NEWFOUNDLAND C13 SG230 1933 5c PUT TO FLIGHT LABRADOR AIRMAIL P14.3 USED CV$30


 

 

 
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NEWFOUNDLAND C13 SG230 1933 5c PUT TO FLIGHT LABRADOR AIRMAIL P14.3 USED CV$30

5 cent "Put to Flight" stamp from the 1933 Labrador Airmail issue, engraved, reddish brown, Coat of Arms watermark* (position 4 - normal for this stamp), perf 14.3x14.3. There are 3 perforation varieties of this stamp, the most common being 14.3x14.3 followed by 13.8x13.8 with the scarecest being the recently discovered perf 14.1x14.1. Used with contemporary bar grid obliterator hand stamp cancel. Sound, fault-free used example of this iconic Newfoundland airmail stamp.

Listed as 230 in the 2020 edition of the Stanley Gibbons catalogue with a retail selling price in used condition of 22pds - approximately $30.00 USD. Although Stanley Gibbons retail prices are frequently higher than values given in other stamp catalogues (that don't make a market in stamps), in my opinion, Newfoundland stamps in good used condition are undervalued in the current marketplace.

The normal position of the watermark for this stamp as viewed from the back is with the top of the Coat of Arms shield facing to the right with the elk* facing down - this is listed as watermark position number 4 in the Walsh Newfoundland Specialized Stamp Catalogue.

*Note" Many people have assumed that the animal on the top of the Cost of Arms shield is either a caribou or a moose (both of which are quite common in Newfoundland). In the registered design granted in 1637 to the Colony of Newfoundland by Royal Letters Patent, the heraldic description for the Crest reads: "On a Wreath Or and Gules an Elk passant proper." (see attached article by Stanley C. Calder in BNATopics from October 1949) However, this still doesn't clear up the matter. Europeans refer to "elk" what North Americans call "moose". Moose became extinct in Great Britain 1,000s of years before the original Newfoundland Coat of Arms was designed and granted. Therefore it is not likely that the original designer used a "moose" as the model for the "Elk" on the shield. And since "caribou" were largely unknown to European royalty as well, just what was the animal used as a model for the Coat of Arms? In the British Isles, many people refer to some of the larger species of "deer" as "elk". This would probably be most particular to the royalty in reference to Red Deer and Fallow Deer held for their exclusive use on their country estates. Fallow deer were introduced by the Normans into southern England in the first century A.D. for hunting (a sport more or less reserved for nobility). The Fallow "deer" is the only species of deer other than moose with palmated antlers. I believe the animal shown on the Newfoundland Coat of Arms is neither a "moose", "caribou" or an "elk" but is in fact a Fallow "deer".

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