While looking at some Air Mail covers I've had for years I came across this one, I guess I missed it because there are no Air Mail stamps on it and just never looked close. The 5¢ rate was made using two 1¢ Franklin's and a 3¢ Lincoln.
As you can see the cover is postmarked Aug 3 1929 and the stamps are Kansas Overprint.
My Question is, are they real or counterfeit? Is this common to find these on cover?
Any other information, if you like, would be appreciated.
Dialysis, damned if you do...dead if you don't 20 Feb 2018 04:50:35pm
re: 1929 Kansas Overprint on cover
It is real, value around $5.00 (US). It is the correct rate for 1929 airmail (5 cents).
The Greater Burlington Association was a community service club and worked with other clubs that served the rural community in Kansas Iowa.
Here are a few mentions of them...
Local groups “…who helped materially in furthering 4-H club work were the newspapers of the county (Burlington Gazette and the Burlington Hawkeye), the Greater Burlington Association, the Burlington banks and business men.”
The 1926 Extension Report included: “The clothing clubs…reach and influence more homes than does any other of the clubs. The work…has been influential causing the girls to wear approved shoes, to use better judgment in the planning of their entire wardrobe…” Indeed, included in a 4-H program flyer that year were the Ten Commandments for an Iowa Club Girl. Along with such items as “Thou shalt appreciate good music” and “Thou shalt learn to ply the needle” was “Thou shalt not have ten sardines, but ten toes”. The cooperation of the Greater Burlington Association, The Burlington Gazette and of Glick’s Wearing Apparel for Women was reported to be very instrumental in making the clothing clubs a success.
One year the Greater Burlington Association hosted the annual club banquet at Hotel Burlington with the Honorable John Hammill, Governor of Iowa, and R.K. Bliss, Iowa Extension Director as speakers. As usual, group singing was part of the program – songs such as Till We Meet Again, the Iowa Corn Song and Jingle Bells.
Dialysis, damned if you do...dead if you don't 20 Feb 2018 07:36:57pm
re: 1929 Kansas Overprint on cover
Hi Chris,
Yes, what I posted above is from the Iowa 4-H History page, I mistaken typed Kansas, sorry. I assumed that someone simply had the Kansas stamps on hand or perhaps, being a club, someone had donated them. (You know how clubs sometimes have to scramble to make ends meet.)
I'm am not sure the cover is philatelic. It does not appear to be commemorating anything special, the stamp combination is not special, the date does not seem to be special. I am thinking it was club mail.
Don
Dialysis, damned if you do...dead if you don't 21 Feb 2018 03:03:58pm
re: 1929 Kansas Overprint on cover
"What means “Thou shalt not have ten sardines, but ten toes”?
Are we encouraging the young ladies to rinse their feet on rising?
And how did sardines get such a bad rap in the Midwest?"
Hi ikey,
The mid-1920s were celebrating 'coming out' of the dark depression years. Fashions became more daring, women got the right to vote and began to leave the house and enter the work force. Skirts moved upward and it was now acceptable for women to dress more like men thanks to Chanel. I assumed that it meant that the open-toed shoes and flats were now also acceptable and women no longer had to crush their feet and toes into tightly enclosed shoes.
Don
This issue has an interesting history, not least of which is this:
In 1973, Schoen estimated that "no issue of United States stamps is so extensively imitated and over 60 per cent of the used copies are not genuine."
Schoen, Robert H., and DeVoss, James T. Counterfeit Kansas-Nebraska Overprints on the 1922-34 Issue. 1973. (Printed by the American Philatelic Society in their APS Handbook Series.)
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