Postage Stamps of the United States First Issued in
1929
Presidents: Jan. 1 - Mar. 3: Calvin Coolidge ·
Mar. 4 - Dec. 31: Herbert Hoover |
| Postmasters General: Jan. 1 - Mar. 4:
Harry S. New · Mar. 5 - Dec. 31:
Walter F. Brown |
| Domestic Letter Rate: 2¢ per oz. · Postcard Rate: 1¢
· Air Mail Rate: 5¢ per oz. |
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The Commemorative Postage Stamps of
1929
Flat Plate - Perforated 11
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George Rogers Clark
100 Subject Plates
16,684,674 issued
First Day: Feb. 25, 1929 |
Sullivan Expedition
400 Subject Plates
51,451,880 issued
FDC: June 17, 1929 |
Fallen Timbers
400 Subject Plates
29,338,274 issued
FDC: Sept. 14, 1929 |
Ohio River Canals
400 Subject Plates
32,680,900 issued
FDC: Oct.19, 1929 |
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Colonel George Rogers Clark - Surrender at
Sackville
The George Rogers Clark
stamp was physically the largest
commemorative issued by the U.S. to that date. Combined
with the bi-colored design, the cost of
producing this issue was entirely out of
character for then Postmaster New. The
reasons for this change of heart are not
entirely clear, perhaps it was the fact that
New's term as Postmaster General would be
ending soon, or the fact that New was from
Indiana, the site of the Battle of Vincennes
commemorated by this stamp.
The unwieldy size of this stamp made it
somewhat impractical for use as postage, especially
since it was only a 2¢ stamp, and many of
the stamps issued were never used postally. Still the
stamp set a record for a single day's sales
from one post office, more than 300,000
stamps were sold on the first day in
Vincennes, Indiana, the only city in which
First Day sales were made. The bi-colored
design made for a wide variety of plate positions,
in fact so many plate blocks were saved by
collectors that the plate block can be had
today for much less than any of its
contemporaries.
Major General John Sullivan Expedition
The Sullivan stamp commemorated the
total devastation of the Iroquois lands in New York and Pennsylvania,
necessitated by the Iroquois Nations
allegiance to the British during the
Revolutionary War. This devastation
is hardly something that would even be
considered worthy of commemoration today,
but in 1929 sentiment was different.
Crippling the Iroquois Nations was a
necessary evil in that it severely weakened
Britain's presence in western New York and
northeastern Pennsylvania. Sullivan's place
in history has been somewhat obscured,
perhaps by
the brutality of his army's acts and
certainly by his unpleasant and unpopular disposition.
The issuance of this stamp met with the
usual resistance from Postmaster New, who
did everything in his power to prevent new
issues. The stamp was finally authorized
after much political pressure was placed on
the new Postmaster General Brown, who
continued New's attitude that new issues
were a costly nuisance. My how
times have
changed!
First Day sales were politically charged
also. It is strange that with much of the
pressure put on Brown coming from Pennsylvania politicians,
all of the cities chosen for First Day sales
were in New York. Here is a list of the
cities: Auburn, Binghamton, Canandaiga,
Elmira, Geneseo, Geneva, Horseheads, Owego,
Penn Yan, Perry, Seneca Falls, Waterloo and
Waverly. At the time, this was by far and
away the most First Day cities for a new
issue.
The Battle of Fallen Timbers
Commemorative
The "Battle of Fallen Timbers"
stamp is another in a long line of issues
during this period that leaves one
scratching their head. With all of the
important events of the Revolution reaching
their sesquicentennial anniversaries, it is
amazing that stamps such as this and the
subsequent "Ohio River
Canalization" stamps were issued in
their stead.
Amazing that is, unless one considers
political motivations. The position of
Postmaster General had long been considered
a political plum, since the Postmaster had
the authority to appoint the Postmaster
position in cities around the country.
Apparently this latitude was used when
decisions to issue new stamp designs were made. It can hardly be a coincidence that
after refusing to issue stamps commemorating
important events of the Revolutionary War,
two relatively obscure events from Ohio were
honored by a Postmaster from, you guessed
it, Ohio.
To make matters worse, the "Battle of
Fallen Timbers" celebrated the 135th
anniversary and the "Ohio River
Canalization" the 54th anniversary of
the event they commemorated. This must have
been quite a slap in the face to the
petitioners that had been declined the
issuance of stamps commemorating important
150th anniversaries associated with the
birth of our nation and most likely explains
the poor reception these stamps received
from the press.
The "Battle of Fallen Timbers",
although perhaps not well known outside of
Ohio, did shape the American landscape. At
the time, Ohio was part of the western
frontier of the recently formed United
States. The early settlers were
understandably having problems with Native
Americans thwarting U.S. presence in the
region. Britain and France had already
established settlements and the U.S. did not
want to lose the territory to foreign
powers. Offers of a peaceful settlement drew no response,
and U.S. troops decided the issue forcibly,
with the decisive battle near Toledo in a
wooded area in which a tornado had blown
over most of the trees (hence the name
"Fallen Timbers").
First Day Sales were at Maumee, Perrysburg,
Toledo and Waterville, Ohio and also at
Erie, Pennsylvania, the final resting place
of General Wayne, the commander of the
troops at "Fallen Timbers".
The Ohio River Canalization Tribute
The Ohio river is formed by the junction of
the Monongahela and Allegheny rivers in
Pittsburgh. It runs more than 967 miles from
Pittsburgh to Cairo, Illinois where it
empties into the Mississippi river and is
joined along the way by a number of
important rivers. Untamed, seasonal
fluctuations in water depth made these
important routes of commerce unnavigable. In
1875 work began on the canalization of the
Ohio River, utilizing a system of dams and
locks guaranteeing a nine foot channel from Pittsburgh,
Pa. to Cairo, Ill. In 1929 the Corps of
Engineers completed the project transforming
the Ohio, Monongahela and Allegheny rivers
into a navigable stair stepped chain of
lakes.
First Day sales were in seven cities,
representing six states along this major
trade route: Pittsburgh and Homestead, Pennsylvania; Wheeling, West
Virginia; Cincinnati, Ohio; Louisville,
Kentucky; Evansville, Indiana; and Cairo,
Illinois.
Today the issue of the above two
"Ohio" stamps would barely raise
an eyebrow, and perhaps hold more merit than
stamps honoring the likes of Bugs Bunny and Daffy
Duck, but at the
time the resentment was loud and clear. This
resentment was tempered somewhat, for only
ten days after the Ohio River Canalization
stamps had been issued, on October 29, 1929,
immortalized as "Black Tuesday", America and the world
entered the Depression.
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The Electric Light's Golden
Jubilee - "Edison Light Bulb" Commemoratives of 1929
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Flat Plate Perf 11 400 Subject Plates
31,679,200 issued
First Day: June 5, 1929 |
Rotary Perf 11 x 10½
400 Subject Plates
210,119,474 issued
First Day: June 11, 1929 |
Rotary Coil Perf 10 Vert.
170 Subject Plates
133,530,000 issued
First Day: June 11, 1929 |
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On October 21, 1879, Thomas Edison and his
associates applied current to a carbonized cotton filament
light bulb under vacuum. The filament glowed a soft orange
until it finally burnt out 13 hours later. And the rest is
history, as they say.
The "Electric Light's Golden
Jubilee" or "Edison Light Bulb" stamps, as
they are more commonly called, were issued to commemorate
this event. They were issued on June 5, rather than October
21, to promote the National Electric Light Association
Convention in Atlantic City. Edison's name appears on the
stamps, but a likeness was forbidden, law prohibited placing
a living person's face on a U.S. postage stamp.
Like the Harding
Memorial stamp, this stamp was issued in three
formats, although rather than imperforate, it was issued
in sidewise coils. The coils were produced for the utility
companies who wanted to use the stamp for promotional
purposes on outgoing mail.
The demand was so great that the initial orders of
75,000,00 each for the rotary stamps proved insufficient
and second printings were needed for both.
The perf 11 flat plate stamp set new records for First Day
sales, 800,000 stamps were sold on June 5 in Edison's home
town of Menlo Park, New
Jersey, the only city in which First Day sales were made.
This number includes back orders, since the initial supply
of 400,000 was quickly exhausted. Surprisingly, no First Day sales were
made at either the Philatelic Agency in Washington, D.C. or
at the National Electric Light Association Convention in
Atlantic City, for which the stamp had implicitly been
designed.
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The following postage stamp varieties were
first issued by the U.S. in 1929:
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Ordinary issue:
Scott 599A - 2¢ Type II Washington rotary
coil perf 10 vert. - EKU: 3/29/1929
Scott 653 - ½¢ Nathan Hale rotary perf 11 x 10½ - First
Day: 5/25/1929
Scott 658 - 1¢ Franklin Kansas Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 659 - 1½¢ Harding Kansas Overprint - First
Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 660 - 2¢ Washington Kansas Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 661 - 3¢ Lincoln Kansas Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 662 - 4¢ Martha Washington Kansas Overprint - First
Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 663 - 5¢ Theodore Roosevelt Kansas Overprint -
First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 664 - 6¢ Garfield Kansas Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 665 - 7¢ McKinley Kansas Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 666 - 8¢ Grant Kansas Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 667 - 9¢ Jefferson Kansas Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 668 - 10¢ Monroe Kansas Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 669 - 1¢ Franklin Nebraska Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 670 - 1½¢ Harding Nebraska Overprint - First
Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 671 - 2¢ Washington Nebraska Overprint - First Day:
5/1/1929
Scott 672 - 3¢ Lincoln Nebraska Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 673 - 4¢ Martha Washington Nebraska Overprint -
First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 674 - 5¢ Theodore Roosevelt Nebraska Overprint -
First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 675 - 6¢ Garfield Nebraska Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 676 - 7¢ McKinley Nebraska Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 677 - 8¢ Grant Nebraska Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Scott 678 - 9¢ Jefferson Nebraska Overprint - First Day:
5/1/1929
Scott 679 - 10¢ Monroe Nebraska Overprint - First Day: 5/1/1929
Commemoratives:
Flat Plate - Perf 11x11 unless otherwise noted
Scott 651 - 2¢ George Rogers Clark - Designers: C. A.
Huston - Engravers: L. Schofield (vignette)
- E.
M. Hall (lettering)
Scott 654 - 2¢ Electric Light's Golden
Jubilee - Designer: A. R. Meissner - Engravers:
J. C. Benzing (vignette) - E.
M. Hall (lettering)
Scott 655 - 2¢ Electric Light's Golden Jubilee - Edison's Lamp -
rotary
perf 11 x 10½
Scott 656 - 2¢ Electric Light's Golden Jubilee - Edison's Lamp -
rotary
coil perf 10 vertically
Scott 657 - 2¢ Sullivan Expedition - Designers: C. A.
Huston - Engravers:
J. Eissler ( (vignette)
- E.
M. Hall & E. H. Helmuth (lettering)
Scott 680 - 2¢ Battle of Fallen Timbers - Designers: C. A.
Huston - Engravers: L. Schofield (vignette)
- E.
M. Hall (lettering) - E. H. Helmuth (numerals)
Scott 681 - 2¢ Ohio River Canalization - Designer: A. R. Meissner - Engravers:
Frederick Pauling
(vignette) - E.
M. Hall (lettering)
Special Handling:
No new varieties of the Special Handling stamps were issued in
1929
Air Mail:
No new varieties of the Air Mail stamps
were issued in 1929
Special Delivery:
No new varieties of the Special Delivery
stamps were issued in 1929
Postage Dues:
No new varieties of the Postage Due stamps
were issued in 1929
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