Barefoot Caribbean postman
Bud's Big BlueBud's Observations
Jamaica swashbuckled its way through
its first 150 years of postal service. Truly exciting. King Charles II authorized post offices for
Jamaica and Barbados in 1663 making them the first British colonies to have
such. Captains of Caribbean trading vessels were
entrusted with the letters’ safe transport. In the preceding century, however, the
English and Dutch had licensed privateers to bollix Spanish shipping. Such
“letters of marque,” as they were called, dried up about 1660. High drama
ensued: privateers went rogue and initiated the “Golden Age of Piracy.” Many
letters never made it to safe harbor. Piracy continued strong until 1730, then dwindled along for another 100 years. Early Jamaican
stampless covers are, unsurprisingly, scarce.
Fortunately for BB
collectors Jamaican stamps are plentiful, inexpensive, and quite interesting.
I’ll comment only on the Jamaican seal showing in the 1903-6 series (see
below). A Taino woman and man support a shield with a red cross surmounted by
five golden pineapples. At the top, a crocodile poses on a royal mantle (in the
stamps, it’s on a log). William Sancroft, Archbishop of Canterbury, designed
the original in 1661. The motto, barely visible on BB’s selection, reads Indus uterque serviet uni which
translates “Both Indies will serve one” -- definitely colonial in sentiment,
possibly racist. Upon independence in 1962, Jamaica change its motto to “Out of
many, one people.” Compare e pluribus
unum.
The barefoot Caribbean
postman (above) is in my collection. Carved mahogany, 19 in. tall.
Census: 78 in BB
spaces, 4 tip-ins, 37 on the supplement page.
Jamaican Seal
Jim's ObservationsThe Scott Classic Specialized catalogue has, from 1860-1952, 152 regular, 3 semi-postal, 11 war tax, and 4 official major descriptive stamp categories: Total 170.
Of those, 86 are CV <$1-$1+, or 51%. Not surprisingly, the catalogue values are higher with the island's close proximity to the United States, and the fact it is a British Commonwealth country.
But it has no extensive rarities, so it can be completed to a high degree by the assiduous classical collector.
Jamaica Blog Post and BB Checklist
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Supplements
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Comments appreciated!
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