For broadcast on CBS Radio Network stations
July 10-11, 1999:
Real or fake?
The Stamp Collecting Report, I'm Lloyd de Vries.
Earlier this year, it was reported that one of the world's
rarest stamps had a twin: The 1856 Penny Magenta from
British Guiana (ghee-AN-ah). There's only one known for
sure, and now experts are casting doubt on that supposed
second copy.
The last time the original was sold, in 1980, the price
was close to a million dollars. It's possible the second
copy is an altered version of another 140-year-old stamp,
itself worth quite a bit.
What's also interesting is how the two major stamp
newspapers in this country are taking sides.
STAMP COLLECTOR broke the story, while LINN'S STAMP NEWS
scoffed at it, pointing out that the owner of the second
stamp is an admitted forger. When British experts refused
to certify the second copy as genuine, LINN'S jumped on
that story, while STAMP COLLECTOR said the experts weren't
certain.
Here's one other interesting fact about the Penny Magenta:
That one known genuine copy is owned by chemical fortune
heir John du Pont -- now in prison for murder.
And that's stamp collecting this week.
I'm Lloyd de Vries, CBS News
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