Großbritannien

Los Nr. 1224

1847, 1s. green, die 'W.W. 1', cancelled with barred numeral '76' of the London District Post, used on pre-printed lettersheet of the Bank of England, dated 14/9/52 inside, printed or handstamped letter code B on front left to the adhesive stamp, two London date stamps of 14 September 1852 for dispatch on reverse, Liverpool datestamp ”L SP 15” (1852) applied in transit, addressed to ”Miss Catherine Browne, Island of Bermuda”. the 1847, 1s is cut close but not touched at bottom, otherwise wwith very large regular margins and neatly cancelled. The ”76” barred numeral, issued in 1851 to the London Chief Office for cancelling the bulk of letters collected in the District Post area, does not tie from the 1s postage stamp to the lettersheet, nevertheless it can be confirmed the 1s stamp had originally been used on the cover. Adhesive and envelope are in a very fresh state of preservation. The 1s postage is for a letter not exceeding 1/2 ounce weight routed via Liverpool and Halifax (Nova Scotia) to Bermuda. The code letter ”B” left to the adhesive stamp is thought to be a senders marking of the Bank of England. A very rare foreign destination cover to the Islands of Bermuda. Certificates Richter (1997), van der Linden BPP (1997), Royal Philatelic Society (1999), Louis BPP (2016).

Ausruf

1.500 EUR

Ergebnis
Unverkauft

Los Nr. 1225

1847 1 s green, die ”W.W. 1” tied by barred numeral ”9” LONDON CHIEF OFFICE and boxed ”AUS ENGLAND / PER AACHEN FRANCO” transit marking in red to small entire with ”MY 11 1850” datestamp for dispatch on reverse, addressed to ”Fräulein Josephine d'Alquen, Arnsberg, Prussia” with arrival datestamp ”AUSG 14.5.” on reverse. The 1947, 1s, with good to very large margins all round, neatly cancelled. The 1s. and the envelope are in a very fresh state of preservation. The 1s are the postage for a letter to Prussia not exceeding 1/2 ounce weight routed ”via Belgium” between 1 january 1847 and 31 July 1852. The letter was written by Arnold Friedrich ”Fritz” Engelbert D'Alquen (1809 - 1887), pianist, violinist, cellist, professor of music, MD, Doctor of Medicine, to his sister Josephine d'Alquen (1802-1869) living in the familiy's hometown Arnsberg. ”Fritz” d'Alquen was sentenced in 1835 to 15 years prison on charge of high treason to the fatherland during the July Revolution 1830. In 1839 he begged the King of Prussia for permission to emigrate to England which was finally granted in 1839. He made a living as piano teacher. From 1846-1869 he was residing at 4 Ovington Terrace in London Knightsbridge. Certificate Enzo Diena (1988) and Karl-Albert Louis BPP (2016).

Ausruf

800 EUR

Ergebnis
Unverkauft