Download this report as an MP3 sound file.
Baked Nebraska.
The Stamp Collecting Report, I'm Lloyd de Vries.
Remember irradiation of the mail to prevent another anthrax
attack? Some mail was scorched, some otherwise damaged, and
there were complaints from credit card companies, electronics
firms...and stamp collectors.
In February, the Postal Service told stamp writers there would
be no more irradiation of mail, except to a few government
office buildings in Washington.
So what happened to a valuable U-S stamp mailed later that month
from Pennsylvania to North Carolina? According to Linn's Stamp
News, it was a ten-cent James Monroe stamp from the 1929 Nebraska
overprint series, worth nearly two hundred dollars.
The orange-yellow design is all but gone, the glue side of the
stamp stuck to the plastic mount, and the clear plastic of the
mount melted.
It took more than a month to make the delivery, too, so the
speculation is that somehow the package was mis-routed via Official Washington. Insured Mail isn't supposed to get lost like that.
Or ruined.
And that's stamp collecting this week.
I'm Lloyd de Vries, CBS News.
----------------------------------------------------------
Go to Previous Report
Go to Next Report
Go to Report Index
Return to Virtual Stamp Club Home Page
|