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Washington–Franklin Issues

The Washington–Franklin Issues are a series of definitive U.S. Postage stamps depicting George Washington and Benjamin Franklin, issued by the U.S. Post Office between 1908 and 1922. The distinctive feature of this issue is that it employs only two engraved heads set in ovals—Washington and Franklin in full profile—and replicates one or another of these portraits on every stamp denomination in the series. This is a significant departure from previous definitive issues, which had featured pantheons of famous Americans, with each portrait-image confined to a single denomination. At the same time, this break with the recent past represented a return to origins. Washington and Franklin, after all, had appeared on the first two American stamps, issued in 1847, and during the next fifteen years, each of the eight stamp denominations available (with one exception) featured either Washington or Franklin.

Washington–Franklins
Wreath of Olive branches designs, issued 1908–1922

In the early Washington–Franklin issues (1908–1911), every design incorporated a pair of olive branches surrounding one or the other of the two profiles. From 1912 on, however, the Franklin-head issues would instead appear with Oak leaves near the bottom of the oval in the image. Olive branches and oak leaves are often used as symbols for peace (olive branches) and strength (oak leaves), though no significance was officially acknowledged in their use here. The Washington–Franklins were issued in denominations ranging from 1 cent to 5 dollars, each value printed in different color ink. The two engravings of either Washington or Franklin are employed in five basic design themes (i.e., framework, ornaments, lettering) which in turn were used to print more than 250 separate and distinct stamp issues over a fourteen-year period. During this time seven separate series of the Washington–Franklins appeared in succession, each series differing somewhat from its predecessor in physical characteristics (i.e., paper type, perforation size, etc.), while some series would also introduce new denominations printed with new colors. Produced by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington D.C., these issues were generally printed by the flat-plate process, but several of the issues also employed other new and experimental printing methods, including use of the revolutionary rotary printing press and the offset printing process. The first Washington–Franklin postage stamp to be released was a 2-cent stamp issued on November 16, 1908. Other denominations soon followed and would continue to appear through the first World War years, with the last Washington–Franklin postage stamp issued in 1923. The series thus survived for almost fifteen years, longer than any previous U.S. postage stamp series produced by a single printing organization.[1][2][3]

Background edit

During the several decades that led up to the production of the Washington–Franklin issues the printing technology of U.S. Postage stamps was in many respects still in its development stages. As a consequence the U.S. Post Office would often receive complaints from the general public about its postage stamps. In 1869 the Post Office faced its first nationwide complaints when it issued a set of ten stamps that broke from the tradition of honoring and depicting statesmen (selected Presidents and Franklin) on the faces of all U.S. Postage stamps. Withering criticism also cited the small size and inconvenient shapes of the 1869 stamps and faulted their adhesive gum as inadequate. Consequently, this issue was short lived and pulled from post offices across the nation. As the years passed other complaints ranged from criticism about stamp subject and design, difficulty with perforations and even objections to the often unpleasant taste of the gum on the backs of stamps. Many of the criticisms also came from postal clerks who complained about the insufficiently varied choice of colors used on the issues, which sometimes resulted in the same or similar color appearing on several different denominations, making it visually difficult to sort mail quickly. Shortly after the turn of the 19th–20th century the problem of improving stamps and production prompted debates in Congress and the Senate, debates into which President Theodore Roosevelt sometimes injected himself. For example, Roosevelt argued that in observance of the upcoming 100th anniversary of Lincoln's birth, Lincoln should be included in the new definitive 1908 issue then being planned. Lincoln, however, was omitted: instead he would be honored with his own anniversary commemorative stamp in 1909. Many of the innovations employed in the production of the Washington–Franklin Issues were the result of this ongoing effort to improve on the production of U.S. Postage.[1][3]

Stamp design edit

The Washington–Franklin issues employed a classical yet simple style in their designs with either Washington or Franklin displayed in full profile, both figures surrounded, in early issues, with an arrangement of olive branches. This style was in stark contrast with that of the definitive stamps previously issued in 1902–03 as that issue not only presented a variety of American historical figures, but framed them with an elaborate assortment of allegorical and ornamental designs—which, in spite of their artistic quality, were criticized as so flamboyant that they detracted from the central portrait and theme. The relatively austere design consequently chosen for the Washington–Franklins was the result of this concern.

In keeping with the quest for simplicity the original design concept was not for a Washington–Franklin series, but for a series devoted exclusively to Washington, with all its near-identical stamps exhibiting the same image of the first United States President—they would differ from one another only in denomination and color. This idea originated with one Charles H. Dalton of Boston, who, in a letter to his Senator, Winthrop M. Crane, expressed admiration for the current British stamps, all of which employed the same profile portrait of King Edward VII. Dalton recommended that the next U.S. series be similarly uniform, with every one of its stamps presenting the same profile head of Washington found on the 2¢ denomination of the 1894 First Bureau Issue. The senator passed this letter on to the Postmaster General, George Meyer, who by and large followed Dalton's recommendation.[4] Full uniformity, however, would have violated a long-standing postal tradition dating back to 1851, which had placed Franklin on every definitive one-cent stamp issued by the U.S. Post Office. It may have been for this reason that Franklin was admitted to the 1908 series in the single case of the one-cent stamp. The Washington–Franklin series resulting from this compromise was designed by the renowned artist Clair Aubrey Huston, known for his many postage stamp designs.[5] Most denominations of the 1902–03 series had been identical in color to their counterparts in the preceding First Bureau Issue. By contrast, the Washington–Franklin set preserved the previous colors only for its five lowest values: new and very different colors were chosen for all denominations of 6-cents and higher.

Despite the vast number of Washington–Franklin stamps released—as said, more than 250 in seven different series—only five basic designs were employed during their printing and production. Two separate engravings—one of Washington, the other of Franklin—are used in the five basic design types.[1][2] The engraving of George Washington was modeled after a bust (sculpture) by the celebrated sculptor Jean Antoine Houdon. The image of Franklin in this issue was engraved by Marcus Baldwin who modeled his engraving after a photograph of a plaster bust of Franklin created by Jean Jacques Caffieri in 1777.[5] As the issue evolved through its seven series, Washington and Franklin replaced each other on some values—marking the first time in United States postal history that two men had appeared on the same denomination in one issue.[6] Indeed, both Washington and Franklin ultimately appeared on the 1-cent, 8-cent, 10-cent, 13-cent, 15-cent, 50-cent and 1-dollar values.


The five basic design types:
 
Issue of 1908
 
Issue of 1908
 
Issue of 1912
 
Issue of 1917
 
Issue of 1918
The same engraving of either Washington or Franklin is used in five design types.
At first glance, the design types may appear almost the same.
  • Washington with Olive branches, postage spelled out, TWO CENTS
  • Franklin with Olive branches, the denomination spelled out, ONE CENT (denomination is only spelled out on the 1- and 2-cent, 1908, 1909 and 1910 issues, six stamps.)
  • Washington with Olive branches, postage in numeral form, used on all denominations with the exceptions of the 9, 11, 12, 20 and 30-cent and the 2 and 5-dollar amounts.
  • Franklin with Oak leaves, postage in numeral form, used on denominations from 8-cents to 1-dollar.
  • Franklin with horizontal frame, used on 2 and 5-dollars denominations, postage amount in numeral form.

In the case of the first four designs, preparing printing plates for each stamp required two separate transfer phases. Two different steel dies were used, one containing the Washington or Franklin engraving, the other providing the framework and lettering. After every image on the steel plate had been impressed with both design components, the plate was heat-treated and hardened to prepare it for printing. In the lower-denomination Washington–Franklin Issues, 400 separate impressions appeared on a printing plate, referred to as a flat plate. The higher value of 1-dollar was printed from a flat plate of 200 subjects.[3] The fifth design required different plates for each of the two elements, as printing took place in two stages: the frame was first printed in color and, in a second impression, the Franklin portrait was laid over it in black. These $2 and $5 values employed plates of 100 subjects.

Stamp issues edit

The first Washington–Franklin stamp issued was a two-cent red Washington-head, issued on November 16, 1908, to pay the first class postage on a standard letter.[6] The seven separate and distinct Washington–Franklin series appeared at intervals of a year or two and included denominations that ranged from 1-cent to 1 or 5 dollars, depending on the series. The different issues can be distinguished from one another by one or more of several factors: perforation gauge, the type of stamp paper—or, in some unusual varieties, by the printing method used. Four or five basic paper-types were employed during the life of the issue. Two of these have different watermarks (consisting of single-line and double line letters: 'USPS'), while another paper-type had no watermarks (watermarks are detected by placing the stamp in a special fluid). In 1909 a much less common type of bluish paper was used, made of 35% rag stock combined with the usual wood pulp and can readily be identified by its faint bluish-gray color.[3] (N. B., Some contend that bluish paper contained only 10% rag stock.[7]) Later in the same year the Post Office is supposed to have experimented with China clay paper, but whether such a paper stock actually existed has become a matter of dispute.[8]

Stamp issues chart edit

The Washington–Franklin stamp issues of 1908–1923: dates of issue
Denomination 1908–1909
DL-Wmrk
perf.12
1909
Bluish-paper
perf.12
1910–1911
SL-Wmrk
perf.12
1912–1914
SL-Wmrk
perf.12
1914–1915
SL-Wmrk
perf.10
1916–1917
Un-Wmrk
perf.10
1917–1923
Un-Wmrk
perf.11
1 cent F O – Dec 2 1908 F O – Feb 16 1909 F O – Nov 23 1910 W – 12 Feb 1912 W – 5 Sep 1914 W – 27 Sep 1916 W – 23 Mar 1917
2 cents W T – 16 Nov 1908 W T – 16 Feb 1909 W T – 23 Nov 1910 W – 12 Feb 1912 W – 5 Sep 1914 W – 25 Sep 1916 W – 23 Mar 1917
3 cents W – 24 Dec 1908 W – 16 Feb 1908 W – 16 Jan 1911 W – 18 Sep 1914 W – 11 Nov 1916 W – 23 Mar 1917
4 cents W – 24 Dec 1908 W – 16 Feb 1908 W – 20 Jan 1911 W – 7 Sep 1914 W – 7 Oct 1916 W – 23 Mar 1917
5 cents W – 19 Dec 1908 W – 16 Feb 1908 W – 25 Jan 1911 W – 14 Sep 1914 W – 17 Oct 1916
– 7 Mar 1919 (red error)
W – 23 Mar 1917
– 23 Mar 1917 (red error)
6 cents W – 31 Dec 1908 W – 16 Feb 1908 W – 25 Jan 1911 W – 28 Sep 1914 W – 10 Oct 1916 W – 23 Mar 1917
7 cents W – 29 Apr 1914 W – 10 Sep 1914 W – 10 Oct 1916 W – 24 Mar 1917
8 cents W – 12 Dec 1908 W – 16 Feb 1908 W – 8 Feb 1911 F – 12 Feb 1912 F – 26 Sep 1914 F – 13 Nov 1916 F – 24 Mar 1917
9 cents F – 29 Apr 1914 F – 6 Oct 1914 F – 16 Nov 1916 F – 12 Mar 1917
10 cents W – 7 Jan 1909 W – 16 Feb 1908 W – 24 Jan 1911 F – 11 Jan 1912 F – 9 Sep 1914 F – 17 Oct 1916 F – 24 Mar 1917
11 cents F – 11 Aug 1915 F – 16 Nov 1916 F – 19 Mar 1917
12 cents F – 29 Apr 1914 F – 10 Sep 1914 F – 10 Oct 1916 F – 12 May 1917
13 cents W – 11 Jan 1909 W – 16 Feb 1908 F – 10 Jan 1919
15 cents W – 19 Jan 1909 W – 16 Feb 1908 W – 1 Mar 1911 F – 12 Feb 1912 F – 16 Sep 1914 F – 16 Nov 1916 F – 21 May 1917
20 cents F – 29 Apr 1914 F – 19 Sep 1914 F – 5 Dec 1916 F – 12 May 1917
30 cents F – 29 Apr 1914 F – 19 Sep 1914 F       ~[clarification needed] F – 12 May 1917
50 cents W – 13 Jan 1909 F – 12 Feb 1912
– 29 Apr 1914
F – 10 Dec 1915 F – 2 Mar 1917 F – 19 May 1917
1 dollar W – 29 Jan 1909 F – 12 Feb 1912 F – 8 Feb 1915 F – 22 Dec 1916 F – 19 May 1917
2 dollars '02 (Madison) 22 Mar 1917 F – 19 Aug 1918
5 dollars '02 (Marshall) 22 Mar 1917 F – 19 Aug 1918
  • W = Washington
  • W T = Washington with TWO spelled out
  • F = Franklin
  • F O = Franklin with ONE spelled out
  • DL-Wmrk = Double-line watermark
  • SL-Wmrk = Single-line watermark
  • Un-Wmrk = No watermark
  • '02 = Reprint of 1902

Year series edit

The first three series of Washington–Franklin postage stamps depicted Washington on every denomination except for the ONE CENT issue, which presented Benjamin Franklin's profile inside the same frame design as that of the Washington issues. On January 11, 1912 Franklin for the first time began to appear on denominations of 8-cents and higher. Each of the seven successive series brought various changes in design, color, perforations, paper and sometimes printing methods. In addition to these series, there are a few individual stamps—issued near the end of the Washington–Franklin era—that can not be categorized within one of the series because of design or perforation anomalies. The last Washington–Franklin was issued in May 1923, a 1-cent green Washington-head with olive leaves, (Scott 544) would coincidentally also become the rarest postage stamp of the issue (errors excepted) and can only be positively identified by measuring its outer frame dimensions. Because its distinct features are not readily apparent, this variety sometimes turns up in every day collections. This, however, is unusual, as the stamp was printed in very limited quantities and consequently any surviving examples of this variety are exceedingly rare and valuable today.[1][3]

1908–09 series edit

 
1st Washington–Franklin
Issued November 16th, 1908
Washington and Olive branches design
The Washington–Franklins were initially released to the public one and two stamps at a time, first appearing in Post Offices in December of 1908. The issues portray Washington and Franklin in profile surrounded by a pair of olives branches. On the 1 and 2-cent denominations the amount of postage is worded as ONE CENT and as TWO CENTS, while on the remaining denominations (3-cents to 1 dollar) the amount of postage appears in numerals. Franklin is depicted only on the one cent denomination in this series; Washington appears on the values from two cents to 1-dollar. (see: WF chart) The Post Office decided not to include 2-dollar or 5-dollar denominations in the series because ample quantities of the 2- and 5-dollar stamps from the 1902–03 series were still on hand (indeed, additional supplies of these values would not be needed until 1917).
This first Washington–Franklin issue appeared with gauge 12 perforation and was printed on paper having a double-line watermark consisting of the letters USPS embedded in the fibers.[3] This particular watermark had large double-lined letters which often weakened the sheets of stamps, causing the frequent separation of stamps at the Post Office before they even reached the customers. As a result, the double-line watermark was discontinued in 1910 and replaced by a single line watermark with smaller letters. Because of the high demand for the one and two cents denominations, these issues were also printed in booklet form, with six stamps to a page.[3]
Using the printing technique employed with the Bureau triangle issues of 1894, the paper used to print the Washington–Franklin issues was first dampened so that printing ink would be absorbed more thoroughly and evenly. However, this resulted in paper shrinkage when the sheets of stamps dried, causing the rows of stamps to be drawn closer together. As the flat printing plates for this issue had individual stamp impressions spaced 2 mm apart the resulting dried sheet would leave stamps spaced about 1½ mm apart, making it very difficult to line up rows of perforations accurately between the rows of stamps. Many sheets were issued with perforations somewhat off center, while roughly 20% of the sheets emerged with perforations so off-center that they were deemed unsalable and had to be destroyed. Paper shrinkage would lead the Bureau to try various approaches to the problem in the following issues. Finding well-centered stamps with wide margins in any denomination in this early issue is a challenge for the collector and well centered examples command prices that far exceed average catalog values.[1][9]


 
Issues of 1908–1909, 1-cent through 6-cents

  • The ONE CENT and TWO CENTS designs appear in the 1909 and 1910–11 series.
  • The 3c, 4c, 5c and 6c designs appear in every series except that of 1912–1914.
  • The 7c Washington-head (shown below) doesn't appear until 1914.
 
Issues of 1908–1909, 8 cents through 1 dollar

  • The 8c, 10c and 15c Washington-heads also appear in the 1909 and 1910–11 series.
  • The 13c Washington-head also appears in the 1909 series.
  • The 50c and 1-dollar Washington-heads are exclusive to the 1908 series and appear nowhere else in the Issue.
  • There are no Washington-heads with denominations of 9c, 11c, 12c, 20c 30c, $2 and $5.

1909 series edit

In 1909 the U.S. Post Office, in its effort to counter the effects of shrinkage, experimented with different paper, printing the next series of postage stamps on a bluish-paper reportedly consisting of a 35% rag stock used conjunction with the usual wood pulp (this percentage has been called into question by some analysts). When placed next to a stamp of ordinary wood pulp paper and the reverse sides are inspected the difference in paper tone is readily apparent. This experimental paper was supposed to reduce shrinkage from the paper dampening involved in the wet-sheet printing process; but while it represented a marginal improvement over the 1908 issues, it did not solve shrinkage problem sufficiently and its use was discontinued after a brief period. The perforation gauge of this issue is again 12. Stamps printed on bluish paper have denominations that range from 1c through 15c and were sold only in Washington DC, so used examples on cover usually bear a Washington DC postmark. Consequently most of the issues from this series are scarce and generally expensive.[1] The 1 and 2 cent stamps are the most affordable for collectors, for they were issued in larger quantities, approximately 3 million of each issue printed.[10] The remaining denominations appeared in very limited quantities and are (sometimes very) valuable. Rarest of all are the 4-cent and 8-cent stamps, which, in fact, were never released for postal use; apparently, they reached the public in 1915 when the Post Office traded them to stamp dealers in exchange for rare issues missing from the Smithsonian Institution collection of U.S. stamps.[11] The denominations of 7, 9, 11 and 12 cents do not occur on bluish paper.[9] (see: WF chart)
It was long believed that later in 1909, the Post Office experimented briefly with another paper-type designed to reduce shrinkage, one containing a China clay additive that gave its appearance a grayish tone very similar to that of bluish-paper. China-clay versions of the 1¢ through 15¢ values are listed in standard catalogues—appearing as variants of the 1908–09 stamps, rather than being classified as a separate series or as part of the bluish paper issue. Some philatelists believe that China clay stamps are a myth, for examination of some purported examples failed to find any clay in the composition of the paper.[8]

1910–11 series edit

When producing the 1910–11 series, the Post Office abandoned experiments with paper additives, but took two other measures to compensate for paper shrinkage. First, the stamp-images on the outer columns of the printing plate were set wider apart (3 mm) than those toward the center (2 mm). Second, the elaborate double-line watermark—deemed a possible source of uneven paper-shrinkage—was discontinued and replaced by a simpler "single-line" watermark, which, it was hoped, would ensure more uniform shrinkage. In other respects, the 1910–11 series mirrors its predecessors. Like them, it is perforated twelve and it employs the same Franklin- and Washington-head designs. It does not, however, include all the denominations available in earlier issues, but omits the 13c Washington stamp, which had been offered in the two previous series, as well as the 50c and $1 Washington issues printed in 1908–09. None of these three designs would appear again in subsequent Washington–Franklin series.[9]

1912–1914 series edit

By 1912, the Post Office had received numerous complaints from postmasters that the many near-identical Washington stamps in the issue confused postal clerks, too often leading them to give customers higher denominations than they paid for. The Post Office addressed this problem in the series of 1912–1914 by making a significant change in the line up in the Washington–Franklin denominations. Washington would now appear on the lower values only; all denominations of 8c and higher would display the Franklin-head. The realignment provided a clear visual distinction between the cheaper and the more expensive stamps. To further heighten the distinction, the Post Office now introduced the oak-leaf frame for the Franklin stamps, thus eliminating olive branches from the higher values along with Washington.
To be sure, assigning Washington exclusively to the small denominations meant that Franklin had to be displaced from the iconic position he had enjoyed on 1¢ definitive stamps for over sixty years. However, putting Franklin on the lower values would have violated a tradition more noticeable to the public: that of having Washington's image appear on the normal-first-class-letter-rate stamp of every definitive series. (This tradition dated back to 1851 and had only been ignored once: in the disastrous 1869 issue.)
 
Washington and Olive-branches
Issue of 1912

Washington appears on the 1-cent stamp of this Issue for the first time.
 
2-cent with numerals
Accordingly, in early 1912, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing released a new version of the 1-cent stamp, this time with the profile of Washington instead of Franklin who had been on all 1-cent green issues of the three previous series. This was the first U.S. Postage stamp to go on sale in booklet form before sheets were available: the booklet appeared on February 8, while the sheet was not issued until four days later. The denominations of the 1- and 2-cent stamps now appeared in numerals rather than lettering. The new Franklin oak leaf design had already been introduced in January with the issue of a 10-cent yellow stamp, and the other high values soon reached post offices. In the 1912–1914 series, the denominations of 7, 9, 12, 20 and 30-cents appeared for the first time in the Washington Franklin issues.
This series is again perforated 12, and the values between 1¢ and 50¢ are printed on single-line watermarked paper. The 50¢ and $1 issues, however, are instead printed on double-line watermarked paper left over from the production of the 1908 series. Denominations not included in this printing are the 3, 4, 5 and 6-cent stamps as there were still adequate stocks of these available. Of special interest is the first appearance of the 7-cent Washington-head, with its premier color of black, issued on April 29, 1914. An estimated 5 million 7-cent stamps were printed, a relatively low number for a definitive issue. It was available in post offices for only five months, for this denomination went through a perforation change in the next series, thus making it a new and separate issue.[1]
New arrivals:
 
1912–1914 series Washington 7c in black and Franklin with Oak leaves, 8c to 11c
 
1912–1914 series, Franklin with Oak leaves, 12c to 50c
 
1st Franklin 1-Dollar
Issued February 12, 1912
The 50-cent and 1-dollar Franklin issues made their debut on February 12, 1912. These stamps were printed from plates of 200 subjects instead of the 400-subject plate used on all lesser denominations. The 200-subject printing plate required paper whose dimensions were compatible with its size and operation. Since there were remaining stocks of double-line watermarked paper from 1908 intended for plates with 200 subjects on hand, this paper was used for these two issues. When stocks of this paper ran out some two years later, new single-line watermarked paper was cut to the proper size and used. Consequently the 50-cent Franklin occurs on two paper-types in this one series. The 1-dollar Franklin was not printed again on this new paper as existing stocks were ample up to 1916. The 50-cents and 1-dollar Franklin and Oak leaves issues occur again in the following three series of the Washington–Franklin Issue.[1][3] (see: WF chart)

1914–15 series edit

 
1st Franklin 11-cent
Issued August 11, 1915
This series again includes Washington-heads on denominations 1-cent through 7-cents and Franklin-heads on the 8-cent through 1-dollar values. It is the first series to include the 11-cent denomination with the Franklin and Oak leaves design, colored slate-green, which appears again in the following two series of 1916 and 1917. Lower values of the series are printed from plates of 400 on single-line watermarked paper, while the one-dollar Franklin is printed from plates of 200 subjects and uses double-line watermarked paper of the appropriate size. Because of stamp separation problems in previous issues using gauge 12 perforations, particularly when attempting to tear a block of stamps from the sheet to cover postage on parcels, this series was instead issued with gauge 10. The perforations of this gauge would soon prove to be a problem also, as the coarser gauge of perforation made it more difficult to separate stamps, often resulting in torn stamps.[1][3]

1916–17 series edit

The series of 1916–17 brought an end to the use of watermarked paper. By this time, the stock of older 2 and 5-dollar stamps had been exhausted; but rather than producing new Franklin designs for these values, the Post Office merely ordered reprints of the 2 and 5-dollar stamps used in 1903, which depict, respectively, James Madison and John Marshall. It can be thus be argued that these two stamps do not truly belong to the Washington–Franklin Issues. Up until this time each new series had either added new denominations or discontinued older ones, but this series remained the same, issuing every denomination, with the same colors, from 1-cent to 1-dollar that had been included in the 1914–15 series, and also retaining that issue's gauge 10 perforations.[1][3] (see: WF chart) Most experts long believed that the 30¢ denomination had been omitted from the 1916–17 series—indeed, no post office records indicate that this value was ever issued. Claims by one famous collector, Benjamin Miller, that he indeed possessed an unwatermarked perforated 30¢ stamp from 1916–17 were discounted, and, accordingly, in the original Scott catalogue, the 20¢ stamp of the series—No. 476—was immediately followed by the 50¢—No. 477. The years following World War II, however, saw the discovery of additional copies of the 30¢ value that seemed unwatermarked, and in 1957, Scott chose to label this stamp No. 476A.[12] Yet Scott's numbering did not permanently settle the issue; for in 2008 a stamp-rating service, Professional Stamp Experts, discovered a "ghost" watermark on a copy of 476A and this raised the question of whether, after all, the unwatermarked version had ever been legitimately issued. PSE at that point ceased certifying copies of this stamp.[13] The 30¢ unwatermarked perforated 10 stamp from 1916–17—if it exists at all—remains the rarest of any Washington–Franklin issue belonging to a full series: fewer than 300 copies have been certified by various expertizing services.

1917–1920 series edit

The 1917–1920 series was perforated 11 and included all the denominations found in the two preceding series, but added three new Franklin-heads of 13-cents, 2 and 5-dollars. The two higher denominations appeared late in this issue as the Bureau of Engraving and Printing was busy replacing worn printing plates and dealing with various experiments and innovations that delayed production of the 2 and 5 dollar plates. Perhaps to identify these stamps as luxury items, they were printed in two tones, with the vignette head in black and the frame in color. They were further distinguished from lower values by their use of landscape format rather than the normal portrait orientation. Because the 2 and 5 dollar Franklin-head stamps were the two largest denominations they are often referred to by collectors as the 'Big Bens'. The 2-dollar Franklin was intended to be printed in carmine-red and black, but somehow the color of the printing ink from the particular lot that was used turned out to have a distinct orange tone. Variations in color in printing ink is somewhat common in stamp production, but the variance in this case ventured into a different color completely—orange. By the time this acute color variance was brought to the attention of officials a good number of sheets had already been distributed among the various post offices and were most likely already in circulation. In 1920 a second printing of the 2-dollar Franklin was issued, this time with the colors that were originally intended, carmine-red and black. These were printed and remained in use for some 3 to 4 years and therefore quantities of the red and black variety out number the orange and black approximately 15 to 1. Quantities issued are, for 2-dollar orange and black, 47,000 (470 sheets of 100), and 2-dollar carmine-red and black, 743,600 (7,436 sheets of 100).[1][3]
While the denominations from 1c to 1-dollar were printed with plates of 400 subjects and cut into sheets of 100 stamps for sale at the post office, the 2 and 5-dollars issues were printed with plates of 100 subjects, did not require cutting into separate sheets and were issued as is. Consequently there are no 2 and 5-dollar stamps with straight edges. By contrast, all the lower- denomination stamps are found in straight edged examples, produced when the sheets were cut in quarters.[1][3]
New arrivals in the 1917–1920 series:
 
1st / only Franklin 13c
issue of 1919
 
    The 'Big Bens'
Issue of 1918
 
Franklin 2-dollar reprint
issue of 1920

Offset printing edit

 
Offset stamps (left) as compared to engraved stamps

During World War I, several ingredients of postage stamp ink that had previously been imported from Germany became unavailable, and the domestic materials that replaced them had significant gritty impurities, with the result that the stamp printing plates became worn much more quickly. In response to this problem, the U.S. Post Office employed the new offset printing process to produce several separate Washington-head issues. The offset method involved taking a photo of a die proof of the postage stamp and through a special process, transferring an image of its negative to a plate of glass, which became the actual printing plate. The set-up and development process was more involved in the preparation stages than the engraving process, but once the photo mask was made it only took about an hour to produce and replace a worn printing plate. The offset process produced an image of lesser quality with a smooth surface, as compared to that of an engraved stamp whose lines are raised above the surface of the paper. A stamp produced by the offset process almost always possesses a softer or grayish tone to its color and is usually easy to distinguish, especially when placed next to a similar stamp printed by the engraving process.[1][3]

The Washington–Franklin
offset printing
Washington
heads:
1918–1920
Perf.11 - Un-Watermarked
1 cent 525, (536 perf.12½)
2 cents 526, 527, 528, 528a, 528b
3 cents 529, 530
Nine stamps (numbers from Scott)

Three denominations of 1, 2 and 3-cents were printed by the offset printing process. There are two types of the 1-cent denomination, five different types of the 2-cent variety, and two types of the 3-cent variety. These types possess differences in the lines on the toga rope in Washington's profile and usually require the aid of magnification to positively identify their different characteristics. Stamps produced by the offset process were issued with a perforation gauge of 11 with the one exception of the 1919 1-cent issue with gauge 12½. The first Washington–Franklin stamp printed by the offset process was a 3-cent Washington-head, issued on March 22, 1918. The 1-cent green followed and was issued on December 24, 1918. The five types of the 2-cent denomination were issued sometime later on March 15, 1920. Beginning in 1919 an imperforate variety (no perforations between stamps) was also issued. All three denominations were printed and possess the same variations in type that are found on the perforated issues, as the imperforate issues were produced from the same plates. There were no Franklin-heads printed with the Offset printing press.[1][3]

Imperforate stamps edit

 
Imperforate block of 6 with printing plate number.

Postage stamps issued in sheets with no perforations between the rows and columns of individual stamps are referred to as imperforate. The Washington–Franklin issue contains several series of imperforate stamps that occur on a small range of denominations from 1 through 5-cents. These stamps were issued in imperforate form to accommodate several major vending machine companies of that period who used this stock for coil stamps in their machines which were in wide use about the country. Many of these companies applied their own form of perforations, such as the Schermack, Mail-O-Meter, and Brinkerhoff vending machine companies. There were at least seven such firms, each having its own patented machines. Imperforate stamps were issued in full uncut sheets of 400 subjects or in coil rolls of 500 or 1000 stamps. The imperforate issues were printed from a flat plate with 400 subjects until 1918 when they were produced on the rotary press from continuous rolls of paper. Imperforate coils from this stock are much rarer than examples cut from full sheets.[1][3]


The Washington Franklin Imperforate issues
Denomination 1908-09
DL-Wmrk
1911
SL-Wmrk
1912
DL-Wmrk
1914
SL-Wmrk
1916-17
Un-Wmrk
1918-1920
Un-Wmrk
1-cent 343 - Fo 383 - Fo 408 - W - 481 - W 531 - W
2-cents 344 - Wt 384 - Wt 409 - W 459 - W 482 / 482a - W 532-34b - W
3-cents 345 - W - - - 483 - W/484 - W 535 - W
4-cents 346 - - - - -
5-cents 347 - W - - - 485 - W (red) -

W = Washington / Wt = Washington with TWO spelled out F = Franklin / Fo = Franklin with ONE spelled out
DL-Wmrk = Double-line WaterMark / SL-Wmrk = Single-line WaterMark / Un-Wmrk = No Watermark
Numbers for stamps from Scott Specialized US Stamp Catalogue

 
Postally used examples of imperforate Washington–Franklins

Coil stamps edit

 
Washington on coil stamps, vertical pair
issue of 1908

Postage stamps that come in strips with the individual stamps arranged side by side or one above the other and rolled into a coil for sale at the post office are referred to as coil stamps. The coil configuration made the repeated removal of individual stamps easier for the clerks and others who dealt with mass mailings on a daily basis. The coil configuration also made it possible to dispense individual stamps in vending machines.[1] Responding to complaints from vending machine companies that coil stamps with standard perforations (perforated 12) separated too easily, the postal service introduced a much coarser gauge—perforated 8½—in 1910. This gauge, however, proved problematic for opposite reasons: the stamps proved too difficult to separate. As a result, a finer gauge, perforated 10, was used for coils from 1914 on.

From 1908 to 1914 coil stamps were printed with Flat Plate presses in sheets of 400 which were then cut into strips for coiling. In 1915 the Bureau began printing coil stamps from continuous rolls of paper with the Rotary Press. The printing plates were curved and affixed around a rotating cylinder, a process that stretched the images somewhat, making them slightly longer than similar images printed from a flat-plate. The difference in size becomes evident when the two different types are placed side by side.

Coil stamps are either perforated horizontally, with one stamp over the other, or vertically with the stamps situated side by side along the strip of stamps. Made from the same paper stock as sheet stamps, the coil stamps were accordingly issued concurrently with the regular Washington–Franklins. The denominations for coil stamps of these series range only from 1-cent up to 10-cents. While the 1–5 cent denominations were issued almost continuously the 10-cent coils were only issued twice, once as a yellow Washington-head stamp first issued in 1908, (See: Coil stamps Table-1) and once as a 10-cent yellow Franklin-head coil that wasn't issued until 1916. (See: Coil stamps Table-2)[1][3]

The Washington–Franklin coil stamps (Table 1 of 2)
Denomination 1908–09
DL-Wmrk
Perf.12 Hz
1908–09
DL-Wmrk
Perf.12 Vrt
1910
SL-Wmrk
Perf.12 Hz
1910–11
SL-Wmrk
Perf.12 Vrt
1910
SL-Wmrk
Perf.8½ Hz
1910–13
Un-Wmrk
Perf.8½ Vrt
1912
SL-Wmrk
Perf.8½ Hz
1912
SL-Wmrk
Perf.8½ Vrt
1 cent 348 – Fo 352 – Fo 385 – Fo 387 – Fo 390 – Fo 392 – Fo 410 – W 412 – W
2 cents 349 – Wt 353 – Wt 386 – Wt 388 – Wt 391 – Wt 393 – Wt 411 – W 413 – W
3 cents 389 – W 394 – W
4 cents 350 – W 354 – W 395 – W
5 cents 351 – W 355 – W 396 – W
10 cents 356 – W
W = Washington / Wt = Washington with TWO spelled out / F = Franklin / Fo = Franklin with ONE spelled out
Hz = Horizontal perf / Vrt = Vertical perf / DL-Wmrk = Double-line watermark / SL-Wmrk = Single-line watermark / Un-Wmrk = No watermark
Numbers for stamps from Scotts Specialized US Stamp Catalogue
 
Coil stamps, center-line pair
issue of 1912
 
Coil stamps, center-line pair
issue of 1912
 
Coil stamps, pair
issue of 1909
The Washington–Franklin coil stamps (Table 2 of 2)
Denomination 1914
SL-Wmrk
Perf.10 Hz
1914–15
SL-Wmrk
Perf.10 Vrt
1915–16
DL-Wmrk
Perf.10 Hz
1914–16
SL-Wmrk
Perf.10 Vrt
1916–19
SL-Wmrk
Perf.10 Hz
1916–22
Un-Wmrk
Perf.10 Vrt
1 cent 441 – W 443 – W 448 – W 453 – W 486 – W 490 – W
2 cents 442 – W 444 – W 449 – W 453 – W 487–88 – W 491–92 – W
3 cents 445 – W 456 – W 489 – W 493 – W
4 cents 446 – W 457 – W 495 – W
5 cents 447 – W 458 – W 496 – W
10 cents 497 – F
W = Washington / F = Franklin / Hz = Horizontal perf / Vrt = Vertical perf
DL-Wmrk = Double-line watermark / SL-Wmrk = Single-line watermark / Un-Wmrk = No watermark
Numbers for stamps from Scotts Specialized US Stamp Catalogue

Notes:

  • Each of the year series produced stamps with denominations of 1c and 2c that were issued with both horizontal and vertical perforations. The remaining denominations of 3c to 10c were issued with mostly vertical perforations.
  • There is only one example each of the Washington 3c, 4c and 5c stamps issued with horizontal perforations.
  • Neither the Washington-head nor Franklin-head 10-cent coil was ever issued with horizontal perforations, hence the issues only existed with stamps situated next to one another on a coil.[3]

Orangeburg coil edit

 
The Orangeburg coil
Issue of 1911
 
Brinkerhoff perforations

A 3-cent Washington-head coil stamp (Scott 389) issued in 1911 is commonly referred to as the Orangeburg coil. It was printed with the flat-plate press on single-line watermarked paper with vertical, gauge 12, perforations. The Post Office produced only a small batch of these stamps (it would soon switch over to gauge 8½ perforations for coils) and apparently sold them all to the Bell Pharmaceutical Company, which used 3¢ coil stamps to send samples of their products to physicians through the mail. The actual quantity issued remains unknown. The earliest known use on cover is dated April 27, 1911. Due to the quantity of mail, they were put through the first-class canceling machine at Orangeburg, New York and were mailed third-class. Because these stamps were used on third class mail, most were eventually discarded. Owing to its limited and specific usage philatelists were at first unaware of this issue for approximately two years and so very few examples were saved and collected in mint condition, which accounts for their rarity of this issue today. Approximately twelve covers have been certified as genuine by the Philatelic Foundation. The Orangeburg coils are the rarest coils of the Washington–Franklin issues.[14][15][16]

Private perforations edit

Beginning on January 3, 1911 the Bureau of Engraving and Printing issued the 1-cent and 2-cent denominations in imperforate form on single-line watermarked paper specifically for use by at least seven different private coil-stamp vending machine companies. Each company used its own distinctive types of perforations, and most firms continued to experiment with them. Thus on the 1-cent issues, these five companies employed a total of 18 different types of private perforations, while 19 types exist on the 2-cent denomination. These private perforations, designed to fit the specific mechanisms of the various vending machines, were applied to imperforate sheets of 400 stamps after those sheets had been cut into either vertical or horizontal strips (the first such sheets had been issued in 1906 at the request of various vending machine companies). Joseph Schermack is generally credited with producing the first coil stamp vending machine. Privately applied perforations continued to be used well into the 1920s, and comprise a distinctive segment of U.S. postal history.[1][17]

 
Schermack Stamp Vending Machine
Courtesy National Postal Museum

There are no known records of actual quantities issued for private perforation types, however relative rarity of the various types is known from years of stamp sales and auction results. The Farwell type 3A2 is the most rare variety of the private perforations. Counterfeits perforations applied to the imperforate variety are somewhat common among several of the types, usually among items having a far lower value than the coil with privately applied perforations. Coil-stamp pairs with a center line mark in between the stamps are also targets for counterfeiters as the item itself is scare or rare and with the addition of fake perforations, the rarity of the item is compounded allowing its value to go up exponentially if not detected. With two exceptions, each vending machine company that applied private perforations produced several different distinct types: i.e. the Schermack vending machine company produced five different perforation types, Mail-o-meter produced six different types, Brinkerhoff produced four different types. Other companies include The John V. Farwell Company which produced eleven different types of perforations and the U.S. Automatic Vending Company which issued four types. By contrast, the Attleboro company and The International Vending Machine Company each produced only one type.[18]

Outlining all the various types of private perforations involves a considerable amount of specialized information requiring a good number of accompanying illustrations and is therefore beyond the scope of this section. Further inquiry into private perforations can be made with information available in the external links section under Privately applied perforations.[17]

Private perforation varieties
 
Schermack
 
Mail-o-meter
 
Farwell
 
Farwell

2- and 3-cent types edit

 
2 and 3 cents varieties

Those engraved images on the 2- and 3-cent Washington-head issues that appear similar but whose lines vary significantly are referred to and often cataloged as types. Type I occurs on flat plate printings only while types II & III also occur mostly in rotary press printings and in offset printings as they were produced from photo plates made from the former printing plates. The 2-cent Type II stamp does not occur on a flat plate stamp. Because the commonly used denominations of the Washington–Franklin issues were printed in greater quantities the worn printing plates would have to be replaced in the process from time to time. Though each new plate was made from the same die transfer, the plates would still differ slightly from the previous plate in use due to the bending process to fit the plate around the rotary press printing cylinder. Plates would also differ because the transfer die itself would wear from repeated image transfers to the printing plate.[1]

There are eleven different types of stamps designs among the two denominations of 2 and 3 cents. The variations that constitute types occur in the various facial features on Washington, and on his Toga and on the various lines of shading on the ornaments of the stamp design. Defining all the various types among these two denominations involves a highly specialized area of study that encompasses a sizable amount of additional information whose many details need accompanying illustrations and as such is beyond the scope of this section.[1][3] It suffices to say that most of the types are common to less common with only two types that are rare and valuable, one a 2-cent, 1916 issue, type II, the other a 2-cent 1919 issue, type II.[19] Because it requires knowledge of and magnification to see the subtle variations in the lines of the image the valuable stamps can and have gone unnoticed for years before they are ever discovered, and sometimes turn up in common stamp collections, but this is very uncommon as these types are indeed rare. There are various places on-line, one listed in 'External links', 'Identifying the 2 and 3 cent types', that can provide detailed information about the 2c and 3c design types with an assortment of illustrations and charts to aid positive identification. Various publications like the popular Scott Specialized Catalogue of US Stamps also provide detailed and illustrated information for design types.

Oddities of the Issue edit

There are a few Washington–Franklin issues that were produced at the latter part of their production and can not be categorized with the other series or groups of stamps by their standard features, having features that are not defined by perforation gauge or paper type alone, rendering these issues one of a kind.[1][3]

  • In 1917, the New York Post office returned a batch of imperforate 2-cent stamps from the 1908–09 issue (double-line watermark, "two" spelled out) to Washington for credit. Rather than remitting cash, however, the Federal Post Office in effect transformed these stamps into a new issue by perforating them with the then-current gauge—perforated 11—and returned them to New York. A relative rarity, this issue is catalogued as Scott 519.
  • For the first time in the Washington–Franklin issues three stamps were printed with a dual perforation gauge of 11 x 10. Issued June 14, 1919, these 1-, 2-, and 3-cent Washington-heads are the only three stamps in the issue (Scott 538-40) with this particular dual perf. configuration.
  • In 1920 a 1-cent Washington-head was issued with perforations of gauge 10 x 11, making it the only stamp in the entire Issue (Scott 542) with this particular configuration and one of only four issues with a compound or dual perforation gauge.
  • In 1921 a 1- and 2-cent Washington-head were issued, again on unwatermarked paper with gauge 11 perforations. These two stamps were issued in sheets of 170 and were made from coil waste printed on the rotary press. Images produced from curved printing plates are slightly longer than images produced from a flat plate as the surface and images elongate from the bending. The only way to distinguish this printing from the 1918 perf.11 printing is to measure the parameters of the stamp designs which measure 19½ mm wide by 20 mm tall, or by placing it next to and comparing it with a flat-plate printing.
  • In 1923 the Post Office released the last Washington–Franklin stamp that would also become the rarest non-error stamp (Scott 544) in this issue. Printed on unwatermarked paper with gauge 11 perforations, this issue can only be distinguished from the 1-cent 1918 issue (which is also printed on unwatermarked paper with gauge 11 perforations) by measuring the parameters of the design: 19 mm wide by 23½. In 1922 a small quantity of 1c Rotary Press stamps was perforated 11, using remainder sheets from the earlier printings that were normally perforated in 10 gauge or 10 x 11 dual (or compound) gauge. Its existence as a Perf. 11 variety was discovered in 1936, and the stamp finally received a Scott Catalogue listing in 1938.[1][3][20]

Rare perforation errors edit

When the Post Office changed the perforation gauge from 12 to 10 in 1914, a few sheets emerged with stamps that had been perforated with one of the gauges horizontally and the other vertically (compound perforations). These errors included 1¢, 2¢ and 5¢ stamps (Scott #423A, 423B and 423C) that were perforated 12×10 (12 horizontally and 10 vertically), as well as 1¢ and 2¢ stamps (Scott #423D and 423 E) perforated 10x12. All five varieties are great rarities; indeed the 2¢ perforated 10×12 issue (423E) has been identified as one of the rarest of all U.S. stamps with only a single used copy certified, while the #164 (24c on vertically ribbed paper) is unique.[21] (By comparison, two examples are known of the celebrated 1¢ Z Grill stamp of 1868).[22]

The 5-cent color error, 1916–1920 edit

 
5-cent color error
During the production of the 1916–17 series, it was observed that on one 2-cent plate, No. 7942, three of the 400 images had become noticeably worn. Two of these images were a vertical pair, appearing near the bottom of the top-left pane of 100; the remaining image appeared near the top of the bottom-right pane. When replacing these three images, the technician responsible (conceivably confused by the problems of working with mirror-image material, which can makes a 5 look like a 2) inadvertently transferred 5-cent images onto the three problem positions of the plate. This error was not noticed for several weeks, and eventually three different carmine-colored 5-cent stamps were distributed by the Post Office: the perforated 10 issue of 1916–17 (Scott #467), the imperforate issue of the same years (Scott #485), and the perforated 11 issue of 1917–20 (Scott #505). The imperforate version is by far the rarest of these, and few collectors have ever seen one.[3]

Watermarks edit

Watermarks occur in paper and are made during the paper making process by means of various devices that impart an impression in the wet paper pulp, the impression usually consisting of an official emblem or letter(s). The actual watermark portion of the paper is thinner than the surrounding paper. The difference in paper thickness can usually be detected by holding the stamp up to a light, however some countries have issued stamps whose watermarks are very difficult to detect in this manner and require watermark detection fluid. Watermarks were originally used by governments for documents, currency and other applications to help prevent counterfeiting. The U.S. Post office began using a double-line watermark bearing the initials USPS in 1895, when the Bureau of Engraving and Printing introduced it into the previously unwatermarked Bureau Triangles stamp issues. The same double-line watermark paper used then was used on the various issues leading up to and used in the production of the 1908 and 1909 versions of the Washington–Franklin issues. In 1910 the watermark was changed to a single-line watermark and with initials which were smaller in size, partly because the double-line watermark tended to weaken the sheets at the perforations causing premature separation of stamps at the Post Office, and partly because postal officials suspected that the double-line watermark caused the stamp paper to shrink unevenly when the sheets dried after printing.

As the Bureau used only two types of watermarks for the Washington–Franklins, with each type bearing the initials USPS, their application is easily summarized. There are eight distinct configurations in which the watermarked initials can appear on any U.S. postage stamp (or sheet), from right side up, to sideways right, to upside down, and to sideways left; and similarly again in reverse form as a result of the sheet of paper being placed reversed in the printing press, thus causing the initials USPS to appear reversed on the stamp/sheet. Watermarks as they occur on U.S. postage stamps are not usually visible to the naked eye and must be submerged in a special watermark fluid that enhances its appearance. This is done to distinguish stamps with the same color, perforation gauge and denomination but which were printed on paper with different watermarks or without any watermarks—i.e., the only way to positively distinguish a 3-cent, 1908 issue, with double-line watermark, from a 3-cent, 1910 issue, with single-line watermark, is to test for these watermarks, as both of these issues are identical in color, denomination and perforation (gauge 12), and therefore cannot be differentiated by these features. (see: WF chart)

The Washington–Franklin issues were the last U.S. stamps to employ papers bearing the USPS watermark; the use of these was discontinued in 1916, during World War I, as a means to reduce expense, as watermarked paper was more expensive than its unwatermarked equivalent and at year's end the difference saved was considerable.[23][24][25]

See also edit

Preceded by
Series of 1902 (Second Bureau Issue)
US Definitive postage stamps
1908–1922
Succeeded by
1922–1931 Definitives
Regular (definitive) issues of 1922–1931
Description
Dates of Issue
Flat-Plate printing
perf.11
Rotary Press printing
perf.10
Rotary Press printing
perf.11x10½
½-cent, Nathan Hale 551 – Apr.4, 1925 - 653 – May 25, 1929
1-cent, Benjamin Franklin 521 – Jan.17, 1923 581 – Oct.17, 1923 632 – Jun.10, 1927
1½-cent, Warren G. Harding 553 – Mar.19, 1925 582 – Mar.19, 1925 633 – May 17, 1927
2-cents, George Washington 554 – Jan.15, 1923 583 – Apr.14, 1924 634 – Dec.10, 1926
3-cents, Abraham Lincoln 555 – Oct.27, 1922 584 – Aug.1, 1025 625 – Feb.3, 1927
4-cents, Martha Washington 556 – Jun.15, 1923 585 – Apr.4, 1925 636 – May 17, 1927
5-cents, Theodore Roosevelt 557 – Oct.27, 1922 586 – Apr.4, 1925 637 – Mar.24, 1927
6-cents, James Garfield 558 – Nov.20, 1922 587 – Apr.4, 1925 638 – Jul.27, 1927
7-cents, William McKinley 559 – May 1, 1923 588 – May 29, 1926 639 – Mar.24, 1927
8-cents, Ulysses S. Grant 560 – May 1, 1923 589 – May 29, 1926 640 – Jun.10, 1927
9-cents, Thomas Jefferson 561 – Jan.15, 1923 590 – May 29, 1926 641 – May 17, 1927
10-cents, James Monroe 562 – Jan.15, 1923 591 – Jun.8, 1925 642 – Feb.3, 1927
11-cents, Rutherford B. Hayes 563 – Oct.4, 1922 - 692 – Sep.4, 1931
12-cents, Grover Cleveland 564 – May 20, 1923 - 693 – Aug.25, 1931
13-cents, Benjamin Harrison 622 – Jan.11, 1926 - 694 – Sep.4, 1931
14-cent, American Indian 565 – May 1, 1923 - 695 – Sep.8, 1931
15-cents, Statue of Liberty 566 – Nov.11, 1922 - 696 – Aug.27, 1931
17-cents, Woodrow Wilson 623 – Dec.28, 1925 - 697 – Jul.25, 1931
20-cents, Golden Gate 567 – May 1, 1923 - 698 – Sep.8, 1931
25-cents, Niagara Falls 568 – Nov.11, 1922 - 699 – Jul.25, 1931
30-cents, Buffalo 569 – Nov.11, 1922 - 700 – Sep.8, 1931
50-cents, Arlington Amphitheater 570 – Nov.11, 1922 - 701 – Sep.4, 1931
1-dollar, Lincoln Memorial 571 – Feb.12, 1923 - -
2-dollars, U.S. Capitol 572 – Mar.30, 1923 - -
5-dollars, Freedom 573 – Mar.30, 1923 - -
Dates are for day stamp was issued. Numbers for stamp issues from Scotts US Stamp Catalogue.
U.S. stamp locator and NaV-AiD
United States stamp–related categories on Wikimedia Commons:

General categories on Wikimedia Commons:

(Some of these categories contain images of stamps not issued by the United States.)

See also (Wikipedia articles):

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Armstrong, Martin A., Washington Franklins 1908–1921, (1979)
  2. ^ a b "Third Bureau Issues (1908–1922)". Smithsonian National Postal Museum. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Scott Specialized Catalogue of United States stamps. William W. Cummings, James B. Hatcher. Scott Publishing Company, New York, N.Y. 1982. ISBN 978-0-89487-042-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  4. ^ Johl, Max G. The United States Postage Stamps of the Twentieth Century, Vol. 1 (1937), p. 104.
  5. ^ a b Scotts Stamp Identifier
  6. ^ a b "1-cent Washington". Smithsonian National Postal Museum. Retrieved 28 December 2010.
  7. ^ "Rare Paper Varieties". Roger Kirby.
  8. ^ a b "Review of Edward M. Liston, "The 'China Clay' Variety of the 1908–1910 Washington Franklin Issue?"". A. J. Valente, Paper Historian.
  9. ^ a b c "1908–15 Washington–Franklin Series" (PDF). Robert Siegel Philatelic Auction Galleries. Retrieved 28 December 2010.
  10. ^ "Bluish-Paper Stamps". Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 30 December 2010.
  11. ^ Trepel, Scott Rarity Revealed: The Benjamin K. Miller Collection (2006, Smithsonian National Postal Museum, Washington D. C. and The New York Public Library, New York, N.Y.), p. 120.
  12. ^ "United States 476A Used Stamps". Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  13. ^ "Siegel Power Search". Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  14. ^ "The Orangeburg Coil". Retrieved 28 February 2011.
  15. ^ "The Orangeburg Coil". The Philatelic Foundation, New York. Retrieved 7 January 2017.
  16. ^ "The Orangeburg Coil". Smithsonian National Postal Museum. Retrieved 28 February 2011.
  17. ^ a b "Schermack stamp vending machines". Smithsonian National Postal Museum. Retrieved 27 February 2011.
  18. ^ "Private Perforations on U.S. Vending and Affixing Machine Coil Stamps 1907–1927". 1847US.com. Retrieved 26 February 2011.
  19. ^ 2-cent, issue of Nov.17, 1916, type II (Scott 491)
    2-cent, issue of Jun.14, 1919, type II (Scott 539);
    Scotts Specialized Catalogue of US Stamps
  20. ^ "1922 1c Rotary Perf 11 Issue (Scott 544)". Robert A. Siegel Auction Galleries. Retrieved 14 January 2011.
  21. ^ Scott Specialized Catalog of United States Stamps and Covers, 2014 edition, p. 34
  22. ^ The "Sirron" Collection of United States Perforation Rarities (Siegel Auction catalogue, Sale 1001, December 9, 2010, p. 6)
  23. ^ The Kenmore US Stamp Catalog, 2010 edition, page 32 'First Watermarks'
  24. ^ "How to detect Watermarks" (PDF). Kenmore Stamp Company. Retrieved 29 December 2010.
  25. ^ "The Eight Possible Orientations for the USPS Watermarks". 1847US. Retrieved 29 December 2010.

Bibliography edit

  • Armstrong, Martin A., Washington–Franklins 1908–1921, (1979) Trenton Publishing Co., New Jersey, USA
  • Smithsonian National Postal Museum, Archives, Collections and Exhibits.
  • Scotts Specialized Catalogue of United States Stamps, 1982, Scott Publishing Company,
    New York, N.Y. ISBN 978-0-89487-042-2; Library of Congress Card No. 2-3301
  • Kenmore Collectors Catalog, 2010 Winter edition, Catalog #906, p 37–41,

External links edit

  • Engraving to Plate transfer process, Smithsonian National Postal Museum
  • Postage stamp production
  • How to Detect Watermarks
  • Identifying the 2 and 3 cent types
  • Privately applied perforations
  • The Orangeburg coil, Philatelic Foundation, New York
  • The Washington–Franklin Issues, Smithsonian National Postal Museum
  • Second Bureau Issue, 1902, Smithsonian National Postal Museum
  • Fourth Bureau Issue, 1922, Smithsonian National Postal Museum
  • STAMPDATA

washington, franklin, issues, series, definitive, postage, stamps, depicting, george, washington, benjamin, franklin, issued, post, office, between, 1908, 1922, distinctive, feature, this, issue, that, employs, only, engraved, heads, ovals, washington, frankli. The Washington Franklin Issues are a series of definitive U S Postage stamps depicting George Washington and Benjamin Franklin issued by the U S Post Office between 1908 and 1922 The distinctive feature of this issue is that it employs only two engraved heads set in ovals Washington and Franklin in full profile and replicates one or another of these portraits on every stamp denomination in the series This is a significant departure from previous definitive issues which had featured pantheons of famous Americans with each portrait image confined to a single denomination At the same time this break with the recent past represented a return to origins Washington and Franklin after all had appeared on the first two American stamps issued in 1847 and during the next fifteen years each of the eight stamp denominations available with one exception featured either Washington or Franklin Washington FranklinsWreath of Olive branches designs issued 1908 1922In the early Washington Franklin issues 1908 1911 every design incorporated a pair of olive branches surrounding one or the other of the two profiles From 1912 on however the Franklin head issues would instead appear with Oak leaves near the bottom of the oval in the image Olive branches and oak leaves are often used as symbols for peace olive branches and strength oak leaves though no significance was officially acknowledged in their use here The Washington Franklins were issued in denominations ranging from 1 cent to 5 dollars each value printed in different color ink The two engravings of either Washington or Franklin are employed in five basic design themes i e framework ornaments lettering which in turn were used to print more than 250 separate and distinct stamp issues over a fourteen year period During this time seven separate series of the Washington Franklins appeared in succession each series differing somewhat from its predecessor in physical characteristics i e paper type perforation size etc while some series would also introduce new denominations printed with new colors Produced by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington D C these issues were generally printed by the flat plate process but several of the issues also employed other new and experimental printing methods including use of the revolutionary rotary printing press and the offset printing process The first Washington Franklin postage stamp to be released was a 2 cent stamp issued on November 16 1908 Other denominations soon followed and would continue to appear through the first World War years with the last Washington Franklin postage stamp issued in 1923 The series thus survived for almost fifteen years longer than any previous U S postage stamp series produced by a single printing organization 1 2 3 Contents 1 Background 2 Stamp design 3 Stamp issues 3 1 Stamp issues chart 4 Year series 4 1 1908 09 series 4 2 1909 series 4 3 1910 11 series 4 4 1912 1914 series 4 5 1914 15 series 4 6 1916 17 series 4 7 1917 1920 series 5 Offset printing 6 Imperforate stamps 7 Coil stamps 7 1 Orangeburg coil 7 2 Private perforations 8 2 and 3 cent types 9 Oddities of the Issue 9 1 Rare perforation errors 9 2 The 5 cent color error 1916 1920 10 Watermarks 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksBackground editDuring the several decades that led up to the production of the Washington Franklin issues the printing technology of U S Postage stamps was in many respects still in its development stages As a consequence the U S Post Office would often receive complaints from the general public about its postage stamps In 1869 the Post Office faced its first nationwide complaints when it issued a set of ten stamps that broke from the tradition of honoring and depicting statesmen selected Presidents and Franklin on the faces of all U S Postage stamps Withering criticism also cited the small size and inconvenient shapes of the 1869 stamps and faulted their adhesive gum as inadequate Consequently this issue was short lived and pulled from post offices across the nation As the years passed other complaints ranged from criticism about stamp subject and design difficulty with perforations and even objections to the often unpleasant taste of the gum on the backs of stamps Many of the criticisms also came from postal clerks who complained about the insufficiently varied choice of colors used on the issues which sometimes resulted in the same or similar color appearing on several different denominations making it visually difficult to sort mail quickly Shortly after the turn of the 19th 20th century the problem of improving stamps and production prompted debates in Congress and the Senate debates into which President Theodore Roosevelt sometimes injected himself For example Roosevelt argued that in observance of the upcoming 100th anniversary of Lincoln s birth Lincoln should be included in the new definitive 1908 issue then being planned Lincoln however was omitted instead he would be honored with his own anniversary commemorative stamp in 1909 Many of the innovations employed in the production of the Washington Franklin Issues were the result of this ongoing effort to improve on the production of U S Postage 1 3 Stamp design editThe Washington Franklin issues employed a classical yet simple style in their designs with either Washington or Franklin displayed in full profile both figures surrounded in early issues with an arrangement of olive branches This style was in stark contrast with that of the definitive stamps previously issued in 1902 03 as that issue not only presented a variety of American historical figures but framed them with an elaborate assortment of allegorical and ornamental designs which in spite of their artistic quality were criticized as so flamboyant that they detracted from the central portrait and theme The relatively austere design consequently chosen for the Washington Franklins was the result of this concern In keeping with the quest for simplicity the original design concept was not for a Washington Franklin series but for a series devoted exclusively to Washington with all its near identical stamps exhibiting the same image of the first United States President they would differ from one another only in denomination and color This idea originated with one Charles H Dalton of Boston who in a letter to his Senator Winthrop M Crane expressed admiration for the current British stamps all of which employed the same profile portrait of King Edward VII Dalton recommended that the next U S series be similarly uniform with every one of its stamps presenting the same profile head of Washington found on the 2 denomination of the 1894 First Bureau Issue The senator passed this letter on to the Postmaster General George Meyer who by and large followed Dalton s recommendation 4 Full uniformity however would have violated a long standing postal tradition dating back to 1851 which had placed Franklin on every definitive one cent stamp issued by the U S Post Office It may have been for this reason that Franklin was admitted to the 1908 series in the single case of the one cent stamp The Washington Franklin series resulting from this compromise was designed by the renowned artist Clair Aubrey Huston known for his many postage stamp designs 5 Most denominations of the 1902 03 series had been identical in color to their counterparts in the preceding First Bureau Issue By contrast the Washington Franklin set preserved the previous colors only for its five lowest values new and very different colors were chosen for all denominations of 6 cents and higher Despite the vast number of Washington Franklin stamps released as said more than 250 in seven different series only five basic designs were employed during their printing and production Two separate engravings one of Washington the other of Franklin are used in the five basic design types 1 2 The engraving of George Washington was modeled after a bust sculpture by the celebrated sculptor Jean Antoine Houdon The image of Franklin in this issue was engraved by Marcus Baldwin who modeled his engraving after a photograph of a plaster bust of Franklin created by Jean Jacques Caffieri in 1777 5 As the issue evolved through its seven series Washington and Franklin replaced each other on some values marking the first time in United States postal history that two men had appeared on the same denomination in one issue 6 Indeed both Washington and Franklin ultimately appeared on the 1 cent 8 cent 10 cent 13 cent 15 cent 50 cent and 1 dollar values The five basic design types nbsp Issue of 1908 nbsp Issue of 1908 nbsp Issue of 1912 nbsp Issue of 1917 nbsp Issue of 1918The same engraving of either Washington or Franklin is used in five design types At first glance the design types may appear almost the same Washington with Olive branches postage spelled out TWO CENTS Franklin with Olive branches the denomination spelled out ONE CENT denomination is only spelled out on the 1 and 2 cent 1908 1909 and 1910 issues six stamps Washington with Olive branches postage in numeral form used on all denominations with the exceptions of the 9 11 12 20 and 30 cent and the 2 and 5 dollar amounts Franklin with Oak leaves postage in numeral form used on denominations from 8 cents to 1 dollar Franklin with horizontal frame used on 2 and 5 dollars denominations postage amount in numeral form In the case of the first four designs preparing printing plates for each stamp required two separate transfer phases Two different steel dies were used one containing the Washington or Franklin engraving the other providing the framework and lettering After every image on the steel plate had been impressed with both design components the plate was heat treated and hardened to prepare it for printing In the lower denomination Washington Franklin Issues 400 separate impressions appeared on a printing plate referred to as a flat plate The higher value of 1 dollar was printed from a flat plate of 200 subjects 3 The fifth design required different plates for each of the two elements as printing took place in two stages the frame was first printed in color and in a second impression the Franklin portrait was laid over it in black These 2 and 5 values employed plates of 100 subjects Stamp issues editThe first Washington Franklin stamp issued was a two cent red Washington head issued on November 16 1908 to pay the first class postage on a standard letter 6 The seven separate and distinct Washington Franklin series appeared at intervals of a year or two and included denominations that ranged from 1 cent to 1 or 5 dollars depending on the series The different issues can be distinguished from one another by one or more of several factors perforation gauge the type of stamp paper or in some unusual varieties by the printing method used Four or five basic paper types were employed during the life of the issue Two of these have different watermarks consisting of single line and double line letters USPS while another paper type had no watermarks watermarks are detected by placing the stamp in a special fluid In 1909 a much less common type of bluish paper was used made of 35 rag stock combined with the usual wood pulp and can readily be identified by its faint bluish gray color 3 N B Some contend that bluish paper contained only 10 rag stock 7 Later in the same year the Post Office is supposed to have experimented with China clay paper but whether such a paper stock actually existed has become a matter of dispute 8 Stamp issues chart edit The Washington Franklin stamp issues of 1908 1923 dates of issue Denomination 1908 1909DL Wmrkperf 12 1909Bluish paperperf 12 1910 1911SL Wmrkperf 12 1912 1914SL Wmrkperf 12 1914 1915SL Wmrkperf 10 1916 1917Un Wmrkperf 10 1917 1923Un Wmrkperf 111 cent F O Dec 2 1908 F O Feb 16 1909 F O Nov 23 1910 W 12 Feb 1912 W 5 Sep 1914 W 27 Sep 1916 W 23 Mar 19172 cents W T 16 Nov 1908 W T 16 Feb 1909 W T 23 Nov 1910 W 12 Feb 1912 W 5 Sep 1914 W 25 Sep 1916 W 23 Mar 19173 cents W 24 Dec 1908 W 16 Feb 1908 W 16 Jan 1911 W 18 Sep 1914 W 11 Nov 1916 W 23 Mar 19174 cents W 24 Dec 1908 W 16 Feb 1908 W 20 Jan 1911 W 7 Sep 1914 W 7 Oct 1916 W 23 Mar 19175 cents W 19 Dec 1908 W 16 Feb 1908 W 25 Jan 1911 W 14 Sep 1914 W 17 Oct 1916 7 Mar 1919 red error W 23 Mar 1917 23 Mar 1917 red error 6 cents W 31 Dec 1908 W 16 Feb 1908 W 25 Jan 1911 W 28 Sep 1914 W 10 Oct 1916 W 23 Mar 19177 cents W 29 Apr 1914 W 10 Sep 1914 W 10 Oct 1916 W 24 Mar 19178 cents W 12 Dec 1908 W 16 Feb 1908 W 8 Feb 1911 F 12 Feb 1912 F 26 Sep 1914 F 13 Nov 1916 F 24 Mar 19179 cents F 29 Apr 1914 F 6 Oct 1914 F 16 Nov 1916 F 12 Mar 191710 cents W 7 Jan 1909 W 16 Feb 1908 W 24 Jan 1911 F 11 Jan 1912 F 9 Sep 1914 F 17 Oct 1916 F 24 Mar 191711 cents F 11 Aug 1915 F 16 Nov 1916 F 19 Mar 191712 cents F 29 Apr 1914 F 10 Sep 1914 F 10 Oct 1916 F 12 May 191713 cents W 11 Jan 1909 W 16 Feb 1908 F 10 Jan 191915 cents W 19 Jan 1909 W 16 Feb 1908 W 1 Mar 1911 F 12 Feb 1912 F 16 Sep 1914 F 16 Nov 1916 F 21 May 191720 cents F 29 Apr 1914 F 19 Sep 1914 F 5 Dec 1916 F 12 May 191730 cents F 29 Apr 1914 F 19 Sep 1914 F clarification needed F 12 May 191750 cents W 13 Jan 1909 F 12 Feb 1912 29 Apr 1914 F 10 Dec 1915 F 2 Mar 1917 F 19 May 19171 dollar W 29 Jan 1909 F 12 Feb 1912 F 8 Feb 1915 F 22 Dec 1916 F 19 May 19172 dollars 02 Madison 22 Mar 1917 F 19 Aug 19185 dollars 02 Marshall 22 Mar 1917 F 19 Aug 1918W Washington W T Washington with TWO spelled out F Franklin F O Franklin with ONE spelled out DL Wmrk Double line watermark SL Wmrk Single line watermark Un Wmrk No watermark 02 Reprint of 1902Year series editThe first three series of Washington Franklin postage stamps depicted Washington on every denomination except for the ONE CENT issue which presented Benjamin Franklin s profile inside the same frame design as that of the Washington issues On January 11 1912 Franklin for the first time began to appear on denominations of 8 cents and higher Each of the seven successive series brought various changes in design color perforations paper and sometimes printing methods In addition to these series there are a few individual stamps issued near the end of the Washington Franklin era that can not be categorized within one of the series because of design or perforation anomalies The last Washington Franklin was issued in May 1923 a 1 cent green Washington head with olive leaves Scott 544 would coincidentally also become the rarest postage stamp of the issue errors excepted and can only be positively identified by measuring its outer frame dimensions Because its distinct features are not readily apparent this variety sometimes turns up in every day collections This however is unusual as the stamp was printed in very limited quantities and consequently any surviving examples of this variety are exceedingly rare and valuable today 1 3 1908 09 series edit nbsp 1st Washington FranklinIssued November 16th 1908Washington and Olive branches designThe Washington Franklins were initially released to the public one and two stamps at a time first appearing in Post Offices in December of 1908 The issues portray Washington and Franklin in profile surrounded by a pair of olives branches On the 1 and 2 cent denominations the amount of postage is worded as ONE CENT and as TWO CENTS while on the remaining denominations 3 cents to 1 dollar the amount of postage appears in numerals Franklin is depicted only on the one cent denomination in this series Washington appears on the values from two cents to 1 dollar see WF chart The Post Office decided not to include 2 dollar or 5 dollar denominations in the series because ample quantities of the 2 and 5 dollar stamps from the 1902 03 series were still on hand indeed additional supplies of these values would not be needed until 1917 This first Washington Franklin issue appeared with gauge 12 perforation and was printed on paper having a double line watermark consisting of the letters USPS embedded in the fibers 3 This particular watermark had large double lined letters which often weakened the sheets of stamps causing the frequent separation of stamps at the Post Office before they even reached the customers As a result the double line watermark was discontinued in 1910 and replaced by a single line watermark with smaller letters Because of the high demand for the one and two cents denominations these issues were also printed in booklet form with six stamps to a page 3 Using the printing technique employed with the Bureau triangle issues of 1894 the paper used to print the Washington Franklin issues was first dampened so that printing ink would be absorbed more thoroughly and evenly However this resulted in paper shrinkage when the sheets of stamps dried causing the rows of stamps to be drawn closer together As the flat printing plates for this issue had individual stamp impressions spaced 2 mm apart the resulting dried sheet would leave stamps spaced about 1 mm apart making it very difficult to line up rows of perforations accurately between the rows of stamps Many sheets were issued with perforations somewhat off center while roughly 20 of the sheets emerged with perforations so off center that they were deemed unsalable and had to be destroyed Paper shrinkage would lead the Bureau to try various approaches to the problem in the following issues Finding well centered stamps with wide margins in any denomination in this early issue is a challenge for the collector and well centered examples command prices that far exceed average catalog values 1 9 nbsp Issues of 1908 1909 1 cent through 6 cents The ONE CENT and TWO CENTS designs appear in the 1909 and 1910 11 series The 3c 4c 5c and 6c designs appear in every series except that of 1912 1914 The 7c Washington head shown below doesn t appear until 1914 see WF chart nbsp Issues of 1908 1909 8 cents through 1 dollar The 8c 10c and 15c Washington heads also appear in the 1909 and 1910 11 series The 13c Washington head also appears in the 1909 series The 50c and 1 dollar Washington heads are exclusive to the 1908 series and appear nowhere else in the Issue There are no Washington heads with denominations of 9c 11c 12c 20c 30c 2 and 5 1909 series edit In 1909 the U S Post Office in its effort to counter the effects of shrinkage experimented with different paper printing the next series of postage stamps on a bluish paper reportedly consisting of a 35 rag stock used conjunction with the usual wood pulp this percentage has been called into question by some analysts When placed next to a stamp of ordinary wood pulp paper and the reverse sides are inspected the difference in paper tone is readily apparent This experimental paper was supposed to reduce shrinkage from the paper dampening involved in the wet sheet printing process but while it represented a marginal improvement over the 1908 issues it did not solve shrinkage problem sufficiently and its use was discontinued after a brief period The perforation gauge of this issue is again 12 Stamps printed on bluish paper have denominations that range from 1c through 15c and were sold only in Washington DC so used examples on cover usually bear a Washington DC postmark Consequently most of the issues from this series are scarce and generally expensive 1 The 1 and 2 cent stamps are the most affordable for collectors for they were issued in larger quantities approximately 3 million of each issue printed 10 The remaining denominations appeared in very limited quantities and are sometimes very valuable Rarest of all are the 4 cent and 8 cent stamps which in fact were never released for postal use apparently they reached the public in 1915 when the Post Office traded them to stamp dealers in exchange for rare issues missing from the Smithsonian Institution collection of U S stamps 11 The denominations of 7 9 11 and 12 cents do not occur on bluish paper 9 see WF chart It was long believed that later in 1909 the Post Office experimented briefly with another paper type designed to reduce shrinkage one containing a China clay additive that gave its appearance a grayish tone very similar to that of bluish paper China clay versions of the 1 through 15 values are listed in standard catalogues appearing as variants of the 1908 09 stamps rather than being classified as a separate series or as part of the bluish paper issue Some philatelists believe that China clay stamps are a myth for examination of some purported examples failed to find any clay in the composition of the paper 8 1910 11 series edit When producing the 1910 11 series the Post Office abandoned experiments with paper additives but took two other measures to compensate for paper shrinkage First the stamp images on the outer columns of the printing plate were set wider apart 3 mm than those toward the center 2 mm Second the elaborate double line watermark deemed a possible source of uneven paper shrinkage was discontinued and replaced by a simpler single line watermark which it was hoped would ensure more uniform shrinkage In other respects the 1910 11 series mirrors its predecessors Like them it is perforated twelve and it employs the same Franklin and Washington head designs It does not however include all the denominations available in earlier issues but omits the 13c Washington stamp which had been offered in the two previous series as well as the 50c and 1 Washington issues printed in 1908 09 None of these three designs would appear again in subsequent Washington Franklin series 9 1912 1914 series edit By 1912 the Post Office had received numerous complaints from postmasters that the many near identical Washington stamps in the issue confused postal clerks too often leading them to give customers higher denominations than they paid for The Post Office addressed this problem in the series of 1912 1914 by making a significant change in the line up in the Washington Franklin denominations Washington would now appear on the lower values only all denominations of 8c and higher would display the Franklin head The realignment provided a clear visual distinction between the cheaper and the more expensive stamps To further heighten the distinction the Post Office now introduced the oak leaf frame for the Franklin stamps thus eliminating olive branches from the higher values along with Washington To be sure assigning Washington exclusively to the small denominations meant that Franklin had to be displaced from the iconic position he had enjoyed on 1 definitive stamps for over sixty years However putting Franklin on the lower values would have violated a tradition more noticeable to the public that of having Washington s image appear on the normal first class letter rate stamp of every definitive series This tradition dated back to 1851 and had only been ignored once in the disastrous 1869 issue nbsp Washington and Olive branchesIssue of 1912 Washington appears on the 1 cent stamp of this Issue for the first time nbsp 2 cent with numerals Accordingly in early 1912 the Bureau of Engraving and Printing released a new version of the 1 cent stamp this time with the profile of Washington instead of Franklin who had been on all 1 cent green issues of the three previous series This was the first U S Postage stamp to go on sale in booklet form before sheets were available the booklet appeared on February 8 while the sheet was not issued until four days later The denominations of the 1 and 2 cent stamps now appeared in numerals rather than lettering The new Franklin oak leaf design had already been introduced in January with the issue of a 10 cent yellow stamp and the other high values soon reached post offices In the 1912 1914 series the denominations of 7 9 12 20 and 30 cents appeared for the first time in the Washington Franklin issues This series is again perforated 12 and the values between 1 and 50 are printed on single line watermarked paper The 50 and 1 issues however are instead printed on double line watermarked paper left over from the production of the 1908 series Denominations not included in this printing are the 3 4 5 and 6 cent stamps as there were still adequate stocks of these available Of special interest is the first appearance of the 7 cent Washington head with its premier color of black issued on April 29 1914 An estimated 5 million 7 cent stamps were printed a relatively low number for a definitive issue It was available in post offices for only five months for this denomination went through a perforation change in the next series thus making it a new and separate issue 1 New arrivals nbsp 1912 1914 series Washington 7c in black and Franklin with Oak leaves 8c to 11c see WF chart nbsp 1912 1914 series Franklin with Oak leaves 12c to 50c nbsp 1st Franklin 1 DollarIssued February 12 1912The 50 cent and 1 dollar Franklin issues made their debut on February 12 1912 These stamps were printed from plates of 200 subjects instead of the 400 subject plate used on all lesser denominations The 200 subject printing plate required paper whose dimensions were compatible with its size and operation Since there were remaining stocks of double line watermarked paper from 1908 intended for plates with 200 subjects on hand this paper was used for these two issues When stocks of this paper ran out some two years later new single line watermarked paper was cut to the proper size and used Consequently the 50 cent Franklin occurs on two paper types in this one series The 1 dollar Franklin was not printed again on this new paper as existing stocks were ample up to 1916 The 50 cents and 1 dollar Franklin and Oak leaves issues occur again in the following three series of the Washington Franklin Issue 1 3 see WF chart 1914 15 series edit nbsp 1st Franklin 11 centIssued August 11 1915This series again includes Washington heads on denominations 1 cent through 7 cents and Franklin heads on the 8 cent through 1 dollar values It is the first series to include the 11 cent denomination with the Franklin and Oak leaves design colored slate green which appears again in the following two series of 1916 and 1917 Lower values of the series are printed from plates of 400 on single line watermarked paper while the one dollar Franklin is printed from plates of 200 subjects and uses double line watermarked paper of the appropriate size Because of stamp separation problems in previous issues using gauge 12 perforations particularly when attempting to tear a block of stamps from the sheet to cover postage on parcels this series was instead issued with gauge 10 The perforations of this gauge would soon prove to be a problem also as the coarser gauge of perforation made it more difficult to separate stamps often resulting in torn stamps 1 3 1916 17 series edit The series of 1916 17 brought an end to the use of watermarked paper By this time the stock of older 2 and 5 dollar stamps had been exhausted but rather than producing new Franklin designs for these values the Post Office merely ordered reprints of the 2 and 5 dollar stamps used in 1903 which depict respectively James Madison and John Marshall It can be thus be argued that these two stamps do not truly belong to the Washington Franklin Issues Up until this time each new series had either added new denominations or discontinued older ones but this series remained the same issuing every denomination with the same colors from 1 cent to 1 dollar that had been included in the 1914 15 series and also retaining that issue s gauge 10 perforations 1 3 see WF chart Most experts long believed that the 30 denomination had been omitted from the 1916 17 series indeed no post office records indicate that this value was ever issued Claims by one famous collector Benjamin Miller that he indeed possessed an unwatermarked perforated 30 stamp from 1916 17 were discounted and accordingly in the original Scott catalogue the 20 stamp of the series No 476 was immediately followed by the 50 No 477 The years following World War II however saw the discovery of additional copies of the 30 value that seemed unwatermarked and in 1957 Scott chose to label this stamp No 476A 12 Yet Scott s numbering did not permanently settle the issue for in 2008 a stamp rating service Professional Stamp Experts discovered a ghost watermark on a copy of 476A and this raised the question of whether after all the unwatermarked version had ever been legitimately issued PSE at that point ceased certifying copies of this stamp 13 The 30 unwatermarked perforated 10 stamp from 1916 17 if it exists at all remains the rarest of any Washington Franklin issue belonging to a full series fewer than 300 copies have been certified by various expertizing services 1917 1920 series edit The 1917 1920 series was perforated 11 and included all the denominations found in the two preceding series but added three new Franklin heads of 13 cents 2 and 5 dollars The two higher denominations appeared late in this issue as the Bureau of Engraving and Printing was busy replacing worn printing plates and dealing with various experiments and innovations that delayed production of the 2 and 5 dollar plates Perhaps to identify these stamps as luxury items they were printed in two tones with the vignette head in black and the frame in color They were further distinguished from lower values by their use of landscape format rather than the normal portrait orientation Because the 2 and 5 dollar Franklin head stamps were the two largest denominations they are often referred to by collectors as the Big Bens The 2 dollar Franklin was intended to be printed in carmine red and black but somehow the color of the printing ink from the particular lot that was used turned out to have a distinct orange tone Variations in color in printing ink is somewhat common in stamp production but the variance in this case ventured into a different color completely orange By the time this acute color variance was brought to the attention of officials a good number of sheets had already been distributed among the various post offices and were most likely already in circulation In 1920 a second printing of the 2 dollar Franklin was issued this time with the colors that were originally intended carmine red and black These were printed and remained in use for some 3 to 4 years and therefore quantities of the red and black variety out number the orange and black approximately 15 to 1 Quantities issued are for 2 dollar orange and black 47 000 470 sheets of 100 and 2 dollar carmine red and black 743 600 7 436 sheets of 100 1 3 While the denominations from 1c to 1 dollar were printed with plates of 400 subjects and cut into sheets of 100 stamps for sale at the post office the 2 and 5 dollars issues were printed with plates of 100 subjects did not require cutting into separate sheets and were issued as is Consequently there are no 2 and 5 dollar stamps with straight edges By contrast all the lower denomination stamps are found in straight edged examples produced when the sheets were cut in quarters 1 3 New arrivals in the 1917 1920 series nbsp 1st only Franklin 13cissue of 1919 nbsp The Big Bens Issue of 1918 nbsp Franklin 2 dollar reprintissue of 1920 see WF chart Offset printing edit nbsp Offset stamps left as compared to engraved stampsDuring World War I several ingredients of postage stamp ink that had previously been imported from Germany became unavailable and the domestic materials that replaced them had significant gritty impurities with the result that the stamp printing plates became worn much more quickly In response to this problem the U S Post Office employed the new offset printing process to produce several separate Washington head issues The offset method involved taking a photo of a die proof of the postage stamp and through a special process transferring an image of its negative to a plate of glass which became the actual printing plate The set up and development process was more involved in the preparation stages than the engraving process but once the photo mask was made it only took about an hour to produce and replace a worn printing plate The offset process produced an image of lesser quality with a smooth surface as compared to that of an engraved stamp whose lines are raised above the surface of the paper A stamp produced by the offset process almost always possesses a softer or grayish tone to its color and is usually easy to distinguish especially when placed next to a similar stamp printed by the engraving process 1 3 The Washington Franklinoffset printing Washingtonheads 1918 1920Perf 11 Un Watermarked1 cent 525 536 perf 12 2 cents 526 527 528 528a 528b3 cents 529 530Nine stamps numbers from Scott dd dd dd Three denominations of 1 2 and 3 cents were printed by the offset printing process There are two types of the 1 cent denomination five different types of the 2 cent variety and two types of the 3 cent variety These types possess differences in the lines on the toga rope in Washington s profile and usually require the aid of magnification to positively identify their different characteristics Stamps produced by the offset process were issued with a perforation gauge of 11 with the one exception of the 1919 1 cent issue with gauge 12 The first Washington Franklin stamp printed by the offset process was a 3 cent Washington head issued on March 22 1918 The 1 cent green followed and was issued on December 24 1918 The five types of the 2 cent denomination were issued sometime later on March 15 1920 Beginning in 1919 an imperforate variety no perforations between stamps was also issued All three denominations were printed and possess the same variations in type that are found on the perforated issues as the imperforate issues were produced from the same plates There were no Franklin heads printed with the Offset printing press 1 3 Imperforate stamps edit nbsp Imperforate block of 6 with printing plate number Postage stamps issued in sheets with no perforations between the rows and columns of individual stamps are referred to as imperforate The Washington Franklin issue contains several series of imperforate stamps that occur on a small range of denominations from 1 through 5 cents These stamps were issued in imperforate form to accommodate several major vending machine companies of that period who used this stock for coil stamps in their machines which were in wide use about the country Many of these companies applied their own form of perforations such as the Schermack Mail O Meter and Brinkerhoff vending machine companies There were at least seven such firms each having its own patented machines Imperforate stamps were issued in full uncut sheets of 400 subjects or in coil rolls of 500 or 1000 stamps The imperforate issues were printed from a flat plate with 400 subjects until 1918 when they were produced on the rotary press from continuous rolls of paper Imperforate coils from this stock are much rarer than examples cut from full sheets 1 3 The Washington Franklin Imperforate issues Denomination 1908 09DL Wmrk 1911SL Wmrk 1912DL Wmrk 1914SL Wmrk 1916 17Un Wmrk 1918 1920Un Wmrk1 cent 343 Fo 383 Fo 408 W 481 W 531 W2 cents 344 Wt 384 Wt 409 W 459 W 482 482a W 532 34b W3 cents 345 W 483 W 484 W 535 W4 cents 346 5 cents 347 W 485 W red W Washington Wt Washington with TWO spelled out F Franklin Fo Franklin with ONE spelled out DL Wmrk Double line WaterMark SL Wmrk Single line WaterMark Un Wmrk No Watermark Numbers for stamps from Scott Specialized US Stamp Catalogue nbsp Postally used examples of imperforate Washington FranklinsCoil stamps edit nbsp Washington on coil stamps vertical pairissue of 1908Postage stamps that come in strips with the individual stamps arranged side by side or one above the other and rolled into a coil for sale at the post office are referred to as coil stamps The coil configuration made the repeated removal of individual stamps easier for the clerks and others who dealt with mass mailings on a daily basis The coil configuration also made it possible to dispense individual stamps in vending machines 1 Responding to complaints from vending machine companies that coil stamps with standard perforations perforated 12 separated too easily the postal service introduced a much coarser gauge perforated 8 in 1910 This gauge however proved problematic for opposite reasons the stamps proved too difficult to separate As a result a finer gauge perforated 10 was used for coils from 1914 on From 1908 to 1914 coil stamps were printed with Flat Plate presses in sheets of 400 which were then cut into strips for coiling In 1915 the Bureau began printing coil stamps from continuous rolls of paper with the Rotary Press The printing plates were curved and affixed around a rotating cylinder a process that stretched the images somewhat making them slightly longer than similar images printed from a flat plate The difference in size becomes evident when the two different types are placed side by side Coil stamps are either perforated horizontally with one stamp over the other or vertically with the stamps situated side by side along the strip of stamps Made from the same paper stock as sheet stamps the coil stamps were accordingly issued concurrently with the regular Washington Franklins The denominations for coil stamps of these series range only from 1 cent up to 10 cents While the 1 5 cent denominations were issued almost continuously the 10 cent coils were only issued twice once as a yellow Washington head stamp first issued in 1908 See Coil stamps Table 1 and once as a 10 cent yellow Franklin head coil that wasn t issued until 1916 See Coil stamps Table 2 1 3 The Washington Franklin coil stamps Table 1 of 2 Denomination 1908 09DL WmrkPerf 12 Hz 1908 09DL WmrkPerf 12 Vrt 1910SL WmrkPerf 12 Hz 1910 11SL WmrkPerf 12 Vrt 1910SL WmrkPerf 8 Hz 1910 13Un WmrkPerf 8 Vrt 1912SL WmrkPerf 8 Hz 1912SL WmrkPerf 8 Vrt1 cent 348 Fo 352 Fo 385 Fo 387 Fo 390 Fo 392 Fo 410 W 412 W2 cents 349 Wt 353 Wt 386 Wt 388 Wt 391 Wt 393 Wt 411 W 413 W3 cents 389 W 394 W 4 cents 350 W 354 W 395 W 5 cents 351 W 355 W 396 W 10 cents 356 W W Washington Wt Washington with TWO spelled out F Franklin Fo Franklin with ONE spelled out Hz Horizontal perf Vrt Vertical perf DL Wmrk Double line watermark SL Wmrk Single line watermark Un Wmrk No watermark Numbers for stamps from Scotts Specialized US Stamp Catalogue nbsp Coil stamps center line pairissue of 1912 nbsp Coil stamps center line pairissue of 1912 nbsp Coil stamps pairissue of 1909The Washington Franklin coil stamps Table 2 of 2 Denomination 1914SL WmrkPerf 10 Hz 1914 15SL WmrkPerf 10 Vrt 1915 16DL WmrkPerf 10 Hz 1914 16SL WmrkPerf 10 Vrt 1916 19SL WmrkPerf 10 Hz 1916 22Un WmrkPerf 10 Vrt1 cent 441 W 443 W 448 W 453 W 486 W 490 W2 cents 442 W 444 W 449 W 453 W 487 88 W 491 92 W3 cents 445 W 456 W 489 W 493 W4 cents 446 W 457 W 495 W5 cents 447 W 458 W 496 W10 cents 497 FW Washington F Franklin Hz Horizontal perf Vrt Vertical perf DL Wmrk Double line watermark SL Wmrk Single line watermark Un Wmrk No watermark Numbers for stamps from Scotts Specialized US Stamp Catalogue Notes Each of the year series produced stamps with denominations of 1c and 2c that were issued with both horizontal and vertical perforations The remaining denominations of 3c to 10c were issued with mostly vertical perforations There is only one example each of the Washington 3c 4c and 5c stamps issued with horizontal perforations Neither the Washington head nor Franklin head 10 cent coil was ever issued with horizontal perforations hence the issues only existed with stamps situated next to one another on a coil 3 Orangeburg coil edit nbsp The Orangeburg coilIssue of 1911 nbsp Brinkerhoff perforationsA 3 cent Washington head coil stamp Scott 389 issued in 1911 is commonly referred to as the Orangeburg coil It was printed with the flat plate press on single line watermarked paper with vertical gauge 12 perforations The Post Office produced only a small batch of these stamps it would soon switch over to gauge 8 perforations for coils and apparently sold them all to the Bell Pharmaceutical Company which used 3 coil stamps to send samples of their products to physicians through the mail The actual quantity issued remains unknown The earliest known use on cover is dated April 27 1911 Due to the quantity of mail they were put through the first class canceling machine at Orangeburg New York and were mailed third class Because these stamps were used on third class mail most were eventually discarded Owing to its limited and specific usage philatelists were at first unaware of this issue for approximately two years and so very few examples were saved and collected in mint condition which accounts for their rarity of this issue today Approximately twelve covers have been certified as genuine by the Philatelic Foundation The Orangeburg coils are the rarest coils of the Washington Franklin issues 14 15 16 Private perforations edit Beginning on January 3 1911 the Bureau of Engraving and Printing issued the 1 cent and 2 cent denominations in imperforate form on single line watermarked paper specifically for use by at least seven different private coil stamp vending machine companies Each company used its own distinctive types of perforations and most firms continued to experiment with them Thus on the 1 cent issues these five companies employed a total of 18 different types of private perforations while 19 types exist on the 2 cent denomination These private perforations designed to fit the specific mechanisms of the various vending machines were applied to imperforate sheets of 400 stamps after those sheets had been cut into either vertical or horizontal strips the first such sheets had been issued in 1906 at the request of various vending machine companies Joseph Schermack is generally credited with producing the first coil stamp vending machine Privately applied perforations continued to be used well into the 1920s and comprise a distinctive segment of U S postal history 1 17 nbsp Schermack Stamp Vending MachineCourtesy National Postal MuseumThere are no known records of actual quantities issued for private perforation types however relative rarity of the various types is known from years of stamp sales and auction results The Farwell type 3A2 is the most rare variety of the private perforations Counterfeits perforations applied to the imperforate variety are somewhat common among several of the types usually among items having a far lower value than the coil with privately applied perforations Coil stamp pairs with a center line mark in between the stamps are also targets for counterfeiters as the item itself is scare or rare and with the addition of fake perforations the rarity of the item is compounded allowing its value to go up exponentially if not detected With two exceptions each vending machine company that applied private perforations produced several different distinct types i e the Schermack vending machine company produced five different perforation types Mail o meter produced six different types Brinkerhoff produced four different types Other companies include The John V Farwell Company which produced eleven different types of perforations and the U S Automatic Vending Company which issued four types By contrast the Attleboro company and The International Vending Machine Company each produced only one type 18 Outlining all the various types of private perforations involves a considerable amount of specialized information requiring a good number of accompanying illustrations and is therefore beyond the scope of this section Further inquiry into private perforations can be made with information available in the external links section under Privately applied perforations 17 Private perforation varieties nbsp Schermack nbsp Mail o meter nbsp Farwell nbsp Farwell2 and 3 cent types edit nbsp 2 and 3 cents varietiesThose engraved images on the 2 and 3 cent Washington head issues that appear similar but whose lines vary significantly are referred to and often cataloged as types Type I occurs on flat plate printings only while types II amp III also occur mostly in rotary press printings and in offset printings as they were produced from photo plates made from the former printing plates The 2 cent Type II stamp does not occur on a flat plate stamp Because the commonly used denominations of the Washington Franklin issues were printed in greater quantities the worn printing plates would have to be replaced in the process from time to time Though each new plate was made from the same die transfer the plates would still differ slightly from the previous plate in use due to the bending process to fit the plate around the rotary press printing cylinder Plates would also differ because the transfer die itself would wear from repeated image transfers to the printing plate 1 There are eleven different types of stamps designs among the two denominations of 2 and 3 cents The variations that constitute types occur in the various facial features on Washington and on his Toga and on the various lines of shading on the ornaments of the stamp design Defining all the various types among these two denominations involves a highly specialized area of study that encompasses a sizable amount of additional information whose many details need accompanying illustrations and as such is beyond the scope of this section 1 3 It suffices to say that most of the types are common to less common with only two types that are rare and valuable one a 2 cent 1916 issue type II the other a 2 cent 1919 issue type II 19 Because it requires knowledge of and magnification to see the subtle variations in the lines of the image the valuable stamps can and have gone unnoticed for years before they are ever discovered and sometimes turn up in common stamp collections but this is very uncommon as these types are indeed rare There are various places on line one listed in External links Identifying the 2 and 3 cent types that can provide detailed information about the 2c and 3c design types with an assortment of illustrations and charts to aid positive identification Various publications like the popular Scott Specialized Catalogue of US Stamps also provide detailed and illustrated information for design types Oddities of the Issue editThere are a few Washington Franklin issues that were produced at the latter part of their production and can not be categorized with the other series or groups of stamps by their standard features having features that are not defined by perforation gauge or paper type alone rendering these issues one of a kind 1 3 In 1917 the New York Post office returned a batch of imperforate 2 cent stamps from the 1908 09 issue double line watermark two spelled out to Washington for credit Rather than remitting cash however the Federal Post Office in effect transformed these stamps into a new issue by perforating them with the then current gauge perforated 11 and returned them to New York A relative rarity this issue is catalogued as Scott 519 For the first time in the Washington Franklin issues three stamps were printed with a dual perforation gauge of 11 x 10 Issued June 14 1919 these 1 2 and 3 cent Washington heads are the only three stamps in the issue Scott 538 40 with this particular dual perf configuration In 1920 a 1 cent Washington head was issued with perforations of gauge 10 x 11 making it the only stamp in the entire Issue Scott 542 with this particular configuration and one of only four issues with a compound or dual perforation gauge In 1921 a 1 and 2 cent Washington head were issued again on unwatermarked paper with gauge 11 perforations These two stamps were issued in sheets of 170 and were made from coil waste printed on the rotary press Images produced from curved printing plates are slightly longer than images produced from a flat plate as the surface and images elongate from the bending The only way to distinguish this printing from the 1918 perf 11 printing is to measure the parameters of the stamp designs which measure 19 mm wide by 20 mm tall or by placing it next to and comparing it with a flat plate printing In 1923 the Post Office released the last Washington Franklin stamp that would also become the rarest non error stamp Scott 544 in this issue Printed on unwatermarked paper with gauge 11 perforations this issue can only be distinguished from the 1 cent 1918 issue which is also printed on unwatermarked paper with gauge 11 perforations by measuring the parameters of the design 19 mm wide by 23 In 1922 a small quantity of 1c Rotary Press stamps was perforated 11 using remainder sheets from the earlier printings that were normally perforated in 10 gauge or 10 x 11 dual or compound gauge Its existence as a Perf 11 variety was discovered in 1936 and the stamp finally received a Scott Catalogue listing in 1938 1 3 20 Rare perforation errors edit When the Post Office changed the perforation gauge from 12 to 10 in 1914 a few sheets emerged with stamps that had been perforated with one of the gauges horizontally and the other vertically compound perforations These errors included 1 2 and 5 stamps Scott 423A 423B and 423C that were perforated 12 10 12 horizontally and 10 vertically as well as 1 and 2 stamps Scott 423D and 423 E perforated 10x12 All five varieties are great rarities indeed the 2 perforated 10 12 issue 423E has been identified as one of the rarest of all U S stamps with only a single used copy certified while the 164 24c on vertically ribbed paper is unique 21 By comparison two examples are known of the celebrated 1 Z Grill stamp of 1868 22 The 5 cent color error 1916 1920 edit nbsp 5 cent color errorDuring the production of the 1916 17 series it was observed that on one 2 cent plate No 7942 three of the 400 images had become noticeably worn Two of these images were a vertical pair appearing near the bottom of the top left pane of 100 the remaining image appeared near the top of the bottom right pane When replacing these three images the technician responsible conceivably confused by the problems of working with mirror image material which can makes a 5 look like a 2 inadvertently transferred 5 cent images onto the three problem positions of the plate This error was not noticed for several weeks and eventually three different carmine colored 5 cent stamps were distributed by the Post Office the perforated 10 issue of 1916 17 Scott 467 the imperforate issue of the same years Scott 485 and the perforated 11 issue of 1917 20 Scott 505 The imperforate version is by far the rarest of these and few collectors have ever seen one 3 Watermarks editWatermarks occur in paper and are made during the paper making process by means of various devices that impart an impression in the wet paper pulp the impression usually consisting of an official emblem or letter s The actual watermark portion of the paper is thinner than the surrounding paper The difference in paper thickness can usually be detected by holding the stamp up to a light however some countries have issued stamps whose watermarks are very difficult to detect in this manner and require watermark detection fluid Watermarks were originally used by governments for documents currency and other applications to help prevent counterfeiting The U S Post office began using a double line watermark bearing the initials USPS in 1895 when the Bureau of Engraving and Printing introduced it into the previously unwatermarked Bureau Triangles stamp issues The same double line watermark paper used then was used on the various issues leading up to and used in the production of the 1908 and 1909 versions of the Washington Franklin issues In 1910 the watermark was changed to a single line watermark and with initials which were smaller in size partly because the double line watermark tended to weaken the sheets at the perforations causing premature separation of stamps at the Post Office and partly because postal officials suspected that the double line watermark caused the stamp paper to shrink unevenly when the sheets dried after printing As the Bureau used only two types of watermarks for the Washington Franklins with each type bearing the initials USPS their application is easily summarized There are eight distinct configurations in which the watermarked initials can appear on any U S postage stamp or sheet from right side up to sideways right to upside down and to sideways left and similarly again in reverse form as a result of the sheet of paper being placed reversed in the printing press thus causing the initials USPS to appear reversed on the stamp sheet Watermarks as they occur on U S postage stamps are not usually visible to the naked eye and must be submerged in a special watermark fluid that enhances its appearance This is done to distinguish stamps with the same color perforation gauge and denomination but which were printed on paper with different watermarks or without any watermarks i e the only way to positively distinguish a 3 cent 1908 issue with double line watermark from a 3 cent 1910 issue with single line watermark is to test for these watermarks as both of these issues are identical in color denomination and perforation gauge 12 and therefore cannot be differentiated by these features see WF chart The Washington Franklin issues were the last U S stamps to employ papers bearing the USPS watermark the use of these was discontinued in 1916 during World War I as a means to reduce expense as watermarked paper was more expensive than its unwatermarked equivalent and at year s end the difference saved was considerable 23 24 25 See also editGeorge Washington on stamps Benjamin Franklin on stamps Thomas Jefferson on stamps Clair Aubrey Huston designer of Washington Franklins 1932 Washington Bicentennial Presidents of the United States on U S postage stamps US Regular Issues of 1922 1931 Postage stamps and postal history of the United States Commemorative stamps Definitive stamp U S Postage stamp locatorPreceded bySeries of 1902 Second Bureau Issue US Definitive postage stamps1908 1922 Succeeded byUS Regular Issues of 1922 1931 see also Fourth Bureau issue1922 1931 DefinitivesRegular definitive issues of 1922 1931 DescriptionDates of Issue Flat Plate printingperf 11 Rotary Press printingperf 10 Rotary Press printingperf 11x10 cent Nathan Hale 551 Apr 4 1925 653 May 25 19291 cent Benjamin Franklin 521 Jan 17 1923 581 Oct 17 1923 632 Jun 10 19271 cent Warren G Harding 553 Mar 19 1925 582 Mar 19 1925 633 May 17 19272 cents George Washington 554 Jan 15 1923 583 Apr 14 1924 634 Dec 10 19263 cents Abraham Lincoln 555 Oct 27 1922 584 Aug 1 1025 625 Feb 3 19274 cents Martha Washington 556 Jun 15 1923 585 Apr 4 1925 636 May 17 19275 cents Theodore Roosevelt 557 Oct 27 1922 586 Apr 4 1925 637 Mar 24 19276 cents James Garfield 558 Nov 20 1922 587 Apr 4 1925 638 Jul 27 19277 cents William McKinley 559 May 1 1923 588 May 29 1926 639 Mar 24 19278 cents Ulysses S Grant 560 May 1 1923 589 May 29 1926 640 Jun 10 19279 cents Thomas Jefferson 561 Jan 15 1923 590 May 29 1926 641 May 17 192710 cents James Monroe 562 Jan 15 1923 591 Jun 8 1925 642 Feb 3 192711 cents Rutherford B Hayes 563 Oct 4 1922 692 Sep 4 193112 cents Grover Cleveland 564 May 20 1923 693 Aug 25 193113 cents Benjamin Harrison 622 Jan 11 1926 694 Sep 4 193114 cent American Indian 565 May 1 1923 695 Sep 8 193115 cents Statue of Liberty 566 Nov 11 1922 696 Aug 27 193117 cents Woodrow Wilson 623 Dec 28 1925 697 Jul 25 193120 cents Golden Gate 567 May 1 1923 698 Sep 8 193125 cents Niagara Falls 568 Nov 11 1922 699 Jul 25 193130 cents Buffalo 569 Nov 11 1922 700 Sep 8 193150 cents Arlington Amphitheater 570 Nov 11 1922 701 Sep 4 19311 dollar Lincoln Memorial 571 Feb 12 1923 2 dollars U S Capitol 572 Mar 30 1923 5 dollars Freedom 573 Mar 30 1923 Dates are for day stamp was issued Numbers for stamp issues from Scotts US Stamp Catalogue U S stamp locator and NaV AiDUnited States stamp related categories on Wikimedia Commons History of the United States on stamps Presidents of the United States on stamps George Washington on stamps Thomas Jefferson on stamps Benjamin Franklin on stamps Andrew Jackson on stamps Abraham Lincoln on stamps Ulysses S Grant on stamps People of the United States on stamps Stamps of the United States Commemorative stamps of the United States Definitive stamps of the United States Airmail stamps of the United States Revenue stamps of the United States Stamps of the Confederate States of America Flags of the United States on stamps Stamps of the Confederate States of America Stamps of the American Civil War Stamps of the Canal Zone Stamps of the United States 1860 1869 Stamps of the United States 1847 1859 Stamps of the United States 1870 1880 Stamps of the United States 1881 1890 Stamps of the United States 1891 1900 Stamps of the United States 1901 1910 Stamps of the United States 1911 1920 Stamps of the United States 1921 1930 Stamps of the United States 1931 1940 Stamps of the United States 1941 1950 Stamps of the United States 1951 1960 Stamps of the United States 1961 1970 Stamps of the United States 1971 1977 Stamps of the United States 1978 1980 U S historical landmarks on stamps U S territories on stamps Stamps designed by Charles R Chickering Stamps designed by Clair Aubrey Houston General categories on Wikimedia Commons Some of these categories contain images of stamps not issued by the United States Aircraft on stamps Automobiles on stamps Birds on stamps Buildings on stamps Dogs on stamps Elephants on stamps Horses on stamps Maps on stamps Sailing ships on stamps Ships on stamps Trains on stamps Red stamps Blue stamps Brown stamps Green stamps Purple stamps Black stamps Yellow stamps Orange stamps US multi colored stamps See also Wikipedia articles Presidents of the United States on U S postage stamps Washington Franklin Issues US Regular Issues of 1922 1931References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Armstrong Martin A Washington Franklins 1908 1921 1979 a b Third Bureau Issues 1908 1922 Smithsonian National Postal Museum Retrieved 27 December 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Scott Specialized Catalogue of United States stamps William W Cummings James B Hatcher Scott Publishing Company New York N Y 1982 ISBN 978 0 89487 042 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Johl Max G The United States Postage Stamps of the Twentieth Century Vol 1 1937 p 104 a b Scotts Stamp Identifier a b 1 cent Washington Smithsonian National Postal Museum Retrieved 28 December 2010 Rare Paper Varieties Roger Kirby a b Review of Edward M Liston The China Clay Variety of the 1908 1910 Washington Franklin Issue A J Valente Paper Historian a b c 1908 15 Washington Franklin Series PDF Robert Siegel Philatelic Auction Galleries Retrieved 28 December 2010 Bluish Paper Stamps Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 30 December 2010 Trepel Scott Rarity Revealed The Benjamin K Miller Collection 2006 Smithsonian National Postal Museum Washington D C and The New York Public Library New York N Y p 120 United States 476A Used Stamps Retrieved 3 December 2012 Siegel Power Search Retrieved 3 December 2012 The Orangeburg Coil Retrieved 28 February 2011 The Orangeburg Coil The Philatelic Foundation New York Retrieved 7 January 2017 The Orangeburg Coil Smithsonian National Postal Museum Retrieved 28 February 2011 a b Schermack stamp vending machines Smithsonian National Postal Museum Retrieved 27 February 2011 Private Perforations on U S Vending and Affixing Machine Coil Stamps 1907 1927 1847US com Retrieved 26 February 2011 2 cent issue of Nov 17 1916 type II Scott 491 2 cent issue of Jun 14 1919 type II Scott 539 Scotts Specialized Catalogue of US Stamps 1922 1c Rotary Perf 11 Issue Scott 544 Robert A Siegel Auction Galleries Retrieved 14 January 2011 Scott Specialized Catalog of United States Stamps and Covers 2014 edition p 34 The Sirron Collection of United States Perforation Rarities Siegel Auction catalogue Sale 1001 December 9 2010 p 6 The Kenmore US Stamp Catalog 2010 edition page 32 First Watermarks How to detect Watermarks PDF Kenmore Stamp Company Retrieved 29 December 2010 The Eight Possible Orientations for the USPS Watermarks 1847US Retrieved 29 December 2010 Bibliography editArmstrong Martin A Washington Franklins 1908 1921 1979 Trenton Publishing Co New Jersey USA Smithsonian National Postal Museum Archives Collections and Exhibits Scotts Specialized Catalogue of United States Stamps 1982 Scott Publishing Company New York N Y ISBN 978 0 89487 042 2 Library of Congress Card No 2 3301 Kenmore Collectors Catalog 2010 Winter edition Catalog 906 p 37 41 External links editEngraving to Plate transfer process Smithsonian National Postal Museum Postage stamp production How to Detect Watermarks Identifying the 2 and 3 cent types Privately applied perforations The Orangeburg coil Philatelic Foundation New York The Washington Franklin Issues Smithsonian National Postal Museum Second Bureau Issue 1902 Smithsonian National Postal Museum Fourth Bureau Issue 1922 Smithsonian National Postal Museum STAMPDATA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Washington Franklin Issues amp oldid 1186170468, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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