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Pillar Of The Community
United States
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Pillar Of The Community
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The covers by themselves are standard WWII censored mail, but you've pinpointed what sets them apart: the addressee. It's great fun to collect fan mail covers and not too difficult to find them for almost any star of the silver screen. |
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Rest in Peace
United States
7097 Posts |
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Wow that's really neat! I have a few of these to Davey Jones. Fan mail like yours. Great looking stuff~! |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
1362 Posts |
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Rest in Peace
United States
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
1362 Posts |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
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Pillar Of The Community
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Moderator

United States
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Love the penmanship on that first one! Also, I'm a big fan of Gene Autry and his Cowboy Philosophy...  |
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Pillar Of The Community
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The value is in the addressee which you already know the value. The stamps and cancels and censoring has little value since none of these are airmails which depending on the routes and years can give a bit of extra value. |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
611 Posts |
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I love the covers. They will make a nice display and collection. Reading the Cowboy Code, I just don't see that being used today. What a great era. The idea exudes a positive outlook. You can tell it touched a lot of people around the world. I'm sure that was less than a days worth of mail. You just don't know how many survived. The ladies working the mail desk would have boxes were they tossed this stuff. Most tore the stamps from the cover. Great to see them! |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
1362 Posts |
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One more from Dublin Ireland with the "Grow More Wheat" slogan cancel:  |
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Robert |
| Edited by stampfan9 - 04/20/2018 9:25 pm |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
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Quote: It's great fun to collect fan mail covers and not too difficult to find them for almost any star of the silver screen. And they're often very inexpensive. I've seen a fair number in the $1 cover boxes at WESTPEX. I've picked up a few myself: one to Mary Pickford, one to Marlene Dietrich, and a couple to Doris Day. The Doris Day ones are particularly fun, because they're aerogrammes and thus still contain the charming letters written by Norwegian schoolgirls in less than perfect English. |
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Pillar Of The Community
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As has been mentioned, these have little commercial value as stamps and covers, but they are fun to have, especially as a group of them. Too bad the syrupy letters inside are gone. All of the movie stars of that era received vast quantities of this kind of fan mail every week and there were secretaries whose job was to go through it all. Sometimes the stars would take the time to look at some of it. Sometimes the secretaries sent publicity photos to the writers. The letters that have the extra value are ones that have rare stamps or rare markings, or even better letters or envelopes that were actually mailed by the stars themselves and where they hand wrote the address. Those are hard to find since the big stars had secretaries and publicity agents who did most of the handling of the mail from the stars. |
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Bedrock Of The Community
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I agree with rod222, Kirks is a gentleman philatelist of the first order. As an aside, does anyone know what title on the last cover the writer has given to Gene Autry. My wild guess is an abbreviation for Tech Sergeant.
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Robert |
| Edited by stampfan9 - 04/21/2018 07:17 am |
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Replies: 17 / Views: 5,550 |
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