I purchased a 1908 Christmas Seal stamp in MNH from a fellow stamp club member. He tells me that from 1907 until around 1919, each yearly issue has the Red Cross noted on them.
I'm told they are listed in the Specialized catalog from Scott, how ever, I don't own one, and my local library has their copy out with four on a waiting list. Could use some help on this on. The one I purchased has CS2WX3a Type1 written on the stock card?
Would like the catalog #'s for all of the Red Cross issues. Three year's collecting Red Cross issues, and only now coming to learn about these.
Brian's suggestion is a great one. It will get you to one of the most knowledgeable seal dealers and collectors around. He is also current president of the Christmas Seal and Charity Stamp Society, the philatelic org best suited to any study of Christmas (and other) seals.
Scott takes seals through 1979 and stops, because, at that point, ALA, then the owner of the Christmas seal brand, began issuing multiple formats (much like the USPS was doing), all in the name of generating collector revenue. So there might be as many as 10 different types of seals (w, w/o foil; in spanish; six different test seals; imperfs, etc.). It was too much for Scott.
Christmas seals are also catalogued in Green's, which is current through last year, and includes additional varieties not listed in Scott, even through 1979. Green's numbering is different, with your seal being called 8.1 (assuming it's type I). The beauty of that system should be self-evident.
PM me if you want more information on seals.
David
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"Save the USPS, buy stamps; save the hobby, use commemoratives"
Does John reveal where to find the secret printer's marks, and what mark is used by which printer? There were several different printers for each year. I don't think Scott's does this.
Green's does this often, but not always. I believe (but am not sure) that, unless detailed otherwise, printer's marks are on seal #56 on sheets of 100. I don't know if John's website features this detail or not.
Green's is typically far more detailed than Scott's on seals.
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"Save the USPS, buy stamps; save the hobby, use commemoratives"