Post Office
Building, Tanga, German East Africa, about 1905
Bud's Big BlueBud's Observations
German colonists frequently used Tanga, a city in the
northeast close to the Kenya border, as their port of entry. A contemporary
observer proclaimed Tanga to be more beautiful and prosperous than Dar es
Salaam, the capital city; this because of coffee, sisal and cotton exports to
Europe.
No doubt, the Tanga cancel (23 May 1907, shown below) was struck in
city’s bustling post office.
Notice in the above photo: 1) the line outside the post
office, likely waiting mail carriers some of whom would be dispatched locally,
some perhaps to the interior, 2) the characteristic German colonial
architecture, 3) the signboard with the German eagle, 4) the telegraph pole, 5)
the kerosene street lamp, and 6) the tram trundling along rails, powered by
Africans but conveying a European who ogles the camera.
Colonists “devoured” any and all mail from home. One
contemporary journaled “… for every white person in remote Africa, however
monotonous or uniform his life may be, there is a recurring joyful moment when
his pulse beats faster -- the unexpected appearance of a dust-covered mail
carrier with a chest filled with mail from home -- even more so if the previous
mail came long ago. Every little letter will be read with devotion, turned
around, viewed upside down, then re-read. Every bit of newspaper, albeit months
out of date, will be literally devoured and almost memorized.” The colonial
stamps affixed to the replies now fill our BBs.
Note: Penciled-in “Rs” on a Bud’s Big Blue album pages
indicate damaged placeholders. Here, two stamps have old cellophane tape
stains. Sometimes defects don’t show up clearly on the scans. Hence, the Rs.
Photo credit: http://kunstmuseum-hamburg.de/deutsch-ostafrika-im-bild/
Sources for text: “Die Post im Innern Afrikas” Published 10
Oktober 2016 by Kunstdirektor http://kunstmuseum-hamburg.de/die-post-im-innern-afrika/.
Kolonie und Heimat in Wort und Bild -
3. Jahrgang Nr. 11 - 1910-02-13
https://archive.org/stream/KolonieUndHeimatInWortUndBild. (My very free,
summarized, and likely faulty translation).
Sources for text: “Die Post im Innern Afrikas” Published 10
Oktober 2016 by Kunstdirektor
Kolonie und Heimat in Wort und Bild -
3. Jahrgang Nr. 11 - 1910-02-13
Census: 33 in BB spaces, 1 tip-in, 12 on supplement page including three Nyasaland Protectorate stamps with “N.F.” overprints, these intended for Nyasaland military use in GEA during WWI.
The German colony of German East Africa, opposite Zanzibar, and bordering on the Indian Ocean, was established as a protectorate by the German government on March 3, 1885. When the Sultan of Zanzibar objected, five warships were sent by Otto von Bismark to the area. The British and the Germans divided the mainland among themselves, and the Sultan had to agree.
In 1890, the Heligoland-Zanzibar Treaty was instituted between Germany and the British. Germany gained the islands of Heligoland in the North Sea ( A British possession since 1814), while the British were allowed to build a railway through parts of East Africa to Lake Victoria. And Germany agreed not to interfere with the British sphere of influence with the Zanzibar sultanate.
Makes sense if one things of Africa as a Monopoly Board. ;-)
German Easy Africa Blog Post & BB Checklist
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