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USA Sc# 316

 
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Canada
1 Posts
Posted 01/15/2014   09:45 am  Show Profile Bookmark this topic Add theotheuke to your friends list Get a Link to this Message
Why does Scott not list this coil as used? Was it not issued?
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Bedrock Of The Community
United States
12128 Posts
Posted 01/15/2014   09:53 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add wt1 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
This explanation was taken from a Siegel auction website:


Quote:
According to Johl, these first government coils were an experiment, and collectors and dealers were generally unaware of their existence. Regular sheets of 400 were perforated in only one direction. They were then cut into strips of 20. The strips were pasted together to form rolls.

It is unknown exactly how many of these experimental coils were produced (one paste-up pair is known). They were superseded less than a year later by the Washington-Franklin issue coils, the first of which were issued on December 29, 1908.

Our census of Scott 316 ( available at http://siegelauctions.com/enc/census/316.pdf ) records nine pairs, three line pairs (one of which is rejoined) and an unused single, for a total of 25 stamps. No used examples are known.
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Edited by wt1 - 01/15/2014 09:58 am
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United States
1270 Posts
Posted 01/15/2014   1:41 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Al E. Gator to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
According to Armstrong's book on coils, 515,000 #316 were ordered and produced for the American Stamp and Ticket Vending Co., Washington, D.C., the Parkhurst Vending Machine Co., Indianapolis, Indiana, and the International Vending Machine Co., Baltimore Md. He does not state where he arrived at that number. He does say that these early experimental coils were not available to the public except through the vending machine companys that requested these coils for use in there machines. He also states that dealers and collectors of the time considered these coils to be of no philatelic value, therefore few were saved. I guess most must have ended up in the waste basket?
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United States
8956 Posts
Posted 01/15/2014   2:38 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Petert4522 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
I remember being member of a stampclub back home in the Netherlands. This was in the fifties. Coils were not really regarded as collectible, same as stamps with one side not perforated. Exceptions were the syncopated stamps that were sold in automatic machines and came off a roll like regular coils.
Only the real stamp collectors would save their coils, hence the price of these have skyrocketed!

Peter
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United States
7097 Posts
Posted 01/15/2014   2:48 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add I_Love_Stamps to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
I have what I thought was a #314 with Shermack type perfs. Could that be one or was that normal?
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Posted 01/15/2014   3:00 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Al E. Gator to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
ILS, #314 with Schermack Type III is pretty common--about $2-$3 used. Type I or Type II Schermack are worth a good bit more but still not rare like a #316, #317, #318, #321 or #322 are.
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Rest in Peace
United States
7097 Posts
Posted 01/15/2014   3:35 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add I_Love_Stamps to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Yep I just looked it up. Got excited there for a second...lol
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