and accompanied 
with a brief memorandum, plainly stamped with the date stamp of the 
Post OfSce, and indicating the nimiber and value of the 3c. stamps, 
etc., claimed to be enclosed. If other stamps are required to replace 
those returned, a separate requisition therefor (not enclosed in the 
package) should be sent direct to the Department in the usual way. 

(3) Single stamps, and stamps that are not in complete sheets, 
should be pasted on alternate pages of separate sheets of paper, with 
not more than one hundred stamps on each page. Any stamps that have 
stuck together whilst in the possession of the Postmaster, must be 
taken apart (which can easily be done by immersing them for a few 
minutes in water) and then pasted on sheets of paper as above directed. 

Postmasters of Non-Accounting Offices are particularly asked to 
bear in mind that any 3c. letter-cards, 3c. stamped envelopes or 3c. 
postage stamps which conformably to this instruction, they may re- 
ceive from the public in exchange for other stamps and find unsaleable, 
must 6e returned, as aJ)ove directed, to the City Post Offices from which 
they respectively ohtain their supplies, and not to the Department. 

As only the unused remnant of 3c. stamps now in the Departm,ent 
will 6e surcharged, Postmasters must not send in, with a view to their 
surcharge, any 3c. stamps in their possession nor accept 3c. stamps 
from the public for that purpose. 

Postmasters must distinctly understand that the exchange of 
stamps herein permitted applies only to the 3c. letter-card, the 3c. 
stamped envelope and 3c. postage stamp. 

E. M. COULTEE, 

Deputy Postmaster General. 



172 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

As a matter of fact the 2 cent purple seems to have lasted about a week 
longer than was anticipated in the above circular, so that the surcharged 3 
cent stamps were not issued until the 28th July.^ A correspondent of the 
Weekly Philatelic Era, in its issue for 22nd July, said: "I learn that the 3c 
numeral and some 3c with the four maple leaves will be surcharged," which 
proved correct j those first issued on the date mentioned above were of the nu- 
meral type, while on the 8th August^ the "maple leaf" 3 cent made its ap- 
pearance with the same surcharge. 

Illustrations of the two stamps will be found as numbers 41 and 42 on 
Plate II. It is stated that the surcharge was made up in its peculiar form so 
as to prevent counterfeiting by the use of ordinary type. At any rate the 
graded height of the numeral and letters, giving the concave effect to the top 
of the surcharge, shows it to have been specially prepared. There is some var- 
iation in the thickness of the surcharge, due perhaps to inking and to wearing 
of the plates. The overprinting was done in full sheets of one hundred from 
a special plate, in black ink, and should normally be horizontally across the 
bottom of the stamps. Poor registering of the sheets in printing caused the po- 
sition to vary even up to about the middle of the stamp in some cases, and of 
course there had to be some inverted surcharges in both varieties. The num- 
ber of these has not been published. Illustrations of the inverts will be found 
as numbers 44 and 45 on Plate II. 

The quantity of 3 cent stamps surcharged was reported by the Ottawa 
correspondent of the Weekly Philatelic Era' as "variously stated to be 
9,000,000 to 11,000,000," while Stanley Gihhons Monthly Journal is more 
definite^ in saying that "there are some 9,000,000 of 3c. stamps in stock, of 
which about 6,000,000 are of the four leaves type, and the rest have the nu- 
merals in the lower corners." Just where these figures were obtained does 
not appear, but the Postmaster General's report for 30th June, 1900, makes 
the following statement: — "Included in the stamp output of the year was 
$123,600 worth of 3 cent stamps, which constituted the unissued remnant 
of 3 cent stamps in the possession of the department; on the occasion of the 
reduction of the domestic letter rate of postage they were surcharged and issued 
as 2 cent stamps." The figures quoted account for only 4,120,000 of the 3 



i^Monthly Journal, X: 35. 
^Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, XIII: 308. 
'Weekly Philatelic Era, XIII: 393. 
^Monthly Journal, X: 35. 



THE "NUMEEALS" ISSUE, 1898-1902 173 

cent stamps, and this quantity is confirmed in the Eeport for 1901, which 
says: — "In 1899-1900 3 cent stamps to the mimber of 4,120,000 were in- 
cluded in the output solely with a view to surcharging them down to 2 cents 
and transference to that column." The two varieties, however, are not sep- 
arated in the accounts, but inasmuch as the catalogue prices are now, after 
ten years, at the same figure for each, it is reasonable to suppose that one is 
as common as the other and that therefore they must have been issued in ap- 
proximately equal amounts. 

Plate numbers for the surcharges seem to be again recorded in only a 
half hearted way. But one reference has been found to those of the numeral 
type, plates 5 and 6', and none for the "maple leaf" type. 

The reduction in the domestic rate of postage was also the cause of an- 
other provisional, but of quite a different character. Stanley Oihhons Monthly 
Journal for January 31, 1899, says: — 

In some offices Ic. and 2c. stamps ran short, and their places were 
supplied by one-third and two-thirds portions of 3c. stamps divided 
vertically. In some places, our correspondent says, these divided 
stamps were employed without further alteration, but in others we 
regret to hear that they were surcharged with a figure "3", in 
purple, upon the figure "3" of the larger portion, or the word "one" 
in green, upon the smaller part; or, to further complicate matters, 
when thirds of two adjoining stamps were used for 2c. each part was 
impressed with a figure "3". Our informant's letter is franked in part 
by % of a 3c. stamp surcharged "3" so we fear that this horrible tale 
is founded on fact. 

In the Journal for March 31, 1899, is further light: — 

The surcharged fractions appear to have been used only at the 
office at Port Hood, N. S., where the Postmaster apparently did not 
consider it safe to use divided stamps without some distinguishing 
mark. We have seen other copies since, and find that a figure "1" was 
struck upon the smaller portion; not the word "one'' as previously 
stated. 

Again in the Journal for April 29, 1899, we find: — 

In reference to the cut and surcharged 3c. stamps, a correspond- 
ent sends us the following extract from a letter from the postmaster 
of Port Hood: — 

"When the change in Canadian postage was made — of which we 
got notice by wire — I had only very few two cent stamps in stock, 
so that before I got my supply from Ottawa I ran completely out of 

•Weekly Philatelic Era, XIH: 400, 403, 



174 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

them, and, to keep my account straight, I was compelled to cut threes. 
This was for one day only, and not over 300 stamps were cut. I would 
say about 200 '3' and 100 '1' were used. Those stamps I put on letters 
for delivery within the county as much as possible. About 100 '3' and 
probably nearly as many '1' were marked with the figures 3 and 1 as 
you describe, and were placed on letters for delivery in towns through- 
out the Dominion. Those were the only provisional stamps used by 
this ofBce." 

Mr. Horsley reports having a copy on the original cover -with the post- 
mark of Port Hood dated 5 January, 1899, which is doubtless the "one day" 
that they were employed. 

A Canada correspondent, writing in MekeeVs Weekly Stamp News^^ 
concerning these "splits", says that "the Dominion Government has announced 
that they were not authorized and letters having them on for postage should 
have been charged double rate when delivered." They may be interesting 
as curiosities, but they are assuredly not worthy of any great attention from 
collectors. Illustrations of the "2" cent and a pair of the "1" cent vdll be 
found as ISTos. 37 and 39 respectively on Plate II. 

E"othing further in the line of novelties is to be reported until the 29th 
December, 1900, when a new 20 cent stamp suddenly made its appearance as 
a companion in design to the rest of the "numeral" series. The large 20 
cent stamp of 1893 had finally been exhausted, and the new comer in its neat 
olive green was a welcome addition to the current set. It of course conformed 
to the others in engraving, sheet arrangement, etc., and had the plate number 
1. An examination of the stamp accounts during its term of life make it 
appear probable that approximately 500,000 were issued. 

Finally the long heralded Y cent stamp, which was supposed to take the 

place of the 8 cent stamp after the reduction of domestic postage, made its 

appearance nearly four years late! It was announced in a despatch to the 

Toronto Mail and Empire as follows: — 

Ottawa, Dec. 18th, [1903]. — The Post OfBce Department announces 
that on the 34th instant it will be in a position to supply a seven- 
cent postage stamp to accounting post offices throughout Canada. 
This stamp, which is of a yellow color, will be especially convenient 
for postage and registration fee on single rate letters, while it may 
also be used for other postage purposes to the extent of its face value. 
Non-accounting ofBces can obtain their supply through the city post 
offices. This new stamp will bear the Queen's head, the department 
not having yet decided on the design for the King's head issue. 

uMekeel's Weekfy Stamp News, xm: 187. 



THE "NUMERALS" ISSUE, 1898-1902 175 

The Postmaster General's Eeport for 1903, however, gives the issue of 
7 cent stamps as occurring on the 23rd December, 1902. The stamp, as was 
the case with the 20 cent, conformed in all respects to the others of the 
numeral issue, but was printed in a hideous shade of olive yellow. There 
was but one plate number, No. 1. It seems probable that about one million 
copies constituted its total issue. 



The above completes the issues of the numeral type stamps with the 
Queen's head. Glancing over the Eeports of the Postmaster General, as 
usual, for the period during which they were in issue, we find the following 
items of interest. 

In the Eeport for 30th June, 1899, the introduction of "Domestic Penny 
Postage" is thus recorded : — 

On the 1st January, 1899, the letter rate within Canada was re- 
duced from 3 to 3 cents per ounce. This change has been accompanied 
by such a marked and continuous increase in the number of domestic 
letters being transmitted through the mails, as to warrant the con- 
clusion that the loss of revenue consequent on such reduction will 
soon be overcome. 

As a result of the reduction in the Domestic Letter rate of post- 
age, the issue of the 3c. letter card, 3c. stamped envelope and 3c. post- 
age stamp has been discontinued, unused quantities of these, however, 
continuing available for postage purposes or exchangeable at any post 
ofBce for their equivalent in postage stamps of other denominations. 

On the 1st January, 1899, also, the provisions of the Act which reim- 
posed postage payment on newspapers and periodicals went into effect. This 
was An Act further to amend the Post Ojfice Act (assented to 13th June, 
1898)^^ which we have already quoted as being the Act authorizing the 
reduction in the domestic postage rate to 2 cents per ounce. The third section 
of this Act repealed section 26 of the Post Office Act and substituted the 
following therefor: — 

26. On and after the first day of January, one thousand eight 
hundred and ninety-nine, newspapers and periodicals, printed and 
published in Canada, mailed by the publisher in the post office at the 
place where they are published and addressed to regular subscribers 

"61 Vict. Chap. 20. 



176 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

or newsdealers in Canada, resident elsewhere than in the place of pub- 
lication, shall be transmitted by mail to their respective addresses as 
follows : — 

If they are required to be transmitted by mail a distance within 
twenty miles from the place of publication or within a circular area of 
a diameter not exceeding forty miles, and if their publication is of no 
greater frequency than once a week, they shall be so transmitted free 
of postage within one or other of such areas to be selected by the 
publisher in accordance with regulations in that behalf to be estab- 
lished by the Postmaster General ; if they are required to be trans- 
mitted a greater distance, or if their publication is of greater fre- 
quency than once a week, then in either of such cases postage 
thereon shall be paid on and after the said first day of January, and 
until and inclusive of the thirtieth day of June next following, at the 
rate of one-quarter of one cent, and thereafter at the rate of one-half 
of one cent, for each pound w^eight or any fraction of a pound weight, 
which shall be prepaid by postage stamps or otherwise, as the Post- 
master General from time to time directs ; provided that — 

(o) such newspaper or periodical is known and recognized as a 
newspaper or periodical in the generally received sense of the 
word, and consists wholly or in great part of political or 
other news or of articles relative thereto or to other current 
topics, and is published regularly at intervals of not more 
than one month; 

(6) the full title, place and date of publication, and the distin- 
gfuishing number of the issue are printed at the top of the 
first page, and every subsequent page, and also on any paper, 
print, lithograph or engraving purporting to be a supple- 
ment to it and sent with it; 

(c) it is addressed to a ionA fide subscriber, or to a known news- 
dealer in Canada; and — 

(<i) it is delivered into the post of&ce under such regulations as 
the Postmaster General, from time to time, makes for that 
purpose. 

2. For the purpose of determining the weights of such news- 
papers or periodicals, each newspaper or periodical transmitted sepa- 
rately through the mails shall be held to weight not less than one- 
half of one ounce. 

3. [The Postmaster General to decide whether any publication 
comes under this section, and whether the requirements have teen 
complied with in any cose.] 

4. [Books for the Mind transmitted free of Canadian postage.] 

One other item, not strictly philatelic perhaps, but interesting to record 
here, is the announcement of the issue of postal notes, the system having been 
inaugurated throughput Canada on the 4th August, 1898, It was intended 



THE "NUMERALS" ISSUE, 1898-1902 177 

mainly to otviate the need of remitting small sums by mail in postage stamps, 
with the consequent difficulty to the recipient of disposing of any quantity. 
The notes were for certain fixed values, odd amounts between values being 
made up by affixing postage stamps. 

Their denominations and dates of issue are recorded as follows: — 

4th August issued notes of 35, 50 and 70 cents. 
33rd " " " " $1, $3.50 and $5. 

31st October " " " 40 cents, $1.50 and $3. 

35th November " " " 20, 30, 60 and 80 cents. 

33rd January, 1899 " " " 90 cents, $3. and $4. 

In the Report for 1900 we find mention of the issue of stamp books. 

In the month of June, 1900, the department commenced the issue 
to Postmasters, of a small book of 3 cent postage stamps, containing 
13 stamps, disposed on two sheets of 6 stamps each, and interleaved 
with wax paper to prevent adhesion of the sheets. The size of the 
book is such as to make it convenient to be carried in the pocket or 
pocket-book. Printed on the cover is postal information calculated 
to be of interest to the public. The price at which the book is issued 
is 35 cents, one cent over the face value of the stamps being charged 
to cover the cost of binding, etc. 

The stamp accounts give the date of issue of the stamp books as 11th 
June, 1900. That they have proved popular is evidenced by the increase in 
the number issued to postmasters from some 320,000 in 1901 to about 
1,400,000 in 1910. 

The books are about two by three inches in size, with stiff cardboard 
covers which are bound together by red cloth. The coat-of-arms of Canada 
with the words CAISTADA POSTAGE beneath are engraved in red on the 
front cover, while inside are four pages of postal information and the two 
sheets of six stamps each — three horizontal pairs — backed by leaves of paraf- 
fined tissue paper. 

I^otice is also given of the discontinuance of two denominations of post- 
age stamps, the old 15 cent of 1868 passing quietly away at the age of 31 
years, 1 month and 1 day — or on the 2nd November, 1899, to be exact. The 
6 cent stamp, for which there was bu't little call since the reduction of the 
letter postage to 2 cents, was discontinued on the 10th February, 1900. 

From the Report of 1901 we learn that the last issue of the $1 Jubilee 
stamps took place on 27th June 1900, but nothing is said of dates for the 



178 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

cents values, all of which appear for the last time in the "issued to post- 
masters" column in amounts of 700 or 800, and even 2000 in the case of 
the % cent. 

The Eeport of 1902 notes the last issue of the 3 cent stamp in March, 
1901, and of the 8 cent stamp, which had been of but little use since the re- 
duction of postage, on the 16th December, 1901. 

The Eeport of 1903 announces the issue of the new King Edward 
stamps, and of the prepayment of printed matter in cash, instead of by 
stamps, under the "permit" system. Both of these subjects will be considered 
in their proper chapters. 

Though the Report for 1904 takes us into the period of the King Edward 
stamps, yet we find it noted therein that the last issue of 6 cent and 8 cent 
stamps (Queen's head) took place on the 4th September, 1902. Both these 
values had already been disposed of apparently, but it seems that 100,000 
of the 6 cent and 125,000 of the 8 cent were "received from 
manufacturers" and "issued to postmasters", according to the stamp accounts 
of 1902-3, and rumor has it that some large concern ordered them for the 
mailing of catalogues. The date, 4th September, was probably that of de- 
livery to the purchasers. 



CHAPTER XIV 

THE "CHRISTMAS" STAMP OF 1 898 

^ ^ y'~X CEAl^ Penny Postage, which became the dream of Postal Re- 
^ W formers almost from the date of the adoption of the plan of 
Rowland Hill, is at length within measurable distance of becom- 
ing an accomplished fact. It is true that it is not yet to be the Universal 
Penny Postage, or even the Imperial Penny Postage so perseveringly ad- 
vocated by Mr. Henniker-Heaton ; but these will come in time, and an 
immense step in the desired direction has been taken by the adoption of the 
partial scheme, which is to come into force within a few months." So wrote 
Major Evans in July, 1898,^ upon the conclusion of the Imperial Conference 
on Postal Rates which took place in London during that month. 

Many of our readers may have seen the illustrated envelopes, in various 
designs, which were issued some fifty or sixty years ago in advocacy of an 
"Ocean Penny Postage." Great Britain, having committed herself to domestic 
penny postage in 1840, after the herculean labors of Sir Rowland Hill in that 
behalf, seems to have been looked to by succeeding postal reformers to furnish 
over-sea transportation along the same lines. Chief among these advocates 
was Elihu Burritt, the "learned blacksmith" of ISTew Britain, Conn., who 
not only published documents on the subject but went to England and de- 
livered addresses in support of the idea. Major Evans says:^ — "What ap- 
pears to have been the first pamphlet on 'Ocean Penny Postage', issued by 
Elihu Burritt, was probably published quite at the end of 1848, or early in 
1849. It contains a poem dated Christmas, 1848, which may give us approx- 
imately the date of publication." This proves extremely interesting, inas- 
much as Imperial Penny Postage was put into effect on Christmas, 1898, 
just a half century later to a day. 



^Monthly Journal, IX: 1. 
'Stamp Lover, I: 263. 



180 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

But Burritt's proposal was not that which was accomplished so longi 
afterward. In his own words:' — 

By the term "Oeean Penny Postage" we mean simply this: — That 
the single service of transporting a letter, weighing under half-an- 
ounce, from any port of the United Kingdom to any port beyond the 
sea, at which the British mail-packets may touch, shall be performed 
by the British Government for one penny; or one penny for its mere 
conveyance from Folkestone to Boulogne, Liverpool to Boston, &c., 
and vice versa. Thus the entire charge upon a letter transmitted from 
any town in the United Kingdom to any port beyond the sea, would 
be two pence ; — one penny for the inland rate, and the other for the 
ocean rate. 

Of course this does not reckon in what might be added for an inland 
rate at the "port beyond the sea", but the main point was the transportation 
on the ocean part of the journey at a uniform rate of one penny. 

This was practically accomplished — and even bettered — ^by the estab- 
lishment of the Universal Postal Union in 1875; for where Burritt wrote:* — 
"It , would meet the terms of our proposition if every letter under half an 
ounce, from any town in Great Britain to any town in the Colonies, should 
pay three pence ; one penny for the home inland rate, another penny for the 
ocean, and the third for the colonial inland rate, and vice versa" the Postal 
Union fixed a charge of but twopence halfpenny as the standard rate between 
all countries that subscribed to its provisions. 

To quote further:^ — 

The later discussion in England on the extension of Penny Postage 
across the seas has alternated between the proposals for Universal 
Penny Postage and Imperial Penny Postage. Mr. Henry Fawcett, 
who was Postmaster-General in 1880, was keenly interested in endeav- 
ouring to get the Colonies to accept a lower postal rate to and from 
the Mother Country, but the Colonies were afraid to lower their rates. 
....Mr. Henniker-Heaton brought up the subject in the House of 
Commons in 1885 by moving for the opening of negotiations with other 

Governments, with a view to establishing Universal Penny Postage 

In 1890 the Jubilee of the introduction of Uniform Penny Postage was 
celebrated in London and throughout the United Kingdom, and public 
interest in postal matters received a new stimulus The long sus- 

»A Penny AM the Way, Melville, p. 23. 
<lbld., page 22. 
■ibid., page 30. 



THE "CHKISTMAS" STAMP OF 1898 181 

tained agitation for Imperial Penny Postage was at last brought to a 
definite issue at the Imperial Conference on Postal Kates in 1898. The 
London Standard of 13th July, 1898, stated : — 

"We are authorized by the Postmaster-General to state that, as 
the result of the Imperial Conference on Postal Eates, it has been 
agreed, on the proposal of the Eepresentative of the Dominion of 
Canada, that letter postage of one penny per half-ounce should be 
established between the United Kingdom, Canada, Newfoundland, the 
Cape Colony, Natal, and such of the Crown Colonies as may, after com- 
munication with, and approval of. Her Majesty's Government, be will- 
ing to adopt it. The date on which the reduction will come into effect 
will be announced later on. The question of a uniform reduced rate 
for the whole Empire was carefully considered; but it was not found 
possible to fix upon a rate acceptable to all the Goverimxents con- 
cerned. A resolution was therefore adopted, leaving it to those parts 
of the Empire which were prepared for penny postage to make the 
necessary arrangements among themselves"- 

The Postmaster-General who had the distinction of issuing this 
important communication was the Duke of Norfolk, and the represen- 
tative of Canada was the Hon. (now Sir) William Mulock, LL. D., 
Q. C, Postmaster-General of Canada, who gave the chief credit for the 
reform to the British Empire League. 

Nevertlieless, Mr. Mulock had been interested not only in the scheme ol 
Imperial Penny Postage but also in endeavoring to obtain a reduction of the 
Canadian domestic postage to the penny (2 cents) basis. The inland letter rate, 
it may be remembered, was made 3 cents per half ounce throughout the new 
Dominion on the 1st April, 1868. Not until the 2nd May, 1889, did legis- 
lative enactment raise the limit of weight to one ounce. Meanwhile the 
United States, on the 1st October, 1883, had lowered its inland rate, which 
also applied to letters for Canada, to 2 cents per ounce. Agitation for the 
same reduction had naturally taken place in Canada, but instead of this it 
was proposed late in 1897" to reduce the Postal Union rate of 5 cents per half 
ounce to the domestic rate of 3 cents per ounce on letters to Great Britain and 
the Colonies. An Order in Council was actually passed announcing a rate of 
3 cents per half ounce to any place in the British Empire, to take effect on 
1st January, 1898, but the Imperial authorities objected to it as exceeding 
Canada's powers as a member of the Postal Union, and it was necessarily 
abandoned. 

Finally legislative enactment was passed on the 13th June, 1898, making 

•Weekly Philatelic Era, XH: 129. 



182 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

the long desired reduction in the domestic rate to 2 cents, but not to come 
into operation until the date named by the Governor-GeneraU Within a 
month, as we have already detailed, the Imperial Conference in London de- 
cided on a penny (2 cent) rate for the British Empire and in l^Tovember it 
was decided to put this in operation on Christmas day of 1898. Thus the 
anomaly was created of a 2 cent rate from Canada to England or Africa, 
but a 3 cent rate from one town to another in Canada. This was remedied 
a week later, as we have seen, by the proclamation putting the domestic 2 
cent rate into force from 1st January, 1899. 

As a leader in the final adoption of Imperial Penny Postage, Canada 
could look with pride upon its accomplishment and may be pardoned for its 
mild celebration of the event in the guise of a single commemorative stamp. 
It was unnecessary, of course, and no other Colony attempted it, but Mr. 
Mulock recognized the opportunity and rose to the occasion. The following 
clipping from the Ottawa Evening Journal^ gives some interesting details: — 

The new Imperial Penny Postage Stamp, to be used between Great 
Britain and a number of her colonies after Christmas Day next, has 
been designed by the Postmaster-General and is ready to be issued. 
It is not to be a special issue, but will take its place among the 
regular issues. When Mr. Mulock was in Britain he was surprised to 
notice that the great mass of the people did not appreciate the value 
of the greatness of the British possessions abroad. This was especial- 
ly true of Canada. The idea therefore suggested itself to him, when 
he was considering a new stamp, to prepare something that would 
show the dimensions of Great Britain compared with all other 
countries. Mr. Mulock asked for some designs from a few artists when 
he came back to Canada, but they did not meet with his views, and he 
roughly sketched out something himself and passed it over to an artist 
to have it touched up. 

The feature of the new stamp is a neatly executed map in minia- 
ture of the world, showing the British possessions as compared with 
all other countries. The empire is distingiiished from the possessions 
of the other powers by being in red. Surmounting this map is a rep- 
resentation of the crown, underneath which is a bunch of oak and 
maple leaves, symbolizing the unity of the Mother Country and 
Canada. At the upper edge of the stamp are the words "Canada Post- 
age" in a neat letter. Underneath the map is placed "Xmas, 1898", so 
that the date of the inauguration of Imperial Penny Postage shall 
be a matter of record. On the lower corners are the figures "2",in- 
dicating the denomination of the stamp, and at the lower edge is this 

'See page 169. 

"Monthly Journal, IX: 87. 



THE "CHEISTMAS" STAMP OF 1898 18 J 

suggestive passage taken from the -works of one of our patriotic 
poets: "We hold a vaster empire than has been". Mr. Mulock will be 
able to claim the credit of giving the public the cheapest map of the 
world ever issued. 'Ihe size of the stamp is about the same as the 
Jubilee issue. 

A reproduction of this multum in parvo composition is shown as No. 38 
on Plate II. 

This remarkable stamp caused no end of criticism, at home and abroad, 

not only because of its novel and startling design, but also because of the 

bombastic legend which appeared upon it. The following clipping from the 

Chicago Tribune^ explains the origin of the motto: — 

The motto chosen by Mr. Mulock, "We hold a vaster empire than 
has been,'' is from the jubilee ode of Sir Lewis Morris, entitled a 
"Song of Empire", with the date, June 20, 1897, as a subtitle, indicat- 
ing its tone and purpose. An excerpt from the last stanza, from which 
the motto was taken, is as follows: 

"We love not war, but only peace. 

Yet never shall our England's power decrease ! 

Whoever guides our helm of state. 

Let all men know it, England shall be great ! 

We hold a vaster empire than has been ! 

Nigh half the race of man is subject to our Queen ! 

Nigh half the wide, wide earth is ours in fee ! 

And where her rule comes all are free. 

And therefore 'tis, O Queen, that we. 

Knit fast in bonds of temperate liberty, 

Eejoiee to-day, and make our solemn jubilee !" 

In consequence of the peculiar legend, the stamp has been dubbed, not 
ineptly, the "has been" stamp. 

We learn from a despatch to the Toronto Telegram that the printing of 
the stamp began on the 1st December: — 

Ottawa, Dec. 2, 1898. — (Special) — The Governor-General and Hon. 
William Mulock, Postmaster-General, presided yesterday at the print- 
ing of the first copies of the new imperial penny postage stamp. The 
design is Mr. Mulock's own.io 

It was thus brought into the world under distinguished patronage — that 
of its official father and god-father, so to speak. Its baptism came on the 7th 
December, rather earlier than expected, but explained by the following news- 
paper clipping :^^ 

•Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, Xni: 76. 
"Ibid., Xn: 205. 
"Ibid., xn: 213. 



184 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

Ottawa, Ont., Dec. 5 — It having been stated in some newspapers 
that the new two-cent Imperial stamp would not become available 
until Christmas day, inquiry made' at the Post Office Department today 
to ascertain the truth of this statement elicits the fact that, 
although it was the original intention of the department that the new 
stamp should not come into use until the 25th inst., the demand from 
the public for it has become so pressing that the department has de- 
cided to issue it at once, and permit its immediate use to the extent 
of its face value for all postage purposes. In other words, as soon as 
it reaches the public it may, if preferred by the purchaser, be used 
instead of the ordinary two-cent stamp. The two-cent inter-Imperial 
rate does not, of course, come into effect until Christmas Day. 

In. the WeeMy Philatelic Era, the Canadian correspondent discourses 
upon its advent as follows, under date of 7th December :^^ — 

The new Imperial stamps referred to in past numbers of the Era 
were issued this morning, and although the new Imperial rate does not 
come into efEect until Xmas-day, and they bear that inscription, they 
are receivable for ordinary postage now. 

The general design has already been described, but it may be well 
to say that the stamps are printed in three colours. The frame is in 
black with white letters, the seas are in a pale blue, or rather a laven- 
der, and the British possessions are in a bright red. The map of the 
world is on Mercator's projection, which magnifies high latitudes ; 
consequently the Dominion of Canada, which occupies the middle of 
the upper part of the stamp, looks bigger than all the other British 
possessions put together. The border of the stamp is of cable pattern 
and measures 32 mm. in width by 22% in height. The stamp is printed 
on medium, machine-wove, white paper, similar to that used for the 
Jubilee and subsequent Canadian issues, and is perforated 12. 

The above quotation settles the fact that the first color in which the 
"seas" were printed was lavender. There has been some discussion on this 
point. Again, a correspondent of the WeeMy Philatelic Era wrote under 
date of "Dec. 20th" that "A government official of Canada states that the 2c 
Imperial postage stamp is to be changed in color from a lavender to a blue. 
One of your contemporaries states that the color is to be green."^* Under 
date of "Ottawa, Dec. 29," another correspondent of the same paper 
writes:^* — "The first issue of these geographical stamps, on the 7th instant, 
had the sea coloured a light lavender. About the 20th, I cannot fix the exact 

"Weekly Philatelic Era, XHI: 105. 
Mlbld., xni: 121. 
"Ibid., Xin: 129. 



THE "CHRISTMAS" STAMP OF 1898 185 

day, a second supply had the sea coloured a light blue, as nearly as I can judge 
Prussian blue. And now I am told the third lot are to have the seas much 
darker in colour, but tbat is only a rumour." A clipping from the Winmpeg 
Free Press, however, states that "the second shipment, which arrived on Dec. 
13th, were of an entirely different priat, although the fact passed imnoticed 
for some days. The sea on these stamps — and on all the thousands received 
since — is printed in pale green!" The first shipment is noted as "lavender 
or pale blue" as usual. Evidently the change in color took place within the 
first week or ten days after printing began. A dark shade of green is appar- 
ently as common as the pale green, and a cancelled copy dated January 13, 
1899, is noted in Ewen's Weehly Stamp News. Doubtless it was issued much 
earlier. The lavender shade seems to have been reverted to in the later issues 
of the stamp, for it is noted in chronicles as having been received from Canada 
in February and March, 1899, and the stamp was considered obsolete in 
April. We venture to think, however, that it was not a reversion to lavender 
in the printing of the stamp, but rather the remainder of the first priatings 
— for it is well known that when bundles of stamp sheets are placed in stock 
some of the first packages received may remain at the bottom of the pile for 
years, while the later ones, placed on top, are used to fill orders. 

The stamps were printed in the usual sheet arrangement of 100, ten rows 
of ten. The black portion was from line engraved plates, but the red and 
lavender (or green) portions were doubtless printed on the sheets by lithog- 
raphy previous to the impression of the main design of the stamp in black. 
There are four marginal imprints reading AMEEICAK" BANK E"OTE CO. 
OTTAWA in Koman capitals % mm. high, the inscription being about 29 mm. 
long, (see illustration number 113 on Plate X). They are placed above the 
third and eighth stamps of the top row and beneath the corresponding stamps 
of the bottom row. A plate number, in hair line figures about 4 rmn. high, is 
placed over the division between the fifth and sixth stamps of the top row, 
and higher up than the imprints. Plates 1, 2, 3 and 5 are known, but we 
have been unable to find plate 4 recorded, though it would be presumed to 
exist. All four known plates come with the lavender sea, and probably all 
four were used with the light green and dark green seas, although we have 
only been able to find record of plate 1 with the former and plate 2 with the 
latter.15 

"Ewen's Weekly Stamp News, II: 122. 



186 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

Mr. Ewen, in his exhaustive article on these stamps/® notes an apparent 
retouching of one of the plates. He says: — "Readers will have noted that the 
stamps are each surrounded by what appears to be a rope. On the sheet of 
plate 3 before us, the outer edge of this rope on the stamps at the end of each 
row (right hand side of each sheet) has worn away and has been replaced by a 
straight line engraved on the plate, except on stamp No. 80, which still shows 
the very defective nature of the rope." Much space is also given to a descrip- 
tion of minor varieties in the red portions of the stamp — omission of islands, 
extra islands, peninsulas instead of islands, etc., etc. The chief variety, how- 
ever, occurs in the two dots representing two islands in mid-Pacific: in the 
normal stamps these two lie one above and one below the "equator", if prop- 
erly placed; in the variety, which is the sixth stamp in the fifth row (No. 
46 in the sheet) both islands lie horizontally just below the equator. 

A further variety is the stamp in imperforate condition, of which we are 
able to illustrate a block of four from the Worthington collection as number 
113 on Plate X. This occurs with the bluish, the pale green and the deep 
green oceans. 

It would be interesting to know the number of stamps printed in each of 
the distinct shades, but we do not know even the total issue of the map stamps. 
The only reference is in the London Philatelist,^'' where it is remarked that 
"we understand [it] has been issued to the number of sixteen millions." They 
were not separated in the stamp accounts, but were reckoned in with the or- 
dinary 2 cent stamps, and the above figure may very likely be the correct one 
as the number must have been large. We find from a newspaper clipping 
that the cost of manufacture of these stamps was 45 cents per thousand.^* 

In closing this account of the Christmas stamp it may be interesting to 
record the story of the first letter sent from Canada at the new rate and bearing 
the commemorative stamp in prepayment. It is taken from a Toronto newspaper. 

Penny ocean postage came into force at midnight on Saturday. The 
first letter to be posted was one by Mr. J. Koss Robertson, written to 
Mr. Edward Letchworth, the Grand Secretary, at Freemason's Hall, 

Great Queen-street, London The letter was received at the 

General Post-0£6ce, Adelaide-street, Toronto, at one second past 12 
o'clock on the morning of Sunday, Dec. 25th, by Mr. John Carruthers, 
the Assistant Postmaster, who certified to the posting with his signa- 

"Ewen's Weekly Stamp News, II: 122. 
"London Philatelist, VIII: 79. 
"Post Office, IX: 37. 



THE "CHRISTMAS" STAMP OF 1898 187 

ture on the envelope. At five seconds past 13 it was handed to Mr. 
H. S. Allen, chief of the night staff, who, at twelve seconds past the 
hour, dropped it into one of the electric stamping machines, and at fif- 
teen seconds past midnight it came out in due and proper form, bear- 
ing the Toronto postmark of Dec. 25, and the new two-cent stamp in 
the right-hand corner, duly cancelled, so that it was all ready for the 
London mail bag, waiting for it and succeeding letters going by the 
next British mail. 

On the envelope was the name of the sender in the upper left- 
hand corner and the following endorsation in the lower left-hand 
corner. 

"This is to certify that this letter was mailed at the Toronto Post- 
OfBce at one-quarter of a minute past 12 o'clock on the morning of 
Dec. 25, 1898, and is the first letter to be posted and cancelled at the 
Toronto postoffice, bearing the new imperial penny postage stamp, 
addressed to Great Britain, (signed) John Carruthers, assistant post- 
master." 

And under this : 

"Eeceived at Freemason's Hall, London, Eng., at o'clock, 

day of January, 1899. 



"Grand Secretary." 

This is probably the first time in philatelic history that race-track timing 
has been employed on the passage of mail matter through the post ! 



CHAPTER XV 

THE "KING'S HEAD" ISSUE OF 1903-1908 

THE death of the beloved Queen Victoria on January 22, 1901, por- 
tended momentous changes in the multitude of stamps hearing her 
efBgy throughout the Empire. Canada of course was expected to make 
the proper substitution of the portrait of the new ruler. King Edward the 
Seventh, but as time went on seemed in no hurry to do so. In fact it was 
nearly two years and a half after the Queen's death before the King Edward 
stamps appeared, and in the meantime but little could be learned concerning 
Canada's intentions in the matter. 

About the first of January, 1903, it was reported in the newspapers that 
Postmaster-General Mulock had announced "that designs had been submitted, 
and it has been decided to select one bearing an excellent likeness of His Ma- 
jesty." In its issue for 18th April, 1903, the Metropolitan Philatelist again 
gave advance information concerning Canadian stamp matters in the foUow- 
iug detailed account: — 



The King's head series of Canadian stamps will probably shortly 
make its appearance. The die has been received by the Post Office 
Department and approved of. The stamp will be very similar to the 
present stamp except that the maple leaf in each of the upper corners 
will be replaced by a crown. The figures of value will appear in the 
lower corner as at present and the value will be spelled out as at pres- 
ent in the oval frame which surrounds the portrait. This frame will 
be as in the present stamp. The portrait of the King shows him three- 
quarters to the right — ^head and shoulders, as the Queen is in the pres- 
ent stamp, but there is no crown on his head. The portrait is an ex- 
ceptionally nice one and it is understood that Royalty has had some- 
thing to do with its selection. The die was made in England, 
although the American Bank Note Co. are contractors for the govern- 
ment work. 



THE "KING'S HEAD" ISSUE OF 1903-1908 189 

The details given proved correct. The official announcemeiit of the forth- 
coming issue was given in a circular to postmasters dated 10th June and 
signed by the Deputy Postmaster-General i^ — 

Postmasters are hereby informed that a new issue of postage 
stamps, bearing the portrait of His Majesty King Edward VII., and 
comprising five denominations (Ic., 2c., 5c., 7c., and 10c.) , is about to 
be supplied to Postmasters for sale in the usual way, but none of these 
stamps are to be sold until the first of July, 1903. 

The colours of the forthcoming series will be the same respective- 
ly, as those now used for the denominations specified, except that the 
shade of the 7o. will be slightly deeper. 

Postmasters will please bear in mind that, notwithstanding the 
new issue, they are not to return to the Department any of the old 
stamps on hand, but will sell them in the ordinary way. At first, the 
public may prefer getting new stamps, and if so, there is no objection 
to this wish being acceded to, but it is also desirable to work ofE in due 
course all remnants of old stamps. 

A change in the design of the stamp of the present series of 
post-cards, post-bands and stamped envelopes, to correspond with that 
above referred to, will be made as soon as the present stock of these 
items shall have been exhausted. 



The new stamps were accordingly issued on "Dominion Day" (July 1st) 
of 1903. Their actual appearance brought forth the following interesting 
account of their preparation in the London Philatelist:^ — 

Although for a long time past we have been aware of the circum- 
stances attending the preparation of the new postage stamps for Can- 
ada, and in a position to illustrate the approved design, we have re- 
frained from publishing the facts in compliance with the desire of the 
authorities that no details should be made public until the stamps had 
been completed and were ready to be put into circulation. 

We believe that the delay which has taken place in bringing out 
the new issue has been due to questions arising out of the existing con- 
tract under which the postage stamps of the Dominion are produced, 
and that even after the approval of the design and the receipt of the 
die some difficulties were experienced in connection with the prepara- 
tion of the plates by the contractors. 

These have happily been surmounted, and now that the issue is 
an accomplished fact it is with much gratification that we illustrate 



•Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, XVII: 254. 
'London Philatelist, Xn: 162. 



190 



CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 




the design of the new stamp, our illustration, prepared some time back, 
being taken from a proof from the steel die en- 
graved by Messrs. Perkins, Bacon and Co., of Lon- 
don, and used in the manufacture of the plates of 
the several values issued by the Canadian postal 
authorities on the 1st. instant. By comparing our 
illustration with the stamp as issued it will be 
seen that the contractors or the postal authorities 
have made some alterations in the design, which, 
in our judgement, are by no means improvements. 
The leaves in the lower corners have been redrawn on a smaller scale, 
and hardly impinge upon the frame ; their drawing is vastly inferior, 
and the graceful effect of the broken circle is lost. The numerals of 
value are in colour on a white ground, reversing the original design, 
the labels being larger and the figures taller and thinner; this also 
detracting materially from the charming homogeneity of the stamp as 
first proposed. The greatest alteration, and the worst, is the substi- 
tution of heavy diagonal lines for horizontal ones in the background. 
The latter were finely drawn and delicately shaded, leaving the King's 
Head in clear outline, and framed, by the dark oval band containing the 
inscriptions. The background and frame no longer present this ar^ 
tistic effect, and the whole design materially suffers thereby. 

The circumstances connected with the inception of the issue are 
as gratifying as they are novel, and will be hailed with acclamation 
by the Philatelists of the British Empire. 

The Postmaster of Canada, Sir William Mulock, being one of the 
many distinguished visitors to this country during the Coronation 
festivities, took the opportunity afforded by his visit of approaching 
the Prince of Wales, and of meeting His Eoyal Highness's suggestions 
and advice in the preparation of a, new die for the Canadian stamps. 
The Prince, with his characteristic energy and courtesy, cheerfully un- 
dertook the task, and it will be seen from our illustration with abso- 
lute and conspicuous success. H. E. H. wisely decided, in the first in- 
stance, that it is advisable to have some continuity of design in 
succeeding issues, and therefore adopted the frame and groundwork 
of the then current stamps as a basis. In selecting a portrait of His 
Majesty the Prince decided to rely upon a photograph giving a true 
likeness of the King as we know him, in lieu of an idealised represen- 
tation by an artist. The photograph eventually chosen, with the full 
approval of His Majesty, was one taken shortly before the Coronation. 
The likeness is undoubtedly what is termed a speaking one, and 
with the addition of the Coronation robes represents as faithful and 
as pleasing a picture of the King, at the time of his accession to the 
throne, as it is possible to find. The introduction of the Tudor 
crowns in the upper angles, which was another of the Prince's inno- 
vations, obviates the difficulty that has so often made "the head that 
wears a crown" lie "uneasy" on a postage stamp. These emblems of 



THE "KING'S HEAD" ISSUE OF 1903-1908 191 

sovereignty, taken in conjunction with the Canadian maple leaves in 
the lovirer angles, complete a design that for harmony, boldness, and 
simplicity has assuredly not been excelled by any hitherto issued 
stamps of the British Empire. It is palpable, on analyzing the stamp, 
(1) that the attractiveness of the design has in no v^ay been allowed 
to militate against its utility, for its country of origin and denomina- 
tion are clearly expressed; (3) that the boldness of the design has not 
been detracted from (as is so often the case) by superfluous ornamen- 
tation, and that the design has been artistically balanced by the intro- 
duction of the right-sized portrait and the proper treatment of light 
and shade. 

We think it will be obvious, on comparing the illustration of the original 
design above with the issued stamps, that the modifications introduced into 
the lower corners by the American Bank ]S]"ote Co. did not improve the ap- 
pearance of the design. [Illustration No. 43 on Plate II.] 

As stated in the Post Office circular, the colors followed those of the 
Queen's head stamps, except that the 7 cent value was given a darker shade, 
more of an olive than before and an improvement on its predecessor. The stamps 
were of course line engraved and printed in the usual sheet arrangement of 
ten rows of ten. The imprint was the same as on the Queen's head plates, 
being placed only over stamps 5 and 6 of the top row. The plate numbers 
began as before at ISTo. 1 for each stamp, and up to the present writing, (Dec. 
1910) there have been recorded the following: — 

1 cent —1-10, 13, 14, 18, 19, 22, 24, 25, 34, 47, 48, 51, 52, 55, 58 

2 " —1-30, 35-40, 47, 53-59, 62, 63, 67-74, 78 
5 " —1, 2 

7 " —1 
10 " —1, 2 

Over a year elapsed before any additions were made to the above set. 
Finally Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News^ published in its chronicle the follow- 
ing note from a correspondent: — "On Tuesday, 27th September, [1904] 
the last sheets of the 20c numerals were issued to the distributing offices, 
and the first issue of the 20c King's Head was made on the same day." The 
stamp of course corresponds in all particulars with the others of the set and 
continues the fine olive green color of its predecessor. But one plate number, 
1, has so far appeared. The amount delivered by the manufacturers since its 
appearance has averaged about 400,000 per year. 

'Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, XVIII: 338. 



192 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

The remaining value of the regular Canadian series, the 50 cent, b& 
cause of its limited use and the stock of the 1893 issue still on hand, had 
escaped being included in either of the Queen's Head issues. But the old 
stock at last ran out in 1908 and on the 19th JSTovember, according to Mekeel's 
Weehly Stamp News,* this value appeared in the King's Head type, printed 
in a rich violet and making a very handsome addition to the series. It con- 
forms in all respects to the other values, and bears the plate number 1. The 
supply of the stamp received up to 31st March, 1910, was 300,000 copies. 

It may have been noticed, however, that no % cent stamp has appeared 
in the King's head design. Trouble over this value seems to have begun to 
brew with the Jubilee stamps. We have already detailed the story as far 
as that issue is concerned, and also the manner in which the % cent "maple 
leaf" was forced to appear before the authorities reckoned. Primarily in- 
tended for prepaying the rate on transient newspapers, this value was sup- 
posed to be employed only in that way, though its use had never been so re- 
stricted. Its yearly issue to postmasters had gradually increased from some 
300,000 in 1869 to 900,000 in 1895. In 1898 the latter number had doubled, 
and by 1902 had only fallen to about 1,200,000. The trouble seemed to be 
partly due, at least, to the fact that stamp collectors were buying them up, 
and using them largely on their letter mail. This came to the attention of 
the Post Office Department, and resulted in the following Department Cir- 
cular, published in the Montreal Star for the 6th December, 1902 :^ — 

The attention of postmasters is drawn to the fact that the postal 
necessity for the % cent stamp, as such, is now confined to one pur- 
pose — prepaynaent of newspapers and periodicals posted singly, and 
weighing not more than one ounce each (see Postal Guide, page xii, 
section 47). As publications of the kind referred to must, in the nature 
of things, be few, and as in the case of their being mailed to subscrib- 
ers by the office of publication, the bulk rate of postage would be far 
cheaper and more convenient for the publisher, the demand for the l^ 
cent stamp throughout the Dominion must be appreciably diminished 
as a result of this restriction of its use. While, of course, any number 
of % cent stamps on an article of correspondence will be recognized 
to the full extent of their aggregate face value, it is not the wish ol 
the Department to supply them except for the sole specific purpose 
above mentioned, and an intimation to that effect should be given by 
postmasters to patrons of their office who are in the habit of buying 14 
cent stamps for other postal purposes. 

•Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, XXII: 414. 
•Ibid., XVI: 471. 



THE "KING'S HEAD" ISSUE OF 1903-1908 193 

This circular seems to have had the desired effect, at least in good meas- 
ure, for the stamp accounts in the Eeports for succeeding years showed an 
average issue to postmasters of approximately 400,000 % cent stamps, being 
a reduction of tv70-thirds. Finally, on the 19th May, 1909, an amendment^ to 
the Post Office Act was passed which repealed the provision granting the % 
cent rate to newspapers and periodicals weighing less than one ounce, when 
posted singly. This placed them in the one cent per ounce class and sounded 
the death knell of the % cent stamp. The stamp accounts in the 1910 Eeport 
show 1,700 1/2 cent stamps on hand April 1, 1909, and 600,000 more received 
from the manufacturers. These were all issued to postmasters and a foot-note 
finishes the story: "Discontinued June 10, 1909." 

Just why the % cent stamp never was issued in the King's head type can- 
not be stated. All the other values then in use in Canada had made their appear- 
ance in this design, the 20 cent and 50 cent even having delayed their advent 
until the stock of previous types had been exhausted ; but the V2 cent Queen's 
Head with numerals was regularly received from the printers and distributed 
to postmasters down to the middle of 1909, six years after the King's Heads 
first made their appearance. With the end of its usefulness at that time, of 
course, disappeared all hope of ever seeing it in the King's Head set. 

In the issue for October 10, 1908, Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News pub- 
lished the following editorial: — 

We are enabled to report the existence of the two-cent Canada, 
current issue, imperforate, a reader having shown us a sheet of one 
hundred of these varieties bearing the plate number 18. This is a dis- 
covery of momentous interest which must attract much attention not 
alone from specialists but from collectors, as we may say for the sake 
of distinction, as well. The fact that the pane bears so early a plate 
number removes it from any inclusion in the theory that the Canadian 
authorities propose to issue stamps in imperforate sheets in the manner 
that has been employed by the United States. Without doubt, the sheet 
under notice was regularly prepared for issue in the accepted way and 
it is the belief from information at hand that a sheet of four hundred 
of the stamps was printed and reached the public. 

This announcement created some comment and was made the subject 
of enquiry of the Post Office Department at Ottawa. The officials repudiated 
the idea that any such irregularity could have happened, but finally took 

•8-9 Edward VH, Chap. 30. 



194 CANADIAJS" POSTAGE STAMPS 

steps to authenticate the report. In the issue of February 20, 1909, of the 
paper already quoted, is the full story of the "find", which has a peculiar 
interest, as will be seen later. 

The sheet as found was not of 400 stamps but of over 200 stamps, 
as the right hand half of the sheet on which our report was based and 
which was not before us when we wrote, contained a pane of 100 
stamps, plate number 14 and an irregularly torn part of plate number 
13, showing about fifteen whole stamps and parts of others. Assuming 
that the lower pane in the left half was torn approximately in the 
manner of the right lower pane, or plate number 13, the find consisted 
originally of 230 stamps, more or less. This reckoning agrees, we be- 
lieve, with the recollection of the person who rescued the imperforates 
from oblivion, in a philatelic sense. The plate numbers on the sheet 
that gave authority for the chronicling of the stamps by the Weekly 
are 13 and 14, respectively, and not 18 as first printed. 

A. N. Lemieux of Chicago is the man who found the stamps. 
While in Ottawa five years ago or so', when he was in business in that 
city, he saw the stamps just within the iron fence that has been de- 
scribed as surrounding the establishment of the bank note company 
that prints the Canadian stamps. The day was a rainy one and the 
sheet had evidently been blown out of the window. Mr. Lemieux ap- 
parently attached no value to the sheet of over two hundred stamps 
which was in a wet, crumpled condition and without gum. Mr. 
Lemieux was under the impression, no doubt, that gum had been on the 

sheet but had been washed ofE by the rain Before he showed the 

stamps to the Weekly, Mr. Lemieux had disposed of the left half of 
the sheet or about 115 whole stamps to a, collector .... on an exchange 
basis .... Mr. Lemieux was informed that the stamps still in his 
possession had no little philatelic interest as curiosities and he sold 
the specimens to Mr. Severn. 

Mr. Severn subsequently submitted the stamps to the officials at Ottawa, 
who pronounced them "printer's waste" and stated that "they seemingly had 
been trampled upon and subjected to the usage that would be given such cast 
off material. Further, it was said that they had been blown or thrown out of 
a window, no doubt. It was suggested that the stamps be returned to Ottawa 
and that there were moral grounds for such a course on the part of the holders. 
The description of 'printer's waste' seems to be correct and the inference is 
that the stamps never had been gummed. They belong to that class of cur- 
iosities that appeals strongly to the specialist but which the ordinary collector 
regards as something apart from his collecting policy."* 

'This was later corrected to June, 1906. 
sMekeel's Weekly Stamp News, XXIII: 66. 



THE "KING'S HEAD" ISSUE OF 1903-1908 195 

But now mark the result. The stamps very naturally did not go back to 
Ottawa, so Ottawa took pains to "get back" at the stamps! In the Weelcly 
of May 22, 1909, a correspondent writes: — 

It may be of interest to know that the last supplement to the 
Canadian Post Office Guide contains the following : "In view of repre- 
sentations which have been made to the Department, it has been de- 
cided to permit the sale of the 2-cent denomination of Canadian post- 
age stamps of the current issue, in sheets of 100, without tlie usual 
perforation." I at once asked for a sheet of 2-cent and incidentally- 
said I would take a sheet of the other denominations if available. A 
reply came today informing me that only the 2-cent would be avail- 
able, and then, not for some time, as the department intends to make 
a separate printing of these stamps, to supply whatever demand may 
occur. 

The quotation from the Guide appeared in the supplement for April, 
1909, and concluded with the sentence: — "Applications for the same should 
be made to the Postmaster at Ottawa." 

It might be inferred, perhaps, from the announcement in the Otdde, 
that the activities of the mailing machine companies had induced the Cana- 
dian Post Office Department to cater to their convenience, as had been done 
in the United States, by issuing sheets of stamps, only purchaseable as such, 
in imperforate form. But no! The Department gave itself away! ISiTote 
the following points: — Mr. Severn sent the original imperforates to Ottawa 
for examination. They had the plate numbers 13 and 14 on them. They 
were returned with the intimation that "it would be safer not to dispose of 
the sheet in view of the circumstances under which it reached the public. It 
was suggested that Mr. Severn might be 'recouped' the amount that he paid 
for the stamps if he relinquished them."' Naturally the stamps did not 
again see Ottawa. Six months later the Department placed on sale the 2 
cent stamp in imperforate sheets of 100, BUT — it was announced that they 
could only be procured from the Postmaster at Ottawa; that only the 2 cent 
would be available ; that the Department intended to make a separate printing 
of the stamps ; and when collectors obtained them they were found to be from 
the identical plates 13 and 14 of the "irregular" imperforates that Mr. Severn 
held, although the regular issues of 2 cent stamps at that time were being 
printed from plates numbered at least up to 62. We said "identical plates," 

•Mekeel's Weekry Stamp News, XXHI: 190. 



196 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

but in view of the early plate numbers and the delay in issuing the imperfor- 
ates, the suspicion is strong that new plates may have been made and given 
the old numbers. 

As no other values have since been issued imperforate, and as no other 
plate numbers have appeared in the 2 cent imperforate except the original 
13 and 14, there is but one explanation for this "special printing" on these 
early plates, and that is an attempt to checkmate the holder of the originals 
and "to destroy what may be called an accidental monoply of a stamp, the 
issue of which was not intended previously." As a clincher we make one 
more quotation: — "l^ow that Mr. Lemieux, the finder of the imperforates, 
has received the Quarterly Supplement alluded to, containing the order cre- 
ating the imperforates neatly blue-pencilled, it is assumed that the issue of 
the stamps in this form has been made with the idea of rendering the sheet that 
escaped the department of no value. Thus philately plainly has its influence 

in this new emission and an interesting variety has been added to the 

philatelic supply by reason of the refusal to return the sheet that accidentally 
escaped some years ago." 



The Postmaster General's Reports for the several years of the King's 
Head issue (1903 to date) have but little of special interest. The Report 
of 30th June, 1903, says: — "Towards the end of the fiscal year a new 
series of postage stamps, bearing the portrait of His Majesty King Edward 
VII, and comprising five denominations was supplied to Post Masters so as 
to be on sale throughout the Dominion on the 1st July, 1903." 

The Report of 1905 states that a Postal Convention between Canada and 
Mexico came into operation on 1st July, 1905 by which first, second and third 
class matter can be sent from either country to the other at the domestic rates 
of the country of origin. 

The fiscal year was once more changed from the 1st July to the 1st April 
of each year, so that the Reports of the Postmaster General have beei^ made 
up to the 31st March since 1907. The Report of 1908 states that "for some 
time past the provisions of the Postal Convention between Canada and the 
United States relative to the postage on newspapers and periodicals passing 
between the two countries were felt to be unsatisfactory, and an amendment 
was made to the Convention (taking effect on 8th May, 1907) by which the 
rate was fixed at 1 cent for each 4 ounces, calculated on the weight of each 



THE "KING^S HEAD" ISSUE OE 1903-1908 197 

package of newspapers or periodicals, and prepaid by means of postage stamps 
affixed. The amendment was subsequently modified: and copies of legitimate 
daily newspapers posted from the office of publication addressed to regular sub- 
scribers and newsdealers, can now be sent from Canada to the United States and 
from the United States to Canada at the rate of 1 cent per pound. ^Newspapers 
and periodicals published less frequently than daily are stiU subject to the rate 
of 1 cent per 4 ounces." 

The issue of the "6c. International Keply Coupon" is recorded as having 
taken place on the 5th October, 1907. A supply of 500,000 was received 
from Berne, and of these 62,625 were distributed. The Report for 1909 
gives but 2,475 issued from headquarters, and the 1910 Eeport 14,050. 

The 1908 Report also notes the extension of free delivery of letters by 
carrier to the following places : in Ontario : — Peterboro, Guelph, Berlin, Strat- 
ford, Windsor, St. Catherines; in Quebec: — Sherbrooke, St. Hyacinthe, 
Trois Rivieres; in Prince Edward Island: — Charlottetown ; in Manitoba: — 
Brandon; in Alberta: — Calgary, Edmonton. 

The Report for 1909 states that "a greatly desired reduction was made 
in August 1908, ta the rate of postage on letters posted for local delivery 
in cities and other places having free letter carrier delivery service. The 
former rate was two cents per ounce; the present rate is one cent per ounce." 

Further changes in newspaper regulations are noted as follows: — 

Some changes have been made in the regulations respecting news- 
papers and periodicals posted from the office of publication addressed 
to regular subscribers and newsdealers. (1) The former rate of % cent 
per pound applicable to newspapers and periodicals which required to 
be transmitted a distance in Canada exceeding three hundred miles, 
or which were addressed for delivery in a place having Free Letter Car- 
rier Delivery service has been abolished; and now all newspapers and 
periodicals published not less frequently than once a month can be 
posted from the place of publication to any place in Canada at the bulk 
rate of a quarter of a cent per pound. (3) The extent of the circular 
area in Canada within which newspapers and periodicals published no 
more frequently than weekly and no less frequently than monthly can 
be sent free of postage to regular subscribers has been increased from 
an area having a radius of 30 miles to an area having a radius of 40 
mUes, the center of which may either be the place of publication or 
some place not more than 40 miles distant therefrom, according to 
the wish of the publisher. 

The following places are given as having had the system of free de- 
livery of letters by carrier extended to them: in Ontario: — Chatham, Fort 



198 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

William, Port Arthur, Sarnia, St. Thomas; in 'New Brunswick: — Moncton; 
in Saskatchewan: — ^Regina; in British Columbia: — New Westminster. 

The Eeport for 1910 contains nothing special. New Parcels Post regu- 
lations are noted with the United Kingdom, British West Indies, British Guiana 
and Mexico, by which the rate is made 12 cents per pound or fraction, with a 
limit of 11 pounds. 

In closing the chapter on the King Edward stamps, doubtless ere long 
to be superseded by "King George" stamps, it may be well to record the 
following statistics in order to note the progress made in the Post Office De- 
partment for the period we have been considering. 

31st. Mar. '03. 31st. Mar. '10. 

Number of Post Offices, 10,150 12,887 

letters and post cards annually, 262,437,000 501,189,000 

registered letters annually, 5,470,000 10,465,000 

pieces of 3rd class matter annually, . . 46,794,000 87,237,000 

" " packets and parcels annually, 3,790,740 7,112,660 

Mileage travelled on mail routes annually, 35,752,087 46,773,727 

Net revenue, $4,366,127.75 $7,958,547.72 

A very important fact is also to be found on examining the financial re- 
ports of the Department — that from a deficit (as usual for many years) of 
$416,183.99 in 1901, and a wee surplus of $5,109.14 in 1902, there has grown 
to be a surplus of $743,210.25 in 1910. Evidently Canada's Post Office De- 
partment is at least run efficiently and economically ! 



» >} 



5J 



CHAPTER XVI 

THE "TERCENTENARY" ISSUE OF 1 908 

IT may be remembered, perhaps, that in our introductory chapter we noted 
the fact that the first permanent settlement in Canada was made by Cham- 
plain at Quebec in 1608. As the year 1908 approached, the idea of cele- 
brating in proper manner the three hundredth anniversary of this event was 
strongly agitated, particularly by the French population of the Province of 
Quebec. Plans were formed and materialized in the shape of fetes, historical 
pageants, etc., which took place at Quebec in July, 1908, and to be present at 
which the Prince and Princess of Wales made a special trip across the Atlantic 
in one of Britain's most powerful warships. 

In view of former precedents it was to be expected that the Canadian Post 
Office Department would also celebrate in a fitting way, and although a new 
Postmaster General had taken the place of Sir William Mulock, he nevertheless 
arose to the occasion as the following newspaper despatch shows : — 

Quebec, March 31. — Hon. Eudolphe Lemieux, Postmaster Gen. of 
Canada, announces that a series of postage stamps commemorative of 
the Champlaiu tercentenary will be issued at Ottawa on the third of 
July, which marks the exact anniversary of the foundation of Quebec 
by Champlain. 

No sooner was this fact made known than the Postmaster General was 
showered with suggestions of all kinds as to the designs of stamps appropriate 
to the occasion. But after the first announcement the Post Office Department 
was very reticent in regard to the matter, and letters of enquiry concerning the 
proposed issue were answered as evasively as possible. 

At last the veil was lifted and the following despatch to the Toronto Olobe^ 
gave definite information concerning the proposed issue : — 

Ottawa, July 3, (Special). — Postmaster-General Lemieux has given 
instructions to issue a series of postage stamps commemorating the 
tercentenary. 



'Ewen's Weekly Stamp News, No. i62. 



200 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

They are eight in number. Four of them bear portraits of persons 
dear to Canada, or whose names recall great events. The first repre- 
sents the Prince and Princess of Wales ; the second the King and Queen. 
Next come Cartier and Champlain, and then, in connection with the 
battlefields park scheme, Wolfe and Montcalm. 

The second part of the issue represents Cartier's arrival before 
Quebec. On the calm waters of the mighty St. Lawrence stand in bold 
relief three ships of the discoverer of Canada, flying the fleur-de-lys. 

As a sequel to the above is a very picturesque tableau. In Cham- 
plain's narrative of his third voyage to Canada is found the following 
passage : 

"With our canoes laden with provisions, our arms and some mer- 
chandise to be given as presents to the Indians, I started on Monday, 
May 37, from the Isle of Saincte Helaine, accompanied by four French- 
men and one Indian. A salute was given in my honor from some small 
pieces of artillery." 

The artist, under the inspiration of these few lines, has depicted 
Champlain's departure for the west. There stand two canoes. In one 
Champlain's companions have already taken their places, paddle in 
hand, whilst the great explorer is still on shore, bidding good-bye to a 
few friends. The picture is full of life. The legend underneath reads 
as follows : "Partement de Champlain pour L'ouest." The word "partfe- 
ment", now obsolete, is the one used by Champlain for the modern one 
"depart." 

The same note of old France is used in connection with a view of 
the first house in Quebec, indeed in Canada, Champlain's habitation, 
which is called in his narrative "I'abitation de Quebecq." This stamp is 
a clear reproduction of a cut from Champlain's work. 

Quebec as it was in 1700 is the next view, copied from 
Bacqueville de la Potherie's "Histoire de la Nouvelle France." It is a 
quaint picture of the old city, showing steeples here and there, the fort 
on the river front and in faint lines the Laurentide Mountains in the 
background. 

All stamps bear with the words "Canada Postage" the line "Ille 
centenaire de Quebec." 

The postmaster-general has given special attention to the selection 
of portraits and historical scenes to be represented. His choice has been 
an excellent one. 

The carrying out of the engraving part of the plan has been en- 
trusted to Mr. Machado, of the American Bank Note Co., who, with keen 
artistic sense, has performed his part of the work with great success. 

Excellent reproductions of tliis attractive series will be found as Nos. 
46—53 on Plate III. 

The stamps were placed on sale at Ottawa on the 16th July. They are of 
the same shape as the Jubilee issue, though the dimensions are 1 mm. higher 



THE "TERCENTENARY" ISSUE OF 1908 201 

and nearly 3 mm. longer. The designs are as already described, except that 
the legend "Partement pour I'ouest" does not have Champlain's name in it, 
and the dates 1608 and 1908 are placed in the upper corners. The colors do 
not whoUy correspond with the regular set; the 1, 2 and 5 cent naturally con- 
form, but the y^ cent is in a black-brown and the 7 cent in the fine olive green 
of the regular 20 cent. The 10 cent is also changed to a handsome violet, 
whUe the 15 cent is in orange and the 20 cent in a dark brown. 

The stamps are beautifully engraved, as usual, and printed ia sheets of 
100, ten rows of ten. Above the 5th and 6th stamps of the top row is the regu- 
lar marginal imprint: "OTTAWA — No, — " and the figure representing the 
plate number. A peculiar variety has been recorded, however, in the sheets of 
the 2 cent value, some of those with plate numbers 3 and 4 having the imprint 
inverted in the bottom margiu of the sheet. ^ As it occurs both ways, the only 
explanation seems to be that the plates may have printed two panes, which were 
afterwards separated into post office sheets of 100 stamps each, and that by 
error, perhaps, the imprint was inverted on one of these panes. 

The plate numbers of the several values are as follows : — 

Plate No. 1 %c., 7c., lOc, 15c., 20c. 

" Nos. 1, 2 5o. 

" Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4 Ic, 2o. 

The stamps are on stout white wove paper and perforated 12. 

It may not be out of place to further describe some of the designs of these 
stamps because of their historical interest. Of course the portraits of the Brit- 
ish Royal Family are familiar, that of the Princess of Wales being the one used 
on the handsome 4 cent stamp of Newfoundland, and that of the Prince of Wales 
being from a photograph taken by W. and D. Downey of London, just before 
the Prince's journey to India in 1906. The portrait of Cartier will also be 
recognized as the one that appeared on the early lOd. stamp of the Province of 
Canada. 

Concerning the picture on the 20 cent stamp, "Arrivee de Cartier, Quebec 
1535," we find some interesting details given by M. Th. Lemaire:^ — 

In 1533 Jacques Cartier obtained from Philippe de Chabot, Admiral 
ol France, authority to arm ships "to voyage, discover and conquer in 

'Ewen's Weekly Stamp News, Nos. 478, 480. 
'Journal des Phllat£llstes, 5th Series, page 298. 



202 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

New France, as well as to find, by the North-west, the passage to Ca- 
thay." On his first voyage he touched Newfoundland, but the advanced 
season obliged him to return to France. King Francis I thereupon or- 
dered him, as a "royal pilot", to arm three vessels for a second voyage. 
On the 19th of May, 1535, the flotilla set out from St. Malo. It was 
composed of two ships, the 6rande-H ermine of 120 tons and the 
Petit-H ermine of 80 tons, and a galley, the Hdmerillon, of 40 tons. 
These are the ones shown on the stamp. The ships were built with the 
high bows and sterns of those days, and were armed with "falconets" 
(small cannon) along the sides and "culverins"' (long cannon) in a bat- 
tery on the bridge. The galley was long and narrow, low in the water, 
and was propelled both by sails and oars ; it was armed with two small 
cannon forward and a dozen large arquebuses. The complement of the 
three ships comprised in all- — ofBcers, gentlemen, volunteers, chaplains, 
sailors, workmen, servants — a hundred and ten men. 

On the 14th September, Cartier arrived at an Indian village, 
Stadacone, called also by the natives Canada (or the town), the resi- 
dence of the chief Donnacona. This village was built on the bay which 
the river St. Charles forms where it flows into the St. Lawrence, 
against the steep flank of a mountain, on the spot where now is built 
the south-eastern section of Quebec. The 20-cent stamp represents this 
arrival of Cartier at Stadacone, the future Quebec. 

Samuel de Champlain, whose efBgy figures on the 1 cent stamp be- 
side that of Cartier, was sent by Henri IV in 1603 to found a settlement 
in Canada. On his first voyage he sailed up the St. Lawrence river and 
established friendly relations with the native chiefs. On the second 
expedition, in 1608, he disenabarked on the 3d July at the foot of 
the promotory of Stadacone, accompanied by only thirty men. 

His first care was to find a favorable place to built a "habitation" 
with a, view to wintering there. "I could find nothing more convenient 
or better situated, said he, than the point of Quebecq, so called by the 
savages, which was filled with walnut trees." It was on the same spot 
where, seventy-three years before, Cartier had constructed a fort of 
tree trunks. 

Thanks to the activity displayed by all, the "habitation" was quick- 
ly finished. It was composed of three main houses of two stories, each 
measuring fifteen by eighteen feet. The magazine was thirty-six by 
eighteen feet, with a six foot cellar. Champlain lodged in the same 
building with part of the workmen, but on the first story. The other 
buildings served for the workmen and for storing the arms and muni- 
tions. In an ell back of Champlain's quarters, several artisans slept 
beside their forge. All around the buildings a gallery six feet wide 
served as a promenade. A ditch fifteen feet wide and six feet deep 
served to protect the colonists from the aggressions of the savages. 
Champlain had several breastworks thrown up outside the ditch where 
he placed his cannon. There remained, between the habitation and 
the river, only a strip of land about twenty-five feet wide, and behind, 



THE "TERCENTENARY" ISSUE OF 1908 203 

on the side of the cape, a plot of cultivated ground about 100 to 120 
paces by 60 paces. There Champlain had wheat and rye planted and 
also set out vines. 

As with the Jubilee stamps, some special sets were made up for presenta- 
tion purposes. The following press clipping gives the details :* — 

As the Prince of Wales is an enthusiastic collector of stamps, His 
Koyal Highness will no doubt be very pleased to receive the set of the 
special tercentenary stamps which will be presented to him at Quebec. 
The stamps will be held in small gold boxes, enclosed in a, handsome 
large box of Morocco leather. A second set accompanies the gift in a 
special gold box. On the cover of the large box is the Prince's crest 
and a gold plate inscribed as follows : "Set of Canadian postage stamps 
issued upon the occasion of the Quebec tercentenary, 1908. Presented 
to His Eoyal Highness the Prince of Wales by Hon Kodolphe Lemieux, 
Postmaster-General of Canada." Sets of these stamps, in boxes with 
appropriate crests and monograms, will be presented to Earl Grey, 
Sir Wilfred Laurier and Hon. Kodolphe Lemieux. 

Unlike the Jubilee issue, no advance information concerning quantities 
printed was given out. Many attempts were made to get this interesting detail, 
but without result. Even an interpellation of the Postmaster-General in the 
House of Commons was unproductive, as witness the following excerpt:^ — 

Mr. McKechnie sends ns information regarding the issue, indicat- 
ing' that there is to be no such vexatious limits set upon the niimber 
to be printed as was the case with the Jubilee %c. Postmaster-General 
Lemieux is reported, in the Canadian Hansard, to have said in answer 
to a query as to the number printed of each denomination : "Since the 
arrangements as to the respective quantities comprising the series are 
thus far of a necessarily tentative character, being largely dependent 
upon the demand therefor that may arise, no final estimate has been 
made of the number to be issued in each denomination." 

All of which was simply a parliamentary way of saying "mind your own 
business", as the full quota of stamps was doubtless printed and delivered at 
that time. At any rate, a Memorandum for the Postmaster, issued from head- 
quarters under date of 12th September, 1908, states that "With the exception 
of the 10c, 15c and 20c stamps, all of the Tercentenary postage stamps are now 
exhausted." However, the question of the quantity issued was again brought up 
in the House of Commons, after some time, and the following two questions pro- 
pounded by a member :® — 

•Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, XXII: 265. 
•Canadian Hansard, 31st March, 1909, page 3754. 
•Ibid., XXn: 266. 



204 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

1. What was the total amount received by the Post Office Depart- 
ment from the sale of the special Tercentenary stamps? 2. What part 
of this sum would probably have been received as ordinary revenue 
if there had been no special issue of stamps? 

To these questions the Hon. Eodolphe Lemieux, Postmaster-Gener- 
al, responded: The following was the issue to Postmasters of the Ter- 
centenary postage stamps : 



Denominations. 


Quantities. 


Value. 


% 


cent 


2,000,000 


$10,000 


1 


>» 


22,530,000 


225,300 


2 


" 


35,100,000 


702,000 


5 


" 


1,200,000 


60,000 


7 


»» 


700,000 


49,000 


10 


)» 


500,000 


50,000 


15 


?) 


300,000 


45,000 


20 


Totals, 


304,200 


60,840 




62,634,200 


$1,202,140 



The department has no knowledge whether the stamps in question 
have all been sold, as during their issue the ordinary postage stamps 
were also on sale, both issues being in use as preferred by the public. 
The proceeds derived from the sale of stamps of the two issues were 
not kept separately, but treated as arising from a common source. It 
is, therefore, impossible to state to what extent the issue of the Ter- 
centenary postage stamps may have afEected the ordinary revenue. 

The Report of 1909, in referring to this issue, had the following remarks : — 

To meet what appeared to be a general wish a special series of 
postage stamps, which has come to be knoWn as the Tercentenary 
Series, was introduced as a feature of the celebration in July, 1908, of 
the three hundredth anniversary of the founding of Quebec by Champ- 
lain. The first supply of these stamps was sent out to Postmasters 
about the middle of that month, and was on sale to the public by the 
time His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales reached Quebec for the 
celebration. The demand for the new stamps was extraordinary, and 
for the better part of a month was steadily kept up. The interest 
taken in them was, in no small measure, due to the historic associa^ 
tions with which in design they were so happily linked, the subjects de- 
picted in the several denominations of the series being in variety and 
appropriateness admirably adapted to the end in view, — popular 
recognition of an epoch-making event. 

The Report of 1910 notes that the last issue of the Tercentenary stamps 
was on Oct. 14, 1908, — apparently the 15 cent denomination. The whole 
issue was thus exhausted in three months' time. 



CHAPTER XVII 

THE REGISTRATION STAMPS 

THE first mention that we find concerning the registration system in 
Canada is in the Postmaster General's report for the year ending 31st 
March, 1856, in the following words: — "The number of letters pass- 
ing through the Post under the Kegistration System commenced in May 
1855, is very great, and is rapidly increasing." The number of letters is 
given in even figures as 350,000 during the first year. The Report states 
further: — "In October 1856, an agreement with the Post Ofiice Department 
of the United States took effect for a system of Registration to be applied to 
letters passing between the two countries. Under this arrangement a person 
posting a letter on either side can, by the pre-payment of a fee of 3d. in addi- 
tion to the ordinary postage, secure a continuous record of its transmission 
from the place of posting to the place of destination, where a receipt will be 
taken and preserved of the due delivery of the letter so registered." Further 
details are found in the postal section of the Canadian Directory for 1857-8, 
as follows: — 

Persons transmitting letters, which they desire should pass through 
the post as "registered letters," must observe that no record is taken 
of any letter unless specially handed in for registration at the time of 
posting. Upon all such letters, with the exception of those addressed 
to the United States, one penny must be prepaid as a registration 
charge. If addressed to the United States, the ordinary postage rate 
on the letters to that country must 6e prepaid, and in addition a regis- 
tration charge of 3d. per letter. The registry thus effected in Canada 
will be carried on by the United States Post office until the letter ar- 
rives at its destination. 

In like manner, letters addressed to Canada may be registered at 
the place of posting in the United States, and the registry made there 
will accompany the letter to the place of delivery in Canada. 

A certificate of registration will be given by the postmaster if re- 
quired. 

The registration system can be applied to the letter portion of the 
mail only 

[The Postal Department is not Uahle for the loss of any registered 
letters.] 



206 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

The next year's Eeport gives the number of registered letters posted 
annually as computed at 500,000. The Report of 30th September, 1858 also 
says: "About 500,000 letters were registered last year", and goes on to state: — 
"It is also considered that it would be an improvement on the system if the 
charge for registration were made pre-payable by a stamp, instead of by money 
as at present." From this it is evident that the postage stamps were not then 
used for indicating the payment of the registration fee. Just when they were 
permitted to be so employed does not appear, but it was doubtless within a 
comparatively short time thereafter, as we have seen a cover with stamp so 
used which was dated in 1862 ; in fact it seems probable that arrangements 
for using stamps to indicate the payment for registration may have accom- 
panied the introduction of the decimal stamps in 1859. 

Further remarks upon the registration system are found in the Eeport 
for 1860, as foUows: — 

A rate of ctarge for Kegistration so low as, in no probable degree, 
to operate as a motive, with persons posting letters of value, to deny 
themselves the advantage of securing from the Post Office an acknowl- 
edgement of the receipt of the specific letter, has always been con- 
sidered to be a cardinal point in the Canadian Kegistration System. 

The Registration fee, or charge, has, therefore, under the influence 
of this consideration, been maintained at 2 cents, though it is doubt- 
ful whether such a rate of charge covers the actual cost of the process ; 
the address of the Eegistered Letter having, in the course of 
transmission, to be entered on an average not less than six times, and 
forms of certificate or receipt, and Books in which to preserve perma- 
nent records at each Post Office, to to supplied. 

From the above it is evident that the domestic rate of registration was 
2 cents in 1860, the equivalent of the 1 penny rate already noted as being 
in force in 1857, and doubtless the original rate when the system was inaug- 
urated in 1855 — certainly a remarkably cheap fee for the service. Of course 
the rate for letters to the United States, which had been fixed at 3 pence in 
1856, was held at the equivalent of 5 cents upon the change to decimal cur- 
rency in 1859. 

ISTothing further of special interest is found until the Eeport of 1864, 
in which the following dissertation occurs : — 

When a letter is registered, that is to say marked and recorded 
in the Post Office so as to individualize it from the bulk of ordinary 
letter correspondence, its presence in the Post Ofiice can be identified 



THE KEGISTRATION STAMPS 207 

and its course of transmission traced, and a registered letter is thus 
secured from the chance of abstraction by an unfaithful messenger em- 
ployed to post it (as it is always open to proof whether the letter was 
posted for registration or not), from risk of loss by accidental mis- 
direction on the part of the sender, and from mistakes in the Post 
Office — such as mis-sending or delivery to a wrong party. Against actu- 
al dishonesty on the part of the Post OfBce employes, a registered let- 
ter is incomparably more secure than an unregistered one, for an un- 
registered money-letter leaves no trace behind it whilst passing in the 
great stream of ordinary correspondence, though its presence as a 
money-letter and the nature of its contents are, to any person accus- 
tomed to handle letters, as manifest as though the letter had been sin- 
gled out and marked by the registered stamp. Moreover, the safety 
of an unregistered letter in dependent on the integrity of a Post Office 
Clerk during the whole time that it remains in his custody, frequently 
for hours or even days ; whilst a registered letter will almost invariably 
have to be acknowledged at the moment of its passing into an officer's 
hands, and cannot thereafter be suppressed without leaving him indi- 
vidually accountable for its disposal. 

In the Eeport for 1865 it is stated that "there has been a reduction in the 
charge on Eegistered letters" between Canada and the United Kingdom, but we 
are left in the dark as to the amount of the reduction or the new rate, as far 
as the Report goes, but in a Post Office Directory for 1866 (dated October 1, 
1865) we find the following table which gives us the information desired: — 

BEGISTBATION OF LETTEBS. 
*«««* ««» 

The charge for Registration, in addition to the Postage, is as 
follows, viz. : 
On Letters to any other place in Canada, or British North America 2 cents 

On Letters for the United States, 5 " 

On Letters for the United Kingdom, 12% " 

On Letters for British Colonies or Possessions, sent via England, . . 25 " 
On Letters for France and other Foreign Countries, via England, an 
amount equal to the postage rate. 

Both the postage charge and registration fee must in all cases be 
prepaid. 

The Post Office Act 1867 made the domestic registration of letters con- 
taining valuables compulsory, the Postmaster General being empowered to 
prescribe and enforce regulations "in respect to the registration by the officers 
of the Post Office of letters unquestionably containing money or other val- 
uable enclosure when posted without registration by the senders of the same, 



208 CAITADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

and to imposing a rate of two cents registration charge upon such letters."^ 
The Keport for 1868, which was the first of the Dominion of Canada, 
gave the statistics of registered letters as 640,000 for Ontario and Quebec 
(the former Province of Canada), 24,700 for New Brunswick, and 40,000 
for Nova Scotia, a total registered correspondence of Y04,700. The next 
year's Keport especially notes the increase in the use of the registration sys- 
tem, the total having advanced to 850,000 pieces, while the Report for 1870 
records an even million. 

Finally in the Eeport for 1872, we find the first hint of special stamps 
for registration purposes, as follows: — 

It seems expedient to adopt some distinctive postage stamp to be 
used only in prepayment of the Eegistration charge, both to make it 
clear that this charge has been duly paid and accounted for in every 
case, and to diminish the risk which is occasionally felt at points of 
distribution of omitting to carry on the Registration in cases vyhere 
the ordinary Registration postmark is not as distinct and calculated to 
arrest attention as it should be. 

It has always been the policy of the Canadian Post OfBce to admit 
letters to Registration at a, low rate of charge for the additional secur- 
ity thus given, so as to leave no adequate motive, on the score of cost, 
for sending valuable letters through the mails unregistered : and, doubt- 
less, the very large proportion of such letters offered for registration 
demonstrates a gratifying measure of success in attaining the desired 
object. 

We have here the reason for the extremely cheap domestic registry fee 
of 2 cents — a reason which might, possibly with profit, even, enter more deeply 
into the calculations and published rates of even larger countries than Canada. 

The above recommendation did not bear immediate fruit, but after a 
delay of three years the suggested special stamps made their appearance on 
November 15, 1875. The Eeport of that year says of them: — 

Registration stamps have been issued, to be used by the public in 
prepaying the registration charges on letters passing within the Do- 
minion, or to the United Kingdom or United States, each destination 
being distinguished by a different colour in the stamp, as well as by a 
variation in the amount of registration charge and corresponding value 
of the stamp. 

There is a red stamp of the value of two cents for prepayment of 
the registration charges on letters within the Dominion. 

'31° Vict. Cap. X, Sec. XO, par. 11. See page 96. 



THE REGISTRATION STAMPS 209 

There is a green stamp of five cents value for registered letters ad- 
dressed to the United States. 

There is a blue stamp of eight cents value for registered letters 
addressed to the United Kingdom. 

These stamps are to apply exclusively to the registration charges, 
and the postage rates on registered letters are to be prepaid by the 
ordinary postage stamps. 

It is believed that the use of these distinctive stamps for the reg- 
istration charges, will tend to give registered letters additional security 
against the risk which is sometimes felt of the registration escaping 
observation, when such letters are dealt with hurriedly or handled at 
night, whilst passing through the post. 

The special registration stamps are too well known to need any particu- 
lar description, especially as they are excellently illustrated as Numbers 54, 
55 and 56 on Plate III. Like the ordinary postage stamps, they are en- 
graved on steel and were originally printed in sheets of 50, ten horizontal 
rows of five stamps each, which made a sheet of nearly the same size, only 
turned through an angle of 90°, as the ordinary sheet of 100 postage stamps. 
The imprint was the same as the second type employed for the "small" cents 
issue — "British American Bank Note Co. Montreal" in a pearled frame — 
and likewise appeared four times on the sheet, as already fully described in 
the chapter dealing with that issue. ^ The denomination of the stamp was 
also expressed as TWO CENTS, in the shaded Koman capitals which we 
found in the case of the postage stamps, over the first stamp in the top row of 
that value, but with the 5 cent the word FIVE alone appears. The 8 cent 
we have not seen. On the 2 cent there is also a large numeral 3, 7% mm. 
high, over the last stamp in the top row (number 5) but the 5 cent has none. 
The normal colors for the stamps were: — 
2 cents, orange varying through orange red to vermilion. 
5 cents, a slightly yellow green varying from pale to dark. 
8 cents, both bright and dull blue. 

The stamps were printed upon the same ordinary white wove paper as 
was used for the contemporary postage stamps. The variation from thin to 
thick quality is found in the case of the 2 cent and 5 cent stamps, but very 
little variation in the 8 cent stamp. This is explained by the fact that there 
were probably but two printings of the latter stamp, 100,000 having been 
delivered by the manufacturers according to the Postmaster General's Eeport 
for 30th June, 1875, and 25,000 more according to the next year's report. 



>See page 125. 



210 CANADIA]!f POSTAGE STAMPS 

The stamps were normally perforated 12, but the 2 cents in orange and 
the 5 cents in dark green are both known in imperforate condition, the latter 
having been chronicled in the Halifax Philatelist for Ifovember, 1888. A 
vertical pair of the 5 cent is shown as illustration l^o. 115 on Plate X. 

In the Report for 1877 we find the following: — "The Eegistration charge 
on registered letters between the United Kingdom and Canada has been re- 
duced from 8 cents to 5 cents by the Post Offices of the United Kingdom." 
This naturally dealt a heavy blow at the use of the 8 cent stamp. The Stamp 
Journal for Pebruary, 1878, said: — "Mr. E. Burpee states that the 8 cent 
'Registered' stamps have been called in, and that hereafter the fee to Great 
Britain and foreign countries will be the same as to the United States — 5 
cents." The next issue, however, corrected this: — "After January, 1878, 
the cost of registering letters to Great Britain has been fixed at 5 c, the same 

as to the United States To foreign countries the rate is as before, 8 

cents, and therefore there is no suppression of the 8 cent registered stamps." 

Nevertheless, the rate to foreign countries must have been reduced not 
long after, as the statistics for stamps issued to postmasters between the 1st 
July, 1878 and the 1st July, 1879 give but 25 of the 8 cent registered stamp, 
which must therefore have been sent out early in the fiscal year. The total 
issues to postmasters, according to the Reports, were as under: — 

1876 71,950 

1877 17,200 

1878 9,400 

1879 25 



Total 98,575 

The number returned as "unfit for use" and presumably destroyed dur- 
ing the several years was 8,872. This gives a total issue of 89,700 for the 
8 cent stamp, according to the Reports; but the Canadian correspondent of 
Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News stated:* — "In 1878 a little over 75,000 of 
these [original 125,000] were destroyed by order of the Postmaster-General." 
This probably means that the stamps were called in after their usefulness 
ceased, and allowing for the amount destroyed during the period of issue gives 
us perhaps 40,000 as the number actually issued to the public from post 
offices. 

•Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, 11: 45:2. 



THE REGISTRATION STAMPS 211 

The 2 cent and 5 cent stamps remained in use, but wLen the general 
revision of rates took place in 1889 the domestic rate was raised to 5 cents, 
and the 2 cent stamp lost its usefulness, the 5 cent alone remaining. We have 
already reproduced the circular announcing these changes,* and will only 
repeat here the paragraph relating to the registration fee: — 

The fee for the registration of a letter or other article of mail 
matter will be five cents upon all classes of correspondence passing 
within the Dominion. For the present, and until further instructed, 
the registration fee may be prepaid by using the 2 cent Registration 
stamps and postage stamps to make up the amount. 

This notice was dated 8th May, 1889, and the Keport of 30th June fol- 
lowing remarks further: — 

The charge for the registration of a letter, parcel, book or other 
articles of mail matter was also made uniform, and fixed at 5 cents 
for all classes of matter. The frequent delay consequent upon the pre- 
payment of a wrong registration fee will no longer take place. 

The removal of the British American Bank Note Co. from Montreal to 
Ottawa, which we have already noted as resulting in some marked changes 
in the shades of the regular postage stamps,^ was not without its effect upon 
the registration stamps. Apparently the same ink used for printing the or- 
dinary 3 cent stamp was used for the 2 cent registration, for we find both 
stamps chronicled in the Halifax Philatelist for October, 1888, as having 
appeared in a "bright carmine." The usual catalog designation for this 2 
cent registration stamp is "scarlet vermilion", but we think that "brick red" 
best describes the ordinary shade in which these Ottawa printings are found, 
though the Halifax Philatelist recorded a "dull rose" tint in March, 1889. 

The 5 cent stamp was also noted in blue green in the ISTovember, 1889, 
issue of the Philatelic Record, a few months after the regular 2 cent postage 
stamp appeared in the same shade, again apparently showing the use of the 
same ink in printing both stamps. 

During its regular currency the 2 cent stamp had risen from an issue 
to postmasters of 937,000 in 18Y6 to 2,800,000 in 1889, but the change in 
rates caused a drop to 600,000 in 1890, 14,850 in 1891, and 100 in 1892, 
while a straggling lot of 400 appeared in 1896. 

<See page 136. 
°See page 128. 



212 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

The 5 cent stamp was distributed to the amount of about 232,000 in 
1876, but ran up gradually from 135,000 in the next year to half a million 
in 1889. The increase in rates jumped it to nearly three times this amount 
in 1890, and by 1893, when the regular 8 cent stamp was issued for combined 
postage and registration, the annual output of the 5 cent registration stamp 
was 2,260,000. 

It may be remembered that after the removal of the engraving company 
from Montreal to Ottawa certain of the low value postage stamps appeared 
printed from plates of two hundred impressions instead of the ordinary one 
hundred. In like manner we find that new plates of double size were made 
for the 5 cent registration stamp also, these being in one hundred impres- 
sions, ten rows of ten, but without the "Ottawa" imprint which appeared on 
the enlarged plates of the regular postage stamps, according to the Dominion 
Philatelist^ which noted the new sheet arrangement in October, 1892. 

On the 1st August, 1893, the regular 8 cent stamp was issued to prepay 
the combined postage and registration fee, and the notice we have already 
quoted in that connection stated* that when the supply of the 5 cent regis- 
tration stamp on hand was exhausted no more would be issued. The Report 
for 1894 states that 307,900 were issued to postmasters for the year ending 
30th June, and as over two and a half millions had been issued in the pre- 
vious twelve-month, the probability is that the supply was exhausted about 
the time of the appearance of the 8 cent postage stamp, and therefore the 
stock in the hands of postmasters must have been pretty well used up by 1894. 

There is one point left in connection with the registration stamps that 
deserves mention, as it has so frequently been a bone of contention. The 2 
cent stamp was formerly listed in hrown, and quantities of printer's ink and 
valuable space have been wasted in discussing its merits. Mr. Donald A. 
King seems to have been the discoverer of the variety, according to the Hali- 
fax Philatelist^ where it was exploited in an article which is worth quoting 
here for its historical value. 

THE CANADIAN ERROR. 

The Canada Sc. brown registration is at this time mentioned fre- 
quently in the Figaro and several other philatelic publications. As 
there seems to be considerable doubt as to the origin, and as I was in 
the main instrumental in introducing them to the philatelic public, I 

"See page 143. 

'Halifax Philatelist, II: 8. 



THE REGISTEATION STAMPS 213 

have decided to give the information I possess on this subject to them. 
About the beginning of January, 1887, I was shown a registered 
letter received from Miscou Light House Post Office in New Brunswick. 
It had a BEOWN 3c. registration stamp on it— a clear nnmistakable 
dark brown. I immediately wrote the postmaster there for informa- 
tion relative to them. He answered and said that he had 23 on hand. 
That he had originally received 50 from the P. O. Dept. at Ottawa, and 
that they were BEOWN when he received them. This he stated 'posi- 
tively. I then sent to him for them, but before my letter reached him 
he had used two of them so that I received only 21. 

Those stamps I showed to several philatelists, and could not get 
two to agree as to their origin. Some said the change in color was 
due to the gum, others to chemical changes, others again said it was 
due to the atmosphere from the salt water. Very few would allow a 
misprint. In the meantime Mr. P. C. Kaye also came across another 
registered letter with brown registration stamp. This time it was from 
the P. O. of New Eoss in Lunenberg Co., N. S. Prom this office about 50 
were obtained. The postmaster at this office was also positive as to 
having received them from the Dept. at Ottawa in brown. The same 
objections were raised to those as to the others, as to whether they 
were a genuine misprint or not. In this case the atmosphere of salt 
water was not the cause as New Eoss is in the interior. If the gum was 
the cause of their, changing color, it is peculiar that we do not get 
more of them. Changes by chemical means were also tried. The only 
thing which would turn the red of the genuine color to brown, was 
sulphuric acid mixed with water, and this did not give a good clear 
color, having a somewhat greyish shade in it. Those experiments have, 
in my opinion, confirmed their genuineness. And now as if to make as- 
surances in regard to their genuineness more sure, we find a third post 
office with them. This was Beauly, in Antigonish Co., N. S. There were, 
however, only 6 received from there, the postmaster had the same story 
as the others, he had received them from the Dept. at Ottawa in a 
brown color. 

The Department at Ottawa was written to in regard to them, 
but as was to be expected, knew nothing of them whatsoever. No doubt 
if they had been seen they would not have been allowed to be issued to 
the public. 

Again we find some details given in MekeeVs Weekly Stamp News^ under 
"Canadian Kotes" wliich evidently refer to another lot: — 

In this color the stamps were first issued in 1885, and were dis- 
tributed to a number of small towns in Ontario. Some months later 
the attention of the Postmaster at Toronto was called to this stamp, 
and as he had received no official notification of an emission in this 



"Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, VI: 9$. 



214 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

color, he caused inquiry to be made as to the authenticity of these 
stamps. A number of offices that had them on hand were communicated 
with, and all the answers were positive in the statement that the 
color of the stamps when received had been a decided brown, and had 
not undergone the slightest change by the action of either time or 
chemicals. A number of these letters are in the hands of a collector 
here, and are proof positive that this stamp was issued in a brown 
color. 

In spite of this brave showing, however, it is practically certain that the 
stamps are not a misprint but color changelings caused by oxidation, or rather 
"sulphuretting" to be more exact, an effect peculiarly liable to take place 
with stamps printed in red or orange. The same thing is found to occur in 
other Canadian stamps, the 3 pence and 5 cent of the Beaver type, the first 
issues of Newfoundland and the 3 cent, 1851, of the United States, as well 
as some of the red and orange colored revenue stamps of the Civil War per- 
iod. In fact the change is carried almost to a black, at times, but can 
be restored to the original color by the application of hydrogen peroxide. 



CHAPTER XVIII 

THE POSTAGE DUE STAMPS 

GAISTADA managed for years, like many other countries, to collect the 
postage due on insufficiently prepaid mail matter by merely marking 
the amount on the cover. The use of stamps as checks on those re- 
sponsible for making the collections seems not to have been appreciated, or 
more probably was not deemed necessary. At last the advantages of such a 
system seem to have become manifest, and in the Postmaster General's Re- 
port for the 30th June, 1906, we find the following: — 

A system of accounting for short paid postage collected by Post- 
masters, by means of special stamps known as "Postage Due" stamps, 
has been adopted by the Department. These stamps are to be affixed to 
short paid mail matter and cancelled by Postmasters when such mat- 
ter is delivered to the addressee, and are not to be used for any other 
purpose. They cannot be used for the payment of ordinary postage, 
nor are they to be sold to the public. 

The denominations of these stamps are 1, 2 and 5 cents. 

The first issue of the stamps to postmasters was on the 1st June, 1906, but 
the system did not come into operation until a month later. The following is 
the official notice with the technical portions omitted: — 

POST OFFICE DEPAHTMENT, CANADA. 

OTTAWA, 1st June, 1906. 

Circular to Postmasters of Accounting Offlces. 

Commencing on the 1st July, 1906, the present system of collect- 
ing unpaid postage will be discontinued and thereafter the following 
arrangements will supersede the regulations now in force : — 

(1) The Department will issue a special stamp which will be 
known as the "POSTAGE DUE" stamp and on delivery of any article 
of mail naatter on which unpaid or additional postage is to be collected 
the Postmaster will affix and cancel as ordinary stamps are cancelled, 
postage due stamps to the amount of extra postage charged on such 
article. 



2L6 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

(2) The short paid postage must be collected from the addressee 
before postage due stamps are aflixed ; otherwise the Postmaster is 
liable to lose the amount of such postage. 

(3) Postmasters will obtain postage due stamps on requisition to 
the Department but the initial supply will be furnished without requi- 
sition, so that the new system may go into operation on the date 
above mentioned. When a new form is ordered "postage due" stamps 
will be included in the printed list, but it is proposed to use the stock 
on hand at present which would otherwise have to be destroyed. The 
denominations of the new stamps will be 1, 3 and 5 cents. 

The new stamps were of the same size as the regular postage stamps, but 
with the longer dimension horizontal. A large numeral in a central tablet 
flanked by an acanthus scroll at each side, CANADA above, CEl^TS below, 
and POSTAGE DUE in block letters along the bottom, all on an engiae- 
tumed groundwork, make a very neat and effective design for the purpose 
intended. [Illustrations Nos. 58, 59 and 60 on Plate III.] The engraving 
is of course in the usual steel plate process, and the sheets are of 100 stamps 
in ten rows of ten. The marginal imprint is at the center of the top of the 
sheet and is the same as for the later postage issues, "OTTAWA — ISTo — 1" or 
"2". So far there have appeared the following plate numbers: — 



1 cent No. 1 

2 " " 1 and 2 
5 " "1 

The numbers printed, according to the Keports, have been as follows: — 

1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 

1 cent 500,000 700,000 300,000 600,000 

2 " 1,100,000 500,000 900,000 900,000 1,300,000 
5 " 200,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 400,000 

All three values were printed in the same shade of dark violet, but in 
1909 the 5 cent was reported in a red violet. 



T 



CHAPTER XIX 

THE SPECIAL DELIVERY STAMP 

HE Postmaster General's Eeport for 30th June, 1898, contained the 
following announcements : — 

The calendar year has witnessed the introduction of the special 
delivery stamp, whereby on the payment of a delivery fee of 10 cents 
in addition to the ordinary postage, a letter immediately upon its ar- 
rival at the office of destination is sent by special messenger for de- 
livery to the addressee. 

A special-delivery stamp of the face-value of 10 cents was pre- 
pared, and the first supplies thereof were sent out sufficiently early to 
Postmasters to permit of the inauguration of the special delivery ser- 
vice on the 1st July, 1898. The object of this service is to secure special 
and prompt delivery of a letter on which a special-delivery stamp, in 
addition to the ordinary postage, has been affixed. 



The following circular gives the details of the new system: — 

POST OFFICE DEPAETMENT, CANADA. 

Ottawa, 7th June, 1898. 
Circular to Postmasters. 

The Postmaster General has approved of arrangements whereby, on 
and from the first of July proximo, the senders of letters posted at any 
Post Office in Canada and addressed to a City Post Office now having 
Free Delivery by Letter Carriers shall, on prepayment by Special De- 
livery stamps of the face-value of ten cents, affixed one to each letter, 
in addition to the ordinary postage to which the same are liable, se- 
cure their special delivery to the persons to whom they are addressed 
within the limits of Letter Carrier Delivery at any one of the follow- 
ing Post Offices in Cities, viz : — Halifax, St. John, N. B., Fredericton, 
Quebec, Montreal, Ottawa, Kingston, Toronto, Brantford, Hamilton, 
London, Winnipeg, Victoria and Vancouver. The hours of delivery to be 
within 7 a. m. and 11 p. m. daily, except Sunday. These hours are sub- 
ject to change as dictated by local circumstances. 

Drop-letters posted for local delivery, and bearing Special-Delivery 
stamps, in addition to the postage, will also be entitled to special de- 



218 CANADIAls^ POSTAGE STAMPS 

livery in the same manner as letters received at the Post Office by mail. 

Kegistered letters may likewise come under the operations of this 
scheme of Special Delivery, in the same way as ordinary letters, pro- 
vided they bear Special-Delivery stamps, in addition to the full postage 
and the registration fee fixed by law, and the cegulations respecting 
the record and receipting of registered matter are observed. In 
despatching registesred letters that bear Special-Delivery stamps, the 
Postmaster should write prominently across the registered-package 
envelope the words "For Special Delivery". When Special-Delivery 
letters (unregistered) number five or more for any one office the Post- 
master should make a separate package of them, marking it "For 
Special Delivery" ; if such letters are fewer than five, he should place 
them immediately under the "facing-slip" of the letter-package which 
he makes up, either directly or indirectly, for the Special-Delivery office 
for which they are intended, so that the most prompt attention may 
be secured therefor. 

Special-Delivery stamps will be sold at all Money Order Post Offices 
in Canada, (which may secure a supply of such stamps in the same 
way as ordinary stamps are obtained,) for which the Postmasters will 
have to account as they do for ordinary stamips, and on the sales of 
which a total commission of 10 per cent, shall be allowed to Post- 
masters, except to Postmasters having fixed salaries. For the present 
Postmasters will use the existing forms of requisition in applying for 
Special-Delivery stamps. (The usual discount may be allowed to a 
licensed stamp vendor at the time that he purchases Special-Delivery 
stamps from the Postmaster). Special-Delivery stamps are to be can- 
celled as postage stamps are cancelled. Stamps intended for Special 
Delivery are not available for any other purpose, and the article upon 
which one is affixed must have, besides, the ordinary postage prepaid 
by postage stamps. Under no circumstances will Special-Delivery 
stamps be recognized in payment of postage or of registration fee, 
nor can any other stamp be used to secure Special Delivery, except the 
Special-Delivery stamp. Special-Delivery stamps are not redeemable. 

Letters intended for Special Delivery at any one of the City Post 
Offices above mentioned, and prepaid as directed, may be mailed at any 
Post Office in Canada. 

The regulations relating to First Class Matter (Inland Post) apply 
also and equally to Special-Delivery letters, the only difference being 
the special treatment which the latter receive with a view to acceler- 
ating their delivery. 

The object sought by the establishment of Special Delivery, — 
namely, the special delivery of letters transmitted thereunder, — will 
be much promoted if the senders of all such letters are careful to 
address them plainly and fully, giving, if possible, the street and mmi- 
ber in every case. Such care will serve not only to prevent mistakes, 
but also to facilitate delivery. 



THE SPECIAL DELIVERY STAMP 219 

All employees of the Post Office are enjoined to expedite, in every- 
way in their power, the posting, transmission and delivery of letters in- 
tended for Special Delivery. 

E. M. COULTER, 
Deputy Postmaster General. 

For a description of the stamp itself we cannot do better than quote the 
Montreal Witness: — 

The Special Delivery stamp differs materially in design and size 
from the ordinary series, the dimensions of the engraved work being 
ll^ inches long by % of an inch wide [31 x 33 mm.]. The advantage of 
such a contrast is obvious. The letter to which a Special Delivery 
stamp is affixed can thus be at once picked out by those handling the 
mails including it, and its delivery greatly hastened. The design of the 
Special Delivery stamp is without any vignette, and consists substan- 
tially of a panel across the top containing the words "CANADA POST 
OPPICE", with a lathe-work border round the other three sides of 
the stamp. The center of the stamp is occupied by an oval containing 
lathe-work, with the word "TEN" in the center, and the phrase 
"SPECIAL DELIVERY WITHIN CITY LIMITS" in a, white letter, on 
a solid panel encircling the word "TEN". On each side of the stamp, 
connecting the oval with the border, is a circle with the numeral "10" ; 
the space between the oval and the border is occupied by ornamental 
work. At the bottom of the stamp, in the lathe-work border, appears 
a white panel with the words "TEN CENTS"- 

The stamp is illustrated as Number 57 on Plate III. It is line en- 
graved and printed in sheets of 50, ten rows of five. The usual imprint, 
OTTAWA — No. — 1, is found in the margin at the top of the sheet, over the 
third stamp. But one plate number has yet appeared. The color was at first a deep 
green which in 1908 took on a bluish cast. The paper used is the thick white 
wove ordinarily employed for the regular postage series, and the stamp has 
also appeared on the toned paper on which the 1 cent postage is known. The 
annual requisitions from the manufacturers have increased from 25,000 in 
1898 to 112,500 in 1910. 



To return to the Postmaster General's Eeports. That of the 30th June, 
1899, states: — "The 10 cent Special-Delivery stamp, to which reference was 
made in the last report, came into use at the beginuing of the current fiscal 
year, simultaneously with the commencement of the Special-Delivery Service, 
and of this stamp 52,940 were issued to meet the demands, which would go 



220 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

to show that the service is being availed of to a considerable extent through- 
out the country." The date of the first issue of the special delivery stamp to 
postmasters is given as the 28th June, 1898. 

No further mention is made of the service until the Report dated 31st 
March, 1908, vrhich says that the special delivery service had been ex- 
tended to thirteen places vrhere free carrier service had been installed,^ and 
further that "the regulations respecting special delivery have been so modified 
that it is no longer necessary for a person despatching a letter, which he de- 
sires to have delivered immediately, to provide himself with the 'special de- 
livery' stamp issued by the department. He may now place upon his letter 
ordinary postage stamps to the value of ten cents in addition to the stamps 
required for prepayment of postage and write across the corner of the envel- 
ope the words 'special delivery'. This will ensure the special delivery of the 
letter as provided for in the regulations." 

The Report for 1909 states that the service has been extended to the eight 
places where free letter delivery by carrier had been installed during the 
year.^ 

^See page 197. 
'ibid. 



CHAPTER XX 

THE "OFFICIALLY SEALED" LABELS 

STEICTLY speaking, the so-called "officially sealed stamps" are not 
stamps, as that term is technically employed in philately. To the un- 
initiated any design impressed upon a label, whether gummed and per- 
forated or not, may be termed a stamp ; but the ordinarily accepted use of the 
term has been restricted, at least in philatelic lore, to the label that represents 
a value, collected or chargeable, in the service in which it is employed. There 
may therefore be postal, telegraph or fiscal stamps, and because of the identity 
in use — to show that no fee is required, — we can stretch our definition 
to include franking labels, such as are often used officially. But the "officially 
sealed" label performs no such function, and is, as its name implies, simply 
a seal which fulfils that purpose alone and therefore does not properly belong 
in the company of postage stamps. Our only reason for touching upon these 
labels here is that they have been included in some of the catalogs for years 
and many collectors possess them ; consequently it seems desirable to give their 
history along with that of their more worthy prototypes. 

The label figured as Number 117 on Plate X, seems to have been first 
reported in Le Timhre-Poste for October, 1879, and its date of issue is usually 
given as that year. But little seems to have been known about it for some time, 
which perhaps was partly due to its scarcity and partly because it did not 
attract the notice that a regular postage stamp issue would have. 

The London Society's book quoted a somewhat ambiguous explanation 
of the use to which the label was put, which had appeared in the Halifax 
Philatelist;^ but it remained for Major Evans to clear up the matter in the 
columns of the Philatelic Record.^ We cannot do better than quote this in 
full:— 

With reference to what is said about the Canadian offlcialhj-sealed 
label in the London Society's new book, I am glad to be able to throw 
some light upon the question as to the manner of its employment. 

'North American Colonies of Great Britain, page 19; Halifax Philatelist, I: 15. 
"Philatelic Record, XI: 210. 



222 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

When I was in Canada last July [1889] I made special enquiries 
about these labels, as there appeared to be some mystery about their 
use. Everyone agreed that they were not placed upon all letters opened 
at the Dead Letter Office and returned to their senders, and no two per- 
sons seemed to have quite the same theory as to the rules for their em- 
ployment or non-employment in any particular case. Even gentlemen 
connected with the Post-Office at Halifax, such as Mr. King and others, 
could give me no definite information. I therefore determined to see 
what I could do at the head-quarters at Ottawa. 

Fortunately, I was able, through a collector in an official position, 
to obtain an introduction to the Deputy Postmaster-General, who most 
kindly gave me the following particulars, which show that the em- 
ployment of the offlcially sealed labels is very restricted, thus account- 
ing for their rarity. 

Letters in Canada, as in the United States, very frequently have on 
the outside the well-known notice containing the address of the sender, 
and a request that the letter may be returned if not delivered within 
a certain time. These of course are not opened at the Dead Letter Of- 
fice, and in fact, I think, are ordered not to be sent there, but are re- 
turned direct from the office to which they were originally addressed 
or from the head office of the district. On the other hand, those that 
have no indication of the address of the sender on the outside are 
sent to the Dead Letter Office, and there necessarily opened; but 
neither of these classes thus properly dealt with is considered to re- 
quire the offlcially-sealed label. It is only if one of the former class, 
having the sender's name and address on the outside, is sent to the 
Dead Letter Office and there opened in error that the officially-sealed 
label is applied, to show that such letter has been opened officially, 
and not by any unauthorized person. Whether these pieces of gummed 
paper ever had a more extended use or not I cannot say, but I was as- 
sured that the above was the substance of the regfulations as to their 
employment. 

The Deputy Postmaster-General further stated that there Bad been 
so many requests for specimens of these labels that the Department 
had been obliged to make it a rule to turn a deaf ear to all of them. 

In any case they are not postage stamps, properly speaking, at all. 
They indicate neither postage paid nor postage due, but simply that the 
letters to which they are attached have been opened by proper author- 
ity, and they at the same time afford a means for reclosing them. 



The labels are of relatively large size, being 25% by 38 mm. The design 
is mostly engine-turned work, with the words OFEICIALLY SEALED on 
a label across the center; above this appears, in a curve, POST OFFICE 
CANADA, and beneath likewise DEAD LETTEK OFFICE. The label 
is a fine piece of line engraving, but we have been unable to ascertain the size of 



THE "OFFICIALLY SEALED" LABELS 223 

the sheets in which it was printed. Doubtless the usual four marginal im- 
prints were employed, being the "Montreal" type in pearled border. 

It seems to be the general idea that the first printing of the labels, which 
were in a dark red-brown, was the only one, but no information is at hand 
concerning the quantity delivered. At any rate in the Canadian liTotes in 
Meheel's Weekly Stamp News for ISTovember 30, 1892 we read that : — "From 
a reliable source it is learned that the old die of the Canada official seal stamp 
has been spoiled or rather destroyed for further use by the Bank Note Com- 
pany, who have possession of it." We suggest that the words "spoiled" and 
"destroyed" have been transposed in the original, the meaning evidently 
being that the die had been defaced as of no further use. 

The labels were normally perforated the usual 12, but the same journal 
for April 13, 1892 reports that a whole sheet had been seen in an imperforate 
condition. 

Though various rumors that the use of these labels was to be discontin- 
ued are to be found in the late "90's" and early "OO's", and though the de- 
facing of the die would perhaps indicate such intention, yet a new issue in 
changed design made its appearance about 1905, which was of course en- 
graved by the American Bank ISTote Co., who then held the contract for fur- 
nishing stamps. This handsome label, figured as ITumber 116 on Plate X, 
was adapted from the magnificent "Law Stamps" of the "series of 189Y", 
which stand as some of the finest fiscal stamps ever issued. The central vig- 
nette, with its portrait of Queen Victoria at the time of the Diamond Jubilee, 
the word CAISTADA arched above, and the engine-turned border, are re- 
produced in their entirety from the fiscal stamp ; DEAD LETTER OFFICE 
and more engine-turned work replace the LAW STAMP inscription of the 
prototype beneath the vignette, and OFFICIALLY SEALED is filled in in 
block letters of varying heights at the top. 

The labels are of course line engraved and perforated 12, but the sheet 
arrangement or details of quantity printed cannot be given. They were 
issued at first on a pale blue paper, but subsequently, about 1907, appeared 
on plain white paper. 



CHAPTER XXI 

THE STAMPED ENVELOPES 

IN its issue for June, 1904, the London Philatelist^ illustrated a cover, sub- 
mitted by Mr. E. B. Greenshields of Montreal, which had the appearance 

of a provisional 3d. envelope. Concerning it Mr. Greenshields said : — "This 
letter was posted in I^ew Carlisle, Gaspe, Lower Canada, on April Yth, 1851, 
and was stamped 'Three Pence' in two lines, inside a square, with a black 
border of neat design round the sides. Across this was written 'Letter E. W. 
Kelly Apl. 1851'. The letter was addressed to Toronto, C. W., and on the 
other side was stamped the date the letter was received, 'Apl. 16, 1851.' " 
The design was printed on the right upper corner of the envelope, "Three 
Pence" being in script type of a style then in vogue, and the border being a 
common type of loops. 'No stamp appeared on the cover nor the word PAID. 

On enquiry of the Post Office Department at Ottawa the following reply 
was sent: — 

Ottawa, 2nd. March, 1904. 

Sib, — I am directed to acknowledge receipt of your communication 
of tte 26tli ultimo, inquiring whetter E. W. Kelly was Postmaster of 
New Carlisle, Co. Gaspe, Quebec, in 1851, and in reply am directed to in- 
form you that E. W. Kelly, doubtless the same man, was Postmaster 
6t New Carlisle in 1851 

As regards your inquiry as to whether postage stamps were used 
on the 7th April, 1851, and your statement that you have an envelope 
sent on that date from New Carlisle to Toronto with "Three Pence" 
printed on it, inside a fancy border, I have to say that postage stamps 
were issued to the public for the first time on the 33d April, 1851, and 
that stamped envelopes were not issued until some years later. The 
stamped envelope to which you refer may have been an envelope so 
stamped on the prepayment in the New Carlisle Post Office of three 
pence, the required charge for postage. 

I am, sir, your obedient servant, 

William Smith, Secretary. 

'London Phllatellit, XIH: 163, 



THE STAMPED ENVELOPES 226 

Inasmuch as the impression is type-set and printed, it was doubtless a 
scheme of the Postmaster to prepare the envelopes and save stamping them 
with the office seals afterwards, as would be necessary if no adhesive stamp 
were attached. The cover in question was evidently used for his own con- 
venience, but its use as a stamped envelope would depend upon whether it 
was sold to the public for their convenience as a prepaid cover. Under 
such conditions it would assume a character akin to the Postmaster's Pro- 
visionals of the United States, but no such evidence has been forthcoming, 
nor are other copies known. It is an interesting cover, particularly because 
of the lack of the word PAID, which should have been stamped upon it as 
well as the indication of the amount, according to the rules in force before 
adhesive stamps were used to indicate prepayment in themselves; but it had 
no government sanction, and has not yet been shown to have even the rank 
of a "semi-official issue." 

Although following closely upon the heels of the United States in issuing 
postage stamps, less than four years having intervened, Canada was not so 
eager to introduce the stamped envelope, for she waited over six years before 
following the example of her big neighbor. The first reference to the inno- 
vation is found in the Postmaster General's Eeport for 30th September, 
1859 (although the Eeport is actually dated 20th February, 1860), and 
reads as follows: — 



For the promotion of public convenience by facilitating the pre- 
payment of letters, Stamped Envelopes bearing- Medallion Stamps of 
the postage value of 5c. and of 10c. respectively, have been procured 
and issued for sale to the public, at an advance of % a cent on the value 
of each stamp, to cover the cost of the envelope, and of engraving the 
stamp, &c. 



The precise date of issue does not seem to be on record, but the year 
1860 is always given. Prom the stamp accounts, quoted below, we find the 
quantity issued for sale is qualified by the remark "during 8 months to Sept. 
30", which would indicate that the envelopes were issued about the 1st Feb- 
ruary, 1860; and we have therefore assigned this date to them until a more 
authoritative one is produced. 

The next reference to the envelopes, including the accounts, appears in 
the Report for the year ending 30th September, 1860, as follows: — 



226 CANADL^LN POSTAGE STAMPS 

STAMPED ENVELOPES. 

5c. lOc. Value 

Eeceived from Mfrs. 300,000 100,000 21,500.00 

Issued for sale during 8 months to Sept. 30, 136,177 45,651 12,383.09 



Eemaining, 63,833 54,349 9,316.91 

The number of Stamped Envelopes, actually used by the public, 
has been but small, as a considerable proportion of those issued remain 
in the hands of Postmasters. 

The cost of manufacture of the stamped envelopes was included, as we 
have already seen,^ in the payments made to the American Bank Note Co. 
for stamps, etc., in 1860, so that they were obtained from that firm. They 
were not manufactured by them, however, but by George F. ISTesbitt & Co. of 
New York, who at that time held the contract for supplying the United States 
Government with stamped envelopes. The similarity of the stamped im- 
pression, both in size and general arrangement, to the United States envelope 
dies of 1860 will be noted, and the paper used for the envelopes will be found 
to be similar, even to the watermark, while the two "knives" used for cutting 
the envelope blanks will be found to agree with numbers 2 and 11 of the 
Tiffany, Bogert and Eechert catalog. It was evidently a case of the Bank 
Note Co. subletting the contract to Nesbitt, who was regularly in the busi- 
ness. ' - 

Nothing further appears in the Beports in regard to the stamped envel- 
opes, except the tables of statistics, until the Report of 30th Jime, 1864, which 
says: — "In order to promote the use of the Stamped Envelopes a reduction 
in the price to the public was made from 1st October, 1864, from $5.50 per 
100 for the five cent and $10.50 per 100 for the ten cent envelopes, to $5.30 
and $10.30 per 100 respectively." But even this bait did not attract, for 
the next year's Report remarks: — "The recent reduction in the price of 
stamped envelopes has not led to any material increase ia the demand." For 
two years longer the accounts are given, but with the first Report of the Do- 
minion of Canada, for the year ending 30th June, 1868, they disappear, the. 
envelopes evidently having been given up as a bad investment at the close of 
the accounts of the Province of Canada, when it was merged into the Dominion. 
We have already quoted the figures for the first supplies received and 
the quantities first issued to postmasters. It may be well to give the entire 
record for its historical value: — 

'See page 90. 



THE STAMPED ENVELOPES 227 



Balance on hand, 30th Sept. 1860, 
Returned by Post Masters, xmsold, 



Issued for sale during year. 

Balance on hand, 30th Sept. 1861, 
Eetiirned by Post Masters, unsold. 



Issued for sale during year. 

Balance on hand, 30th Sept. 1862, 
Returned by Post Masters, unsold, 



Issued for sale during year. 

Balance on hand, 30th Sept. 1863, 
Returned by Post Masters, unsold. 



Issued during 9 months. 

Balance on hand, 30th June, 1864, 
Returned by Post Masters, unsold. 
Received from manufacturers. 



Issued for sale during year. 

Balance on hand 30th June, 1865, 
Returned by Post Masters, unsold, 



Issued to 30th June, 1866, 

Balance 30th June, 1866, 
Returned by Post Masters, unsold. 



Deduct envelopes short received. 

Issued to 30th. June, 1867, 

Balance 30th. June, 1867, 46 55,724 



5 cent. 

63,823 

1,539 


10 cent. 

54,349 

1,905 


65,352 
20,700 


56,254 
806 


44,652 
251 


55,448 
314 


44,903 
9,595 


55,762 
844 


35,308 


54,918 

4 


35,308 
15,200 


54,922 
900 


20,108 
5,000 


54,022 
3,997 


25,108 
14,800 


57,019 
850 


10,303 

6,444 

25,000 


56,169 
5,632 


41,752 
23,583 


61,801 
5,698 


18,169 
382 


56,103 
235 


18,551 
16,325 


56,328 
635 


2,336 


55,703 
193 


2,326 
10 


55,896 


2,316 
2,270 


55,896 
172 



228 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

These figures are the last that appear concerning the first issue of en- 
velopes, the next Report, as already stated, having no mention of them at 
all. It was very probably because there were not enough to supply the added 
Provinces of the Dominion, in the case of the 5 cent envelopes, and princi- 
pally because they did not seem to be popular enough to warrant continuing 
their use that the envelopes did not remain in issue under the Dominion 
Government. 

An inspection of the above table shows that the 5 cent envelopes were 
apparently issued at an average rate of perhaps 15,000 a year, while 800 
only of the 10 cent were ordinarily put forth. This might indicate a fair 
consumption of the lower value by the public, particularly as the total receipt 
from the manufacturers was 225,000 and but 46 remainders are given at the 
close of the account. But it must be remembered that the table gives the 
quantities "issued to postmasters" and not the sales to the public by the post- 
masters. We know the public did not take particularly to the use of the 
envelopes, so that there were doubtless large quantities of them in postmas- 
ter's hands when their sale was discontinued. These would naturally be re- 
turned to the Department and destroyed, which would of course materially 
reduce the quantity issued as taken from the tables. Unfortunately these 
latter figures have not been obtainable ; but it is certain from the rarity of used 
copies that nothing like 224,954 of the 5 cent and 44,276 of the 10 cent 
envelopes could have been sold to the public. We are able to illustrate an 
entire used copy of each value as !N^umbers 130 and 131 on Plate XIV. 

As already stated, the envelope stamps were very similar in size and 
style to the United States envelope dies of 1860. The inscription CANADA 
POSTAGE is in the frame above the head and the value below, reversing 
the United States arrangement, and there are no stars separating the legends. 
The embossed head of Qneen Victoria was evidently copied from the profile 
used on the 1 cent stamp of 1859. The 5 cent stamp is printed 
in vermilion and the 10 cent in dark brown. There was but one 
size of envelope, 5% x 3^4 inches (140 x 83 mm.), and but 
one quality of paper for the first order — a white laid paper 
with a slightly yellowish tone, watermarked with the letters Ca 
over POD (Canada Post Office Department) which appears about tvdce in 
each envelope. The paper was cut so that the laid lines run diagonally, 
and the knife used was that numbered 2 in the Tiffany, Bogert and Re- 




THE STAMPED ENVELOPES 229 

chert catalog of United States envelopes, with rounded flap and yel- 
lowish gum, extending nearly the length of the flap. 

In the table given it will be noticed that 25,000 more 5 cent envelopes 
were received from the manufacturers in 1865. These latter were on a white 
paper of similar quality with a slightly bluish tone, and a slightly different 
knife had been used in cutting the blanks, which corresponds to that num- 
bered 11 in the catalog quoted. The difference consists mainly in a more 
pointed flap than the first knife. 

The London Philatelist for December, 1896, contained the following 
startling announcement under the head of CANADA :' — 

Mr. L. Gibb, of Montreal, kindly submitted to his fellow members 
of the London Philatelic Society, at a recent meeting, a curious variety 
among the stamps of the Colony he resides in. The specimen in ques- 
tion was the 10 c. envelope of 1860 impressed in vermilion, instead of 
its normal colour — brown, and being presumably printed in error in 
the color of the 5c. The stamp was unfortunately out round, but was 
on the diagonally laid paper usual to the Issue, duly postmarked, and, 
in the opinion of the members present, had every appearance of authen- 
ticity, although surprise was expressed that so marked a variety should 
never have been noted before. 

Nothing further has apparently been learned about it since, but in the 
face of the above statements and opinions it seems necessary to record it. 

Both values were reprinted* by the Nesbitt Company in 1868 on pieces 
of white wove paper and also vertically laid buff paper, the 5 cent copying 
the color of the original, but the 10 cent being in a dark red brown instead of 
black brown. They were also printed in the same colors on entire envelopes 
of white and buff laid paper with the POD over US watermark of the regular 
United States stationery. These were a size smaller than the regular Cana- 
dian envelopes, being 137x77 mm. A further variety is noted in the Cat- 
alogue for Advanced Collectors,^ as follows: — "There is also a second type 
of the 5c to be found on the same papers as above reprints which was prob- 
ably struck off in the same year. The stamp is a trifle larger and the head 
smaller than on the accepted die; this is probably a die prepared by Nesbitt 
but refused by the Canadian Government." 

■London Philatelist, V: 345. 

•American Journal of Philately, 2nd Series, III: 165. 

•Ibid. 



230 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

The Dominion Government, which discarded the Provincial stamped 
envelopes from the beginning, did not essay anything in that line for nearly 
ten years. Finally the following notice was sent out: — 

POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT, CANADA 

Ottawa, 6th October, 1877. 

STAMPED ENVELOPES. 

1. Letter envelopes bearing an impressed postage stamp of one 
cent, and three cents respectively, are ready for issue to Postmasters 
and through their agency to Stamp Vendors for sale to the public. 

3. These envelopes when issued to Postmasters will be charged to 
them, and will have to be accounted for by them at the following rates : 

One cent envelopes, $1.30 

Three cent do No. 1 size, 3.30 

do do No. 3 size, 8.35 

3. The three-cent envelopes are of two sizes, No. 3 being larger 
than No. 1, and Postmasters, when asking at any time for a supply, will 
be careful to state how many of each size they want. 

4. Postmasters and Stamp Vendors will be required to sell these 
envelopes at the above rates per hundred to the public, and when a re- 
quest is made for a single envelope, or for any number less than a hun- 
dred, the charge for the same must be made by the Postmaster or 
Stamp Vendor, as near the exact proportionate value, as compared with 
the above rates per hundred, as the fraction will permit without loss 
to the Postmaster or Stamp Vendor, thus ten of the three-cent enve- 
lopes. No. 1 size, should be sold for thirty-three cents, five for seven- 
teen cents, and two for seven cents. 

5. When used these envelopes will represent the pre-payment of 
postage to the amount of the stamp impressed thereon, and when used 
for letters weighing more than % an oz., or on which the pre-payment 
is required of more than is represented by the impressed stamp, the 
difEerence may be affixed by ordinary postage stamps. 

6. The impressed stamp must be carefully cancelled by Postmas- 
ters when the envelopes are posted. 

7. An impressed stamp cut from an envelope cannot be used for 
pre-payment of postage in any shape, and when detached from the en- 
velope on which it was impressed, it loses all value as a postage stamp. 

8. In the accounts rendered by Postmasters, the amounts of 
stamped envelopes received from the Department and sold to the public 
or to Vendors, are to be added to the postage stamp items. 

L. S. HUNTINGTON, 

Postmaster General. 



THE STAMPED ENVELOPES 231 

Jfemo.— Stamped Envelopes are to be sold to the public at the fol- 
lowing prices by Postmasters and Stamp Vendors :— 



Per 

Hundred. Per Ten. For Single Envelopes. 

1 Cent Envelopes $1.30 13 cents 3 cents, or 3 cents for 2 

3 do do No. 1 size.. $3.30 33 cents 4 cents, or 7 cents for 2 

do do No. 3 size.. $3.35 34 cents 4 cents, or 7 cents for 2 



Curiously enough no mention is made in the Postmaster General's Ee- 
port of either the issue of the stamped envelopes or their reception by the 
public, such as was the case with their predecessors in 1860. We find from 
the stamp aecoimts, however, that the first supplies received from the manu- 
factures were 554,250 of the 1 cent; 1,257,000 of the 3 cent size 1; and 
564,250 of the 3 cent size 2. Further supplies of the 1 cent were not needed 
until two years later, of the 3 cent size 1 until three years later, and of the 
3 cent size 2 imtil four years later, so it is evident that no great popular de- 
mand sprang up for them. 

The 1 cent envelope, which was intended for the local or "drop letter" 
rate, was issued in numbers averaging about 150,000 a year up to 1889, 
when the Post Office Act of that year, which increased the limit of weight 
of the single rate letter from % to 1 ounce and fixed the drop letter rate at 
2 cents per ounce for cities having a free delivery service,^ caused a falling 
off in the issue to 62,000 in the 1890 Eeport, and this gradually diminished 
to about 25,000 per annum in the Report for 1897, when the stamp under dis- 
cussion was superseded by a new design. 

The 3 cent envelopes, being the regular letter rate, had a larger use; 
nevertheless the issue of the !N"o. 1 size fell gradually from some 250,000 in 
1879 to about 50,000 in 1897. The No. 2 size proved more popular, though 
the demand was somewhat erratic. The issue went from 78,000 in 1879 to 
116,000 in 1884; then averaged about 85,000 for three years; next averaged 
about 120,000 for four years; and fijially returned to the 85,000 mark for 
the next six years, when a new issue took its place. 

The design of these envelope stamps is in all respects similar to the 
early type, but they are about half again as large. The embossed head of 

»See page 136. 




232 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

the Queen is copied from the profile on the "large" cent stamps of 1868 and 
is tilted forward rather awkwardly in the frame. The 3 
cent is printed in bright red varying to rose, but the 1 
cent instead of following the yellow color of the adhesive 
is printed in blue, which varies from quite pale to very 
dark. The envelopes were manufactured by the British 
American Bank JSTote Co. from white laid unwatermarked 
paper, and have a pointed flap with gum extending nearly the whole 
length. The smaller sized envelope was also issued with the flap rounded into 
a tongue, but the larger sized envelope is not known in this form. These 
"tongued flap" envelopes were apparently an early variety, as the Philatelic 
Monthly records the 3 cent in its issue for April, 1878. The 1 cent, however, 
does not seem to have been noted until the June, 1884 issue of Le Timhre- 
Poste. 

The earlier printings of the envelopes were upon a laid paper that had 
the "cross vergures", or single laid lines that regularly cross the general 
run, at a spacing of 18 mm. from each other. About 1888 another paper 
came into use which had these "cross vergures" spaced 24 mm. apart, and 
in some cases 27 mm. The two papers can be told at a glance as they varied 
in tone, the latter variety having a slight cream tint and the former being a 
pure white. These two varieties are of course more noticeable in the entire 
envelope than in cut squares, and have been listed as "rosy white" and "bluish 
white" papers, but we feel unable to distinguish them thus as the terms seem 
wholly inapplicable. 

The 1 cent envelope was chronicled in ultramarine in April, 1897, of 
course on the small sized envelope and the cream toned laid paper.^ 

In May, 1896, the Philatelic Record stated* that "Our publishers have 
the envelope of the 3 cents red value with stamp roughly lithographed in- 
stead of being embossed. Mr. J. B. Lewis, of Ottawa, says only 110 were 
printed." This was a somewhat startling statement, and Major Evans thus 
comments on it:* — 

There have been reports of late, in various quarters, of a certain 
number of the 3c. envelopes, of the current type, having had the stamp 
impressed upon them by lithography instead of in the usual manner. 

"Monthly Journal, VII: 175. 
•Philatelic Record, XVIII: 135. 
•Monthly Journal, VI: 188. 



THE STAMPED ENVELOPES 233 

The story goes that the embossing die was lost, or mislaid, that a 
small supply of envelopes was wanted immediately by a business firm, 
and that a few hundreds were lithographed to fill this demand. The 
whole story sounds somewhat doubtful, to any one who knows how 
stamped envelopes are produced, but until quite recently we had not 
seen a specimen of the supposed lithographed envelopes, and therefore 
would not express any opinion upon them. A copy has lately been sent 
to our publishers, and we find it to be practically identical, as far as 
almost entire absence of embossing is concerned, with some specimens 
which we obtained In Canada a few years ago ; the embossing, in the 
copy shown us, is not absolutely invisible, there being slight traces of 
it about the head, and especially the chignon ; and if any envelopes 
have been lithographed, which we greatly doubt, this is not one of 
them. 



The lithographing of a comparatively few envelopes by a country like 
Canada appears somewhat incredulous on the face of it, and even more so 
does the "loss" or "misplacing" of the embossing die; the true explanation of 
the occurrence is doubtless found in the use of a much worn die, or more likely 
a defective "counter-die" or "bed-plate" which backs the paper. 

In the issue for January 1895, the American Journal of Philately had 
this statement: — "Mr. G. A. Lowe informs us that the 3c envelope exists on 
wove paper and was issued in 1891, probably in error." Eeferring to this, 
the Monthly Journal for May 1895, states: — 



Mr. King tells us that he found some packets of this variety in the 
Post-office at Halifax, and that he thinks that they may be a, new edi- 
tion, on a better paper than the last. He is not certain yet about this, 
as the great majority of the stock consisted of the laid paper envelopes, 
and therefore the use of the wove may have been unintentional or tem- 
porary. 

Again in the August 1895 issue, the last quoted paper says: — 

In further reference to the 3c envelopes on wove paper, Mr. King 
sends us replies which he received from the P. O. Department to his 
enquiries on the subject. The replies are vague, if not evasive, but 
show plainly that no intentional change was made in the paper used; 
they seemed to indicate, however, that the contractors are not re- 
stricted to a particular nature of paper, so long as the envelopes sup- 
plied are of sufficiently good quality. 



234 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

The references to Mr. King in 1895 seem to show that he discovered the 
envelopes at about that time, so if the first statement about their appearing 
in 1891 is correct there must have been two lots issued at two different per- 
iods. That they were errors seems to admit of no doubt, as the usual paper 
for these envelopes was of the laid variety. They were only found in the 
large size envelope, known officially as No. 2. 

In the issue for September 1899, the American Jmirnal of Philately 
noted two unusual varieties: — 



Mr. Charles A. Benedict of Brantford has sent us samples of two 
envelopes with stamp of the 1877 type, which have not as yet been 
chronicled and which should probably be classed as printed-tc-order 
envelopes. They are said to be used by a certain firm in Brantford for 
circulars and letters, and are printed on large manila amber envelopes. 



The size of the envelopes is given as 265x113 mm., and both the 1 cent 
and 3 cent stamps were impressed upon them, l^o further information 
seems to have been obtained concerning these curiosities, which must have 
been issued previous to the termination of the contract with the British 
American Bank Note Co. in 1897. 

Although the rate on "drop letters" at free delivery offices was fixed 
at 2 cents per ounce by the Post Office Act of 1889, in place of the previous 
1 cent per half ounce, it did not occur that a 2 cent envelope might be de- 
sirable until about five years later. In the Postmaster General's Keport of 
30th June, 1894, we read: — "It is proposed to issue for use for drop letters, 
that is for letters passing vdthin the limits of a free delivery in cities, a 2 
cent envelope which will no doubt be found a convenience to the public." 

In the next year's Keport we find: — "The 2 cent envelopes, used mainly 
for drop letters, that is, for letters passing within the limits of a free de- 
livery in cities, and referred to in the report for last year, have been issued 
during the year. Judging from the demand made for these envelopes 
already, they are likely to prove a convenience to the public." 

The new denomination was issued on the lith June, 1895,^ on the 
larger sized envelope, the paper being the cream toned laid. It is a rather 

'American Journal of Philately, 2nd Series, YIII: 365. 




THE STAMPED ENVELOPES 235 

bizarre production, being circular in form with a medallion of the Queen's 
head in the center, and a beaver perched outside the 
design at the top, while the sides are broken by maple 
leaves. The inscriptions are in colored letters, and the 
numeral of value appears for the only time on a Cana- 
dian envelope stamp. In spite of the "demand" for 
these envelopes, a total supply of 94,970 received from 
the manufacturers was found sufficient to last until 
the new type was issued from the Government Printing Bureau ia 1899, after 
the contract with the British American Bank ITote Co. had expired. 
The Postmaster General's Eeport for 30th June, 1898, says: — 

New stamped envelopes also came into use, and the price thereof 
ahove the face value as compared with the old envelopes of the same 
size, was reduced by 10 cents per 100, a reduction of 331/3 %. A further 
concession given the public was that a blank form of request (to 
return letter if not delivered within the specified time) is printed with- 
out extra charge on the envelope, so that at the option of the purchaser 
stamped envelopes with or without this form of request may be ob- 
tained. Whilst the three denominations of stamped envelopes ( 1 cent, 2 
cents and 3 cents) are retained, it was deemed advisable to have only 
<jne size instead of two as was the case with the old envelopes, — the 
small size of the latter (known as No. 1) being discontinued because of 
the tendency on the part of the mercantile community to use envelopes 
of the larger size (known officially as No. 2) or what in the commer- 
cial world is classed as No. 7. The latter is now the uniform size of the 
new stamped envelopes. 

The stamped envelopes referred to at the beginning of the above quota- 
tion were the 3 cent envelopes, the first value to appear in a new design, and 
the price, as stated, was reduced from the former rate of $3.30 per hundred 
to $3.20 per hundred. But this apparently applied only to the new style, 
for the old style envelopes returned to the department as "unfit for use" in 
1898, 1899 and 1900 were credited at the old rates, while the new style 
envelopes in the same condition were credited at the new rates in these same 
years. The Eeport for 1899 states that the old style envelopes in their two 
sizes were discontinued on 31st March, 1898. 

The new stamp, while perhaps not as bizarre as the 2 cent of 1895, was 
yet a conspicuously ugly production by reason of the profile portrait of Queen 
Victoria that was employed. The die was engraved by Messrs. De La Kue 



236 



CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 



& Co., of London, and outside of the embossed head is a very neat design of 
t^^^^ engine turned work, with POSTAGE in small white letters 
above the inner oval and THKEE CEJSTTS beneath. The 
word CANADA was added, apparently as an afterthought, 
in colored letters outside the design at the top of the stamp, 
where it breaks the colored line surrounding the oval! The 
impression is in a bright red on a white wove paper of a 

slightly cream tone, and the flap is rounded, with gum extending its full 

length. The return request referred to in the Keport is printed in black 

in the upper left hand corner and reads : — 




If not called for in ten days 
return to 



It seems that the American Bank Note Co., upon taking the contract 
for supplying the Canadian stamps in 1897, asked to be excused from print- 
ing the stamped envelopes as well, because such a small nimiber were used. 
This work was therefore given to the Government Printing Bureau at Ot- 
tawa,® which accounts for the dies having been furnished by Messrs. De La 
Rue & Co. The stamp accounts give the number of 3 cent envelopes furnished 
in the new type as 110,000 in 1898 and 70,000 in 1899, a total of 180,000; 
but the reduction of the domestic letter rate from 3 cents to 2 cents on the 
1st January, 1899, made the 3 cent envelope useless, and large quantities 
were surcharged with the new rate, so that it is impossible to tell what pro- 
portion of the amount given is now represented by each variety. If catalog 
pricing is any criterion, the unsurcharged issue of the envelope should be 
perhaps 80,000. 

The Eeport for 1899 states :— 

As a result of the reduction in the Domestic Letter rate of postage, 
the issue of the 3c. letter card, 3c. stamped envelope and 3c. postage 
stamp has been discontinued, unused quantities of these, however, 
continuing available for postage purposes, or exchangeable at any post 
oflace for their equivalent in postage stamps of other denominations. 

The Eeport does not give the date of issue of the 3 cent stamped envelope, 
but it was chronicled in Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News for May 5, 1898, and 



•Weekly Philatelic Era, XI: 308. 




THE STAMPED ENVELOPES 237 

therefore was probably issued sometime in April. The date of discontinuance 
is given, however, as December, 1898, so that it had a life, unsureharged, of 
only about nine months. 

But meanwhile the 1 cent envelope was being prepared, and evidently 
because of the dissatisfaction expressed over the embossed head of the Queen 
on the 3 cent value, the new envelope appeared with the 
familiar youthful profile similar to that used on the British ' ^ 
envelope dies for so many years. This improved the ap- 
pearance of the stamp, which otherwise corresponded in de- 
sign with the 3 cent and was likewise engraved by Messrs. De 
La Eue & Co. It was printed in a dark green on paper like 
that of the 3 cent value, and in the same size and cut of 
envelope. The new type was issued on July 22, 1898, according to the 1899 
Eeport, and was sold at $1.20 per hundred. The distribution of the old 
style 1 cent envelopes was discontinued in the same month, according to the 
stamp accounts. 

Following the 1 cent envelope came the 2 cent, being identical in every 
respect save the expressed value and color, and emanating from the same 
source as its two predecessors. The Eeport of 1899 gives the date of issue 
of this envelope as the 2nd January, 1899, and, as the corresponding value 
in the adhesive set was a deep violet, we should expect the envelope stamp 
to follow suit. This it did, but was almost immediately followed by an issue 
in bright red, because of the reduction of the domestic letter rate from 3 
cents to 2 cents. It will be remembered that when Imperial Penny Postage 
was inaugurated on December 25, 1898, it was almost immediately announced 
that the internal postage in Canada would be reduced to the 2 cent rate on 
and from the 1st January, 1899. As the Postal Union requirements called 
for carmine as the color of the stamp for the domestic letter rate, the change 
from violet was necessary in the Canadian 2 cent stamp, but owing to the 
large stock of the violet stamps on hand and the surcharging of the 3 cent 
stamps down to 2 cent value, the change in color from violet to carmine did 
not take place in the adhesives for some eight months. ISTot so with the 
envelopes; the new 2 cent ones were about to be issued and had been printed 
to the amount of 10,000 in dark violet. But with the change in rates and 
therefore in color requirements, orders were given to print further supplies 
of the 2 cent envelope in red, and the latter color therefore appeared about a 
week after the violet stamp. 



238 CANADIAJSr POSTAGE STAMPS 

We have gone thus into detail in the matter in order to make it evident 
why the violet stamp was so short lived, and why the change was made. This 
seems necessary because such a furor was created at the time, when it became 
kaown that the issue of violet envelopes was small, and speculation ran high; 
the Government was accused of speculating in them and of putting them in the 
hands of favored ones, and finally, as in the case of the alleged speculation 
in the Jubilee stamps, the matter came up in Parliament. The following 
is an extract from the official report of the debates in the House of Commons 
at Ottawa:'^ — 

ISSUE OP STAMPED ENVELOPES. 
Mr. Hughes asked : 1. Wheii will the present 2 cent purple stamped 
envelope cease to be Issued, and the red issued in its place? 2. How 
many 2 cent purple envelopes were issued, and how many distributed? 
At what offices were they distributed, how many at each office? Are 
there any more to be distributed, and if so, where will they be dis- 
tributed? 3. Is it the intention of the Government to issue an entire 
new set of stamped envelopes to replace those at present in use? If 
so, when? « « « 

The Postmaster-General (Mr. Mulock) : The issue of 2 cent purple- 
stamp envelopes ceased when the suppy thereof in the department be- 
came exhausted, the last issue having been made on the 7th January, 
1899. The subsequent issue of 2-cent stamped envelopes was in red, in 
accordance with the reconmiendation of the Postal Convention. * 

* * The schedule hereto annexed shows the names of the 

post offices supplied with such purple-stamp envelopes and the respec- 
tive quantities so supplied them. 

List of Post Offices to which 2c. purple envelopes 
were issued, and the quantity in each case. 



Post Office. 


Quantity. 


Post Office. 


Quantity. 


BeUeville, Ont. 


500 


Sherbrooke, Que. 


500 


St. Catherine's, Ont. 


500 


Montreal, Que. 


1000 


Toronto, Ont. 


2000 


Kigaud, Que. 


100 


Corinth, Ont. 


100 


Maitland, N. S. 


100 


Haliburton, Ont. 


100 


Truro, N. S. 


100 


Mount Albert, Ont. 


100 


Yarmouth. N. S. 


100 


Tamworth, Ont. 


500 


Andover, N. B. 


200 


Hagersville, Ont. 


100 


Centreville, N. B. 


100 


Hamilton, Ont. 


500 


Shoal Lake, Man. 


100 


Loring, Ont. 


100 


Winnipeg, Man. 


2000 


Newton, Ont. 


100 


New Westminster, B. C. 100 


Ottawa, Ont. 


700 


Greenwood, B. C. 


200 


St. Casimir, Que. 


100 







'Weekty Philatelic Era, XIH: 285. 



THE STAMPED ENVELOPES 239 

Further questioning by the same gentleman, in an effort to show that 
"inside" information had been given concerning the remainder of the 2 cent 
green envelopes at Toronto and the limited issue of the so-called "purple" 
ones, in order that favored parties might "comer" them, resulted in nothing 
definite except that in replying to the question "Was the issue of the 2c. 
purple stamped envelopes done by mistake?" the Postmaster-General said: 
"There was no mistake whatever made in the issue of said envelopes, but, 
on the contrary, the issue took place in the ordinary course of business, and 
was made on requisitions in the usual way, coming from postmasters." Con- 
sidering the date of their issue, the cause of the change in color and the 
above reply of the Postmaster-General, in connection with an examination 
of the table of distribution of the 2c. violet envelopes, we must say that it seems 
clear that the whole business, as far as the Department was concerned, was 
legitimate and straightforward, and the aspersions cast upon the issue of this 
envelope were only animated by a spirit of jealousy or revenge on the part 
of those who unfortunately did not happen to get any, whether "tipped off" 
by friends in or out of the post-office, or not. 

The 2 cent envelope in red may have been issued on the 8th January, 
1899, or within a day or two of that date, and corresponds of course with the 
one in violet and the 1 cent envelope in all respects. It was sold at $2.20 
per hundred. 

We have already spoken of the 3 cent envelope, issued in April, 1898, 
as having been surcharged. This was due, of course, to the same reduction 
in the domestic rate of postage that operated to change the 2 cent envelope 
from violet to red, and which also rendered the 3 cent envelope practically 
useless. In order to utilize the stock of the latter envelopes, therefore, the 
Department decided on surcharging them down to a 2 cent value. This was 
done sometime during the week of 6-11 February, 1899, and we can do no 
better than quote the letter of a Canadian correspondent in the Weekly Phil- 
atelic Era^ for details concerning it. 

Ottawa, 17th Feb'y, 1899. 
Our weekly sensation was duly on tap last week, in the shape of 
surcharges, Canada's first ofEence, but an aggravated case. The Post 
Office Department announced that any holders of 3c. envelopes or letter 
cards might send them in to the postage stamp branch, and have them 
surcharged, and re-issued as 2c. emissions, the difference in value being 

•Weekly Philatelic Era, Xni: 204. 



240 CAIfADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

made good by an additional supply of surcharged stationery or in some 
otter equivalent stamps. 

It was not anticipated that a very large supply of 3c. stationery 
vyas on hand, and consequently the arrangements for surcharging are 
of the most primitive description. Stamps of soft rubber bearing the 
figures 2c. are provided, and the surcharge is put on by hand, the 
stamps being inked on black pads. The consequence is that the work 
is ill done, and we have as many varieties of surcharge as there are 
impressions, with quantitiess of ink varying from a black blue to a 
light grey. I have seen one envelope with the surcharge on sidewise 
reading from bottom to top. 

Independently of the variations in printing, there are two types of 
surcharge. In the first, which I shall christen the "capital surcharge", 
the figure 2 is 10% mm. high by 8 wide, the heavy parts of the figure 
being 2 mm. thick, the thin parts % mm. The C is a capital letter 
4% X 3% mm. There was only one stamp of this type, and when it 
had been in use for two or three days the difference in type was no- 
ticed and the stamp was destroyed. Any stationery surcharged with it 
will be exceedingly rare. 

The other type, which I suggest should be called the "lower case 
surcharge", has a similar figure 3 but the C is a heavy face lower case 
letter 4x3% mm. It is possible that there may be varieties ^^i^ 
of this type, as there are several stamps in use, but the W^wV^ 
printing is so badly done, and the stamps so subject to dis- £LM 
tortion by pressure, that one cannot depend on either inspection or 
measurement, a change in pressure in printing altering the appearance 
of the surcharge very materially. 

In the same issue of the Bra appeared further notes from another cor- 
respondent. In regard to the then current 3 cent envelopes (the so-called 
"Bureau print") he says: — "The P. O. Department has surcharged the stock 
on hand, a few thousand. * * * Some of the old British American Bank 
Note 3c envelopes were also surcharged, hut it is understood that there were 
very few of them on hand, — ^less than a thousand." 

The opportunity given the public, however, to have 3 cent envelopes in 
their possession surcharged, as well as the stock held by postmasters, which 
was returned to a considerable extent (15,848 of the 3c. 1898 returned 1899- 
1901; 6,788 of the 3c. No. 1, 1877, returned 1899-1900; and 3,081 of the 3c. 
No. 2, 1877, returned 1899) and doubtless reissued in surcharged condition, 
has made these provisional envelopes fairly common. No details of the 
numbers so treated are available, but if the catalogue value is any criterion 
the 3 cent of 1898 surcharged is half again as common as the unsurcharged 

•Query: "qualities"? 



THE STAMPED ENVELOPES 241 

variety, or, as before remarked, the numbers issued may be divided up roughly 
as perhaps 100,000 of the former to 80,000 of the latter. Of the old envel- 
opes of 1877, both sizes of which are found surcharged, it is impossible to 
hazard any guesses, save that a considerable number— several thousands of 
each size at least — must have been operated upon to render them as reason- 
able in catalogue price as we find them. 

The surcharge in its first type, as described in the quotation given, with 
the capital 0, has only been found on the 3 cent envelope of 1898, which was 
the one in the reserve stock of the Department when the reduction in postage 
took effect; but the second type, with the "lower case" C is found not only 
on this envelope but also on both sizes of the old "Burland & Co." envelopes 
of the 1877 issue. 

It will be remembered that it took considerably more than two years 
after the death of Queen Victoria before the change to King's head adhesives 
was made in Canada. It took even longer for the change in the envelope dies, 
as the first one to appear, the 2 cent, was not issued until the beginning of 
1905. It was thus described in Meheel's WeeUy Stamp News:^^ — 

Mr. Wm. P. Anderson writes that the 2c Canada envelope. Queen's 
Head, is now obsolete, and that a new issue bearing the King's Head 
was first sent out Jan. 13. It is very similar to the existing type — 
same colour, shape and size and same description of paper and size of 
envelope. The bust of the King, a profile to the left, is larger, filling 
more of the central oval than did that of the young Queen. It is a very 
beautifully cut piece of embossing, the work of Wyon, the celebrated 
London die sinker. The engine turned border is not, Mr. Anderson 
thinks, so neat as that on the old stamp, fromi which it differs in de- 
tail. The word Canada has been removed from outside the frame to 
the upper label, which now reads Canada Postage. This and the value, 
two cents, on a label below the bust, are in white letters on a ground of 
solid colour. The lettering is very thin, which is the only blemish in a 
very neat and effective design. 

The size of the envelope was not exactly the same as 
the previous issue, for it measiires 152 x 90 mm., about 4 
mm. longer than before and 3 mm. wider, the rough meas- 
urements being 6 x 3% inches. The paper is a very white 
wove variety, and the color of the impression is in carmine. 

The 1 cent envelope did not appear until about two months later, the 

"Mekeel's Weekly Stamp New«, XIX: 22. 




242 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

exact date not being available, but being very close to the 1st March, 1905. 
It is in all respects the same as the 2 cent envelope except that it is printed 
in a deep green. 

The use of stamped envelopes in Canada, though never so popular as in the 
United States, yet seems to be largely on the increase in the last twelve years, 
the 1 cent having risen in number from 85,500 in 1899 to 1,360,100 in 1910, 
and the 2 cent from 262,000 to 2,928,400 during the same period. 



CHAPTER XXII 

THE NEWSPAPER WRAPPERS 

IJSr the Postmaster General's Eeport for the 30th June, 1875, we find the 
following: — "Post bands bearing an impressed stamp of one cent each 

have been issued for sale to the public, at the rate of four for five cents, 
to be used in putting up newspapers and such other transmissions requiring 
to be prepaid one cent, for which they may be found convenient." 

The issue took place in May, 1875, and consisted of a wrapper of light 
buff wove paper measuring 9% inches in height by 5 inches in width (235 x 
127 mm.), vrith the stamp impressed at the right side, about 21/^ inches 
from the top. The sheet is cut square and gummed along the top on the back 
side. The stamp is typographed, and consists of an upright oval containing 
the head of Queen Victoria copied from that on the adhesive stamps, OAISTADA 
POSTAGE above, OlSTE CENT below, and the figure 1 in a circle at each 
side. In this first type of the wrapper stamp these circles 
containing the numerals are surrounded by foliations of 
acanthus pattern, and each has a little quatrefoil ornament 
in the label beneath it. There is also a thin, colored, wavy 
line which follows the border of the inner oval, giving a 
scalloped effect, and serves as the distinguishing feature of 
the first type. The impression is in dark blue. The stamp accounts give the 
receipts from the manufacturers as 554,000 during 1875, and 918,000 dur- 
ing 1876. ITo further supplies were received until 1879 so these figures 
doubtless represent the total supply printed on the buff paper, as the small 
supply received in 1879 is probably otherwise accounted for.^ 

In its issue for June 1, 1878, the Philatelic Monthly states that "We 
have received specimens of the newspaper wrappers with the stamp on the 
left and half way from the top." M. Moens lists it in his catalogue, where 
he gives the dimensions as 290 x 165 mm., or about 11% x 6% inches. This 
is somewhat larger than the previous size and we have been unable to confirm 

>See page 270. 




244 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

it by a specimen, but the accuracy of M. Moens' observations is seldom to be 
questioned. The London Society's work states that this wrapper is un- 
known to the members of the Society, but a cancelled copy, used by a busi- 
ness firm, is recorded in the Monthly Journal in 1892.^ Evidently this va- 
riety was an error in the cutting of the sheet. 

In the Philatelic Record for December, 1881,^ a change is noted in the 
wrapper itself, the paper being described as white instead of buff; but in 
Moens' catalogue it is listed as "very pale buff" and in fact is what we might 
call "cream toned", being more correctly described later in the Philatelic 
Record as "almost white".* The wrapper was also cut to a new size, 11 x 5 
inches or 280 x 127 mm. It is very probable that this wrapper comes from 
the lot of 197,000 received according to the stamp accounts for 1880 — the 
first since 1876, barring the small lot in 1879.^ 

Again, in its issue for June 1, 1882, the Philatelic Monthly illustrates 
a new variety in the stamp for the wrapper, stating that the color is light blue. 
The distinguishing features of the new die are the removal of the wavy line 
from the inner border of the oval, the removal of the folia- 
tions from around the circles enclosing the numerals, and the 
replacing of the little quatrefoil ornament beneath these 
circles by an inverted triangular ornament. This wrapper 
was presumably of the usual light buff tint as no mention 
is made of its color; but in the issue of the same paper for 
October 1, 1882, it is recorded that "We have received specimens of the news- 
paper wrapper, stamp of latest type, on yellow-buff paper." The same wrap- 
per is chronicled in the Philatelic Record which was issued the latter part of 
September as upon "straw-colored wove paper," so it had doubtless appeared as 
early as August, 1882. The size was the same as the last wrapper, 11 x 5 inches. 
From 1882 on the wrappers have been issued in numbers approaching 
half a million per year, and as no note is made in the stamp accounts even of 
changes in design, it is of course impossible to estimate the quantities printed or 
issued of any one variety. 

In an article in the Dominion Philatelist upon the postal stationery of 
Canada,^ the "yellow paper" wrapper is given as the first issued, in 1882, 

'Monthly Journal, III: 3. 

'Philatelic Record, HI: 205; corrected, III: 227. 

^ibid., IV: 142. 

"See page 270. 

'Dominion Philatelist, V: 130. 





THE NEWSPAPER WEAPPEES 245 

and the date 1883 is given the ordinary "pale buff" paper. The chronicles 
we have quoted, however, show that both were doubtless issued in 1882 and 
that the straw colored paper was not the first. The wrapper also appears 
on a cream paper, and the year of issue in the article quoted is given as 1885, 
but we have been unable to find any contemporary chronicle to confirm this. 

Once again, in 1887, we find a change in the impressed stamp. This 
time the first design is reverted to, but with slight modifications which readily 
distinguished the new type; these are the absence of the wavy line running 
around the border of the inner oval, and the coarser shading 
on the face and neck — dotted in the first type and composed 
of lines in this third type. The new variety seems to have 
been chronicled first in the Philatelic Monthly for June 1, 
1887, but nothing is said about the color of the wrapper. The 
article in the Dominion Philatelist, however, gives it as thin 
white paper with a variety in "very thin tough white paper, fine quality." 
The same article under date of 1888 gives this wrapper in cream toned paper 
of both thick and thin quality, and in manila paper. The size of all these 
wrappers was the usual one of 11 x 5 inches. 

Five years of the third type seemed to be sufficient, for in 1892 a fourth 
variety made its appearance. This, curiously enough, reverts to the second 
type in similarity, for the foliations aroimd the numerals again disappear 
and the only distinguishing feature is the ornaments be- 
neath the numerals — ^now little quatrefoils instead of the 
triangular ornaments found on the second type. This 
fourth type seems to have been first noted in the Canadian 
Philatelist for March, 1892, and is more fully described 
in the Monthly Journal for 30th April, 1892, as being 
upon "thin, surfaced, straw coloured paper." This wrapper was cut to a 
slightly smaller size, 10% x 5 inches. The article in the Dominion Phila- 
telist lists it upon "cream colored paper" alone, but both varieties exist, though 
it would seem that the straw colored one was perhaps the first issued. 

There is one variety analogous to the "stamp at left" wrapper of the 
first type, and which is also doubtless due to faulty cutting of the sheets; this 
has the stamp at the usual distance from the top of the wrapper, but nearly 
in the middle as far as the spacing from the sides goes. The impression is 
in dark blue on the straw colored paper. 




246 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

In its issue for 31 March, 1894, the Monthly Journal chronicles a change 
in the color of the wrapper stamp (fourth type) from blue to "grey- 
black", the wrapper itself remaining a "straw" color as before. We find 
the impression to be a plain black, though if lightly inked it might show as 
gray black. Besides the pale straw colored wrapper there exists a cream 
toned one and also one of stouter paper in a very light brown tone. All these 
are cut to the last size noted, viz., 10% x 5 inches. 

All the preceding wrappers were the product of the British American 
Bank l^ote Co., but when their contract for supplying stamps ceased in 1897 
a new issue was naturally looked for. This did not materialize until June 
or July, 1898, when a new wrapper of the usual size and of light manUa 
paper made its appearance with an impression of the 1 cent adhesive stamp 
(maple leaves in the four comers) in dark green. Unlike the stamped envel- 
opes, it was manufactured by the American Bank Note Co., but the die for 
stamping it, instead of being a reproduction of the adhesive, was newly en- 
graved for typographic work and is therefore much coarser in appearance than 
the adhesive stamps. 

No change was made in the wrapper die to include the numeral of value 
until the new issue with head of King Edward took place. As before, the 
design of the adhesive was copied but the die was engraved for surface print- 
ing and is coarser in its lines. The new wrapper probably appeared early in 
October, 1903, as we find it recorded in MeJceel's WeeMy Stamp News for the 
24th October of that year. The size was as before and the paper a light 
manila. 

As a result of the changes in newspaper rates, due to the amending of the 
Postal Convention with the United States in 1907,^ we find a set of special 
wrappers issued in that year, concerning which the Postmaster General's Ee- 
port for 1908 says: — 



To facilitate the mailing of second class matter sent by publishers 
to their subscribers in the United States, special newspaper wrappers of 
the 1 cent, 3 cents and 3 cents denominations were introduced. As a re- 
sult of the reduction in rate of this class of matter, made in February, 
so far as daily editions of newspapers were concerned, the demand for 
2c. and 3c. wrappers ceased, and their issue was, accordingly, discon- 
tinued. 

'See page 196. 



THE NEWSPAPER WRAPPERS 247 

The first issue of these wrappers is given as the 11th July, 1907, and a 
reference to the Keport of 1908, already quoted,^ shows the reason for their 
appearance. The rate on periodicals had been raised to 1 cent per 4 ounces 
when sent to the United States, which in turn had made provision for a like 
rate on periodicals addressed to Canada, at the latter's behest. This move on ' 
Canada's part was aimed principally to prevent the flooding of Canadian 
mails with cheap American monthlies. But such a protest went up against 
this heavy increase, that the rates were lowered, in February 1908, to 1 cent 
per pound on newspapers only, which of course rendered any wrappers save 
the 1 cent of but little use. With becoming thrift, however, the _ 
unissued remainder of the two discarded values was surcharged 1 
"Ic." in large block type in black and used up in that way. I A 

The quantities of these special wrappers delivered to the ■ V» 
Department are given in the stamp accounts as : — 





1908. 


1909. 


1910. 


1 cent 


1,501,000 


353,000 


884,000 


2 " 


367,000 






3 " 


54,000 







Of the 2 cent wrapper the accounts give 300,300 as issued in 1908 and 
of the 3 cent wrapper 15,600. But during 1908 and 1909 213,546 of the 
former and 13,790 of the latter were returned "fit for use" by postmasters, 
and 4,574 2 cent and 790 3 cent "unfit for use" WQre destroyed. It would 
appear from this that the actual issue to the public of these two wrappers 
was 82,180 of the 2 cent and but 1,020 of the 3 cent ! The 1909 tables, how- 
ever, record the issue to postmasters of the total quantity of these wrappers 
then on hand, and the 1910 tables explain this by the statement: — "Withdrawn 
from issue and surcharged one cent, June 18, 1908." The quantities of the 
surcharged wrappers are therefore 280,246 of the 1 c. on 2 cents, and 52,190 
of the Ic. on 3 cents. As these wrappers were not on sale to the general pub- 
lic but only to publishers, who were obliged to purchase in quantity, their use 
was considerably restricted; and as the wrappers often enclosed papers in 
quantity, addressed to any one post office, they were removed in the United 
States post offices before distributing the papers, and very many probably 
lost sight of there as waste paper. 

•See page 196. 



248 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

While the usual newspaper wrappers are designated officially as "Post 
Bands," these we have been describing are called "Special Wrappers." They 
were of stout manila paper, cut to 15 x 61/^ inches (378 x 165 mm.) in size for 
the 1 cent and 2 cent, and 13 x 8 inches (308 x 223 mm.) for the 3 cent, and 
ungummed. The stamp occupied the usual position, but at its left was the 
following two line legend in block letters, printed in the same color as the 
stamp, and occupying a length of 92 mm: — 

THIS WRAPPER TO BE USED ONLY BY PUBLISHERS AND FOR THE SOLE 
PURPOSE OF MAILING SECOND CLASS MATTER TO THE UNITED STATES. 

The 1 cent value was printed in dark green, the 2 cent in carmine, and 
the 3 cent in a slate violet. The surcharges were first noted in Mekeel's 
Weekly Stamp News of 12th September, 1908, though they were prc'iably 
issued soon after the date quoted above. The overprint in each case is in shiny 
black ink, the figure being 13 mm. high and the "c" 6 mm. high, with a period 
after it. 

One curious circumstance has been noted in connection with the use of 
these wrappers — large numbers have been used without the Post Office author- 
ities taking the trouble to cancel them, while in other cases they have been 
cancelled in the usual manner. 



CHAPTER XXIII 

THE POST CARDS 



WE liave already remarked that Canada lagged behind the United 
States in adopting adhesive stamps and also stamped envelopes, 
but when we come to post cards we find the United States to be the 
laggard by nearly two years. In the Postmaster General's Report for 30th 
June, ISTO, we find the following: — 

The introduction of what are known as "post cards" in the United 
Kingdom, and the convenience which is stated to have attended their 
use, have induced the Department to make arrangements for the man- 
ufacture of similar post cards for the use of the public in Canada. 
These post cards will be sold at one cent each, and may be posted for 
any address within the Dominion — and will be conveyed to destination, 
and be delivered in like manner with letters — the one cent covering the 
cost both of the card and of postage. 

They may be used for any communication, which can advantageous- 
ly be written and sent by such a medium; and, it would seem unques- 
tionable, must, in Canada as in England, prove to be extremely conven- 
ient for many objects and purposes. 

The next year's Eeport states: — "Post Cards have been issued to the 
public from June, 1871, and it is believed have been found to be of material 
convenience. The number issued up to the 31st December was 1,470,600." 

These cards were cut to a size approximately 4% x 3 inches (116 x 75 
mm.). The design consists of an engine turned border set about 3-16 of an 
inch in from the edge, with the stamp in the upper right corner of the en- 
closed space. This stamp shows 9^A:M:^ ^-^^^ii^^^:^iiM^-^-i^f^^^ 
a medallion bearing the head of 
Queen Victoria that appears on 
the "large" cents issue of 1868, 
surrounded by a frame that 
makes a roughly rectangular 
outline. The arrangement and 
style of the inscriptions on the 
card are shown by the illustra- 
tion. At the bottom, just above the frame, is the imprint in letters of "diamond" 




260 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

size, "British American Bank ISTote Co. Montreal & Ottawa." The card is not 
of particularly heavy stock, has a somewhat rough surface, and is of a light buff 
tint that varies some in tone. The printing was done in sheets of several im- 
pressions and the engravings were separated by thin colored lines running the 
whole length between them. The color of the impression is a deep blue, though 
specimens in a lighter tone are not uncommon. 

In the Postmaster General's Keport for 1872 we learn that on the 1st 
November of that year, amongst other changes in connection with rates to 
Newfoundland, the exchange of post cards at the ordinary domestic rate was 
provided for. In the Keport for 1873 we read: — "By arrangement with the 
United States Post Office, the post cards of Canada and of the United States 
have, from the 1st July 1873, passed freely to destination between the two 
countries on prepayment of 2 cents each, by affixing a 1 cent postage stamp 
to the card in addition to the one cent stamp printed thereon." The postal 
arrangement concluded between Canada and the United States in 1874,^ 
however, by which mail matter was to be exchanged between the two countries 
at the domestic rates of each, obviated the necessity of the extra cent on the 
post cards from the 1st January, 1875. 

It may be remembered that the marginal imprints on the sheets of ad- 
hesive stamps began to be changed in 1875 and that the word "Ottawa" was 
dropped. The same change took place in the post card some time during 
1876, it being first noted in Le Timbre-Poste for January, 1877. The new 
card had the imprint at the bottom reading "British American Bank Note 
Co. Montreal" in letters slightly larger than on the first type. The frame of 
the card also seems to have been re-engraved as slight differences can be de- 
tected, and the outside or "over all" measurements are found to be about 1% 
mm. greater each way. Otherwise the appearance of the card is the same, 
but it is cut a little larger, measuring 4% x 3 inches (120 x 75 mm.), and 
the stock is a little heavier than the first card and of a slightly paler buff. 
The engravings on the plate were this time separated by short lines of color 
at the center of the sides of the cards. The color of the impression was the 
same as before and at times the front of the card was tinted bluish because of 
imperfectly wiped plates during printing. 

Although Canada failed to obtain entrance into the Universal Postal 
Union on its establishment in 1875, as already detailed,^ yet she was granted 

'See page 120. 
"See page 108. 



THE POST CARDS 



251 




the new rates in her correspondence with the Mother Country. This included 
a 2 cent rate for post cards, and on the 1st January, 1877, a 2 cent post card 
made its appearance which was intended particularly for British cor- 
respondence as is shown by the 
sub-heading "TO UNITED 
KINGDOM." It was quite 
similar in design to the 1 cent 
card, with the same medallion 
portrait of Queen Victoria on the stamp. The frame of the card is of engiae- 
tumed work but of different pattern from the 1 cent card, and has comer 
pieces. The arrangement of the inscriptions is shown by the illustration. The 
card is cut to the same size as the 1 cent (4% x 3 inches) and is of medium 
thickness and of a very light yellowish buff. The impression is in a deep 
yellow green. 

Of these 2 cent cards the stamp accounts give 200,000 as having been de- 
livered ia 1877 and 5000 more in 1879. But the issues to postmasters are 
given as 98,300 in 1877, 6090 in 1878, and 13,680 in 1879, a total of 118,070; 
and as there is a record of the return of but 35, it seems fair to assume that the 
remainrag 87,000 were destroyed. 

Canada was finally admitted to the Postal Union on the 1st July, 1878, 
and consequently the 2 cent 
rate on post cards became ap- 
plicable to all the other Postal 
Union countries. We therefore 
find the "United Kingdom" 
card altered to conform to the new conditions, the words "Union Postale Univer- 
selle" now appearing at the top as shown in the illustration. The stamp has 
also been re-engraved, the frame being changed and the words CANADA and 
POSTCAED added in small capitals above and below the medallion. The card 
is of the same size as before, on good stock of a very pale yellowish tone and 
with a smooth surface, and the impression is in a strong yellow green. 

This card appeared early in 1879 and continued in use until 1896. Its 
issue to postmasters increased from 27,300 in 1879, to 67,400 in 1892, though 
it dropped to 47,000 in 1895. 



Union PosialeUolverscUe 

Canada Post Card 

THttmacMOMiyTO u writtch omthis sipi 




262 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

All the previous cards had been line engraved on steel plates and of artis- 
tic appearance and fine work- 



manship. Beginning with ^a|^^^^^£=^&=^^^^ 

1882, however, a cheaper 

form of production began to ^THE>oDRcssjro.BEr.wRrrTEN on this s.oe. 

be employed, the impression being typographed probably from electrotypes. 
The frame of the card is now omitted, the design consisting simply of a curved 
banderole bearing the words CANADA POST CAKD with the instructions 
beneath, and at the right the oval stamp which, from now on, corresponds to the 
contemporary stamp of the newspaper wrapper. 

The Philatelic Monthly for 1st May, 1882, chronicled a new one cent card 
as having just appeared, but did not describe it. It doubtless appeared early in 
April and was of the design detailed in the last paragraph, the stamp being 
that of the second type of the newspaper wrapper, which lacked the foliations 
around the numerals and had the inverted triangular ornaments beneath the 
circles containing the figures "1". The impression was in blue or in ultramar- 
ine on a very light buff card of stout quality and cut to 5% x 3 inches (129 
X 76 mm.) 

About the end of the same year a reply card made its appearance concern- 
ing which the following notice was issued: — 

POST OFFICE DEPAKTMENT. 

Ottawa, 13th December, 1883. 
Departmental Order 
No. 27 
******** 

Reply Post Cards. 

3. For the convenience of correspondence by Post Card within the 
Dominion, a double Post Card has been prepared and is now ready for 
issue, which will afford to the original sender of this form of Card the 
means of sending with his communication, a blank prepaid Post Card 
to be used in reply. Each half of the double card will bear a one-cent 
postage stamp impressed thereon in prepayment. 

The ordinary Post Card regulations will apply to these reply cards, 
both when originally posted, and with respect to the reply half when 
re-posted. 

The reply or double Post Cards, will be issued at two cents each, 
and are to be sold to the public at that rate by Postmasters and stamp 
vendors. 

Canada reply Post Cards, to be used in correspondence with the 
United Kingdom, will also be supplied at an early date, and when Post 
Cards of this description originating in the United Kingdom and bear- 



THE POST CARDS 253 

ing the impressed postage stamp thereof on both halves, have been re- 
ceived here by mail, the reply half may be re-posted in Canada, for 
return to an address in the United Kingdom, as a prepaid Post Card, 
and may be forwarded to destination without requiring the addition of 
any Canada postage stamp or other postage prepayment in Canada. 

JOHN CAJRLING, 
Postmaster General. 
******** 

Judging by the date of the circular the reply card was probably issued the 
middle of December, 1882, although it was not reported in the stamp journals 
until the next February. The stock used was the same as that for the single 
cards and cut so as to be the same size as the latter when folded. The design 
was the same as the single cards but printed in a gray black on the first and 
third faces of the folded card. The reply half is only distinguished by the word 
"(REPLY.)" placed between the banderole and the line of instructions. 

Considerable interest was aroused among philatelists in 1891-2 by a con- 
troversy that sprung up over a reported "error" in this reply card, which 
occurred with the stamp at the left side and the inscriptions to the right. Curi- 
ously enough, this card had been chronicled as a new issue in the Philatelic 
Monthly for March, 1885, where we read : — "We are indebted to Mr. De Wolf 
for the first specimen of a new double 1 cent card we have seen. It is slightly 
smaller than those first issued and the stamp is placed on the left side instead 
of the right." The fact of its existence had apparently lain dormant, except 
among post card specialists, until the Canadian correspondent of Meheel's 
Weekly Stamp Neius rose to remark^ that they could be produced by manipu- 
lating an uncut sheet of the regular cards. This called forth a rejoinder from 
Mr. A. Lohmeyer* who wrote : — 

In the first place, the Error Cards, for such they are, do not exist 
among the 1 cent cards, but only among the 1-1 cent of 3883, or reply- 
paid cards. Of this issue a comparatively small quantity were printed 
with the stamp in the upper left corner, and the error was not discov- 
ered until after a number of post-offices had been supplied with them, 
whereupon they were recalled, withdrawn from circulation and de- 
stroyed. This accounts for the great scarcity of these error cards, 
which have, in reality, been in circulation, for I have several used spec- 
imens (halves) in my collection. 

I will now proceed to prove the absurdity of the manipulation de- 
scribed in the article referred to by facts and figures : The space be- 

>Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, I: 43: 1, 
<ibld.. I: 44: 2. 



254 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

tween the stamp and the points of the ribbon bearing the inscription 
"Canada Post Card" on the correct issue, where the cards would have 
to be cut to manufacture Canadensis' error (?) cards, is 4 millimeters. 
If this space is equally divided in cutting the sheet, it would leave a 
margin to the left of the stamp and to the right of the ribbon, after 
being cut, of 3 millimeters, while the space between the right side of 
the stamp and the ribbon would be 10 millimeters. 

Now take an error card, and you will find the latter space to meas- 
ure only 3 millimeters, and the outer margin to the left of the stamp 
and the right of the ribbon to be respectively 5 millimeters. 

"FigTires do not lie". 

A. Lohmeyer. 
Baltimore, Oct. 31, 1891. 

This would seem conclusive proof, and also serve as a means of detecting 
any false error cards which might possibly be made from an uncut sheet as 
printed — ^but which have never been foimd. Yet six months later we find the 
Monthly Journal making inquiries along practically the same lines. This 
brought out the following reply in The Postal Curd : — 

By referring to our paper No. 55, issued on the 14th of May, 1890, 
you will find there a copy of a letter received by us, from the Secre- 
tary of the Post Office Department at Ottawa regarding this very card 
as follows : 

"I am directed to acknowledge your letter stating that you have in 
your possession a Canadian reply post card, upon which the stamp ap- 
pears in the upper left-hand corner, and inquiring whether this stamp 
was officially issued by the department, or whether the position of the 
stamps was due to a mistake in cutting the sheets. 

"In reply, I am to say that the position of the stamp on the card 
to which you refer (a certain number of specimens of which were inad- 
vertently issued by this Department) was due to a mistake in print- 
ing." 

We have never seen one of these cards which could have been pro- 
duced by wrong cutting. 

If any Error cards have been made by such a manipulation, either 
by accident or design, we do not know it. However, the difference be- 
tween a wrongly cut card and a genuine error is so apparent that it 
can be detected even without the use of a millimetre scale. 

The distance of the stamp from the end of the scroll on the error 
card is 4 mm., while if produced by wrong cutting of a sheet of the cor- 
rect issue (stamp at right), the distance will be 14 mm. 

To prove this we take two of the latter cards (in the absence of an 
uncut sheet which we have never seen), place them end against end, 
measure the distapce f TOm the left end of the scroll on one card to the 



THE POST CARDS 255 

outer circle enclosing the figure "1" on the other card, and the result 
will be as stated above. 

This fact and the letter from the Canadian P. O. Department, 
quoted above, removes all doubts as to the true character of this rarity, 
known as the "Canada Error Card". 

We have several used specimens in our collection. 

The Monthly Journal^ later received a copy of the error card which was 
postmarked in September, 1884, and which is the earliest date that has been 
recorded for it. 

Direct evidence is given in a letter from H. F. Ketcheson to Mekeel's 
Weekly Stamp News; he writes as follows :« — 

Regarding the Canadian reply card (error with stamp on upper 
left hand corner) issued in 18S4 (not 1885) would say that I pur- 
chased a quantity of them from various post-offices. I was at that 
time an employe of the Canada Post-Office Department and saw a 
number of these passing through the mails and writing to the offices 
at which they were posted found that they had received a supply from 
Ottawa, and one office informed me at the same time that they had re- 
received instructions to forward all they had on hand to Ottawa as they 
had been issued in error. 

The cards were identical in every respect with the regular ones, except 
for the peculiarity, and therefore call for no further description than has 
already been given them. 

In the Philatelic Monthly for March, 1887, is noted a change in the 
stamp on the single post card, which otherwise remained as before. The 
new stamp has the folia- 
tions around the numerals 
and is identical with Type 3 
of the wrapper stamps, al- 
ready described, and which 
it preceded, in fact, by two or three months. As was to be expected, the reply 
card followed with the same change in the stamps, but no particular notice 
seems to have been taken of it in the contemporary magazines. The article 
in the Dominion Philatelist records it as having appeared in 1887 in "black" 
and in 1888 in "dark green", but the only chronicles that seem to have noted 
it were the Philatelic World for January, 1888, which says merely that 




THE ADDRESS TO BE WRITTEM ON THIS SIDE. 



•Monthly Journal, IV: 171. 

•Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, VI: 216. 



266 



CA.NADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 



"the stamp on the reply paid card has been slightly altered," and the Ameri- 
can Journal of Philately for February, 1888, which says a new reply card 
in "gray on buff" has just been issued. The iaformation is added that the 
inscription "Postage" had been changed to "Postcard", but inasmuch as this 
was a hoax which apparently started with Le Timhre-Poste in the fall of 1887^ 
and went the rounds of the philatelic press, the value of the rest of the informa- 
tion is considerably lessened in conseqtience and we shall therefore take the dates 
as given in the Dominion Philatelist, which seem in the main to be correct. 
The wrapper stamp of 1875, with wavy line inside the oval, illustrated by 
Le Timhre-Poste as appearing on the cards in May, 1888, was never employed. 
It was probably confounded with the third type. 

The next change in the cards was likewise due to a new variety in the 
stamp, which once more lost its foliations and had only a quatrefoil ornament 
beneath the numerals, as 



tallAeOflgSSJO BE^WUITTEN ON THIS SIDE. 




described for Type 4 of 
the wrappers, which it 
again preceded by a couple 
of months. The new card 
was apparently first noted in the Canadian Philatelist^ as having been issued 
at London, Ont., on the Yth December, 1891. This of course may not have been 
its earliest date of issue but is doubtless not far from it. The normal color 
of the impression is a dull ultramarine, but the Dominion Philatelist chron- 
icled it in January, 1892, in a "very light skim milk shade of blue", which 
may be listed as a very pale ultramarine. 

The reply card in the new type is again an uncertainity. Le Timhre- 
Poste for June, 1892, chronicled it in hlue, which it never appeared in. The 
Philatelic Monthly for July, 1892, noted that the reply card had appeared 
in the latest type, but gave no color; probably the item was borrowed from 
the French Journal without credit. Meanwhile the Dominion Philatelist 
for June, 1892, merely mentions that "the reply cards of Canada are now 
appearing on a glazed thin card; design same as before," which would indi- 
cate no change from the current type 3. In December, 1892, however, the 
Philatelic Journal of America reported that it had received from Toronto 
"one of the new Canadian reply cards. The message card bears a stamp the 
same type as that of the current 1 cent postal card, but on the reply card the 



'Le Tfmbre-Poste, XXV: 94. 
'Canadian Philatelist, I: 49. 



THE POST CARDS 257 

stamp is of the old type. Perhaps this is an error as the former double card 
had the same die on both." It may have been an error but it troubled no one 
but the philatelist. The Monthly Journal for 31st January, 1893, also notes 
the receipt of a similar copy from Mr. D. A. King. The account says: — 
"The specimen was found in a packet of reply-paid cards, the remainder of 
which had the stamp of the now obsolete type upon both halves." It would 
seem that the end of 1892 was therefore about the time of the "semi-appear- 
ance" of the stamp of type 4 upon the reply cards; nor does it appear that 
the double card with stamp of type 4 on both halves was issued before the 
"half-breed" card, as the latter continued to be used for nearly two years, 
the card with type 4 alone not being definitely chronicled until the issue of 
30th November, 1894, of the Monthly Journal. 

The next change recorded was the issue of a large sized card for busi- 
ness purposes, which took place, according to the American Journal of Phil- 
ately,^ on the 17th February, 1893, in company with the two high value 
postage stamps and the letter card. The new card was of the usual light buff 
stock and measured 6x3% inches (152 x 92 mm.). The design was the 
same as for the ordinary card, the stamp being of the wrapper type 4 but at 
a slightly greater distance from the end of the banderole — 4 mm. in the small 
card and 12 mm. in the large card. The impression was in black. This new 
card was designated as ISTo. 1, and the ordinary small card became known as 
No. 2. The small sized card, 5x3 inches, soon followed the large one in 
the color of its impression, appearing in a very dark slate that was almost a 
black and being first chronicled in the Monthly Journal for 31st July, 1893. 

In the Postmaster General's Keport for 1893 we find the following: — 
"The introduction of the large size post card has not met with the success 
which was anticipated, and it has been found expedient in Canada, as in the 
United States, where the experiment has also been tried, to return to the 
former practice, and for the future to have only one size which will be some- 
what smaller than the large card and a little larger than that first issued." 
As the stamp accounts kept the number of large sized cards separate from 
the small sized, we are able to give the amount received from the manufac- 
turer, which was 5,396,000. The number issued is given as 4,983,900, but 
nothing is said about the disposition of the remaining 412,100., 

The new medium sized card, which took the place of both the large and 
the small sized cards, was apparently issued about February, 1894, as it was 



■American Journal of Philatelyi 2nd Series, VI: 102. 



258 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

chronicled in the Monthly Journal for 31st March, 1894. The new card 
measured 5% x 3% inches (140 x 85 mm.) and the stock was of a, lighter 
tone than before — almost a cream. The impression was in black and the dis- 
tance between the banderole and the stamp was changed to 8 mm. 

Whether issued especially for advertising purposes or not, this new card 
appeared on a heavier stock of rough surface and straw color early in 1896, 
being chronicled in MekeeVs Weekly Stamp News for 30th April, 1896, as 
on a "thin card board." 

In its issue for 30th May, 1896, the Monthly Journal chronicles the re- 
ceipt of the reply card in black on a very smooth buff card. This indicates 
that the better grade of stock first used for the medium sized single card was 
being employed for the reply card, and that the latter was being printed in 
the dead black ink used for the medium card instead of the dark slate color 
previously employed. 

It may be of interest to note here that on the 1st January, 1895, regu- 
lations went into force in Canada providing for the admission to the mails 
of advertising cards with a 1 cent stamp attached. This was very likely due 
to the failure of the Department's large sized card which was intended to fill 
such a want. As a sort of "rider" upon the circular dealing with the special 
delivery service and stamps, issued by the Department on Yth June, 1898, 
there is a paragraph headed: — 

PKIVATE POST CARDS. 
Postmasters are informed that, as regards Private Post Cards 
posted in Canada addressed to places in Canada, the words "Private 
Post Card" may either be placed thereon or omitted according to the 
option of the sender. Private Post Cards addressed to other countries 
must, however, in every case bear on the address side the words "Pri- 
vate Post Card." 

It is understood, however, that only in the domestic mails were private 
cards allowed to pass at the usual post card rate. If addressed to a foreign 
country a private card, if in writing, would be taxed at letter rates. In the 
Weekly Philatelic Era for 19th November, 1898, however, it is announced 
that the Postmaster General had issued an order admitting private mailing 
cards into the foreign mails provided the size conformed to that of the official 
post cards. 

The next official card that we have to consider is a new Postal Union 
card which made its appearance suddenly in the latter part of 1896. This is 
one of the most striking cards that Canada has produced, being beautifully 




THE POST CAEDS 269 

engraved on steel and printed in a brilliant orange red. There is no frame, 

such as bordered the post CARD jAd CARTE POSTAU: 
previous 2 cent card, univerbal postal union J^^^ union pdstale universelle 
and the stamp in the CANADA. 

THE ADDRESS ONLY TO BE WRITTEN ON THIS SIDE. 

upper right corner °°''^ rssehve a i: aoresse 

much resembles in size and design the large 2 cent adhesive of the 1868 issue, 
except that the head of the Queen is turned to the left. The inscriptions follow 
out, in a way, the general style of British Colonial Postal Union cards, a small 
reproduction of the British arms with supporters occupying the center at the 
top. The arrangement will be seen from the illustration. 

The card is approximately 5% x 3% inches (130 x 80 mm.) in size and 
printed on a very light buff stock. A variety in shade occurs, of some degree of 
rarity, printed in carmine. The card was first chronicled in the American 
Journal of Philately for 1st !N"ovember, 1896, and was the last "new issue" 
put forth by the British American Bank ISTote Co. before its long contract 
was closed. The card was noted in the Postmaster General's Eeport for 1897 
as follows: — "During the year a Universal Postal Union Card, conforming 
more closely to the regulations of the Union was introduced, thus superseding 
the old card." The new dimensions of the card, the removal of the frame, 
and the completing of the inscriptions in both English and French were among 
these requirements. 

The American Bank Note Co., as we all know, began its work for the 
Canadian Government by the production of the Jubilee Issue. As will be 
seen by reference to the prospectus of this series already given,^" there 
was included a special post card of 1 cent to the number of 7 millions. These 
were delivered and all issued with the exception of 3000 on hand as shown 
by the stamp accounts in 1903. They do not appear in the 1904 accounts, so 
it is not known what became of them. 

The cards were issued vdth the Jubilee stamps on the 19th Jime, 
1897.^^ They were the size of the ordinary 1 cent cards and on the same 
quality of stock. The .^^jSHk-^ 

1- ^ ^ — M> ;;;;i ^ ^ ^ 

hesive of the Jubilee the address to be written on this smt 

issue, but engraved for 



stamp is a reproduc- 
tion of the 1 cent ad- 




"See page 148. 
"Ibid. 



260 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

typographic printing. "Canada Post Card" is enclosed in a fancy frame 
at the left and the usual instructions are found beneath it. 

A curious variety of this card was noted in the Metropolitan Philatelist 
for August, 1897, as follows: — "We have seen the new jubilee card bearing 
the stamp only. This is an error caused by the design being in two pieces 
and in this case the inscription has dropped out." 

The regular post cards produced by the new contractors did not make 
their appearance until several months after the first adhesives of the new 
type were out. The two cent card was the first issued, having been reported 
by the Canadian correspondent of the WeeMy Philatelic Era under date of 
4th December, 1897, as just out. It was a copy of the 2 cent card of 1896 
in every respect except the stamp, which was naturally of the new maple leaf 
type, and the color was a deeper shade of orange red. 

The 1 cent card does not appear to have been chronicled until the 
number for 1st February, 1898, of the American Journal of Philately, so 
that it doubtless appeared early in January or possibly the latter part of 
December, 1897, following closely the 3 cent card. It was also of the usual 
size and same stock as before and, like the Jubilee card, had a copy of the 
1 cent adhesive printed in the comer. This was of the maple leaf type, 
engraved for typographic printing and therefore of rather coarser appear- 
ance than its prototype. The inscriptions were simply CAI^ADA POST 
CARD in plain Gothic letters, with the usual line of instructions beneath, all 
printed in black; while the stamp was printed in dark green. 

Early in December, 1897, the following news item appeared in the 
Canadian daily press: — 



Postmaster-General Mulook has formulated a scheme with, respect 
to postal cards which he has been thinking over for some time and 
which he has now got so far into shape as to be ready for publication. 
It is to remove the restriction which has hitherto existed with respect 
to using the address side of the card for any purpose other than the ad- 
dress. It is intended to allow pictures, ads., etc., on the face of the 
card so long as there is room for the address. This will enable a busi- 
ness man to advertise his business and will no doubt be appreciated 
by both the advertiser and the public. It is intended the cards shall 
be printed in sheets instead of singly for the benefit of printers and 
lithographers. 



THE POST CARDS 261 

The following was the official announcement: — 

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC. 

Regulations under which designs, illustrations, portraits, sketches, 
or other forms of advertisement may be engraved, lithographed, printed, 
etc., on the "address" side of the one-cent Post-Card. 

1. A clear space of, at least, a quarter of an inch shall be left 
along each of the four sides of the postage stamp. 

3. There shall be reserved for the address a clear space at the 
lower right hand corner on the "address" side of the card immediately 
below the words "The space below is reserved for address only," such 
space so reserved for the address being, at least, 3i/4 inches long by II/2 
inches wide. 

N. B. It is in the interest of both the Department and those avail- 
ing themselves of the privilege hereby granted that the spaces in ques- 
tion should be unconditionally reserved for the purposes intended. If 
any printing, engraving, or other matter appears on the spaces thus 
reserved, the Post-Cards cannot be permitted to pass through the 
mails. 

Post-Cards may be ordered in sheets of sixteen or less, as desired, 
or singly; orders therefor, specifying quantity of cards required and 
number to the sheet, to be given in writing to the nearest Postmaster. 
PosT-OrpiCE Department, Canada. 
Ottawa, 9th December, 1897. 

These "advertisement" cards were issued by the Post Office Department 
singly, or printed in sheets of eight or sixteen. The single cards came in 
packages of 100 like the ordinary cards; the eight card sheets were made up 
in packages of 125 sheets, or 1000 cards all told; and the sixteen card sheets 
also in packages of 125 sheets, or 2000 cards all told. The reason for this 
is seen in the requirement that orders for these cards should be for not less 
than 1000. It is seen from the stamp accounts that the eight card sheets 
have proven the most popular, about six times as many sheets of this size as 
of the larger size having been issued in 1910, while the number of cards 
represented was five times the number of single cards issued. 

The stock is the same as used for the ordinary cards and the size of the 
single card is the same, while the arrangement on the sheets and the regu- 
lations require that they be cut up into cards of the proper size. The 
stamp is impressed in the right hand upper comer and is the same as for the 
ordinary card but printed in carmine. The only other thing on the card as 
issued is the directions, printed in small black Gothic capitals : — THE SPACE 
BELOW IS RESERVED FOR ADDRESS ONLY. This is placed about 



262 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

midway between the top and bottom of the card and about as far to the right 
as it will go. 

The last of the Queen's head cards were chronicled in the Monthly 
Journal for 30th July, 1898. These were the reply card and the Postal Union 
card in a change of color. The reply card was of the usual size, 5x3 inches, 
and had printed inscriptions in black like the single card, save that the word 
REPLY is placed between the two lines on the card for answer. The stamp 
is from the same die as the single card but printed in black instead of green. 
The stock is the usual pale buff. 

The same paper for 31st March, 1899, notes an error of impression 
in this card, the reply portion being printed on the back of the message card, 
so that the second card has no impression at all upon it. 

The Postal Union card was identical with the one it superseded, except 
that it was printed in deep blue, and the card is of a cream tint rather than a 
buff. The cause of the sudden change in color is not known. 

The King's head cards soon followed the adhesives. Meheel's Weekly 
Stamp News reported the 1 cent in its issue for 5th September, 1903. It 
needs no further description than to say it is a counterpart of the preceding 
Queen's Head card, the stamp as before being a copy of the adhesive engraved 
for typographic work. The impression is in green for the stamp and 
black for the inscriptions. 

The advertising card or "Business Post-Card" was the next to appear, 
having been issued early in December, 1903. Again it is in every way sim- 
ilar to its predecessor save that the impression of the stamp is lighter — rather 
a pink than a carmine. 

Finally, in its issue for 20th February, 1904, MeTceeVs Weekly Stamp 
News reports the issue of the reply card in its usual form and the Postal 
Union card, identical with the former save for the stamp, which is of course 
line engraved on this card. The issue of cards in 1910 comprised over 
26 millions of the 1 cent, 430,000 of the reply cards and 70,000 of the Postal 
Union cards. 



CHAPTER XXIV 



CANADA 

LETTER CARD 




THE LETTER CARDS 

THE Postmaster General's Eeport for 1892 contained the following 
announcement: — "Letter cards, similar to those in use in Great Brit- 
ain, Austria, and other European coimtries, are being prepared, and 
will be issued to the public in a short time." Only one value was issued, the 
3 cents, and it appeared in company with the 20 and 50 cent adhesives and 
large sized post card on the 17th February, 1893. Artistically it is a pretty 
poor production, the stamp being apparently a rough wood-cut imitation of 
the stock type used 
by Messrs. De La 
Eue & Co. at that 
time for British Co- 
lonial stamps. The 
profile of the Queen 
is on a solid ground 
within an octagonal 
frame, and the la- 
bels at top and bot- 
tom contain the 
words POSTAGE "" 
and THKEE 
CENTS respectively. At the left of the stamp, in two lines, is CAISTADA — 
LETTEE CARD, the first being in Gothic, the second in Roman capitals. 
The entire impression is in carmine. The size of the card, opened out, is 
5% X 7 inches (138 x 175 mm.), the longer dimension being reduced one 
half by folding of course. The perforation gauges 12 and is in Eorm A of 
Senf's catalogue (both lines crossing at the corner intersections). The mar- 
gin outside the perforations measures % inch (10 mm.) and is gummed only 
around the third face of the folded card. The stock is of fair quality and of 
a light greenish-blue tint. 

The Postmaster General's Eeport for 1894 says that "so far the demand 



264 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

for these letter cards has not equalled the expectations of the Department." 
On looking at the stamp accounts we find that from their date of issue to the 
30th June, 1893, 265,350 of the letter cards were distributed ; but during the 
whole of the next fiscal year but 104,650 were issued and for the third year 
the amount had dropped to 77,750. The Postmaster General's plaint was 
therefore justified. 

It is perhaps best to record here a curious semi-o£Scial issue of what might 
be termed a "letter sheet" for the use of the Canadian Pacific Railway. It 
was first noted in the Monthly Journal for 31st January, 1894, as "a sheet 
stamped with the current 1 cent wrapper die, upon which is printed the monthly 
statement of receipts and expenditure for transmission to shareholders." Perhaps 
for the reason that the wrapper stamp was impressed upon it, this variety has 
been listed under the newspaper wrappers, but such it is not. The circular was 
printed upon a stout gray-blue paper, and had the wrappei: stamp of type 4 im- 
pressed upon the back in black. Above the stamp appears the inscription 
"Printed Matter Only," while in the lower left corner of the address side of the 
folded sheet are two lines reading: — 

Canadian Pacific Ey. 

Monthly Statement of Earnings and Expenses. 

Three guide lines are printed for the address, as upon the old post cards. 
The sheet must have been issued in 1893 subsequent to the appearance of the 
large post card with the stamp of type 4 in black. It is stated to have been 
issued as an experiment and was in use but a short time. A second variety 
is known, however, on white laid paper, which was probably issued subsequently 
to the blue variety, but at what date is not known. Both sheets are rare so 
the experiment evidently was not carried on for long. 

Eeturning to the regular letter cards we find again in the Postmaster 
Gteneral's Report for 1895 that "arrangements have been made for the issue 
of letter cards of the denominations of 1, 2 and 3c. for the use of banks in 
transmitting certain notices to their customers, as well as for ordinary letters 
within those postal limits to which their denominations respectively apply." 
The next year's Report explains their use a little more fully : — 

During the year the 1 and 2 cent letter cards were introduced — 
the former to serve the purpose of the "drop letter" (i. e., a letter 
posted at, and delivered from, the same office) in places vchere there is 
no free delivery by letter carrier ; the latter to meet a similar object in 



THE LETTER CARDS 265 

cities where there is such a delivery. Already this extension of postal 
facilities appears to be appreciated— more especially by banks, which 
largely use these cards in transmitting notices to their customers. 

The 2 cent letter card is chronicled in the Monthly Journal for 31st Oc- 
tober, 1895, and the 1 cent in the same paper for the 30th N'ovember, 1895. 
Both were doubtless issued the early part of October. They conformed in all 
respects to the 3 cent letter card issued two years and a half previously, except 
for the stamp. If the 3 cent was wretched, the two new ones were hideous. 
They were not only more poorly engraved, which was needless, but the label 
at the bottom was enlarged by extending it at either side. The 1 cent was 
printed in black and the 2 cent in green — inscription and stamp in the same 
color in each case. 

In 1903 the WeeUy Philatelic Era published the following r^ — 

A correspondent in Vermont sends Mr. Lohmeyer a Ic. letter card 
of the first issue, which he discovered in a Canadian post oifice recent- 
ly, it being the only copy there and damaged at that, the perforated 
margin on the right hand side being torn ofE. In the lower left cor- 
ner the bottom perforation runs to the left side perforation only, in- 
stead of crossing it, as on all Canadian letter cards previously seen. 

This is the style of perforation designated as C in Senf's catalogue — in 
which the horizontal line does not project beyond the vertical lines at either 
side. We have seen a perfect copy of the above described 1 cent letter card, 
which seems to be unlisted; but the 3 cent card with this perforation, listed 
and priced in Senf, we have not ourselves seen. It is possible that if two of 
these cards exist with perforation 0, the third one — the 2 cent — ^will some day 
come to light. 

The change in the stamp contractors in 1897 and the use of a new design 
naturally brought changes in the letter cards as well as the other postal requi- 
sites. The new 2 cent letter card was chronicled in the Monthly Journal for 
31st January, 1898, so it is safe to assume that it appeared in December, 1897. 
The 1 cent and 3 cents are chronicled in the same paper for 28th February, 
1898, and must therefore have been issued as early as January, 1898. The 
new letter cards were in all respects the counterparts of the previous ones save 
the stamp, which was now the same as that used for the new post cards and 
wrappers, viz., a copy of the "maple leaf" Queen's head type engraved for 

•Weekly Phllateirc Era, XVH: 149. 



266 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

typographic work. These three letter cards are known only with the per- 
foration A. 

The reduction in domestic postage to the 2 cent rate on the 1st January, 
1899, rendered the 3 cent letter cards useless as weU as the envelopes of like 
denomiaation. We have already recounted the story of the surcharged en- 
velopes and the two types of the handstamp which were used in doing the 
work.^ SuiSce it to say, therefore, that we have but to add the letter cards to 
the same story to make it complete. Both the 3 cent letter cards of 1893 and 
1898 were turned in for surcharging purposes, and the former not only re- 
ceived both types of the rubber hand-stamped surcharge in the usual blue-black 
or gray-black color, but is found also with the second and common type in a 
violet color. ^ The surcharging was begun and the letter cards so treated were 
issued as early as February, 1899. The perforation, so far as known, is always 
A. 

In its issue for 27th January, 1900, the Weekly Philatelic Era notes the 
receipt of the 1 cent and 2 cent letter cards of the maple leaf type in new 
colors, conforming with the requirements of the Postal Union, the one cent in 
green instead of black and the 2 cent in carmine instead of green. In aU 
other respects these letter cards conformed to their predecessors. They were 
doubtless issued early in January, 1900. 

The letter cards had been used in considerable quantities each year, par- 
ticularly after 1895, when the 1 cent and 2 cent values were added to the 
previous 3 cent; but in 1902 they were withdrawn without any particular 
reason having been given that we have been able to discover. The stamp ac- 
counts for the Eeport of 1902 give the numbers issued in that fiscal year as 
195,100 for the 1 cent and 352,000 for the 2 cent. The only item of informa- 
tion we have to quote concerning their demise is confined to the dates: the 
last issue of the 1 cent letter card is recorded as the 4th April, 1902, and of 
the 2 cent letter card as the 28th June, 1902. 

2See page 240. 

•Monthly Journal, JX: 176. 



CHAPTER XXV 

OFFICIAL STATIONERY 

OUTSIDE of the Dead Letter Office seals the Oanadian Govermnent 
has issued no official adhesive stamps. An attempt, however, to foist 
a series of official stationery upon an unsuspecting philatelic public 
was made by one Henry Hechler, a stamp collector and dealer, who thought 
he saw his opportunity in the Indian troubles which broke out in the Oanadian 
Northwest in 1884-5. Mr. Hechler belonged to the Militia and accompanied 
the troops that were sent to quell the disturbance. He took it upon himself 
to have a quantity of envelopes, post cards and wrappers surcharged OFFI- 
CIAL or SERVICE and evidently expected they would be accepted without 
question. 

The first news of these surcharges seems to have come, very strangely, 
from Germany, The Philatelic Record for December, 1884,^ says: — 

Der Philatelist chronicles, on the faith of a correspondent, Herr 
Von Jerzabek, of Temesvar, a set of the adhesives with Queen's head 

, two envelopes, and the 1 cent post card, all surcharged in 

black, with the word OFFICIAL. It is alleged that they were pre- 
pared and issued in 1877, but after a short time were called in again. 
The surcharges are in some cases oblique, and in others perpendicular. 
It is at least strange that, considering our intercourse with Canada, 
our first knowledge of the issue of official stamps so far back as 1877 
should reach us from Temesvar, wherever that may be. 

The Secretary of the Philatelic Society, London, whose official journal 
the Philatelic Record then was, wrote direct to the Oanadian Government to 
inquire into the authenticity of these so-called official issues, and received 
the following reply :^ — 

POST OFFICE DEPAHTMENT, CANADA. 

OTTAWA, 18th May, 1885. 
Sib: — I am directed by the Postmaster-General to acknowledge 
receipt of your letter of the 29th ult., inquiring whether postage 

'Philatelic Record, YI: 210. 
sibld.. Vn: 84. 



268 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

stamps bearing the word "Official" on their face are in circulation in 
the Dominion of Canada, and beg, in reply, to say that no such stamp, 
card, newspaper wrapper, or envelope has ever been issued by this de- 
partment. 

I am, sir, your obedient servant, 

{Signed) Wm. White, Secretary. 

This would ordinarily seem to liave been enough of a disclaimer, but 
like Banquo's ghost the official stationery would not down, though the stamps 
seem to have been lost sight of. Not only were the envelopes of 1 cent and 
3 cents of the 1877 issue, but the newspaper wrappers of 1875 and 1882, and 
the post card of 1882, surcharged across the stamp with the word "OFFI- 
CIAL" or "Service" in black, blue or red ink, but sometimes the arms of 
Great Britain were added at the left of the stamp, and also, in the lower 

left comer, the words "63ED. EIFLES" ^j, ^EADQUAKTEKS, ^ 

63RD. EIFLES. J 

The lack of uniformity, or rather attempt at variety, was enough in it- 
self to condemn the articles. Yet in the American Philatelist for June, 1888, 
we iind an attempted defence of them. We quote:* — 

Henry Hechler writes us as follows : "When the Indian outbreak 
in the Northwest occurred in 1885, and some of the militia of the vari- 
ous provinces were hurriedly ordered out for active service, stringent 
measures for notifying the men calling for prompt attention had to 
be adopted. To distinguish them from ordinary mail matter by show- 
ing their official character they were stamped across the "adhesive" 
with the word Service and at the lower left corner 0. [if.] M. S. only. 
Some were thus printed in black, others in blue, and yet others in red. 
Xhey served for that purpose only, until an Act of Parliament was 
passed to carry all military mail matter on active service free." 

Mr. Hechler was captain of one of the companies of the Halifax 
Battalion, and, therefore, in a position to obtain definite information. 

In other words Mr. Hechler knew aU about these "official" stamps and 
the Postmaster-General and his secretary, as we have seen, knew absolutely 
nothiag about them! This seems to tell its own story. In fact another letter 
from the Post Office Department, dated 13th April, 1888, and published in 
this same volume of the American Philatelist* reiterates the denials of the 
previous letter which we have already quoted. The Philatelic Record re- 

sAmerlcan Philatelist, II: 207. 
•ibid., n: 173. 



OFFICIAL STATIONERY 269 

ceived later,5 from the Postmaster of Halifax, the information that Mr. 
Hechler had had this stationery surcharged and that it was neither issued nor 
recognized by the Government of Canada. The Record says:— "It was a 
smart notion of Mr. Hechler to turn his military duties into the direction of 
his business as a stamp dealer." Mr. Hechler "came back" at this in the col- 
umns of the Philatelic Journal of America^ with the statement that "the Post 
Office Inspector here referred the question to headquarters, and, in reply, 
was instructed to allow such matter to pass through the mails without ques- 
tion or delay." The communication was enclosed in one of the envelopes in 
question, but the Editor's remarks on this are conclusive: — 

The surcharging has not impaired the postal value of the envelope 
and they are permitted to pass through the Canadian mails, but as to 
their value from a philatelic standpoint it is quite another thing. 

The printing in this case is of no more importance than any notice 
or inscription that might be placed on an envelope bearing a regular 
government stamp that in itself is suflBcient to pay the postage. 

In fact the above writer admits that the surcharge had no other 
value than to enable the recipient to distinguish the letter from his 
other mail. They are of no philatelic value whatever. 

It was a private speculation, pure and simple, in spite of any elaims of 
"recognition", and of the fact that copies passed the post. The only other 
quotation to make in the case is from Shakespeare — Exeunt. 

We now come to an actual official issue in the shape of a newspaper wrapper. 
It seems to have been first noted in Le Timhre-Poste for Pebruary, 1883 but 
is stated to have been issued in 1879. The stamp is of the 1875 issue (type 
1) and at its left is printed in blue the following: — 

Inland Revenue, Canada. 

WEIGHTS & MEASUEES SERVICE. 

Official Circular. 
^ ____^ 




Tbis band is to be nsed On Her Majesty'! Service only and must have no writing 
tbereon t>nt tbe name and address. 



•^Phllatefic Record, XI: 44. 

•Philatelic Journal of America, V: 202. 



270 



CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 



Above the English inscription is its counterpart in French. The wrap- 
per itself is of a cream tone and measures 280 x 132 mm. 

The history of this wrapper does not seem to be known, save that it is 
accredited to be what it purports to be. It is quite rare, and as far as we 
have been able to find out is not known used, No mention is made of it in 
the Department reports, but it happens that the stamp accounts for 18Y9, the 
year of its supposed issue, give only 8,000 wrappers as received from the 
manufacturers. None had been received the two years previously, as there 
were plenty on hand, and 192,000 were received the next year. It would thus 
appear, on the face of it, that this small lot of 8,000 was quite probably the 
order of the Inland Revenue wrappers. If so, it was probably the only lot 
ever received and though they may have been used, the chances seem somewhat 
against any such number having actually been issued. 

One other official issue comes in the form of a Customs' post card no- 
tice. It was first chronicled in the American Philatelist for 10th May, 1888, 
as having been issued in connection with the parcel post system just then in- 
augurated with the United States. Postmasters received instructions to for- 
ward these cards free through the mails, although there was no stamp or no- 
tice on the address side. It is of manila card, 130 x 88 mm., blank on one 
side and having printed on the other : — 



Cusfoms Postal Package OflBce. 



.188 



There has arrived at this offlce hy mail from the United States, 
addressed to you as over, the following dutiable package, which will 
6e delivered or forwarded to you on the receipt of the duty payable 
and the return of this card. 



NO. OP 

MANIFEST. 



NO. OF 
PACKAGE. 



DESOKIPTION. 



DUTY 
PAYABLE. 



cts. 



E. 14. 



. Collector. 



In its September, 1888, number the Halifax Philatelist notes that the 
blank address side has been supplied with three dotted lines for the address, and 



OFFICIAL STATIONEKY 271 

inscriptions reading, in the upper left corner, "Advice Note", and in the upper 
right comer, "Free, ly order of the Post Master Oeneral." 

One further official variety is somewhat unusual. The American Phila- 
telist for September, 1889,'' says: — 

"We are indebted to Donald A. King for information concerning 

what is certainly a novelty in the postal line, namely, an unpaid letter stamped 
envelope. When a letter is returned from the dead-letter office the sender is 
required to pay the regular postage and these envelopes have been prepared of 
various values. The only one we have seen is the 3 cent value. It is about 
175 X 120 mm., and is made of manila paper. In the place for the stamp is 
a figure 3 about 23 mm. high. In the left hand upper corner EETUElSrED 
DEAD LETTEE; in the lower comer— ' 

POST OEEICE DEPARTMENT, CANADA, 
DEAD LETTER OEEICE. 

On the reverse. The enclosed Dead Letter is returned by order of the 
Postmaster-General for the reasons thereon assigned. The following values 
are said to exist: 



3 cents, 


black 


on manila, 


6 " 


)} 


" ? 


9 " 


5J 


" ? 


12 " 


55 


" ? 


18 " 


55 


» ? 



We have no further information concerning them. 



'American Phllaterist, HI: 350. 



CHAPTER XXVI 

PRECANCELLATIONS AND PERMITS 

As a matter of record and without any attempt at lists of varieties, 
which would prove futile, we deem it interesting and important to 
give such information as is at hand concerning the precancellation 
of stamps for use on large quantities of identical mail matter, and of the more 
recent substitute for the precancelled stamp which is known as the "permit". 
Both ideas were of course borrowed from the United States, which was the 
originator of this form of labor saving expedient. 

The London Philatelist for April, 1892, quoted a letter from Mr. L. 
Gibb of Montreal which enclosed "a specimen used on the letter, but vsdth the 
obliteration on the stamp only, and also portions of sheets gummed and un- 
severed, but neatly postmarked with horizontal wavy lines." Mr. Gibb 
wrote :^ — 

Sometime back I received the enclosed stamp paying tlie postage 
on an open envelope containing a circular from Toronto ; it has not 
been moved from its original place, and one could see it bad not been 
obliterated on the envelope. After some little trouble I found the P. O. 
v?ould, upon receiving whole sheets of stamps, cancel them, and then 
hand them back to any known firm to be placed on letters in quantity, 
these letters are then taken to a private part of the of&ce in bxdk, and 
are allowed to pass through the post without further marking. 

The system in the United States made use of a cancellation giving the 
town and state name, printed on the sheets by a press ; but the Canadian pre- 
cancellation was of simpler form, being of two fairly heavy horizontal lines 
with a wavy line between. No name occurs in the cancellation and it was 
applied with a roller, thus making a universal style which is more convenient 
in application than the type set form, varying for every post office. 

Further information in regard to this cancellation is found in Mekeel's 
Weekly Stamp News^ where we read: — "The Canadian one-cent stamp can- 

'London Philatelist, I: 100. 

'Mekeel'c Weekly Stamp News, XIII: 388. 



PKECANCELLATIONS AND PEEMITS 273 

celled on circulars is obliterated by a revolving self-inking canceler and is 
issued for use on the Sth class matter, i. e. parcels, etc., to post offices with an 
annual revenue of $3000 and over." 

In 1904 precancelled stamps began to appear with the town name and 
that of the province, separated by two horizontal bars. In answer to an in- 
quiry concerning them the Department replied as follows :^ — 

The main conditions governing the case are the quantities required 
for a given mailing and the limitation of the use of precancelled stamps 
to the particular kind or class of mail matter for which they have 
been issued. The minimum quantity in each such case is 25,000 piece's 
As requisitions for precancelled stamps necessarily take long- 
er to fill than the ordinary, postmasters are expected to send requi- 
sitions for them to the Department a few days in advance of actual 
needs. 

It is evident that the latter form of printed precancellation was the only 
one intended to be employed by the Department, and that the earlier form of 
impression from the roller canceller was unauthorized, for the following cir- 
cular was issued to make matters plain for postmasters :* — 

POST OFFICE DEPAETMENT, CANADA. 

OTTAWA, 16th September, 1904. 

PEE-CANCELLATION OF POSTAGE STAMPS. 

The use of pre-cancelled stamps (or stamps cancelled before act- 
ually used for payment of postage) is permitted in some of the larger 
cities under very stringent regulations and only when required for 
any one mailing in quantities of not less than 25,000 stamps, but post- 
age stamps cancelled with the small roller canceller have been ob- 
served on letters and other matter passing in the mails, and Postmas- 
ters are accordingly instructed that UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES are 
they permitted to precancel postage stamps. The roller canceller is re- 
served for the cancellation of postage stamps on Second, Third and 
Fourth Class Matter and must be used only on stamps after being 
ACTUALLY AFFIXED to such matter. 

ANY POSTMASTER FOUND TO BE PRECANCELLING STAMPS 
IN ANY WAY OR SELLING STAMPS PRE-CANCELLED WITHOUT 
AUTHORITY WILL BE HELD RESPONSIBLE FOE THE FULL 
VALUE OP SUCH CANCELLED STAMPS. 

It is proper to explain that the authorized pre-cancelled stamps are 
struck with a special die bearing the name of the mailing office and are 



>Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, XVIII: 131. 
*lbld., XVra: 322. 



274 CAJTADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

sold only to the largest mailing concerns under conditions which it 
is considered preclude any danger of such stamps being used a second 
time for postage. Such conditions would not attend the use of stamps 
pre-cancelled with the ordinary roller stamp, and in consequence the 
use of the roller stamps for such a purpose is strictly forbidden, under 
the penalty above mentioned. 

Requisitions for pre-cancelled stamps must be made direct to the 
Department (Stamp Branch). No request for pre-cancelled stamps 
can be considered where the number of pieces to be prepaid thereby is 
less than 25,000. 

E. M. COULTER, 

Deputy Postmaster General. 

N^ot long afterward the bars were lowered somewhat on the size of the 
mailing required for the use of precancelled stamps, as the following circular 
shows :" — 

POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT, CANADA. 

OTTAWA, 29th October, 1904. 
PRECANCELLED STAMPS. 
(Amending Departmental Circulars of 11th March and 16th Sep- 
tember.) 

It is desired that the use of precancelled stamps should be attended 
with every possible degree of precaution and security and for that pur- 
pose only requisitions for precancelled stamps to cover mailings of 
25,000 pieces at a time have been allowed. It is considered, however, 
in the light of experience, that this limit is somewhat high, and in fu- 
ture, therefore, postmasters will be allowed to make requisition for 
precancelled stamps for mailings of 10,000 pieces at a time. 

E. M. COULTER, 

Deputy Postmaster General. 

The style of cancellation which is employed by the Department at Ottawa, 
where all the pre-cancelling is evidently done, is a three line one — the town 
name above and the province name below, separated by two parallel lines. It 
is applied in black ink. Evidently considerable mail is sent out under this 
method for the precancelled stamps are fairly common. One other variety 
comes from Montreal with "FOE-THIED-CLASS-MATTER-ONLY", (a 
line for a word) beneath MOJSTTREAL and separated from it by two thin 
parallel lines. 

The issuing of "Permits" was an outgrowth of the precancelled stamp 
system, it being in effect a stamped cover fulfilling the same purpose as a 

•Mekeel's Weekly Stamp News, XVIII: 402. 



PRECANCELLATIONS AND PERMITS 



275 



cover with, a precancelled adhesive affixed to it. The idea was again bor- 
rowed from the United States. The circular issued to postmasters will fully 
explain the methods adopted under this new plan:« — 

POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT, CANADA. 

OTTAWA, 2na February, 1903. 

PREPAYMENT OF THIRD-CLASS (PRINTED) MATTER IN CASH. 
The Postmaster General in order to facilitate the posting of printed 
matter mailed in considerable quantities addressed for delivery at post- 
offices within the Dominion of Canada, has decided that prepayment 
of postage on same may be effected in cash (instead of postage stamps) 
in conformity with the following 

REGULATIONS. 

1. Each lot of mail matter which is posted under this arrangement 
must be accompanied by a Permit, which has been obtained from the 
Postmaster of the ofEloe at which it is posted. The application must 
be made in writing on one of the forms provided for the purpose, in 
which shall be stated approximately the number of pieces it is intended 
to mail, and the postage on each piece at the rate of one cent per two 
ounces or fraction thereof. 

3. The articles posted must be of an uniform weight, and must be 
put up in such a way as to admit of their being readily counted. The 
weight and number must be verified beyond doubt. Circulars to be put 
up in packages of 50, 75 or 100, with addressed sides faced all one way. 
Catalogues must be tied up in neat bundles. 

3. Each article must have printed upon its wrapper or cover an 
impression of an official stamp, a fac-simile of which is here given. 







Authorized under Permit No. 



JUIVeOOV U3ING THIS STAMP WITHOUT AUTHOfllTV 
Wlkt. RENOER HIMSELF IIABIC TOPflOSECUTIOlt 

which shall be furnished by the Postmaster of the office of posting, 
mentioning the name of the office at which posted, and stating that 
the postage was prepaid in cash. 

4. The lowest amount which may be received in payment for mat- 
ter mailed under these regnlations is $35.00. 

5. Under these regulations payment may be made only by marked 



•Weekly Philatelic Era, xvni: 63. 



276 CANADIAI^ POSTAGE STAMPS 

cheque drawn in favour of the Postmaster of the office of posting for 
deposit to the credit of the Eeceiver General. The cheque must accom- 
pany the mail matter at the time it is posted. The cheque is to be 
drawn as follows: 

"Pay to the Postmaster of for deposit to credit of 

Receiver General." 

E. M. COULTEE. 

Deputy Postmaster General. 

Electrotypes of the "stamp" shown were furnished to all offices where 
there was a large output of the class of matter described, and the permit num- 
ber was printed in with the impression when the order under which it was 
issued was being struck off. The "stamp" is usually printed in black, but has 
been seen in dark blue. 

In the stamp account for the year ending 30th June, 1903, no returns 
were given for mailings under these "Permits", but in 1904 we find that 
"Postage Paid in Cash on 3d Class (Printed) Matter" is given as $53,970.47, 
while in 1910 it had risen to $256,468.20 — a quite respectable amount for the 
use of the "Permits". 



REFERENCE LIST 



PROVINCE OF CANADA 

1st. SEEIES. Engraved and printed by Messrs. Kawdon, Wright, Hatch & 
Edson, New York. Unperforated. 

1851. THIN GRAYISH LAID PAPER. 

April 23. 3 pence, deep red, red, vermilion. 

douMe strike, deep red, red, vermilion. 
May 15 (?) 6 pence, black violet, deep brovifn violet, slate. 

diagonal half used as 3d. 
June 15. 13 pence, black. 

STOUT WHITE LAID PAPER. 
3 pence, red. 
6 pence, dull purple. 
1851-7. GRAYISH WOVE PAPER, THIN TO STOUT. 

3 pence, deep red, red, vermilion. 

double strike, deep red, red, vermilion. 
6 pence, black brown, brownish black, greenish black, slate, slate violet, 

deep violet. 
13 pence, black. 

SOFT WHITE WOVE PAPER. 
3 pence, deep red, red. 

double strike, deep red, red. 
STOUT HARD WHITE WOVE PAPER. 
3 pence, deep red, red, vermilion. 
6 pence, deep violet, slate violet, brown violet. 

VERY THICK HARD PAPER. 
6 pence, slate violet. 

VERY THICK SOFT PAPER. 
6 pence, dull purple. 

diagonal half used as 3d. 

THIN SOFT RIBBED PAPER. 
3 pence, red. 

double strike, red. 

STOUT HARD RIBBED PAPER. 
3 pence, red. 

double strike, red. 
6 pence, black violet. 
1855. Jan. THIN WOVE PAPER. 

10 pence, deep blue, Priassian blue, 
wide impression, 
narrow impression, 
double strike. 



278 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

STOUT HARD WOVE PAPER. 

10 pence, deep blue, Prussian blue, 
wide impression. 

1857, June 2 (7) THIN WOVE PAPER. 

7% pence, dark yellow green. 
wide impression, 
narrow impression. 

STOUT HARD WOVE PAPER. 
TYz pence, dark yellow green. 
wide impression. 

1857, Aug. 1. THIN WOVE PAPER. 

% penny, deep rose. 

STOUT HARD WOVE PAPER. 
% penny, deep rose. 

THIN SOFT RIBBED PAPER. 
^ penny, deep rose. 

horizontal rihliing. 
vertical rilihing. 

Same as before, but perforated 12 by the American Bank Note Co, ( ?) 

1859, Jan. (?) STOUT WOVE PAPER. 

Ys penny, deep rose. 
3 pence, red. 

douMe strike. 

pero6 en seie 13, (unofficial). 
perforated 1-i, (unofficial). 
6 pence, black violet, slate violet, deep brown violet, black brown. 
THIN RIBBED PAPER 
% penny, deep rose (?) 
3 pence, red. 

double strike. 

2nd. SERIES. Engraved and printed by the American Bank iN'ote Co., 

New York. Perforated 12. Wove paper. 
1859, July 1. 

1 cent, dull red, rose red, rose carmine. 

imperforate, rose red. 

thick hard paper, rose red. 

riiied paper, dull red. 
5 cents, bright red, brick red, deep red. 

double strike, bright red, red, deep red. 

worn plate, red. 

imperforate, red. 

worn plate imperforate, red. 

ribbed paper, red, deep red. 

diagonal half used as 3%c., red. 
10 cents, bright red violet, dull red violet, deep red violet, deep violet, 

slate violet, brown violet, yellowish brown, brown, dark brown, 

black brown, gray brovyn. 

imperforate, red violet, violet. 

ribbed paper, deep red violet, brown violet, brovwi (light to 

dark) . 

diagonal half used as 5c., red violet, black brovyn. 



REFEEENCE LIST 279 

121^ cents, light yellow green, deep yellow green, green, blue green. 

imperforate, blue green. 

rihied paper, light yellow green. 
17 cents, deep blue, Prussian blue. 

imperforate, Prussian blue. 

rilled paper, Prussian blue. 
1864, Aug. 1. 

2 cents, rose red, dull red. 

imperforate, rose red,, dull red. 

rilled paper, rose red. 

DOMINION OF CANADA 

3rd. SERIES. Laege Stamps. Engraved and printed by the British American 
Bank Note Co., Montreal & Ottawa. Perforated 12, Wove paper. 

1868, April 1. 

% cent, gray black, black. 

horizontal pair, imperforate letween. 
very thin paper. 

1 cent, brown red, deep brown red. 

watermarked, brown red. 

laid paper, brown red, deep brown red. 

very thin paper, deep brown red. 

2 cents, pale yellow green, pale green, green, deep yellow green, deep 

blue green. 

watermarked, green. 

very thin paper, deep yellow green. 

3 cents, vermilion, bright red, deep red, brown red. 

watermarked, brown red, red. 
laid paper, vermilion, bright red. 
very thin paper, deep red. 
very thick paper, brown red. 
6 cents, pale brown, brown, deep brown, gray brown, pale yellow 

brown, deep yellow brown. 
watermarked, deep brown. 
very thin paper, deep brown. 
diagonal half used for 3c., deep brown. 
12 1^ cents, dull blue, deep blue, pale blue. 
watermarked, deep blue. 
very thin paper, dull blue. 
15 cents, mauve, deep mauve, lilac gray, gray violet, deep gray violet, 

blue gray, slate blue, greenish blue. 
watermarked, lilac gray, gray violet. 
thin laid paper, mauve. 
rilled paper, lilac gray. 
very thick paper, mauve, slate blue, purple. 
imperforate, brown violet. 

1869, Jan. 

1 cent, yellow, pale orange, orange yellow, orange. 
imperforate, yellow. 

1875, Oct. 1. 

5 cents, light olive gray, dark olive gray. 



280 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

4th SEKIES. Small Stamps. Engraved and printed by the British American 

Bank Note Company, Montreal & Ottawa. Perforated 12. Thin to 

thick wove paper. 
1870, Jan. (?) 

3 cents, dull rose red, deep rose red, rose carmine (1888), brown red, 
red, bright red, vermilion, orange red. 
imperforate, dull red, vermilion. 
riihed paper, red. 
1870, Mar. (?) 

1 cent, orange, orange yellovy, deep yellow, bright yellow, pale yellow, 
olive yellow. 
imperforate, bright yellow, 
nftfted paper, yellow. 
vertical half, used for i/jc. 

1872, Jan. (?) 

6 cents, pale yellow brown, brown, dark yellow brown; (1888) pale 
chestnut, deep chestnut. 
imperforate, deep chestnut. 
ribbed paper, deep chestnut. 
vertical half, used for 3c. 

1873, Feb. (?) 

3 cents, pale green, green, deep green; (1888) blue green, deep blue 
green. 
imperforate, green. 
ribbed paper, green. 
vertical half, used for Ic. 

1874, Nov. 1. (?) 

10 cents, pale lilac, lilac, mauve, red violet, violet; (1888) dull rose 
red, dull rose, salmon red, brown red, Indian red. 
imperforate, brown red, Indian red. 
ribbed paper, dull rose red, dull rose. 
1876, Feb. 1. (?) 

5 cents, pale olive gray, olive gray, dark olive gray; (1888) gray, 
brownish gray, brownish black. 
imperforate, brownish gray. 
ribbed paper, brownish black. 
1883, July. 

Vs cent, gray black, black. 
imperforate. 

horizontal pair, imperforate between, 
vertical pair, imperforate between, 
ribbed paper. 

5th SEKIES. Engraved and printed by the British American Bank Note Co., 
Ottawa. Perforated 12. Wove paper. 

1893, Feb. 17. 

20 cents, bright red, vermilion. 
imperforate, vermilion. 
50 cents, deep blue. 

imperforate, black blue. 
1893, Aug. 1. 

8 cents, bluish gray, bluish slate, slate violet, dark slate, black violet, 
gray black. 
imperforate, bluish gray. 



EEFERENCE LIST 281 

6th SERIES. Jubilee Issue. Engraved and printed by the American Bank 

Note Co., Ottawa. Perforated 12. Wove paper. 
1897, June 19. 

Vs cent, gray black, black. 

1 " yellow orange, orange, deep orange. 

vertical half, used for %c. 

2 cents, green, deep green. 

3 " carmine. 

5 " deep blue. 

6 " deep brown, deep yellow brown. 
8 " slate violet. 

10 " brown lilac. 

15 " bluish slate. 

20 " vermilion, bright scarlet. 

50 " ultramarine. 

1 dollar, carmine lake. 

2 dollars deep violet. 

3 " orange brown. 

4 " violet. 

5 " olive green. 

7th SEEIES. "Maple Leaf" Issue. Engraved and printed by the American 
Bank Note Company, Ottawa. Perforated 12. Wove paper. 

1897, Nov. 9. V2 cent, gray black, black. 
Dec. 1. (?) 6 cents, deep brown. 
Dec. 1 cent, dark blue green. 

2 cents, red violet, violet, deep violet. 

5 cents, dark blue on bluish (pale and strong). 

imperforate, dark blue on pale bluish. 
8 cents, yellow orange, deep orange. 

1898, Jan. 3 " deep carmine. 

10 " brovyn lilac. 

8th SERIES. "NuMEEALs" Issue. Engraved and printed by the American 
Bank Note Co., Ottawa. Perforated 12. Wove paper. 

1898, June. 1 cent, blue green, deep blue green. 

toned paper, deep green. 

3 cents, carmine, deep carmine. 
Sept. % cent, gray black, black. 

2 cents, purple, pale violet, violet, deep violet. 

6 " deep yellow brown, dark brown. 
Oct. 8 " yellow orange, orange, deep orange. 
Nov. 10 " brown violet, deep brown violet. 

1899, July, 3. 5 " dark blue on bluish (pale and strong). 
Aug. 20. 2 " rose carmine, carmine. 

1900, Dec. 29. 20 " olive green. 
1903, Dec. 33. 7 " olive yellow. 



282 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

9th SEEIES. Impeeial Pestnt Postage Issue. Engraved and printed by 
the American Bank Note Co., Ottawa. Perforated 12. Wove paper. 

1898, Dec. 7 

f black, red and lavender. 
I " " " bluish 

2 cents, -j „ „ „ greenish blue. 

L " " " green. 
imperforate. 

{black, red and bluish. 
" greenish blue. 
" green. 
Unofficial Provisionals. Used at Port Hood only. 

1899, Jan. 5. 1 cent, greenish surcharge on vertical third of 3c. 1898. 

3 cents, purple surcharge on vertical two-thirds of 3c. 1898. 

(These two occur as both "lefts'" and "rights") 

10th SEKIES. Peovisionals, Surcharge typographed in black. 

1899, July 28. 3 cents on 3 cents, 1898, carmine. 

inverted surcharge, carmine. 
Aug. 8. 2 cents on 3 cents, 1897, carmine. 
inverted surcharge, carmine. 

11th SEEIES. King's Head Issue. Engraved and printed by the American 

Bank jSTote Co., Ottawa. (Portrait engraved by Perkins, Bacon 

& Co., London). Perforated 12. Wove paper. 

1903, July 1. 

1 cent, blue green, deep blue green. 

toned paper, deep yellow green. 

2 cents, rose carmine, carmine. 

imperforate, rose carmine. 
5 cents deep blue on bluish (pale and strong). 

indigo on hluish {pale and strong). 
7 cents, deep olive yellow. 
10 cents, brown lilac, brown violet, deep brown violet. 

1904, Sept. 27. , , , J 

20 cents, deep olive green. 
1908, Nov. 19. 

50 cents, violet. 

12th SERIES. Quebec Teeoentenaey Issue. Engraved and printed by 
the American Bank ilSTote Co., Ottawa. Perforated 12, Wove paper. 

1908, July 16. 

% cent, black brown, brown. 

1 " deep blue green. 

2 cents, carmine. 



5 


)J 


deep blue. 


7 


)» 


olive green. 


10 


)) 


deep violet. 


15 


5» 


red orange. 


20 


»> 


deep brown. 



KEFEEENCE LIST 283 

STAMP BOOKS. 

Manufactured by American Bank E'ote Co., Ottawa. 12-2 cent stamps. 
1900, June 11. 2 cents, issxie of 1898. 
1904, (?) 2 " " " 1904. 

REGISTRATION STAMPS. 

1875, Nov. 15. Engraved and printed by the British American Bank ISTote Co., 

Montreal and Ottawa. Perforated 12. Thin to thick wove paper. 

3 cents, orange, orange red, vermilion; (1888) brick red. 

imperforate, orange. 
5 cents, yellow green, green, dark green; (1888) deep blue green. 

imperforate, dark green. 
8 cents, bright blue, dull blue. 

POSTAGE DUE STAMPS. 

1906, July 1. Engraved and printed by the American Bank ISTote Co., Ottawa. 

Perforated 12. Wove paper. 

1 cent, deep violet. 

2 cents, deep violet. 

5 " deep violet, red violet. 

SPECIAL DELIVERY STAMP. 

1898, July 1. Engraved and printed by the American Bank ]^ote Co., Ottawa. 

Perforated 12. Wove paper. 
10 cents, deep green, deep blue green. 
toned paper, deep green. 

OFFICIALLY SEALED LABELS. 

Engraved and printed by the British American Bank ISTote Co., 

Montreal. Perforated 12. Wove paper. 
1879 (?) (no value), dark brown. 

imperforate (?) 

Engraved and printed by the American Bank ITote Co., Ottawa. 
Perforated 12. Wove paper. 
1905 (?) (no value), black on light green. 

1907 (?) (no value), black. 

stamped envelopes. 
Peovince of Canada. 

Laid paper, watermarked p^j^ Size 51/2 x 31,4 inches (138 x 83 mm.) 

I860, Feb. l.(?) Cream toned paper, flap rounded. 
5 cents, bright red. 
10 cents, black brown. 

error (?) 
10 cents, bright red. 
1864 (?) Very white paper, flap more pointed, 
5 cents, bright red. 



284 CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 

UNOFFICIAL REPRINTS, 1868. 

On pieces of white wove or vertically laid huff paper. 
5 cents, bright red. 
10 cents, dark red hrown. 

On diagonally laid white or huff envelopes, watermarked POD 

US 
Size 5y2 X 8 inches (138 x 77 mm). 
5 cents, hright red. 
10 cents, dark red hrown. 



Dominion of Oanaba, 



Sizes: A — 5% x 3% inches (138 x 79 mm.) 
B— 6 X 33/3 inches (150 x 85 mm.) 
C— 9% X 41/2 inches (265 x 113 mm. 
D— 5% X 314 inches (148 x 87 mm.] 
E — 6 X 3% inches (152 x 90 mm.] 

Laid paper, cross vergures 18 mm. apart. Pointed flap. 
1877, Oct. 6. White paper. 

Size A: 1 cent, pale blue, deep blue. 

3 cents, red, rose. 
Size B : 3 cents, " " 
Same paper, tongned flap. 
Size A: 1 cent, blue. 
3 cents, red. 

Laid paper, cross vergures 24 mm. apart. Pointed flap. 

1888 (?) Cream toned paper. 

Size A: 1 cent, blue, deep blue. 

3 cents, red, carmine. 
Size B: 3 cents, " " 

Same paper, cross vergures 27 mm. apart. 

Size A: 1 cent, deep blue. 
White v?ove paper. 

1895 ( ?) Size B : 3 cents, carmine. 

Laid paper, cream toned. 

1895, June 14. 

Size B : 2 cents, blue green. 

1896 (?) Size A: 1 cent, ultramarine. 

Manila amber paper. 
1896 (?) Size C: 1 cent, ultramarine. 
3 cents, red. 

Wove paper, cream toned. 
1898, Apr. 1 (?) Size D: 3 cents, bright red. 

1898, July 22. Size D: 1 cent, dark green. 

1899, Jan. 2. Size D: 2 cents, deep violet. 

1899. Jan. 8 (?) Size D: 2 cents, bright red, vermilion. 



EEFEEENCE LIST 285 

1899, Feb. 6. (?) Surcharged 2c in blue-black. 

Typei. I \-\-zm\im 

Size D: 2 c. on 3 cents, red, of 1898. 
Type 2. 

Size A : 2c. on 3 cents, red, of 1877 ; white paper, pointed flap. 

2c. on 3 " " " 1888 (?) cream toned paper. 
Size B: 2c. on 3 " " " " " " " 

Size D: 2c. on 3 " " " 1898. 

1901 (?) Size D: 1 cent, dark green. 

2 cents, bright red. 

Very white wove paper. 
1905, Jan. 12. Size E: 2 cents, bright red. 

Mar. 1 (?) Size E: 1 cent, deep blue green. 

WRAPPERS. 

Type 1. Size 9V2 x 5 inches (235 x 127 mm.). 
1875, May 1 cent, dark blue, light 'buff paper. 

" variety, stamp at left. [Size 11% x 6% inches (290 x 165 mm.)] 
Size 11 Vs X i% inches (285 x 124 mm.). 

1881, Nov. (?) 1 cent, dark blue, blue, cream paper. 

Type 2. Size as last. 

1882, May (?) 1 cent, pale blue, light buff paper. 
Aug. (?) 1 " blue, straw paper. 

1885, 1 " ultramarine, cream paper. 

Type 3. Size as last. 

1887, May (?) 1 cent, ultramarine, thin white paper. 

1888, 1 " " cream paper. 

1 " " light manila paper. 

Type 4. Size 10% x 4% inches (264 x 124 mm.). 
1892, Feb. (?) 1 cent, dark blue, thin straw paper. 

" variety, stamp half way across wrapper. 
1 " blue, cream paper. 

Size 10% X 4% inches (272 x 125 mm.). 
1 cent, dark blue, straw paper. 



1894, Feb. (?) 1 " 


black, light buff paper. 


1 " 


" light brown paper. 


1898, June (?) 1 " 


dark green, manila paper. 


1903, Oct. (?) 1 " 


„ » »» »» 



Size 15 X 6% inches (378 x 165 mm.). Inscription. 
1907, July 11. 1 cent, dark green, manila paper. 

2 " carmine, manila paper. 

Size 13 X 8 inches (308 x 223 nun.). Inscription. 

3 cents, slate violet, manila paper. 
1988, June 18 ( ?) Last two wrappers, surcharged. 

1 c. on 2 cents, carmine. 
1 c. " 3 " slate violet. 



286 



CANADIAN POSTAGE STAMPS 



1871. 


June 


CI 


1876. 


(end?) 


1877. 


Jan. 


1. 


1879, 






1882, 


Apr. 


(?) 




Dec. 


(?) 


1884, 


Sept. 


(?) 


1887, 


Feb. 


(?) 
(?) 


1888, 




(?) 


1891, 


Dec. 


(?) 


1892, 


Dec. 


(?) 


1894, 


Oct. 


(?) 



1893, Feb. 17. 



1894, 


Feb. 


(?) 


1896, 


Apr. 


(?) 


1896. 


Oct. 


(?) 


1897, 


June 


19. 


1897, 


Dec. 1 


(?) 


1898, 


Jan. 


(?) 



1898, June (?) 



1898, 
1903, 



June (?) 



Aug. 
Dec. 



(?) 
(?) 



POST CARDS. 

Size 4% X 3 inches (116 x 75 mm.). Imprint "Montreal & Ottawa." 

1 cent, dull blue, deep blue, light iuff and pale huff card. 
Size 4% X 3 inches (130 x 75 mm.). Imprint "Montreal" only. 

1 cent, dull blue, deep blue, pale 'buff card. 
Inscribed "To United Kingdom.'' 

2 cents, deep yellow green, pale buff card. 
Inscribed "Union Postale Universelle." 

3 cents, yellow green, pale yellowish card. 
Size 5x3 inches (127 x 76 mm.). No frame. 

Type 2 of wrapper stamp. 
1 cent, light blue, pale buff card. 
1 plus 1 cent, slate, pale buff card. 

Error, stamps at left. 
1 plus 1 cent, slate, pale buff card. 

Ttpe 3 of wrapper stamp. 
1 cent, dull blue, pale buff card. 
1 plus 1 cent, slate, pale buff card. 
1 plus 1 " slate green, pale buff card. 

Type 4 of wrapper stamp. 
1 cent, dull ultramarine, pale ultramarine, pale buff card. 
1 plus 1 cent, slate green, (Type 3 on reply card), pale buff card. 
1 plus 1 " gray black, (Type 4 on each card), " " " 

Size 6x3% inches (152 x 93 mm.). 
1 cent, black, pale buff card. 

Size 5% X 3% inches (140 x 85 mm.). 
1 cent, black, pale yellowish card. 

1 " " rough straw card. 
Size Si/s X 31/8 inches (130 x 80 mm.). 

2 cents, orange red, carmine, pale buff card. 
Size 5%\ X 3% inches (140 x 85 mm.). 

1 cent, "black, pale buff card. 
" variety, inscriptions lacking. 

Size 5% X 3% inches (130 x 80 mm.). 

2 cents, deep orange red, pale buff card. 
Size SVi X 3% inches (140 x 85 mm.). 

1 cent, green, dark green, pale buff card. 
1 " carmine, pale buff card. 

Size 5x3 inches (127 x 76 mm.). 
1 plus 1 cent, black, pale buff card. 

" " variety, reply printed on back of message card. 

Size SVs X 3% inches (130 x 80 mm.). 

3 cents, deep blue, cream card. 

Size 5% X 3% inches (130 x 80 mm.). 
1 cent, green, pale buff card. 
1 " rose, " " 



REFERENCE LIST 287 

Size 5x3 inches (127 x 76 mm.). 
1904, Feb. (?) 1 plus 1 cent, black, pale buff card. 

Size Si/g X 3% inctes (130 x 80 mm.). 
1904, Feb. (?) 3 cents, deep blue, pale huff card. 

LETTER CARDS. 
1893. Feb. 17. 3 cents, carmine, Mue-green card. Perf. A. and C. 
1895, Oct. (?) 1 " black, " " " Perf. A and C. 

2 " green, " " " Perf. A. 

1897, Dec. (?) 2 " " " " " Perf. A. 

1898, Jan. (?) 1 " black, " " " Perf. A. 

3 " carmine, " " " Perf. A. 

Surcharged "2c.'' in blue-black. 

1899, Feb. (?) 2 cents on 3 c. card of 1893, type 1. 

2 " "3 c. " " " " 2. 

2 " "3 c. " " 1898, " 2. 
Surcharged in violet. 

2 cents on 3 c. card of 1893, type 2. 

1900, Jan. (?) 1 cent, green, blue-green card. Perf. A. 

2 " carmine, " " " Perf. A. 

LETTER SHEET. 

1894 (?) 1 cent, black, gray blue laid paper. 

1 " " wMte laid paper. 

OFFICIAL STATIONERY. 
Inland Revenue Wrapper, Size 11 x Si/g inches (280 x 133 mm.). 
1879 (?) 1 cent, dark blue, cream paper. 

Customs Post Card, Size 5% x 3% inches (130 x 88 mm.). 

1888 (?) [plain front], manila card. 

[inscriptions on front], manila card. 
Returned Dead Letter Envelopes. Size 678x4% inches (175 x120 mm.). 

1889 (?) 3 cents, black, manila paper. 

11 1