Jamaica 1 shilling inverted-frame stamp error
The Jamaica 1sh inverted-frame error was discovered in March 1922 at the post office in Manchioneal, a village in the parish of Portland. It is definite that an entire sheet of 60 stamps on multiple CA paper existed but only half of this sheet was sent to Manchioneal. The majority of these were possibly used for fiscal purposes because Manchioneal was a banana trading centre and buyers may have used the telegraph office to confirm purchases.[1] The other half of the sheet was possibly sold over the counter in Jamaica's capital, Kingston, because a copy with a Kingston cancellation exists.[2]
Jamaica 1sh inverted-frame | |
---|---|
A corner pair of the stamp. | |
Country of production | UK |
Location of production | London |
Date of production | 1920 |
Nature of rarity | inverted frame |
No. in existence | 19 [1] |
Face value | 1 shilling |
Estimated value | £30,000 [1] |
Only 5 examples are known in used condition, 4 with Manchioneal cancel and only 1 with Kingston cancel [3]
References
- Tortello, Dr. Rebecca. "The Jamaican Postal Service: History of Stamp". Postal Corporation of Jamaica Ltd. Archived from the original on 2010-03-28. Retrieved 2009-09-28.
- Stanley Gibbons - 85a.
- Empire Philatelists, Stuart Chandler. "Jamaica 1920 1s Orange-Yellow & Red-Orange SG85a Frame Inverted Neatly Cancelled". www.empirephilatelists.com. Retrieved 2018-01-20.
- Empire Philatelists, Stuart Chandler. "Jamaica 1920 1s Orange-Yellow & Red-Orange SG85a Frame Inverted Neatly Cancelled". www.empirephilatelists.com. Retrieved 2018-01-20.
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