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Help To ID Star Cancellation Please (On Washington 3c Stamp)

 
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14 Posts
Posted 10/08/2012   4:34 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this topic Add jaf72 to your friends list Get a Link to this Message
Would anyone know the meaning of the star cancellation, as well as a range of years this could be from? Thanks in advance!




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Edited by jaf72 - 10/08/2012 6:02 pm

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United States
389 Posts
Posted 10/08/2012   4:58 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add dlawson281 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
THe star cancel is a cork cancel used on early US stamps, the stamp is from the 1880s if my memorey is correct. I expect to be corrected on this issue.
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United States
700 Posts
Posted 10/08/2012   4:58 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add new12collector to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Judging by the stamp, 1870s to 1880s. I don't believe the star has any sort of meaning- I think it's a cork cancelation, so the postal clerk would usually just cut a design into it- in this case a star.
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Edited by new12collector - 10/12/2012 06:50 am
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Posted 10/08/2012   4:58 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add smauggie to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
This is a cork cancel. Someone carved a cork into the shape of a star. These were used regularly up until about the turn of the 20th century (longer for smaller post offices).
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Rest in Peace
United States
7097 Posts
Posted 10/12/2012   06:23 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add I_Love_Stamps to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Gibbon, Nebr.

EDIT:
A quick history of Gibbons.


Quote:
In 1872 the first courthouse was erected for Buffalo County in Gibbon. This courthouse was made of brick manufactured in Gibbon. The Presbyterian Church of Gibbon, completed in 1873, was the first church in Buffalo County.


In 1866, a rail siding was built as part of the construction of the Union Pacific Railroad. It was named Gibbon Switch in honor of General John Gibbon. General John Thorpe was originally given the town site of what became Gibbon in exchange for establishing a town site in Buffalo County.

The Union Railroad organized a colony of approximately 85 families from Ohio and other eastern states in the Winter of 1870, and planned for the building of homes in the newly established State of Nebraska. Gibbon was also laid out during this time and on April 7, 1871 a settlement commenced. A surveyor by the name of Mr. J.N. Paul helped the colonist by beginning a survey of the town site of Gibbon. This was finished by C. Putnam. The completion of the survey saw the donation of one block for a public school, one block for a courthouse and a site for a church building. All of these sites were donated by the owners.

Lack of funds, poor crops, insufficient moisture, loss of livestock, shortage of fuel and conflicts with Native Americans were all hardships the colonists had to endure. Despite these hardships and contrary to original belief, Gibbon became the center for one of the most fertile sections of Buffalo County. Although it remained a small town, it was proportionally one of the most thriving towns on the Union Pacific Line.
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Edited by I_Love_Stamps - 10/12/2012 06:30 am
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