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Topical/All : Planes

 

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carabop

25 Sep 2016
12:28:22am
I was online today and bought a few airmail and regular USA stamps with airplane theme. Looking forward to receiving them. I enjoy airmails with planes on them because that is what true airmail was. Now it all goes by air.
Carabop
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TuskenRaider
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25 Sep 2016
08:50:53pm
re: Planes

Hi carabop;

I like those also. but the big bonus is an airmail stamp, with a airplane as the main design, and a cancel also with a airplane.

My most favorite is the US cancel of a Jenny bi-plane and the slogan "Use Airmail
Saves Time"

I just a couple of days ago, found a similar cancel, but from Canada #C8, with a slogan
"Save Time"
(airplane outline)
"Use Air Mail"
the main difference on this cancel is that it is a single wing aircraft.

Some collectors specialize in these and other types of slogan cancels. I believe that they are popular because the Jenny bi-plane for instance has about 8-10 varieties, which are fairly easy to tell apart.

Thanks for posting, it's nice to know there are others that like those stamps too. Big Grin

Just stampin'....
TuskenRaider

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carabop

25 Sep 2016
10:13:16pm
re: Planes

One of my favorites.
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carabop

25 Sep 2016
10:15:55pm
re: Planes

Do you have any airmail stamp, with a airplane as the main design, and a cancel also with a airplane? I don't have any but would love to see some.

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Opa
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15 Feb 2017
01:15:26pm
re: Planes

Two covers with airplanes in the cancelation. One from Belgium and the other from Argentina.

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philb
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15 Feb 2017
06:43:41pm

Auctions
re: Planes

If you like early airmails...check out the DC-2 flights between the Netherlands and the Dutch East Indies .Image Not Found

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"If a man would be anything, he must be himself."
Opa
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16 Feb 2017
12:49:13pm
re: Planes

That is a nice cover philb. I have only seen a set of those stamps on the internet and never in front of me. Beautiful stamp. My Dutch is not very good but on the right I think it says "To the central administration of the Netherland Indies Post, Telegraph and Telephone service in Bandong."

I have two from Germany I think you will like. The Zeppelin letter is not in very good condition, but I still like the cancelation.
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philb
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16 Feb 2017
03:04:08pm

Auctions
re: Planes

Manfred, Yes i like the postmark on the zeppelin ...South America flight...i have more common ones Germany to the United States. I would like to show this cover that i like with the military stamp good for letter or parcel.Image Not Found

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pastorleon
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I am used, hinged multiple times, OG but not teeth.

16 Feb 2017
05:15:19pm
re: Planes

This thread is so cool. As a tour guide/lecturer/docent at the EAA Aviation Museum in Oshkosh, I spend my days hanging around the JN4 "Jenny" explaining to the school children the history of the aircraft and I always mention the plane is most famous for the upside down Jenny stamp. Perhaps motivating them to be fascinated with both aviation and stamp collecting. Again, thanks for the thread.

The Rev.

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Linus
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16 Feb 2017
06:17:41pm
re: Planes

Carabop,

I have this one from China. An airmail stamp, with a plane on the stamp, and a plane in the cancellation. Enjoy!

Linus

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roy
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BuckaCover.com - 80,000 covers priced 60c to $1.50 - Easy browsing 300 categories

16 Feb 2017
06:49:01pm
re: Planes

My two favourite airplane covers:

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Roy

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"BuckaCover.com - 80,000 covers priced 60c to $1.50- 10,000+ new covers coming Tuesday June 1"

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Philatarium
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APS #187980

16 Feb 2017
07:28:02pm
re: Planes

Not on cover, but here are my favorite airmails. (In fact, my favorite stamps of all time.)

Greece C1-C4. To me, this is an amazing and charming design for 1926.

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Winedrinker
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16 Feb 2017
08:33:45pm
re: Planes

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The G-EAOU (God Elp All Of Us) Vickers Vimy bomber that Ross Smith piloted from England to Australia in 1919. Around 100 pieces of mail were carried on the flight. This was the first successful flight from England to Australia. The acting Prime Minister of Australia, Mr. Watt, put up a 10,000 pound prize on March 20, 1919 to the first to do so - "with a view to stimulating aerial activity." It was a flight filled with incident and potential disaster, but, miraculously, was completed in time to win the award.

This stamp is a fake. And even the real stamp is not a stamp, but rather a Cinderella - and very expensive indeed.

Cheers,
Wine


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Opa
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17 Feb 2017
12:48:12pm
re: Planes

A Set from Estonia,1924.
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Opa
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17 Feb 2017
01:01:43pm
re: Planes

Complete sheet from Germany, airmail stamp from 1919. Could also be used on regular mail.Image Not Found

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Linus
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10 Mar 2017
06:02:48pm
re: Planes

Carabop,

A plane on the stamp and a plane in the cancellation.

Linus



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snowy12
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10 Mar 2017
07:31:09pm

Auctions
re: Planes

My page of New Guinea Huts with Airmail Overprints.
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And the Bird of Paradise overprints.
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These are available in two flavors without the date scroll (which this image is) and with the date scroll.
Brian

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Bobstamp
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10 Mar 2017
11:31:19pm
re: Planes

Miscellaneous airmail overprints, including another of the New Guinea stamps:

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I generally don't collect overprints, but these are quite attractive and interesting.

Bob

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www.ephemeraltreasures.net
Opa
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11 Mar 2017
02:28:54am
re: Planes

Some more cancels with planes.
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Bobstamp
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11 Mar 2017
08:03:11pm
re: Planes

I've always like U.S. C11, "Beacon on Rocky Mountains," especially with the cancellation on this one:

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Here's the same cancellation on a pair of "Chicago Century of Progress" commemorative:

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I've always wondered if there are varieties of this cancellation, but after looking at several examples I haven't found any. The various degrees of inking seem to create "varieties".

Bob

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Bobstamp
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12 Mar 2017
03:41:26pm
re: Planes

More airplane cancellations

I found these stamps, separated, in a glassine envelope that I purchased:

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"GIVE WINGS TO YOUR MAIL":

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At first glance, the airplanes in these Canadian "SAVE TIME/USE AIRMAIL" slogan cancellations look similar, but they're quite different; note that the fonts are also different, and the "SAVE TIME" on the stamp at the right is curved:

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Opa
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18 Mar 2017
05:12:01am
re: Planes

Got these last Week. When I saw them I had to have them.

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Luxemburg 1931,Airmail stamps. Breguet over the city of Luxemburg and the Alzette valley.

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Rob1956
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Member ACCC (Australian Commonwealth Collectors Club of NSW)

27 Mar 2017
12:37:19am
re: Planes

"The G-EAOU (God Elp All Of Us) Vickers Vimy bomber that Ross Smith piloted from England to Australia in 1919. Around 100 pieces of mail were carried on the flight. This was the first successful flight from England to Australia. The acting Prime Minister of Australia, Mr. Watt, put up a 10,000 pound prize on March 20, 1919 to the first to do so - "with a view to stimulating aerial activity." It was a flight filled with incident and potential disaster, but, miraculously, was completed in time to win the award.

This stamp is a fake. And even the real stamp is not a stamp, but rather a Cinderella - and very expensive indeed.

Cheers,
Wine"


The facsimile has no watermark, and it is Australia's most expensive Cinderella; last time I saw one sold on cover was about $20,000, it also isn't the most popular; even though its history is of great historical importance it is avoided by many collectors who can afford it as being too expensive for a label.

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rrraphy
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Retired Ap. Book Mod, Pres Golden Gate Stamp Club, Hi Tech Consultant

27 Mar 2017
08:07:36pm
re: Planes

France C1
The French used the airplane silhouette also on a number of stamps issued in the colonies.
But mostly in the design of the stamp. The o/p is rarer, and alas subject to counterfeiting.

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Incidentally, this one is counterfeit. Crying (very crudely...look at that last e!)

rrr...

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"E. Rutherford: All science is either physics or stamp collecting."
keesindy
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09 Apr 2017
03:35:18pm
re: Planes

Dad had found (in the 1960s?) a large number of 1930s era covers. Many looked like they'd been lying in the street during rush hour and were discarded. This one reads, SAVE TIME USE AIR MAIL and was postmarked in Vancouver, BC, Canada on December 21, 1938. It contains a Christmas greeting card and a lengthy personal note.

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This second example has the same cancellation message, but with a different design. It was mailed in 1940 from Bell, Gouinlock & Co., Ltd. in Toronto, Ontario, Canada to a Bank in Richmond, Indiana.

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"I no longer collect, but will never abandon the hobby"
Opa
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12 Apr 2017
01:26:39pm
re: Planes

Again some stamps that I just received. A set from Honduras 1929. Overprints for the first flight from Honduras to New York. This flight however never took place and apparently these stamps were never used on airmail letters.?.

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Linus
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13 Apr 2017
09:21:12pm
re: Planes

From my WW block collection, a flying boat with a railway cancel? Think about it...

Linus

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Bobstamp
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14 Apr 2017
07:45:30pm
re: Planes

And here's an Irish paquetbot airmail cover posted from the United States Lines ocean liner, S.S. America! Talk about shooting yourself in the foot, or, er, your rudder!

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Philatarium
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APS #187980

14 Apr 2017
08:19:27pm
re: Planes

You know, Bob, I think the sender is the writer William Saroyan:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Saroyan

Laurence Pollinger (the c/o in the return address) was a literary agent in London. His agency in still in business"

http://www.pollingerltd.com/history/index.htm

And the recipient was an attorney and literary agent in New York, who represented Saroyan, among others:

http://www.nytimes.com/1998/12/21/business/paul-gitlin-83-pioneering-literary-agent-to-stars.html

So, it all triangulates.

A nice cover, paqueboat and all!!

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Philatarium
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APS #187980

14 Apr 2017
08:22:37pm
re: Planes

Wait --

I was just googling to find images of the US/Soviet joint issue for the Saroyan stamp, and it took me to *your* page -- lol!

http://www.ephemeraltreasures.net/william-saroyan-part-1.html
http://www.ephemeraltreasures.net/william-saroyan-part-2.html


So I guess you already knew about it! Happy

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"You gotta put down the duckie if you wanna play the saxophone. (Hoots the Owl -- Sesame Street)"

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Bobstamp
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14 Apr 2017
11:31:37pm
re: Planes

I did know about it! Thank you for the plug for my web page. Big Hug

As I explain on that web page, I purchased the cover from Roy Lingen several years ago. I bought it because I didn't have any Irish airmail stamps on cover. Only after I received it did I realize who the sender was. Serendipitously, Saroyan was already one of my favourite American authors!

Bob

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Opa
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22 Apr 2017
03:40:32pm
re: Planes

France, American Legion in Paris. Nice article on Wikipedia in German and English.
Also on you tube.

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pigdoc

10 Apr 2019
08:24:07am
re: Planes

Have been working on my Aviation Pioneers presentation for the next Philatelic Gathering (April 27), so I was surfing a SOR Search of "aviation" for inspiration. Saw Bob's posting above, wondering if there were variations of the Curtiss JN-4 (Jenny) "Airmail Saves Time" cancellation. Collectors of early FAM covers will, no doubt, recall that there was a Spanish version of this cancellation:
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Completely different design than the one Bob shows, but contemporary in time, and with the same message. Mine is a partial strike, but not smudged, and is much better than the other one I have in my collection.

And, when I was finding the cover above, I noticed the one below on the next page in my album, and chose to display it here, since this subject has evolved into a very worthy 'Planes in Cancellations' theme...
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Haven't done any research on it yet, I was hooked by the interesting cancellation, the agent's signature, the early first flight date, and the low price.

Enjoy!
-Paul


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Kapul
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02 Jun 2019
05:40:59am
re: Planes

I wonder if CARABOB was aware of the amount of stamps or covers showing planes, when she started this post way back in 2016, A great topic which can turn into a huge collection on its own,covering numerous countries. A few more to keep it going.

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Kapul
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02 Jun 2019
05:55:16am
re: Planes

And a few covers and card.

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musicman
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APS #213005

02 Jun 2019
10:11:51am
re: Planes

Hey Paul/pigdoc,

If you ever want to sell or trade that US C11 cover above,

I would love to have it in my C11 cover collection!


Big Grin

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DannyS
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02 Jun 2019
10:23:12am
re: Planes

Just saw this on Colnet. This year's, 2019, stamp to add to my DC-3 collection although I'm guessing it's a DC-2. It's part of a miniature sheet. (KLM was an early adopter of Douglas airliners in Europe.)

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snowy12
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04 Jun 2019
08:25:35am

Auctions
re: Planes

Is this a douglas dc?
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Brian

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DannyS
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04 Jun 2019
10:54:40am
re: Planes

Off the top of my head I would say a DC-4 or DC-6. I will plump for the former I think.

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Bobstamp
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04 Jun 2019
10:12:48pm
re: Planes

@snowy12: The Dutch stamp does show a DC-2, and KLM was the first airline in Europe to fly Douglas airliners. Its first purchase was a DC-2, which it named the Uiver (Old Dutch for”stork”) and entered in the 1934 MacRobertson International Air Race between London and Melbourne.The Uiver placed first in the handicap portion of the race and and showed that air transport of cargo and passengers was practical and potentially lucrative. The DC-2 is often said to be the world!s first modern airliner.

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ernieinjax
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18 Jun 2019
11:36:59am
re: Planes

Image Not FoundImage Not FoundDanny,

I saw this postcard while strolling through a junk curio shop while on my lunch break and remembered your post about your DC-3 collection. I am unsure whether this is a DC-1, DC-2 or DC-3. Can you tell just from a basic image?

The guy has a pencil mark price written on it of $8.00 and his booth number. I think the $8.00 price is probably on the low side if offered by a dealer. I see high interest postally used cards like this offered for $20.00 all day long. I picked it up for $4.00.

Poignant note from Dad to son on the card. How do you like the way he asks, "How would you like to fly out here in one of these?". Hahaha. If he had lived to see a Boeing 747.

If you send me a private message I will send it to you at no cost.

Have a great week.

-Ernie

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Bobstamp
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18 Jun 2019
06:30:28pm
re: Planes

@ernieinjax:

There are several differences between the DC-2 and the DC-3:

• The planes in the foreground and background are DC-3s. The others are DC-2s.

• In cross section, the fuselages of the two planes are different:

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• The DC-2 has two landing lights located in the nose. The DC-3's landing lights are outboard of the engines on the leading edg of the wings.

• The DC3 has a dorsal fillet added to the fin to improve stability. The DC-2 has no dorsal filet.

• Overall, the DC-3 appears a bit more "plump" than the DC-2.

The DC-2, not surprisingly, followed the DC-1, a plane designed by Donald Douglas to meet the needs of TWA — then Trans-Western Airlines — for its routes in the western U.S., and to compete with United Airlines, which was flying the Boeing 247. In a sweetheart deal, Boeing had agreed to sell the 247 only to United Airlines, so TWA had to search elsewhere for a plane that met their needs. The DC-1 was that plane: it could take off on only one engine and climb to 10,000 feet, had innovative variable pitch propellers for greater fuel efficiency and flaps for lower landing speeds, greater safety, and the ability to land on short runways.

There was only one DC-1. The DC-2s that TWA ordered was slightly longer, but otherwise was a DC-1. This unused real-photo postcard pictures the DC-1; the first DC-2 to be sold outside the U.S. went to KLM Airlines, which probably explains the Dutch caption.

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Bob



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DannyS
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19 Jun 2019
02:26:26am
re: Planes

Ernie that's is a beautiful and stunning postcard.

I think the first three DCs are best looked at as the same plane. The DC-1 as the prototype, the DC-2 as mark 1 and the DC-3 as Mark 2. When we see how the many aircraft models are still Being 737s it makes sense.

As Bob has written the DC-2 was basically the production run of the DC-1 prototype. Also as Bob says the DC-3 was based on the DC-2 but with a wider cabin. There was a very good reason for this. C.R. Smith, head of American Airlines, spent over $300 on a long-distance two hour phone call to Donald Douglas. He needed a replacement for his Curtiss T-32 Condor IIs which had sleeping berths for passengers crossing the North American continent on night flights. He was probably worried that TWA's daytime DC-2 service would eat into his market. The problem for him was that he couldn't fit sleeping berths on both sides of the cabin into the DC-2s 66 inch cabin width. He had to persuade Douglas to increase the width and the DC-3 ended up with 92 inches.

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The Curtiss T-32 Condor

Just on a side note, when Shirley Temple sings about "on the good ship Lollipop" she actually singing about an American Airlines DC-2, not a ship on sea.

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Shirley Temple

C R Smith's sponsorship of the DC-3 design explains why the DC-3 was originally called the DST (Douglas Sleeper Transport). Airlines soon found that the DC-3 made more economic sense with more seats. The eighth plane off the production line had the 14-16 sleeping berths replaced with 21 seats. DC-3s would soon be offering 32 seats against the DC-2s 14 seats.

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The Douglas DST

C R Smith ordered 10 DSTs at $79,500 each in July 1935 during the Great Depression. The money came from the US Governments Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC). FDR had widened the RFC's remit so it covered more than bad banks under his New Deal.

Today we not only see various governments financing their aircraft industries, we also see the airlines competing on who has the best sleeping berths on long distance flights.

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FrequentFlyer
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19 Jun 2019
12:46:42pm
re: Planes

I've been collecting aircraft on stamps and covers for several years now. More covers these days than stamps. Here is a recent acquisition I bought on eBay. Bidding was competitive for this one, but I got it with an esnipe bid that was considerably more than what I usually pay for a cover. It is, however, a dramatic cover that I think is worth the price. I have not seen one like it before. I'm pleased to add it to my collection.

While I have not yet written up the cover, I am presently identifying the aircraft as a Lockheed 8 "Sirius." The rudder is not quite right, but that may be the artists lack of attention to detail. I know there are a several knowledgeable aircraft-on-stamps collectors on this forum, so, if anyone has a more accurate ID for this airplane I would be pleased to have it before I put the cover in my album.

FF

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SForgCa
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19 Jun 2019
01:50:47pm
re: Planes

Japan 1919 first trial flight
High value Sakura C22 & 23 - lots of Fakes
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1929-34 Sakura A1-5 Lake Ashinoko
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1952 AIRMAIL Mt.Tateyama Sakura A16-A21
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FrequentFlyer
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28 Jul 2019
09:05:37am
re: Planes

My purpose for posting this S/S is to ask if any Aircraft on Stamps collectors recognize the make and model of the airplane depicted on this sheet.
It may be named in a catalog, but I don't have a current Scott's or a second edition SG Collect Aircraft on Stamps catalog.

It may be a Phoenix D III (Austrian design)? Any help appreciated!

FF

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nlroberts1961

12,8 cm Kanone 43 L/55 in blueprints only

01 Aug 2019
11:35:27am
re: Planes

Scott does not specify the type. My guess is that it is a Brandenburg Hansa C1 which was used on the first regular international airmail service. It could be a Phonix C1, but the DIII was a single seat Fighter. Another choice is the LVG C VI which made the first airmail runs between Berlin and Weimar in 1919. The first day notes issued with the stamp don't mention the type but they do reference the Weimar - Berlin service. Couple of photos of the C VI here

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"Euros think a 100 miles is a long way, Americans think a 100 yrs is a long time..."
FrequentFlyer
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02 Aug 2019
07:59:47am
re: Planes

Thanks, nlroberts, for your suggestions and link. I'm at the APS show in Omaha, but will check each possibility you mention when home again.

Looks like a radiator in front of the front cockpit. That should be a help, but haven't seen a photo yet that shows one there.

FF

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nlroberts1961

12,8 cm Kanone 43 L/55 in blueprints only

02 Aug 2019
11:03:03am
re: Planes

The trick is that most of these aircraft were rebuilt/modified military aircraft. A lot of them appear in slightly different configurations if you study the various photos. Another issue is that the stamp may be an artists interpretation and not strictly accurate to any specific model. The AEG j.ii is a good example of variants. If you look at this model kit bashing article here , this is quite different from say this variant here with different engine exhaust and fuselage.

Finally each of these aircraft were not only built by the original manufacturer but were licensed to other manufacturers. For example Phonix built variants of the brandenburg hansa and LVG if i recall. The more i look at it I think the LVG V VI or variant seems the closest silhoutette. All these models were originally recon or general purpose aircraft.

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"Euros think a 100 miles is a long way, Americans think a 100 yrs is a long time..."
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03 Aug 2019
08:43:46am
re: Planes

" The more I look at it I think the LVG V VI or variant seems the closest silhoutette."



Hi nlroberts:

I've checked some images of the aircraft you mentioned on the internet back in my motel room and, yes, I agree, the LVG models seem the closest to the s/s image. I'll probably go with it in my write-up for this sheet, with a caveat that the aircraft's identification is a "most likely" choice. Most people wouldn't care anyway, but I do and, for me, part of the fun in collecting aircraft on stamps and covers is identifying the aircraft.

Again, many thanks for your help.

Don (FF)
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gerom

22 Aug 2019
08:24:48am
re: Planes

Hello,
A few stamps of Free State Danzig 1920-24
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and the World's first (?) air post stamp

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FrequentFlyer
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21 Oct 2019
06:56:55pm
re: Planes

Once again I am looking for help with identifying an aircraft, this time in a cachet from the WW II period. The airplane on the cover below looks like a Curtiss, but it is not a Seamew because the wingtips are not turned up. A Curtiss Model 84, SB2C Helldiver on floats? A Brewster Buccaneer? I think the rear cabin looks too short to be Brewster. Any comments will be appreciated.

FF

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michael78651
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21 Oct 2019
07:13:43pm
re: Planes

It looks like a Kingfisher Scout Plane.

Kingfisher

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Bobstamp
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21 Oct 2019
08:04:34pm
re: Planes

Further to previous discussions about the DC series of airliners, here are three postcards from my collection:

A real-photo postcard of a DST (not the small rectangular windows for the sleeping berths above each passenger window:

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A cutaway view of the DST's interior:

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And a photo of passengers getting reading for bed:

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Hmmm.... I wonder how many DST passengers were able to join the Mile High Club? Surprise

Bob



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21 Oct 2019
08:16:28pm
re: Planes

A fascinating if tragic wartime DC-3 drama emerged from the death of movie actor Carole Lombard, who perished on a TWA DC-3 flight from Las Vegas to Los Angeles in 1942. I recommend a recent book about the crash, titled Fireball: Carole Lombard and the Mystery of Flight 3.

Bob

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22 Oct 2019
09:17:42am
re: Planes

"It looks like a Kingfisher Scout Plane."



Thanks Michael. I think you are right. A catapult launched Kingfisher. I had forgotten about the Vought OS2U.

Don

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22 Oct 2019
09:24:16am
re: Planes

"Hmmm.... I wonder how many DST passengers were able to join the Mile High Club? "



Oh my, surely not!Blushing

FF

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DannyS
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30 Nov 2019
05:15:23am
re: Planes

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A hidden story in a stamp.

As I am always looking for new material for my DC-3 collection I was pleased to see Spain issuing this stamp a bit earlier in the year. It celebrates a hundred years of air transport in Spain. The background B&W images is a DC-3, or to be more specific the military version, a C-47. I haven't bought one yet and this image is off Delcampe.

Now where it gets interesting is the aircraft registration is clearly visible, EC-ABL. A check on the number brought up a rather strange story. We have to remember that the fascist leader of Spain during WW2, General Franco, was closely allied to the Axis powers. Both Germany and Italy had helped him defeat the republicans in the civil war.

EC-ABL was one of three DC-3s belonging to the US 12th Air Force carrying US paratroopers from the UK to Oran in Algeria. This was on the 8th November 1942 and would have been in support of Operation Torch, the US seaborne landings in North Africa.

Unfortunately the planes running short of fuel had to make emergency landings in what they thought was Algeria. I'm not sure if for the men it was that unfortunate that they actually landed in Spanish controlled Morocco. They weren't going to be shot at anyway.

Now Franco was a wily old bird and by late 1942 he was no longer certain that Hitler was a real winner. He had supplied volunteers to fight against the Russians, but he had held off officially joining in with his friends. The US military personnel were repatriated fairly quickly via Gibraltar. The three interned aircraft were purchased by Spain from the US the following year for $100,000 each and ended up being part of the Iberia fleet.

A whole story from the registration number shown on a 2019 postage stamp. What more could you ask for?



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30 Nov 2019
09:32:59am
re: Planes

I just found this unused postcard tucked away in my stock. Thought you might enjoy seeing it.

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Roy

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30 Nov 2019
09:00:36pm
re: Planes

Thanks Roy, the cockpit looks so cramped by today's standards. When I was being ferried down into the Libyan dessert the pilots seldom closed the door so they could see what their passengers (us) were up to. Danny

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lemaven
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05 Dec 2019
01:56:04am
re: Planes

Cleaning up my fathers house after his recent passing and found some books and papers that the plane he flew in WWII was a “Lancaster”. Then I found this Canadian stamp.

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Harvey

I think, therefore I am - I think!

05 Dec 2019
05:43:37pm
re: Planes

Airplanes take me back to the 1960's. I was a collector even back then. Jello issued round plastic wheels with pictures of cars and airplanes in them. There were 200 of each and the cars came first, early 60's I think. When you had the set you could send away 25 cents for holders very similar to poker chip holders. They also sent a book with each set - either French or English depending on what you asked for. I still have my complete sets in holder with books. We couldn't eat that much Jello so I had a route around the area - people would save the wheels for me. Does that ring a bell with anyone else out there?

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15 Jan 2020
09:01:37am
re: Planes

I'm stumped on identifying the aircraft on this 1932 first-flight from Elk City, Oklahoma and hoping that someone recognizes it. It somewhat resembles an Armstrong Whitworth design, but the enclosed pilot cabin and engines aren't right. A composite drawing, perhaps?

Thanks.

Don FF

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Linus
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22 Apr 2020
10:32:49pm
re: Planes

FF - Looks like an artist creation to me, as I have never seen a plane like that one.

Here is a cover I bought at Snowpex, earlier this year, for my WW block collection, just because I liked it.

Linus


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23 Apr 2020
12:52:06am
re: Planes

Biplanes

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23 Apr 2020
12:57:45am
re: Planes

More biplanes

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23 Apr 2020
12:58:43am
re: Planes

Seaplane

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23 Apr 2020
01:02:16am
re: Planes

Spirit of Saint Louis
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snowy12
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15 Aug 2020
07:19:33am

Auctions
re: Planes

Here's a postcard.
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Brian

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15 Aug 2020
11:57:57am
re: Planes

From my Aircraft on Covers Collection, a 1932 air show cover with a watercolor add-on cachet depicting what was probably meant to be a de Havilland DH-4 in flight. The rudder and cowling don't look quite like a DH-4's, but the rest of the airplane is a close approximation.

FF

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15 Aug 2020
08:03:39pm
re: Planes

A few years ago I spent a bundle on this First Flight Cover, signed by and flown by the French "Lindbergh," Jean Mermoz, on the first official airmail flight, in 1929, over the Andes between Buenos Aires and Santiago, Chile:

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Mermoz gained fame as a pioneer of Trans-Atlantic mail service from Europe to South America and within South America.

Ever since obtaining that cover, I've been looking for an FFC flown on the first official airmail flight from Santiago to Buenos Aires. And a few weeks ago I found one on HipStamp! It too was flown by Mermoz, s few days after the Buenos Aires-Santiago flight:

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Mermoz flew both flights in a Potez-25 biplane, illustrated on this French commemorative issued in 1997:

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My search for a Santiago-Buenos Aires cover yielded a surprise, posted a year before the Mermoz flights:

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It wouldn't be much to write home about, except for its provenance:

• While it's not an FFC, it is a cover that was carried on a flight made to explore possible airmail routes over the Andes. The address makes sense because the cover was flown in a Ryan aircraft (I don't yet know what model); Ryan was hoping that its aircraft would be purchased for airmail services in South America.

• And the pilot, who would become even better known than Mermoz? Jimmie Doolittle, who less than a year later would make the world's first "blind" flight, relying completely on instruments and radio signals from take off to landing. Then, in the Second World War, he would plan and lead the U.S.'s first attack on Japan.

Bob

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18 Aug 2020
06:31:02am
re: Planes

Can not leave behind :

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18 Aug 2020
06:41:49am
re: Planes

The next stamps are not that common for most of you, but interesting :

HALBAMTLICHE FLUGMARKEN

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20 Aug 2020
08:22:12am

Auctions
re: Planes

Here is a few postcards
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Brian

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carabop

25 Sep 2016
12:28:22am

I was online today and bought a few airmail and regular USA stamps with airplane theme. Looking forward to receiving them. I enjoy airmails with planes on them because that is what true airmail was. Now it all goes by air.
Carabop

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TuskenRaider

25 Sep 2016
08:50:53pm

re: Planes

Hi carabop;

I like those also. but the big bonus is an airmail stamp, with a airplane as the main design, and a cancel also with a airplane.

My most favorite is the US cancel of a Jenny bi-plane and the slogan "Use Airmail
Saves Time"

I just a couple of days ago, found a similar cancel, but from Canada #C8, with a slogan
"Save Time"
(airplane outline)
"Use Air Mail"
the main difference on this cancel is that it is a single wing aircraft.

Some collectors specialize in these and other types of slogan cancels. I believe that they are popular because the Jenny bi-plane for instance has about 8-10 varieties, which are fairly easy to tell apart.

Thanks for posting, it's nice to know there are others that like those stamps too. Big Grin

Just stampin'....
TuskenRaider

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carabop

25 Sep 2016
10:13:16pm

re: Planes

One of my favorites.
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carabop

25 Sep 2016
10:15:55pm

re: Planes

Do you have any airmail stamp, with a airplane as the main design, and a cancel also with a airplane? I don't have any but would love to see some.

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Opa

15 Feb 2017
01:15:26pm

re: Planes

Two covers with airplanes in the cancelation. One from Belgium and the other from Argentina.

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philb

15 Feb 2017
06:43:41pm

Auctions

re: Planes

If you like early airmails...check out the DC-2 flights between the Netherlands and the Dutch East Indies .Image Not Found

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"If a man would be anything, he must be himself."
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Opa

16 Feb 2017
12:49:13pm

re: Planes

That is a nice cover philb. I have only seen a set of those stamps on the internet and never in front of me. Beautiful stamp. My Dutch is not very good but on the right I think it says "To the central administration of the Netherland Indies Post, Telegraph and Telephone service in Bandong."

I have two from Germany I think you will like. The Zeppelin letter is not in very good condition, but I still like the cancelation.
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philb

16 Feb 2017
03:04:08pm

Auctions

re: Planes

Manfred, Yes i like the postmark on the zeppelin ...South America flight...i have more common ones Germany to the United States. I would like to show this cover that i like with the military stamp good for letter or parcel.Image Not Found

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pastorleon

I am used, hinged multiple times, OG but not teeth.
16 Feb 2017
05:15:19pm

re: Planes

This thread is so cool. As a tour guide/lecturer/docent at the EAA Aviation Museum in Oshkosh, I spend my days hanging around the JN4 "Jenny" explaining to the school children the history of the aircraft and I always mention the plane is most famous for the upside down Jenny stamp. Perhaps motivating them to be fascinated with both aviation and stamp collecting. Again, thanks for the thread.

The Rev.

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Linus

16 Feb 2017
06:17:41pm

re: Planes

Carabop,

I have this one from China. An airmail stamp, with a plane on the stamp, and a plane in the cancellation. Enjoy!

Linus

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16 Feb 2017
06:49:01pm

re: Planes

My two favourite airplane covers:

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Roy

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Philatarium

APS #187980
16 Feb 2017
07:28:02pm

re: Planes

Not on cover, but here are my favorite airmails. (In fact, my favorite stamps of all time.)

Greece C1-C4. To me, this is an amazing and charming design for 1926.

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Winedrinker

16 Feb 2017
08:33:45pm

re: Planes

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The G-EAOU (God Elp All Of Us) Vickers Vimy bomber that Ross Smith piloted from England to Australia in 1919. Around 100 pieces of mail were carried on the flight. This was the first successful flight from England to Australia. The acting Prime Minister of Australia, Mr. Watt, put up a 10,000 pound prize on March 20, 1919 to the first to do so - "with a view to stimulating aerial activity." It was a flight filled with incident and potential disaster, but, miraculously, was completed in time to win the award.

This stamp is a fake. And even the real stamp is not a stamp, but rather a Cinderella - and very expensive indeed.

Cheers,
Wine


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Opa

17 Feb 2017
12:48:12pm

re: Planes

A Set from Estonia,1924.
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Opa

17 Feb 2017
01:01:43pm

re: Planes

Complete sheet from Germany, airmail stamp from 1919. Could also be used on regular mail.Image Not Found

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Linus

10 Mar 2017
06:02:48pm

re: Planes

Carabop,

A plane on the stamp and a plane in the cancellation.

Linus



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snowy12

10 Mar 2017
07:31:09pm

Auctions

re: Planes

My page of New Guinea Huts with Airmail Overprints.
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And the Bird of Paradise overprints.
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These are available in two flavors without the date scroll (which this image is) and with the date scroll.
Brian

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Bobstamp

10 Mar 2017
11:31:19pm

re: Planes

Miscellaneous airmail overprints, including another of the New Guinea stamps:

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I generally don't collect overprints, but these are quite attractive and interesting.

Bob

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Opa

11 Mar 2017
02:28:54am

re: Planes

Some more cancels with planes.
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Bobstamp

11 Mar 2017
08:03:11pm

re: Planes

I've always like U.S. C11, "Beacon on Rocky Mountains," especially with the cancellation on this one:

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Here's the same cancellation on a pair of "Chicago Century of Progress" commemorative:

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I've always wondered if there are varieties of this cancellation, but after looking at several examples I haven't found any. The various degrees of inking seem to create "varieties".

Bob

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Bobstamp

12 Mar 2017
03:41:26pm

re: Planes

More airplane cancellations

I found these stamps, separated, in a glassine envelope that I purchased:

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"GIVE WINGS TO YOUR MAIL":

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At first glance, the airplanes in these Canadian "SAVE TIME/USE AIRMAIL" slogan cancellations look similar, but they're quite different; note that the fonts are also different, and the "SAVE TIME" on the stamp at the right is curved:

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Opa

18 Mar 2017
05:12:01am

re: Planes

Got these last Week. When I saw them I had to have them.

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Luxemburg 1931,Airmail stamps. Breguet over the city of Luxemburg and the Alzette valley.

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Member ACCC (Australian Commonwealth Collectors Club of NSW)
27 Mar 2017
12:37:19am

re: Planes

"The G-EAOU (God Elp All Of Us) Vickers Vimy bomber that Ross Smith piloted from England to Australia in 1919. Around 100 pieces of mail were carried on the flight. This was the first successful flight from England to Australia. The acting Prime Minister of Australia, Mr. Watt, put up a 10,000 pound prize on March 20, 1919 to the first to do so - "with a view to stimulating aerial activity." It was a flight filled with incident and potential disaster, but, miraculously, was completed in time to win the award.

This stamp is a fake. And even the real stamp is not a stamp, but rather a Cinderella - and very expensive indeed.

Cheers,
Wine"


The facsimile has no watermark, and it is Australia's most expensive Cinderella; last time I saw one sold on cover was about $20,000, it also isn't the most popular; even though its history is of great historical importance it is avoided by many collectors who can afford it as being too expensive for a label.

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Retired Ap. Book Mod, Pres Golden Gate Stamp Club, Hi Tech Consultant
27 Mar 2017
08:07:36pm

re: Planes

France C1
The French used the airplane silhouette also on a number of stamps issued in the colonies.
But mostly in the design of the stamp. The o/p is rarer, and alas subject to counterfeiting.

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Incidentally, this one is counterfeit. Crying (very crudely...look at that last e!)

rrr...

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keesindy

09 Apr 2017
03:35:18pm

re: Planes

Dad had found (in the 1960s?) a large number of 1930s era covers. Many looked like they'd been lying in the street during rush hour and were discarded. This one reads, SAVE TIME USE AIR MAIL and was postmarked in Vancouver, BC, Canada on December 21, 1938. It contains a Christmas greeting card and a lengthy personal note.

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This second example has the same cancellation message, but with a different design. It was mailed in 1940 from Bell, Gouinlock & Co., Ltd. in Toronto, Ontario, Canada to a Bank in Richmond, Indiana.

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Opa

12 Apr 2017
01:26:39pm

re: Planes

Again some stamps that I just received. A set from Honduras 1929. Overprints for the first flight from Honduras to New York. This flight however never took place and apparently these stamps were never used on airmail letters.?.

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Linus

13 Apr 2017
09:21:12pm

re: Planes

From my WW block collection, a flying boat with a railway cancel? Think about it...

Linus

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Bobstamp

14 Apr 2017
07:45:30pm

re: Planes

And here's an Irish paquetbot airmail cover posted from the United States Lines ocean liner, S.S. America! Talk about shooting yourself in the foot, or, er, your rudder!

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Philatarium

APS #187980
14 Apr 2017
08:19:27pm

re: Planes

You know, Bob, I think the sender is the writer William Saroyan:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Saroyan

Laurence Pollinger (the c/o in the return address) was a literary agent in London. His agency in still in business"

http://www.pollingerltd.com/history/index.htm

And the recipient was an attorney and literary agent in New York, who represented Saroyan, among others:

http://www.nytimes.com/1998/12/21/business/paul-gitlin-83-pioneering-literary-agent-to-stars.html

So, it all triangulates.

A nice cover, paqueboat and all!!

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Philatarium

APS #187980
14 Apr 2017
08:22:37pm

re: Planes

Wait --

I was just googling to find images of the US/Soviet joint issue for the Saroyan stamp, and it took me to *your* page -- lol!

http://www.ephemeraltreasures.net/william-saroyan-part-1.html
http://www.ephemeraltreasures.net/william-saroyan-part-2.html


So I guess you already knew about it! Happy

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Bobstamp

14 Apr 2017
11:31:37pm

re: Planes

I did know about it! Thank you for the plug for my web page. Big Hug

As I explain on that web page, I purchased the cover from Roy Lingen several years ago. I bought it because I didn't have any Irish airmail stamps on cover. Only after I received it did I realize who the sender was. Serendipitously, Saroyan was already one of my favourite American authors!

Bob

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Opa

22 Apr 2017
03:40:32pm

re: Planes

France, American Legion in Paris. Nice article on Wikipedia in German and English.
Also on you tube.

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pigdoc

10 Apr 2019
08:24:07am

re: Planes

Have been working on my Aviation Pioneers presentation for the next Philatelic Gathering (April 27), so I was surfing a SOR Search of "aviation" for inspiration. Saw Bob's posting above, wondering if there were variations of the Curtiss JN-4 (Jenny) "Airmail Saves Time" cancellation. Collectors of early FAM covers will, no doubt, recall that there was a Spanish version of this cancellation:
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Completely different design than the one Bob shows, but contemporary in time, and with the same message. Mine is a partial strike, but not smudged, and is much better than the other one I have in my collection.

And, when I was finding the cover above, I noticed the one below on the next page in my album, and chose to display it here, since this subject has evolved into a very worthy 'Planes in Cancellations' theme...
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Haven't done any research on it yet, I was hooked by the interesting cancellation, the agent's signature, the early first flight date, and the low price.

Enjoy!
-Paul


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Kapul

02 Jun 2019
05:40:59am

re: Planes

I wonder if CARABOB was aware of the amount of stamps or covers showing planes, when she started this post way back in 2016, A great topic which can turn into a huge collection on its own,covering numerous countries. A few more to keep it going.

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Kapul

02 Jun 2019
05:55:16am

re: Planes

And a few covers and card.

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musicman

APS #213005
02 Jun 2019
10:11:51am

re: Planes

Hey Paul/pigdoc,

If you ever want to sell or trade that US C11 cover above,

I would love to have it in my C11 cover collection!


Big Grin

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DannyS

02 Jun 2019
10:23:12am

re: Planes

Just saw this on Colnet. This year's, 2019, stamp to add to my DC-3 collection although I'm guessing it's a DC-2. It's part of a miniature sheet. (KLM was an early adopter of Douglas airliners in Europe.)

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snowy12

04 Jun 2019
08:25:35am

Auctions

re: Planes

Is this a douglas dc?
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Brian

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DannyS

04 Jun 2019
10:54:40am

re: Planes

Off the top of my head I would say a DC-4 or DC-6. I will plump for the former I think.

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Bobstamp

04 Jun 2019
10:12:48pm

re: Planes

@snowy12: The Dutch stamp does show a DC-2, and KLM was the first airline in Europe to fly Douglas airliners. Its first purchase was a DC-2, which it named the Uiver (Old Dutch for”stork”) and entered in the 1934 MacRobertson International Air Race between London and Melbourne.The Uiver placed first in the handicap portion of the race and and showed that air transport of cargo and passengers was practical and potentially lucrative. The DC-2 is often said to be the world!s first modern airliner.

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ernieinjax

18 Jun 2019
11:36:59am

re: Planes

Image Not FoundImage Not FoundDanny,

I saw this postcard while strolling through a junk curio shop while on my lunch break and remembered your post about your DC-3 collection. I am unsure whether this is a DC-1, DC-2 or DC-3. Can you tell just from a basic image?

The guy has a pencil mark price written on it of $8.00 and his booth number. I think the $8.00 price is probably on the low side if offered by a dealer. I see high interest postally used cards like this offered for $20.00 all day long. I picked it up for $4.00.

Poignant note from Dad to son on the card. How do you like the way he asks, "How would you like to fly out here in one of these?". Hahaha. If he had lived to see a Boeing 747.

If you send me a private message I will send it to you at no cost.

Have a great week.

-Ernie

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Bobstamp

18 Jun 2019
06:30:28pm

re: Planes

@ernieinjax:

There are several differences between the DC-2 and the DC-3:

• The planes in the foreground and background are DC-3s. The others are DC-2s.

• In cross section, the fuselages of the two planes are different:

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• The DC-2 has two landing lights located in the nose. The DC-3's landing lights are outboard of the engines on the leading edg of the wings.

• The DC3 has a dorsal fillet added to the fin to improve stability. The DC-2 has no dorsal filet.

• Overall, the DC-3 appears a bit more "plump" than the DC-2.

The DC-2, not surprisingly, followed the DC-1, a plane designed by Donald Douglas to meet the needs of TWA — then Trans-Western Airlines — for its routes in the western U.S., and to compete with United Airlines, which was flying the Boeing 247. In a sweetheart deal, Boeing had agreed to sell the 247 only to United Airlines, so TWA had to search elsewhere for a plane that met their needs. The DC-1 was that plane: it could take off on only one engine and climb to 10,000 feet, had innovative variable pitch propellers for greater fuel efficiency and flaps for lower landing speeds, greater safety, and the ability to land on short runways.

There was only one DC-1. The DC-2s that TWA ordered was slightly longer, but otherwise was a DC-1. This unused real-photo postcard pictures the DC-1; the first DC-2 to be sold outside the U.S. went to KLM Airlines, which probably explains the Dutch caption.

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Bob



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DannyS

19 Jun 2019
02:26:26am

re: Planes

Ernie that's is a beautiful and stunning postcard.

I think the first three DCs are best looked at as the same plane. The DC-1 as the prototype, the DC-2 as mark 1 and the DC-3 as Mark 2. When we see how the many aircraft models are still Being 737s it makes sense.

As Bob has written the DC-2 was basically the production run of the DC-1 prototype. Also as Bob says the DC-3 was based on the DC-2 but with a wider cabin. There was a very good reason for this. C.R. Smith, head of American Airlines, spent over $300 on a long-distance two hour phone call to Donald Douglas. He needed a replacement for his Curtiss T-32 Condor IIs which had sleeping berths for passengers crossing the North American continent on night flights. He was probably worried that TWA's daytime DC-2 service would eat into his market. The problem for him was that he couldn't fit sleeping berths on both sides of the cabin into the DC-2s 66 inch cabin width. He had to persuade Douglas to increase the width and the DC-3 ended up with 92 inches.

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The Curtiss T-32 Condor

Just on a side note, when Shirley Temple sings about "on the good ship Lollipop" she actually singing about an American Airlines DC-2, not a ship on sea.

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Shirley Temple

C R Smith's sponsorship of the DC-3 design explains why the DC-3 was originally called the DST (Douglas Sleeper Transport). Airlines soon found that the DC-3 made more economic sense with more seats. The eighth plane off the production line had the 14-16 sleeping berths replaced with 21 seats. DC-3s would soon be offering 32 seats against the DC-2s 14 seats.

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The Douglas DST

C R Smith ordered 10 DSTs at $79,500 each in July 1935 during the Great Depression. The money came from the US Governments Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC). FDR had widened the RFC's remit so it covered more than bad banks under his New Deal.

Today we not only see various governments financing their aircraft industries, we also see the airlines competing on who has the best sleeping berths on long distance flights.

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FrequentFlyer

19 Jun 2019
12:46:42pm

re: Planes

I've been collecting aircraft on stamps and covers for several years now. More covers these days than stamps. Here is a recent acquisition I bought on eBay. Bidding was competitive for this one, but I got it with an esnipe bid that was considerably more than what I usually pay for a cover. It is, however, a dramatic cover that I think is worth the price. I have not seen one like it before. I'm pleased to add it to my collection.

While I have not yet written up the cover, I am presently identifying the aircraft as a Lockheed 8 "Sirius." The rudder is not quite right, but that may be the artists lack of attention to detail. I know there are a several knowledgeable aircraft-on-stamps collectors on this forum, so, if anyone has a more accurate ID for this airplane I would be pleased to have it before I put the cover in my album.

FF

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SForgCa

19 Jun 2019
01:50:47pm

re: Planes

Japan 1919 first trial flight
High value Sakura C22 & 23 - lots of Fakes
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1929-34 Sakura A1-5 Lake Ashinoko
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1952 AIRMAIL Mt.Tateyama Sakura A16-A21
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FrequentFlyer

28 Jul 2019
09:05:37am

re: Planes

My purpose for posting this S/S is to ask if any Aircraft on Stamps collectors recognize the make and model of the airplane depicted on this sheet.
It may be named in a catalog, but I don't have a current Scott's or a second edition SG Collect Aircraft on Stamps catalog.

It may be a Phoenix D III (Austrian design)? Any help appreciated!

FF

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nlroberts1961

12,8 cm Kanone 43 L/55 in blueprints only

01 Aug 2019
11:35:27am

re: Planes

Scott does not specify the type. My guess is that it is a Brandenburg Hansa C1 which was used on the first regular international airmail service. It could be a Phonix C1, but the DIII was a single seat Fighter. Another choice is the LVG C VI which made the first airmail runs between Berlin and Weimar in 1919. The first day notes issued with the stamp don't mention the type but they do reference the Weimar - Berlin service. Couple of photos of the C VI here

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FrequentFlyer

02 Aug 2019
07:59:47am

re: Planes

Thanks, nlroberts, for your suggestions and link. I'm at the APS show in Omaha, but will check each possibility you mention when home again.

Looks like a radiator in front of the front cockpit. That should be a help, but haven't seen a photo yet that shows one there.

FF

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nlroberts1961

12,8 cm Kanone 43 L/55 in blueprints only

02 Aug 2019
11:03:03am

re: Planes

The trick is that most of these aircraft were rebuilt/modified military aircraft. A lot of them appear in slightly different configurations if you study the various photos. Another issue is that the stamp may be an artists interpretation and not strictly accurate to any specific model. The AEG j.ii is a good example of variants. If you look at this model kit bashing article here , this is quite different from say this variant here with different engine exhaust and fuselage.

Finally each of these aircraft were not only built by the original manufacturer but were licensed to other manufacturers. For example Phonix built variants of the brandenburg hansa and LVG if i recall. The more i look at it I think the LVG V VI or variant seems the closest silhoutette. All these models were originally recon or general purpose aircraft.

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FrequentFlyer

03 Aug 2019
08:43:46am

re: Planes

" The more I look at it I think the LVG V VI or variant seems the closest silhoutette."



Hi nlroberts:

I've checked some images of the aircraft you mentioned on the internet back in my motel room and, yes, I agree, the LVG models seem the closest to the s/s image. I'll probably go with it in my write-up for this sheet, with a caveat that the aircraft's identification is a "most likely" choice. Most people wouldn't care anyway, but I do and, for me, part of the fun in collecting aircraft on stamps and covers is identifying the aircraft.

Again, many thanks for your help.

Don (FF)
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gerom

22 Aug 2019
08:24:48am

re: Planes

Hello,
A few stamps of Free State Danzig 1920-24
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and the World's first (?) air post stamp

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FrequentFlyer

21 Oct 2019
06:56:55pm

re: Planes

Once again I am looking for help with identifying an aircraft, this time in a cachet from the WW II period. The airplane on the cover below looks like a Curtiss, but it is not a Seamew because the wingtips are not turned up. A Curtiss Model 84, SB2C Helldiver on floats? A Brewster Buccaneer? I think the rear cabin looks too short to be Brewster. Any comments will be appreciated.

FF

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michael78651

21 Oct 2019
07:13:43pm

re: Planes

It looks like a Kingfisher Scout Plane.

Kingfisher

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Bobstamp

21 Oct 2019
08:04:34pm

re: Planes

Further to previous discussions about the DC series of airliners, here are three postcards from my collection:

A real-photo postcard of a DST (not the small rectangular windows for the sleeping berths above each passenger window:

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A cutaway view of the DST's interior:

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And a photo of passengers getting reading for bed:

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Hmmm.... I wonder how many DST passengers were able to join the Mile High Club? Surprise

Bob



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Bobstamp

21 Oct 2019
08:16:28pm

re: Planes

A fascinating if tragic wartime DC-3 drama emerged from the death of movie actor Carole Lombard, who perished on a TWA DC-3 flight from Las Vegas to Los Angeles in 1942. I recommend a recent book about the crash, titled Fireball: Carole Lombard and the Mystery of Flight 3.

Bob

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FrequentFlyer

22 Oct 2019
09:17:42am

re: Planes

"It looks like a Kingfisher Scout Plane."



Thanks Michael. I think you are right. A catapult launched Kingfisher. I had forgotten about the Vought OS2U.

Don

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FrequentFlyer

22 Oct 2019
09:24:16am

re: Planes

"Hmmm.... I wonder how many DST passengers were able to join the Mile High Club? "



Oh my, surely not!Blushing

FF

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DannyS

30 Nov 2019
05:15:23am

re: Planes

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A hidden story in a stamp.

As I am always looking for new material for my DC-3 collection I was pleased to see Spain issuing this stamp a bit earlier in the year. It celebrates a hundred years of air transport in Spain. The background B&W images is a DC-3, or to be more specific the military version, a C-47. I haven't bought one yet and this image is off Delcampe.

Now where it gets interesting is the aircraft registration is clearly visible, EC-ABL. A check on the number brought up a rather strange story. We have to remember that the fascist leader of Spain during WW2, General Franco, was closely allied to the Axis powers. Both Germany and Italy had helped him defeat the republicans in the civil war.

EC-ABL was one of three DC-3s belonging to the US 12th Air Force carrying US paratroopers from the UK to Oran in Algeria. This was on the 8th November 1942 and would have been in support of Operation Torch, the US seaborne landings in North Africa.

Unfortunately the planes running short of fuel had to make emergency landings in what they thought was Algeria. I'm not sure if for the men it was that unfortunate that they actually landed in Spanish controlled Morocco. They weren't going to be shot at anyway.

Now Franco was a wily old bird and by late 1942 he was no longer certain that Hitler was a real winner. He had supplied volunteers to fight against the Russians, but he had held off officially joining in with his friends. The US military personnel were repatriated fairly quickly via Gibraltar. The three interned aircraft were purchased by Spain from the US the following year for $100,000 each and ended up being part of the Iberia fleet.

A whole story from the registration number shown on a 2019 postage stamp. What more could you ask for?



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30 Nov 2019
09:32:59am

re: Planes

I just found this unused postcard tucked away in my stock. Thought you might enjoy seeing it.

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Roy

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DannyS

30 Nov 2019
09:00:36pm

re: Planes

Thanks Roy, the cockpit looks so cramped by today's standards. When I was being ferried down into the Libyan dessert the pilots seldom closed the door so they could see what their passengers (us) were up to. Danny

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lemaven

05 Dec 2019
01:56:04am

re: Planes

Cleaning up my fathers house after his recent passing and found some books and papers that the plane he flew in WWII was a “Lancaster”. Then I found this Canadian stamp.

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Harvey

I think, therefore I am - I think!

05 Dec 2019
05:43:37pm

re: Planes

Airplanes take me back to the 1960's. I was a collector even back then. Jello issued round plastic wheels with pictures of cars and airplanes in them. There were 200 of each and the cars came first, early 60's I think. When you had the set you could send away 25 cents for holders very similar to poker chip holders. They also sent a book with each set - either French or English depending on what you asked for. I still have my complete sets in holder with books. We couldn't eat that much Jello so I had a route around the area - people would save the wheels for me. Does that ring a bell with anyone else out there?

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FrequentFlyer

15 Jan 2020
09:01:37am

re: Planes

I'm stumped on identifying the aircraft on this 1932 first-flight from Elk City, Oklahoma and hoping that someone recognizes it. It somewhat resembles an Armstrong Whitworth design, but the enclosed pilot cabin and engines aren't right. A composite drawing, perhaps?

Thanks.

Don FF

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Linus

22 Apr 2020
10:32:49pm

re: Planes

FF - Looks like an artist creation to me, as I have never seen a plane like that one.

Here is a cover I bought at Snowpex, earlier this year, for my WW block collection, just because I liked it.

Linus


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smauggie

23 Apr 2020
12:52:06am

re: Planes

Biplanes

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smauggie

23 Apr 2020
12:57:45am

re: Planes

More biplanes

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smauggie

23 Apr 2020
12:58:43am

re: Planes

Seaplane

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smauggie

23 Apr 2020
01:02:16am

re: Planes

Spirit of Saint Louis
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snowy12

15 Aug 2020
07:19:33am

Auctions

re: Planes

Here's a postcard.
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Brian

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FrequentFlyer

15 Aug 2020
11:57:57am

re: Planes

From my Aircraft on Covers Collection, a 1932 air show cover with a watercolor add-on cachet depicting what was probably meant to be a de Havilland DH-4 in flight. The rudder and cowling don't look quite like a DH-4's, but the rest of the airplane is a close approximation.

FF

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Bobstamp

15 Aug 2020
08:03:39pm

re: Planes

A few years ago I spent a bundle on this First Flight Cover, signed by and flown by the French "Lindbergh," Jean Mermoz, on the first official airmail flight, in 1929, over the Andes between Buenos Aires and Santiago, Chile:

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Mermoz gained fame as a pioneer of Trans-Atlantic mail service from Europe to South America and within South America.

Ever since obtaining that cover, I've been looking for an FFC flown on the first official airmail flight from Santiago to Buenos Aires. And a few weeks ago I found one on HipStamp! It too was flown by Mermoz, s few days after the Buenos Aires-Santiago flight:

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Mermoz flew both flights in a Potez-25 biplane, illustrated on this French commemorative issued in 1997:

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My search for a Santiago-Buenos Aires cover yielded a surprise, posted a year before the Mermoz flights:

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It wouldn't be much to write home about, except for its provenance:

• While it's not an FFC, it is a cover that was carried on a flight made to explore possible airmail routes over the Andes. The address makes sense because the cover was flown in a Ryan aircraft (I don't yet know what model); Ryan was hoping that its aircraft would be purchased for airmail services in South America.

• And the pilot, who would become even better known than Mermoz? Jimmie Doolittle, who less than a year later would make the world's first "blind" flight, relying completely on instruments and radio signals from take off to landing. Then, in the Second World War, he would plan and lead the U.S.'s first attack on Japan.

Bob

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HockeyNut

18 Aug 2020
06:31:02am

re: Planes

Can not leave behind :

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HockeyNut

18 Aug 2020
06:41:49am

re: Planes

The next stamps are not that common for most of you, but interesting :

HALBAMTLICHE FLUGMARKEN

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snowy12

20 Aug 2020
08:22:12am

Auctions

re: Planes

Here is a few postcards
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Brian

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