Postmark

This article is about the postal marking. For the direct mail company see Postmark (company).
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An example of a postmark

A postmark is a postal marking made on a letter or package indicating the (more or less precise) date and time that the item was delivered into the care of the postal service. Modern postmarks are often applied simultaneously with the cancellation or "killer" that marks the postage stamp(s) as having been used (though in some circumstances there may be a postmark without a killer, and sometimes the postmark and killer form a continuous design), and the two terms are often used interchangeably, if incorrectly. Postmarks may be applied by hand or by machines, using methods such as rollers or inkjets, while digital postmarks are a recent innovation. The local post Hawai'i Post had a rubber-stamp postmark parts of which were hand-painted.[1] (http://www.hawaii-post.com/postmarks.html) At Hidaway Island, Vanuatu, the Underwater Post Office has an embossed postmark.[2] (http://www.hideaway.com.vu/postoffice.htm)

The date of the postmark can be quite important. In the United States, the Internal Revenue Service will still consider income tax returns as filed on time though it receives them late if they are postmarked on time, and this date (with, perhaps, other proofs of mailing), may have significance as regards legal filings. Entries into sweepstakes and contests, and juried art exhibitions, may likewise have a "postmark deadline."

There are some examples of "faked covers" produced by philatelic forgers, most usually in order to increase their value, in which the postmark has been altered in some way; for example, by changing the date.[3] (http://www.askphil.org/b55.htm)

The "electronic postmark" was named by drawing a parallel with the regular postmark.

Contents

History

The first postmark (called the "Bishop Mark") was introduced by English Postmaster General Henry Bishop in 1661 and showed only the day and month of mailing in order to prevent the delay of the mail by carriers.[4] (http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/alabaster/A1082558) In the 19th century and early 1900s it was common for letters to receive multiple postmarks indicating the time, date, and location of each post office delivering or transporting the letter, and this is still occasionally true, though to a lesser extent (see "backstamp").

Different types of postmarks include railway post offices ("RPOs") and maritime (on-board ship) postmarks. Postmarks on naval vessels during sensitive operations in wartime are sometimes "clean," showing less information than normally to prevent route of travel or other details from falling into enemy hands. Hawai'i post once had a surfboard mail postmark, for covers that traveled by surfboard.[5] (http://www.hawaii-post.com/postmarks.html)

A colour postmark is on the United States Postal Service-issued collectible envelope commemorating the 2004 inauguration of George W. Bush.

While postmarks are applied almost universally by or under the authority of the official postal department, service, or authority [in the United States it is possible to receive a permit to apply your own postmark, called a ], it is at least theoretically possible that under certain conditions specified by the private express statutes in the United States, a privately-carried letter may be cancelled with a private postmark. Unofficial entities that issue artistamps may use postmark-like markings as well.

Much of the published work on postmarks covers postmarks from before 1900. (This is perhaps because in the United States so-called fancy cancels were prevalent in this period, with the cancelling device often hand-cut from cork by the postmaster in elaborate shapes such as flags, stars or shapes that were seasonally-appropriate such as turkeys for Thanksgiving). Much work in studying postmarks is needed for 1900 and later.

In Great Britain the first postmark employed for the cancellation of the then new postage stamps was the Maltese Cross, so named because of its shape and appearance. This was used in conjunction with a date stamp which was applied, usually to the rear of the letter, which denoted the date of posting.

Fewer postmarks are used now than previously, with the advent of meter labels, which indicate the precise date and time of acceptance at the post office, some types of computer vended postage, and computerized postage people can print off their own PCs (called in the United States PC Postage, these services were offered by such companies as Stamps.com (http://www.stamps.com) and Neopost, Inc.). These indica do not need to be postmarked, though occasionally they are redundantly, and inadvertently (or for whatever other reason).

Digital postmarks

In 2004 the United States Postal Service announced plans to introduce first day digital color postmarks to be used to cancel some first day covers for commemorative stamps in 2005.[6] (http://www.usps.com/communications/news/stamps/2004/sr04_080.htm)

Postmark Advertisement

Singapore Post offers a "postmark advertising" service which, strictly speaking, applies to the "killer" rather than the postmark.[7] (http://www.singpost.com.sg/03_biz_svcs/postmarkad_d.htm)

Value

A special or rare postmark can substantially add to the value of a stamp. (In addition to everyday postmarks there are postmarks indicating the first day of issue of a particular stamp and pictorial cancellations commemorating local events, anniversaries, and the like and slogan postmarks which advertise and event or pass information to the public.)

Postmark Africa

Postmark Africa is a programme on the BBC World Service.

Miscellaneous

A datestamp is a type of postmark.

The Postmark Award is given to outstanding employees of Canada Post.

Similar marks

A postmark should not be confused with the killer which are lines, bars, etc. used to cancel a postage stamp. Neither should a postmark be confused with overprints generally, or pre-cancels (stamps that have been cancelled before the envelope or package to which they are affixed is submitted or deposited for acceptance into the mailstream, they most commonly have taken the form of a pre-printed city name on the stamp) specifically, which generally do not indicate a date.

Flight cachets, more or less elaborate rubber-stamps on an envelope indicating on which flight (typically a first flight) a cover has traveled via air mail, are in addition to the postmark and are not postmarks either.

Source: "Collecting those strange Tongan stamps — on cover," in Scott Stamp Monthly (August 2002)

External links

ja:消印 zh:邮戳

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