Description | Price | ||
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CONNECTICUT - WILLIMANTIC 1860S CIVIL WAR ERA COVER AND LETTER TO GREENE RHODE ISLAND MENTIONS LINCOLN'S DEATH AND BOOTH Outstanding item. Cover bears the Willimantic octagon postmark with a grill cancel on the stamp. The letter opens with a discussion about purchasing wine and the states: "People have been having terrible times this way. Rejoicing over victories and mourning over the President." Also notes: "Got Booth, I suppose." Letter is written by Sarah to friend James Harris. All in good condition. Light stain center of small envelope. |
$50.00 | ||
CONNECTICUT: EARLY TAFTVILLE MILL AND VILLAGE UNUSED POSTCARD Very clean. |
$5.00 | ||
CONNECTICUT: HARTFORD 1876 PUBLISHER'S COVER WITH CT. DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET BROCHURE INSIDE Historic content to this Worthington Company cover. Content is a small 66-page booklet containing details on the Connecticut Democrat State Ticket for 1876. It breaks out all the candidates by name for all the counties in Connecticut, lists elected officials, and provides a synopsis of the election law of 1874. Condition is excellent. Email if you wish to see additional scans of the internal pages of the booklet. |
$30.00 | ||
CONNECTICUT: MERROW, STONY CREEK, EAGLEVILLE DEAD POST OFFICE COVERS Merrow cover contains letter from Uriel Lodge #24 AF&AM. |
$8.00 | ||
CONNECTICUT: NEW-MILFORD 1837 STAMPLESS FOLDED LETTER FROM D. SANFORD TO ROGER SHERMAN, FAIRFIELD LAWYER Short letter from D. Sanford (believe first name to be David) asking prominent Fairfield lawyer Roger Sherman to review a deed from a property sale he was involved in to determine what can be built on the property. Roger Minott Sherman (May 22, 1773 – December 30, 1844) was a lawyer and politician from Fairfield County, Connecticut. There is a grammar school in Fairfield named after him. Item in excellent condition with bold brown postmark. |
$25.00 | ||
CREAGERSTOWN MARYLAND TO LEITERSBURY MARYLAND MANUSCRIPT STAMPLESS COVER - UNLISTED IN ASCC Clear May 9 manuscript postmark on this letter to Rev. George W Anderson, Leitersburg, Maryland. Manuscript postmark for Creagerstown is unlisted in American Stampless Cover Catalog. |
$100.00 | ||
CRISTOBAL CANAL ZONE TO MIAMI FLORIDA TO RAHWAY NEW JERSEY FIRST FLIGHT CACHET COVER Blue cachet. Note that overprinted stamp is missing piece at top right. Proper Miami and Rahway receivers on back. |
$10.00 | ||
CROATIA: LUSSIN PICCOLO 1899 RARE POSTAL CARD FROM ASTRONOMER LEO BRENNER TO MS. WILLIAMINA FLEMING, HARVARD UNIVERSITY, CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS This postal card represents an historic and unique communication between two of the world’s foremost astronomers – Leo Brenner and Williamina Fleming. See biographical information below. The Austria postal card has an 1899 postmark from Lussin Piccolo, a Croatian Island in the northern Adriatic Sea…rare in its own right. At left is a handstamp for Manora-Sternwarte, the observatory founded by Leo Brenner. The card is addressed to Mrs. Fleming at Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. Brenner, whose signature is at the bottom of the card, miswrote his salutation as Dear Sir (probably because few, if any, women had reached such stature in the field of astronomy at the time). He corrected the error before posting his request that she send an image of herself along with a biography for use in his astronomy publication. Card has a light horizontal crease. Otherwise, very clean. Cambridge receiver postmark on address side. Spiridon Gopcevic or Gopcevia was a Serbian astronomer and historian. He is also known by his pen name of Leo Brenner. He was born to a shipowner in the Austrian litoral town of Trieste (today in Italy), and at an early age, was sent to Vienna to be educated. Following the death of his mother, he became a journalist by trade. Among his works he published Macedonia and Old Serbia in 1889, an ethnographic study. However, he spent time in jail in 1893 due to some of his articles against the Austro-Hungarian government, and decided to end his journalistic career. In 1893 he founded Manora Observatory on Mali Lošinj. This observatory was named for his wife, a wealthy Austrian noblewoman. At this observatory, Spiridon used the 17.5cm refractor telescope at the observatory to make observations of Mars, the rings of Saturn, and other planets. He would eventually close the observatory in 1909 due to financial problems. From 1899 until 1908 he was the founder and editor of the Astronomische Rundschau, a popular scientific journal. He spent several years in America before returning to Europe and editing an army journal in Berlin during the war. The crater Brenner on the Moon was named after him (based on his nom de plume) by his friend Phillip Fauth. A new observatory was built on Mali Lošinj in 1993, and was named "Leo Brenner". Williamina Paton Stevens Fleming (15 May 1857 – 21 May 1911) was a Scottish astronomer active in the United States. During her career, she helped develop a common designation system for stars and cataloged thousands of stars and other astronomical phenomena. Among several career achievements that advanced astronomy, Fleming is noted for her discovery of the Horsehead Nebula in 1888. Williamina Paton Stevens was born in Dundee, Scotland on 15 May 1857. In 1877, she married James Orr Fleming, an accountant and widower, also of Dundee. She worked as a teacher a short time before the couple emigrated to Boston, Massachusetts, when she was 21. The couple had one son, Edward P. Fleming. |
$1,000.00 | ||
CUBA - HAVANA TO PARIS VIA NEW YORK 1855 STAMPLESS FOLDED LETTER Heavy rate marking with partial New York paquet boat mark. See scan for markings on back of letter. |
$15.00 | ||
CUBA: CHARLES LINDBERGH OVERPRINT AIRMAIL STAMP ON 1928 HAVANA CACHET FLIGHT COVER. SCOTT #C-2 STAMP Hand drawn flag of Cuba and airmail design on this 1928 Havana Cuba cover to USA franked with Scott C-2 Lindbergh airmail stamp. |
$40.00 |