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A philatelic auction, or stamp auction, is a sale of stamps, covers and other philatelic material usually run by stamp dealers or specialist collectibles auctioneers, such as David Feldman, Christie's and Sotheby's, where prospective purchasers place bids in an attempt to obtain the desired items.
eBay, February 18, 2017 Auction sale Mark J. Patterson Philadelphia, USA, 2012 Estate Edmund E. Neville Mainland China, 1976 Purchase Liu Zhong-En Unknown Unknown 133 AbeBooks.com, September 30, 2016" Purchase Recycle Bookstore (AbeBooks.com) Unknown 209 eBay, May 30, 2016 Auction Sale Estate, NyStamps Unknown 768
Bonhams and Butterfield was a large American auction house, founded in 1865 by William Butterfield in San Francisco. It was purchased in 1999 from Bernard Osher by online auctioneer eBay for $260 million. [1] In 2002, it was acquired from eBay by British auctioneer Bonhams and operated under the name Bonhams & Butterfields for about ten years ...
StampData 748,921 stamp types, free, without values; New Zealand Online Catalog by themes, years and face values; Stamps of the World Wiki 27,757 pages containing 382,414 images, free, without values; StampWorld 840,739, free, with values; The WikiBooks Worldwide Stamp Catalogue; Stamp counters updated from the respective websites on 2024-5-29
Postage stamps were first used in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland on 6 May 1840, with the introduction of the world's first adhesive postage stamps, the Penny Black and Two Pence Blue.
Austria The journal of the Austrian Philatelic Society - quarterly; Stamp News Australasia www.stampnews.net.au incorporates The Australian Stamp Monthly, est. 1930. The only monthly magazine in the Southern Hemisphere, available in print or digital formats. Back issues can be read free online. Stamp Magazine UK
A series of rare photos of American icon Marilyn Monroe are set to hit the auction block soon and they're expected to fetch a pretty penny. Six photos taken by photographer and friend George ...
An early record was achieved in the 1880s for the sale of the Philadelphia Post Office building for $425,000, then a record for a piece of real estate at auction. [5] Through the 1990s, Freeman's was driven by high volume. The house would sell 50,000 lots a year, at an average of $110 per lot, and make $5.5 million.