The evolution of Postage stamps of China

Postal history of China is very fascinating as much as intricate if one considers the gradual decay of imperial China, the years of civil wars, the Japanese Occupation in the 1930s and World War II.

Imperial China
Early records from the first millennium BC show evidence of regular governmental postal service during the Chou Dynasty.  By the 12th century, organised postal services existed as per Marco Polo’s records.  He reported the mailing of private letters by the Min Hsin Chu (a system of letter guilds) and the setting of post stages, as many as 10,000.

The Treaty of Kyakhta in 1727 allowed the regular exchange of mail between Imperial China and Russia.  In the 19th century, the Opium War ended the policy of isolation and ‘treaty’ ports opened, allowing some countries to operate their ‘foreign post offices’ from 1844.  

In 1865, Shanghai organised its own local post and the Englishman Robert Hart set up a mail service for the Imperial Maritime Customs for carrying consular mail to and from the ‘treaty’ ports.  This function was available to the public on May 1878.  Hence, China’s first postage stamps, the ‘Large Dragons’ were issued to handle payment, and were inscribed “CHINA” in both Latin and Chinese characters, and denominated in candareens.

Initially, all mail to foreign destinations went through Shanghai, but by 1882, twelve post offices opened.  Twelve years later, the postal operations were reorganised, Min Hsin Chu and the Shanghai local post ceased to operate, Customs Port became the Imperial Postal Service (effective 1 January 1897) and the postal system adopted cents and dollars as the new units of currency.

The lack of postage during the first half of 1897 forced the use of existing postage and revenue stock surcharged in cents, with some varieties.  The first new stamps, inscribed “IMPERIAL CHINESE POST” went on sale in August 1897 with twelve values, ranging from 1/2c to $5.  These lithographed stamps were printed in Japan and used desgns of a dragon, a carp and a wild goose.  

The paper was watermarked.  The following year, a new series of engraved stamps printed in London were issued in similar designs by using thicker Chinese watermarked paper.  The inscription changed to ‘CHINESE IMPERIAL POST’.  

New printings commenced in 1899 but used non-watermarked paper and from this run, stamps were in use until the end of the Empire.  It’s noticeable that the compliance to the Universal Postal Union saw the introduction of three values and the change of some colours.  

The anniversary of the first year of reign of Emperor Xuantong was ideal for the first Chinese commemorative stamp in 1909, printed on 3 denominations and depicting the ‘Temple of Heaven’ in Beijing.

Revolution and Republic

The 1910s – 
The revolution of 1911 resulted in overprints on the imperial stamps in 1912. Examples of  the overprints are that of ‘Foochow’ (neutral post office available to both sides) and ‘Nanking’ and ‘Shanghai’ (indicating part of the Republic of China).  Postmasters throughout the country used unofficial overprints.  

The first new designs of the Republic were two commemorative sets of 12 each, the first set depicting Sun Yat-Sen and second Yuan Shikai.  Both issues were available from 14 December 1912.

5-cent “junk” from the redesign of 1923

Chinese definitive postage stamps made their mark in May 1913 with the release of the ‘Junk design’ stamps.  Progressively, the higher issues depicred a farmer reaping rice and the ‘gateway to the Hall of Classics’.  Initially printed in London, the stamps were manufactured in Beijing from 1915.  The series was re-engraved in 1923.

The 1920s – 
China produced new commemorative issues, of four stamps each, during the 1920s.   These are the 25th anniversary of the Chinese Post Office (1921), the Temple of Heaven / New Constitution (1923), Marshal of the Army and Navy Zhang Zuolin (1928), the Unification of China / Chiang Kai-Shek (1929) and the State Funeral of Sun Yat Sen (1929). 

The 1930s and 1940s – 
In 1931, new definitives depicting Sun Yat Sen and in 1932, the ‘Six martyrs of Kuomintang’ were printed in volumes and were well used in the next several years.  

Manchuria was invaded in 1931 by the Japanese and ‘Manchukuo’ issued its own stamps.  During World War II, some existing postage stamps from previous issues were surcharged.

Chinese definitive postage stamps made their mark in May 1913 with the release of the ‘Junk design’ stamps.  Progressively, the higher issues depicred a farmer reaping rice and the ‘gateway to the Hall of Classics’.  Initially printed in London, the stamps were manufactured in Beijing from 1915.  The series was re-engraved in 1923.

The 1920s – 
China produced new commemorative issues, of four stamps each, during the 1920s.   These are the 25th anniversary of the Chinese Post Office (1921), the Temple of Heaven / New Constitution (1923), Marshal of the Army and Navy Zhang Zuolin (1928), the Unification of China / Chiang Kai-Shek (1929) and the State Funeral of Sun Yat Sen (1929). 

The 1930s and 1940s – 
In 1931, new definitives depicting Sun Yat Sen and in 1932, the ‘Six martyrs of Kuomintang’ were printed in volumes and were well used in the next several years.  

Manchuria was invaded in 1931 by the Japanese and ‘Manchukuo’ issued its own stamps.  During World War II, some existing postage stamps from previous issues were surcharged.

25 cents on a stamp of 1931
Kansu surcharge on a stamp issued in 1940-41

Although not the first appearance of Chiang Kai-shek on a stamp, this October 1945 commemoration of his inauguration includes a broader array of nationalistic symbols.

Towards the end of the War, the Nationalist Government was still struggling with the Communist forces.   Still, the postal authorities were able to release some commemorative issues on President Lin Sen who died in 1943, the anniversary of Chiang Kai-Shek in October 1945, and for celebrating the Alllied victory.

Severe inflation required a steady stream of overprints; this $2000 value is from 1946

Needless to say, as with many European countries affected by the War, China experienced increased inflation in 1945 and 1946.  The need for postage of higher values necessitated the release of older stamps with surcharges up to $2,000.  A new design of Sun Yat Sen was inscribed with the value of $5,000 but in the following year another issue came out with $50,000 that was superceded with the 1948’s $5,000,000 stamp!

Adoption of a gold yuan standard delayed inflation only for a short time. This $1000 stamp was issued in early 1949.

In 1948, the ‘gold yuan’ standard was adopted and existing stamps were surcharged with values from 1/2c and up.   This currency reformation proved infufficient due to inflation as by early 1949, the overprinted values reached the $5,000,000 mark!  In desparation, the government printed undenominated stamps and sold them at the daily yean rate.  
Later, the silver yuan standard was adopted and more stamps were overprinted.  By August 1949, the Nationalists’ last issues were denominated in silver Yuan.

The postal system of the People’s Republic of China was established in Beijing in that year and was expanded to the liberated areas.  This enabled the authority to cease the sale of regional stamps by end of June 1950, with the exception of the Northeast Liberation Area and the Port Arthur & Dairen Post & Telegraph (by end of 1950).
The unified administration issued its first postage stamps in October 1949 that consisted of four with designs of ‘lantern and the Gate of Heavenly Peace’.

This silver yuan overprint on a revenue stamp was used for only a few months in mid-1949.

The first definitive series were released in February 1950 and featured the Gate of Heavenly Peace against a background of clouds. These stamps came in nine values ranging from $200 to $10,000.  
The design was modified several times over the next few years and today, philatelists have identified six issues.   By the end of 1950, all provinces were entered into the unified postal service.

Like much of the global economy these days, the center of the world’s multibillion-dollar stamp-collecting market is shifting east. Auction houses are sprouting up in Hong Kong, Singapore and Beijing, and rich collectors are catching the bug, especially in China. All of that is helping breathe new life into a hobby—and for some, an investment strategy—that was starting to seem decidedly passé in the West. Without rich Chinese collectors, some experts say, stamp collecting would have continued its long, slow decline from mainstream hobby to near-extinction.

At least a third of the world’s 60 million stamp collectors are now in China, and the number is growing rapidly, Stanley Gibbons says. China, including Hong Kong, has also become a big stamp-trading hub, with at least six auction houses in Hong Kong and another four major houses on the mainland plus several smaller ones, most opening in the past four years. Stamp shows have proliferated, drawing hundreds of thousands of buyers and gawkers at a time when similar events in the U.S. are lucky to break into the five figures.

Online exchanges have also sprouted, with tickers scrolling across the screen like stock markets. Stanley Gibbons says Asian clients now make up 5 percent of the firm’s investments in terms of volume—but almost 18 percent in value, as they spend more.

How much more? Three years ago, two sheets of the first ever-issued stamps for Formosa, the name of the island that later became Taiwan, sold to a Hong Kong collector for HK$10.4 million, or over $1.3 million.

In 1895 China ceded Taiwan to Japan. The Taiwanese reacted by establishing the short-lived Republic of Formosa, which issued its own stamps.

In 2011, a block of four stamps from 1968 called “Chairman Mao’s Inscription to Japanese Worker Friends” sold for more than $1 million at a Hong Kong auction.

The stamps, which feature Chairman Mao’s handwriting declaring that the revolution would succeed in Japan, were printed but never issued—except through a post office in Hebei, China, which started selling them before they were canceled. 

This great rarity is understood to be the largest existing multiple and probably the only surviving block of four of the stamp.

Last year, a pair of 1941 stamps that featured Sun Yat-sen, the revolutionary leader who began the Republic of China in the early 20th century, sold for $709,000 at an auction in Hong Kong. Like many other expensive stamps, their value was due to human error: The text and the $2 sign were printed upside down.

Chinese buyers tend to like alternative investments, from art to jade to homegrown liquors—and now stamps. According to a report by the private-wealth division at Barclays, China’s high-net-worth individuals put 17 percent of their wealth in these type of investments, compared to 9 percent of America’s rich and only 7 percent of the British wealthy. Stamps are also a relatively cheap collectible for countries that have new and growing middle classes and the hope is their young population will wish to take up Philately as a hobby, keeping the demand for their country stamps growing.

Fingers crossed!

The notorious legacy behind Inverted Jenny

During his lunch break on May 14, 1918, William T. Robey, a bank teller at Hibbs and Company in Washington D.C., traveled, as he often did, to the post office on New York Avenue. There, he hoped to purchase a new stamp celebrating the launch of the U.S. airmail service, set to make its first official flight the following day.

William T. Robey, discoverer of the Inverted Jenny, in a family photograph taken in 1940 at his daughter’s wedding

The stamp was an impressive sight. It featured a Curtiss JN-4 or “Jenny”, the same plane set to deliver the mail the following day, and was printed in carmine rose and deep blue. The striking color scheme no doubt wooed buyers, but like many of the avid collectors who gathered at post offices in Philadelphia, New York and the nation’s capital, Robey also knew that it enabled an even more spectacular possibility—a printing error. It was just the second time the Postal Service had attempted a two-color stamp and with the fervor of World War I, sloppy mistakes were a more likely occurrence.

Among the many philatelists, Robey was the lucky one. Instead of flying high through the skies, the Jenny on his stamp appeared upside down, as if it were doing an elaborate aerial flip for some grand barnstorming performance. Even luckier for Robey, the person selling him the stamps on that fateful day had never seen an airplane and couldn’t tell the difference.

When he saw the error, Robey saw opportunity, and he coolly asked to purchase a 100-count sheet for $24.

But when Robey asked for another sheet, the jig was up. In 1918, spending $24 on stamps was surprising, and $48, suspicious. The clerk closed down shop, and no one else would ever buy a sheet of Inverted Jennys.

Soon after, Robey sent word of the mistake to fellow friends and collectors, and it didn’t take long for the news to spread to postal inspectors, who were eager to reclaim the errant stamps. Of course, Robey rebuffed their offers, and for a few days, he hid the sheet of stamps under the mattress in a one-room apartment he shared with his wife. Under mounting scrutiny, he was eager to make a deal, and in a panic, he sold the stamps to Eugene Klein, a Philadelphia businessman an avid philatelist for $15,000.

Eugene Klein (1878-1944)

The money allowed the Robeys to purchase a new house along with a car, which as the story goes, William promptly drove through the back wall of his garage. Its symbolic of a much larger blunder that emerged from his panicked selling: Robey assumed that more flawed stamps would emerge since they were typically printed on a larger 400-subject plate. But the other mistakes were caught and destroyed. Had Robey been patient, he could have made even more.

Klein, in turn, resold the Inverted Jennys for $20,000 to railroad scion Edward H.R. Green. Green divvied the sheet up into 25 rectangles of four Jennys apiece.

Edward Howland Robinson Green

From there, the Jenny sets passed through various hands. Green almost burned some in a pub ashtray before fellow stamp collectors stayed his hand. He numbered the stamps in pencil, 1 to 100. One stamp was stolen from the New York Public Library; another Inverted Jenny possibly appeared on a 2006 absentee ballot.

About 98 of the 100 stamps, have been accounted for.

Thievery is responsible for those that are missing. In 1936, Ethel B. Stewart McCoy bought a quadruplet of Inverted Jennys. In 1955, she allowed the American Philatelic Society to display the stamps at a Virginia convention. That was the last time those four stamps appeared together, as they were filched from the premises.

Ethel B. Stewart McCoy one of the most prominent philatelists of her day. Ms. McCoy was a New Yorker and the daughter of Charles Milford Bergstresser, a co-founder of Dow Jones Company

Ms. McCoy’s foursome had been a gift in 1936 from her first husband, so its sentimental value to her greatly exceeded the $15,000 she insured it for before lending it to the American Philatelic Society to exhibit at its Norfolk, Va., convention in the fall of 1955.

Twenty years later, Chicago collectors found two of the four. But, after the early ’80s, there was no sign of the missing stamps, except, perhaps, on the ballot.

In April, however, everything changed. Another stamp had been found, having made its way across the Atlantic years before. An Irish man, Keelin O’Neill, knew he had a strange stamp among items he had inherited from his grandfather, but did not recognize its significance.

“I had no idea about the history and importance of the stamp until very recently,” he said to the Associated Press. When he tried to sell it to a U.S. auction house earlier this year,  the assessor thought he had a forgery.

“The chances of him having the real McCoy, so to speak, were between slim and none,” George Eveleth, who evaluated O’Neill’s stamp, told NBC News. But when it turned out to be real, collectors tipped off the FBI.

American Philatelic Society executive director Scott D. English, left, congratulates Keelin O’Neill, who was awarded for helping return an ‘Inverted Jenny’

During the World Stamp Show in New York City, the FBI handed it over to the American Philatelic Society. For his part, O’Neil turned out okay, scoring a $50,000 reward for his role in wrapping up a part of the mystery.

But the final Inverted Jenny remains at large, just as the question of who pilfered the block of four of the rare stamps, 60 years ago, remains unanswered.

The discoverer -Robey, continued to enjoy stamp collecting for another 31 years, he never owned another Inverted Jenny after selling the sheet to Klein. He continued to report other philatelic “discoveries,” but none were even remotely comparable to the Inverted Jenny. After witnessing the complete dispersal of Colonel Green’s holding of Inverted Jenny stamps, Robey passed away in February 1949.

Hawaiian Stamps: When it all started

The first Hawaiian stamps came out in 1851. It was King Kamehameha III’s response to the missionaries needing a reliable postal service for letters to their friends and family east. The first post office was part of the government’s newspaper, the Polynesian. In 1855 no less than 24,984 pieces of mail left the islands and 23,940 answers returned!

6-cent 1893 Hawaii stamp Valued at $12,500

These first stamps, with a floral border and a number, were aptly called “the Missionaries”. Valued at $150,000 to $250,000 (way back in 1990’s) the rare two-cent blue stamp now belongs to a few lucky collectors. It is the only stamp in history for which a collector was killed and the only stamp once accepted by two sovereign nations, Hawaii and the US.

Around the same time, a stamp was printed with the image of King Kamehameha III. But a few years later, the government issued a series of plain numerals, seemingly forgetting how much a picture can explain to the world. Where was the image of the Great King Kamehameha I? What about Kamehameha II?

Above letter was stamped in 1852 with the 13-cent blue, “Hawaiian Postage”.

In 1864 a new series came out presenting the Hawaiian royalty. But neither Queen Kaahumanu or Princess Kinau was represented. On stamp, also, appeared King David Kalakaua, Hawaii’s merry ruler, who had started himself out as a postmaster and became king due to a lack of royal heirs. Probably the only king in the world with such a career, Kalakaua made sure to be on millions of colorful stamps while still alive. Kamehameha I finally appeared in print in 1883.

In 1893, the Hawaiian people, unhappy with Queen Liliuokalani’s rule, abandoned the monarchy. Hawaii declared itself a republic. The stamps reflected the change only through an overprint.


The 1882 5-cent Kamehameha V stamp.

The following year Hawaii officially became a republic and seven new stamps came out. Among them one of Star and Palms, expressing already the idea of annexation which occurred in 1898.

At the turn of the century, Hawaii was declared US territory. From now on, stamps were US postage with or without a Hawaii theme. In 1959 Hawaii became the 50th State.

Over the 20th century many stamps continued to reveal Hawaii’s unique position.

The entire collection of Indian Miniature Sheets (M/S)

Stamps of India: Miniature Sheets: chronological order, if you happen to like any stamp and would like to buy or trade, do not hesitate to get in touch !

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started