Anairmail stamp is apostage stamp intended to pay either anairmail fee that is charged in addition to the surface rate, or the full airmail rate, for an item ofmail to be transported by air.[1]
Airmail stamps should not be confused withairmail etiquettes, which are affixed to mail as an instruction to thepostal authority that the mail should be transmitted by air.
With aviation developments, several countries started to experiment with flights, and postal authorities considered flying the mails. Initially flights were unofficial, but some flights such as the 1877 Buffalo balloon flight,[2] carried mail, to which stamp-like labels were affixed. At the beginning airmail letters cost more than surface mail.
Both airmail stamps and stamps surcharged for airmail were issued, though some countries restricted the use of airmail stamps only to letters sent by airmail, while others allowed them to be used for other mail services.[3]
The first stamp depicting an aeroplane was a US 20-centparcel post stamp issued on 1 January 1913 but not intended for airmail duty: the set of 12 showed transportation and delivery methods.[4] Four years later an airmail stamp was issued in Italy. Several of the early ones were produced by surcharging other stamps with overprints; at first in 1917, Italy used express stamps; regular stamps were used by Austria in 1918, Sweden usedofficial stamps in 1920.[3] Some other examples are the use offiscal stamps,telegraph stamps,postage due stamps, andparcel stamps by other countries.[3] Airmail stamps have been issued for extra services, such as registered airmail, express airmail, airmailfieldpost, and even with welfare surcharges.[3]
In the 1920s and 1930s, when many countries issued airmail stamps to publicise their new airmail routes, a new branch ofstamp collecting started. This led to an expansion that includes the collection ofcovers, and other postal items carried by aircraft.[5] Airmail items from the early days are expensive due to the popularity of this collecting area.[6] Specialised catalogues andalbums are produced for collectors of airmail stamps and otheraerophilatelic items.[7] Many airmail stamps feature aviation themes[1] that are an area oftopical stamp collecting.[8]
The first postage stamp to be issued for an airmail flight was in May 1917 whenPoste italianeoverprinted their existingspecial delivery stamps.[9] The following year, theUnited States Post Office Department issued the first airmail stamp specifically issued for the purpose;[10] while it does not have "airmail" or "air post" printed on it, it illustrates aCurtiss JN-4airplane.[9] One pane of 100 stamps were found to have aninvert error, known as theInverted Jenny, because the airplane image in the centre is inverted relative to the outer frame.[11] The error is one of the most well known airmail stamps.[10] Several countries, such as Germany, Finland, Russia and the United States, issued special airmail stamps, or overprinted stamps, for the Zeppelin flights that took place in the late 1920s and early 1930s.[12]
Semi-official airmail stamps are not issued by the postal authority but have official sanction[13] and are sometimes used forlocal posts, they are more accurately referred to a labels rather than stamps.[14] For example, as noted above the privately produced 5¢ Buffalo balloon stamps were used on June 18, 1877, for aballoon flight fromNashville toGallatin, Tennessee.[2] TheVin Fiz Flyer, an early airplane, also carried semi-official stamps on its 1911 flight across the United States.[15]
Notes
Sources
Further reading