From Neville Threfall
https://pngaa.org/site/blog/2015/09...le-threfall/"... It begins in 1914, with the outbreak of World War 1. The British Government asked Australia to find and destroy the German Far East Cruiser Squadron.... At that time Germany held a large colony under the title of 'German New Guinea'.... The Acting Governor signed a surrender document on 17 September, ending all resistance in German New Guinea.... They took with them a quantity of Australian stamps overprinted 'N.W. Pacific Islands' for use in the islands...."
The stamps never actually made it and went to Rabaul instead.
"This is a rare example of stamps being overprinted for use in one region bet never getting there and being used in another region.... So the overprint intended for use in Micronesia, 'the North-West Pacific Islands', was never used there but was instead used..." by the inhabitants of German New Guinea, the Bismarck Archipelago, and Nauru primarily.
This includes the north-eastern quarter of the island of New Guinea, the Bismark Archiplago (New Britain, New Ireland, Manus and lesser islands) and Bougainville, the island territories (several Micronesian island groups, the Carolines, the Marianas and the Marshalls, and also Nauru.
The overprints fall into the following general categories:
Type 6 - the P of PACIFIC falls in line with the S of ISLANDS:
Type 6a - both S in ISLANDS normal;
Type 6b - first S in ISLANDS long tail;
Type 6c - both S in ISLANDS long tail
Type 11 - the P of PACIFIC falls between IS of ISLANDS (both S of ISLANDS normal)
Playing around in an excel spreadsheet having a look at possible displays for my overprints for KGV N.W. Pacific Islands stamps. I have a few more but just wanted to mock-up one page. Currently missing various information including shades, compartment lines, errors, etc. I suppose just trying to get a feel for it.
I Will also add separate images for individual stamps to see if we can make a more complete listing as per the Australian KGV 1d stamps. With the 'varieties' that show up on the overprints they are an interesting study. Could be quite interesting....
My current mock-up page (types may be in wrong positions - oops)-
