Stamp Community Family of Web Sites
Thousands of stamps, consistently graded, competitively priced and hundreds of in-depth blog posts to read








Stamp Community Forum
 
Username:
Password:
Save Password
Forgot your Password?

This page may contain links that result in small commissions to keep this free site up and running.

Welcome Guest! Registering and/or logging in will remove the anchor (bottom) ads. It's Free!

Cover Calendar For Month And Day -Pics

Previous Page | Next Page    
 
To participate in the forum you must log in or register.
Author Previous TopicReplies: 2,383 / Views: 379,483Next Topic
Page: of 159
Pillar Of The Community
United States
2480 Posts
Posted 09/27/2012   5:04 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add tomiseksj to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
September 27, 1861 from Hartford, CT:

Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Valued Member
Japan
165 Posts
Posted 09/27/2012   7:29 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Prahanoaki to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
A cover sent in Sept 28th 1921 from Memel (now Klaipeda, Lithuania) to Lubeck, Germany.

Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Pillar Of The Community
United States
566 Posts
Posted 09/28/2012   01:07 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add kehess to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
September 27 1911, St Paul to Minneapolis MN





I love the way she switches back and forth between German(?) and English. Cute Mama!
Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Pillar Of The Community
United States
566 Posts
Posted 09/28/2012   01:21 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add kehess to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
September 28 1945, Washinton DC to Grand Rapids MN, FDC Honoring the US Army



Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Pillar Of The Community
United States
2480 Posts
Posted 09/28/2012   11:02 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add tomiseksj to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Sep 28th:






Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Pillar Of The Community
2333 Posts
Posted 09/29/2012   02:02 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Cursus to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
In Catholic countries, like Catalonia, today (Saint Michael's) is considered to be "Stamp Day". The reason is that the archangel Saint Michael gave Mary the new that she was to gave birth to Jesus, so he is named the Post Saint Protector.

For a while, some catholic countries issued special stamps for that that they.
On September, 29th 1976 an stamp exhibition was held at the Barcelona's "Virreina Palace" (la Rambla), and a special postmark was used. It shows some Barcelona landmarks. The postmarked stamp (issued on January, 1975) shows the Capella d'en Marcus, a Barcelona tiny 12th century rural church (by then!) from where mounted postmen departed on middle ages.


Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Pillar Of The Community
United States
2480 Posts
Posted 09/29/2012   11:18 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add tomiseksj to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
For September 29th, a first day cover for the World Peace Through Law issue that was released in Washington, DC in 1975 as a prelude to the World Peace Through Law Center's 7th World Law Conference. The Center is now know as the World Jurist Association.


Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Bedrock Of The Community
United States
12128 Posts
Posted 09/29/2012   12:52 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add wt1 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Tomiseksj: The Boston, Mass. cover for September 28th from the 1800s as addressed to Asa P. Morse, 27 Foster's Wharf, Boston, has an interesting history behind it:




Quote:
Biography of Asa Porter Morse

Asa P. Morse was the son of Daniel Morse and Sarah Morse (first cousins) and was born on September 1, 1818 in Haverhill, New Hampshire. He married Dorcas Louis Short (1822-1864) in 1845 in Cambridgeport, Massachusetts. They had three children: Mary Louisa (b. 1847); Velma Maria (b. 1851); and Arthur Porter (1858-1863).

According to the Memorial of the Family of Morse:

"Hon. Asa Porter Morse came to Boston, in 1840, and began as book-keeper in the house of Hayward & Morse, who were engaged in the Provincial and W.I. Trade. In 1846 he moved to Cambridgeport, Mass., where he has ever since resided, and where he became interested in real estate operations, and for a long time [he was] an extensive builder. He has been connected with the Cambridge Fire Insurance Company, as Director, the Cambridge Hospital, as Trustee, and other charitable Institutions, and for about thirty-five years Director of the Cambridgeport National Bank, and for the past twelve years its President; was one of the Committee of Investment, and also Vice-President of the Cambridgeport Savings Bank, and for sixteen years member of the School Board.

Although often called to positions of public trust, it has always been at the solicitation of his fellow citizens. He was Alderman in 1866, and member of the Legislature in 1869, and in 1872 he was again elected, serving the House of 1873, holding important places on several Committees, and declining reelection.

The Republicans of Cambridge of the Third Middlesex Senatorial District in the Campaign of 1878, sought to find their strongest man, and selected Mr. Morse as Candidate for Senator, and he was elected by a handsome majority.

He was appointed by President Cogswell as Chairman of the Joint Committee on Prisons, and also on the Committee on Claims. The Committee on Prisons [was] called upon to revise the entire system of prison supervision, a very important and difficult duty. Under the lead of Mr. Morse a new system was perfected which proved completely satisfactory, and the law of 1879 is acknowledged by all familiar with it to be a superior piece of legislation. So successful was he in bringing about this change, and so heartily and intelligent an interest in prison matters did he manifest, that he was, against his protest, made Chairman of the Joint Special Committee on Contract Convict Labor, which, in the summer and fall of 1879, investigated that subject. The report of that Committee was probably the most exhaustive and valuable ever made in this Country upon that topic, and permanently settled many questions which had before been in controversy.

He was reelected to the Senate of 1880 by an unusual majority. He was again placed at the head of the Committee on Prisons, and also on the Committee on Education, and Expenditures."


Asa P. Morse was the owner of a flourishing business which both manufactured and invested in cooperage materials. He had his own cooperage, in South Boston, which made shooks and constructed casks, drums, hogsheads, pipes, and barrels. He also contracted from various milling companies and individuals for shooks, staves, heads, and hoops in all sizes from sugar and molasses hogsheads to wine pipes and beer barrels. His agents, such as L.E. Persons in West Virginia, conducted many of these transactions for him in various regions of the country. By supplying machinery and money to pay labor costs, Morse also helped to finance individual entrepreneurs who cut, hauled, and fashioned staves and shooks in such areas as Michigan, Georgia, North Carolina, New Hampshire, Maine, and northeastern Connecticut. Materials were delivered, by canal barge, rail, steamer, and sailing vessel, to his warehouse and shop on India Wharf in Boston, and later to Morse's Wharf on First Street in South Boston. Parts or finished products were shipped by boat to Cuba for sugar and molasses, to Spain for wine, to St. Pierre and Miquelon for dried fish, and to Liverpool.

Morse must have been a shrewd businessman during the difficult Civil War years and the business depression of the 1870s, because he appears to have prospered in spite of complaints from his correspondents of slow payment of bills and his own grumbling about the inability to get seasoned wood and good workmanship. Nor was he adverse to cutting corners and trying to include poor "culls" in bundles of good staves!

Morse owned his own home in Cambridgeport and rented out various houses in Cambridge, MA, and the 1893 Directory of Cambridge lists him as President of the Cambridgeport National Bank. He must have been respected by his business associates because he maintained many of the same working relationships for twenty-five years and more, and he financed some smaller milling concerns when bankruptcy threatened.

Asa Porter Morse died March 18, 1906, and is buried in the Mt. Auburn cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Edited by wt1 - 09/29/2012 12:53 pm
Pillar Of The Community
United States
2480 Posts
Posted 09/29/2012   1:29 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add tomiseksj to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
wt1, here is something the Morse bio left out:


Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Bedrock Of The Community
United States
12128 Posts
Posted 09/29/2012   2:07 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add wt1 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Interesting. By the way, there's a school in Cambridge, MA named after him. (I wonder if the school knows about that breach of promise case!)

Anyway, here's a portrait of Asa P. Morse:

Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Edited by wt1 - 09/29/2012 2:08 pm
Pillar Of The Community
United States
566 Posts
Posted 09/29/2012   10:22 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add kehess to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Way to go, Anna!
Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Pillar Of The Community
United States
566 Posts
Posted 09/29/2012   10:28 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add kehess to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
29 September 1894, Worthington MN to Minneapolis MN via the return trip of the Winona-Council Bluffs RR.



Is this cork carved or just beat up?
Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Pillar Of The Community
United States
2480 Posts
Posted 09/30/2012   09:56 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add tomiseksj to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Way to go, Anna!

She made out okay. According to an online inflation calculator, what cost $40,000.00 in 1890 would cost $958,049.91 in 2010.

For September 30th, New York to Chicago in 1895:

Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Pillar Of The Community
United States
566 Posts
Posted 09/30/2012   3:30 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add kehess to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
September 30 1940, Canton NY to St Paul MN

Mr Baker wasn't home to sign for his Airmail Registered Special Delivery so he had to wait and pick it up himself.





Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Edited by kehess - 09/30/2012 3:35 pm
Pillar Of The Community
United States
566 Posts
Posted 09/30/2012   3:42 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add kehess to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Another for September 30
Polish celebration of 1958 International Geophysical Year

I love the polar bear graphics. I visited the polar bears in Churchill, Manitoba a couple of years ago. Well worth the trip if you're able to go.



Send note to Staff  Go to Top of Page
Edited by kehess - 09/30/2012 3:44 pm
Page: of 159 Previous TopicReplies: 2,383 / Views: 379,483Next Topic  
Previous Page | Next Page
 
To participate in the forum you must log in or register.

Go to Top of Page

Disclaimer: While a tremendous amount of effort goes into ensuring the accuracy of the information contained in this site, Stamp Community assumes no liability for errors. Copyright 2005 - 2026 Stamp Community Family - All rights reserved worldwide. Use of any images or content on this website without prior written permission of Stamp Community or the original lender is strictly prohibited.
Privacy Policy / Terms of Use    Advertise Here
Stamp Community Forum © 2007 - 2026 Stamp Community Forums
It took 0.27 seconds to lick this stamp. Powered By: Snitz Forums 2000 Version 3.4.05