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The Bulletin was first published in September 1963, not long after the formation of the Philatelic Bureau on 1 May, and was a monthly publication almost from the start. . Early editions were simple publications, type-written on Bureau notepaper in A4
A 1906 advert for Weston from The Philatelic Index, 1906.. Herbert Edgar Weston (28 October 1874 in Chichester – 21 November 1961 in Twickenham), [1] or H. Edgar Weston, was a stamp dealer in Stockwell, London, then Twickenham, who used the pseudonym Victor Marsh and who purchased Jean-Baptiste Moens' stock of philatelic literature after Moens' retirement in about 1907.
Stamp Collecting, 1913–1984; The Stamp Collector: Asia Pacific's regional magazine for stamp collectors (Milsons Point, N.S.W. : Brian Moore at Asia-Pacific Press, 1991–1995) ISSN 1037-2199; The Stamp Collector's Record, 1864 to 1876; The Stamp-Collector's Review and Monthly Advertiser, 1862
Stamp collecting began to emerge from obscurity in America after the Civil War, and by the 1880s philatelic societies were being formed to connect collectors, and to legitimize and publicize the hobby.
This is a list of philatelic bureaus across the world. In philately , a philatelic bureau is the part of a national postal administration that sells philatelic items to stamp collectors , tourists and stamp dealers .
Henry G. Lapham, Grand Award at the 1936 Third International Philatelic Exhibition [11] H. Dormer Legge; Alfred Lichtenstein [12] James Lindsay, 26th Earl of Crawford, formed massive philatelic library [13] George Ward Linn, founder of Linn's Weekly Stamp News; Robson Lowe, "father of postal history" [14] John Luff [13]
In philately, the Higgins & Gage World Postal Stationery Catalog is the most recent encyclopedic catalogue of postal stationery covering the whole world. Despite most volumes not having been updated for over thirty years, the catalogue and the H & G numbering system are still widely used by philatelists and stamp dealers although the values given in the catalogue are out of date.
They were sold at face value, available from the Philatelic Bulletin and selected Post Offices. Greetings Packs – Greeting stamps were produced in booklet format. They were first available within a 1992 Presentation Pack. Each pack contained ten 1st Class stamps along with the corresponding labels.