Showing posts with label cancellation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cancellation. Show all posts

Friday, 18 April 2025

Queensland Stamp Manuscript Cancellations

This is a listing of the different Queensland receiving office manuscript and other cancellations found on Queensland (Chalon, Sideface and Commonwealth) postage stamps. To find the receiving office you are looking for select from the alphabetical tabs above or the labels at the right.

While hundreds of receiving offices existed for various lengths of time, almost all did not use distinctly recognisable markings. Most receiving offices followed the instructions of either not cancelling the stamp but letting the first "Official" Post Office that the mail arrived at do this, or they followed a later instruction to write the receiving offices' name on the envelope or postcard near the stamp. To see this you would need the envelope or postcard.

However, if the letter was a "local" mail, that is used in the same town / area, then
 postage stamps were to be obliterated by lines drawn diagonally across the stamps with a pen and black ink, and the name of the office and the date written on the upper left-hand corner of the letter. This is where most of the crosses, wavy lines, names and initials come from. Occasionally this was applied to mail destined for outside the local area as well.

All identifiable manuscript cancellations are therefore extremely scarce and hard to find, with the possible exceptions of Cania, Mt Larcom, Parson's Point and San Jose.


The rarity rating, given this caveat, is Scarce, for the most commonly found cancels, Rare, and then Very Rare where only 1 or two examples have been seen by me. All covers and postcards (with the possible exception of Parson's Point) are extremely rare and desirable.


Information about the receiving offices comes from Joan Frew: Queensland Post Offices 1842-1980 and Receiving Offices 1869-1927, published in 1981. 
Stampboards material can be seen at the Queensland Receiving Office Manuscript Cancels on stamps page here.

Railway numeral cancellers were also in use for material sent by rail and using railway stamps. Sometimes these were inadvertently used for postal purposes, especially when the railway station and the post office was co-located. This usage has also been noted when the railway office was located with a receiving office, the use of the railway numeral being the only implement on hand to cancel postally used items.

The postal use of railway cancels is covered in my Queensland Catalog of Numeral Cancellations on Postage Stamps here and therefore I have not duplicated this usage in this blog

Thursday, 10 August 2023

Tungamull

Tungamull receiving office, 20 km east north east of Rockhampton, opened as Swanson's Receiving Office in 1887 and was renamed Tungamull in 1889 and elevated to a post office around December 1906. The original receiving office keeper was N. Swanson in 1887 followed by A. Kenny, the station master in 1888
  • manuscript cancellation dated 1899 rated Very Rare
Tungamull date stamp 5b HERE

Tungamull manuscript cancellation dated 24 April 1899 and rated Very Rare. Seen in an Receiving Office exhibit by Nigel Dickinson

Friday, 9 October 2020

Bingera

Bingera receiving office, 16 km west of Bundaberg and 3 km north of Bingera Plantation, opened in 1889 at the railway station as Gibson's Siding receiving office and the name was changed to Bingera on 4 March 1897 before being designated a post office in late 1927. The receiving office keeper in 1889 was Mrs E. Lyons

  • wavy cancel in purple seen in 1910 rated Very Rare

Bingera wavy line cancellation in purple rated very rare. Tied to the Bingera receiving office by a Bingera Plantation post office datestamp of 1 October 1910

Monday, 25 November 2019

Newspaper Postage Docket Cancellations

Newspapers could be posted as bulk parcels. Here is the relevant extract from the Queensland Postal Regulations of 1895:
  • Bulk parcels, consisting of at least four newspapers, with or without supplements, printed and published in Queensland, not exceeding 14 lb. in weight, will be forwarded at the rate of ld. per lb., if posted by a recognised newspaper publisher or newsvendor, who must register his name at the local post office; such charge shall be levied on the aggregate weight of the parcels lodged at any one time. The stamps to be affixed to the "newspaper" postage docket, and shall be cancelled by the person posting the newspapers, by writing or printing across the stamps, and the post office receiving officer shall impress the docket with the date stamp of the office and send it to the Accountant at the Chief Office by the first mail. The parcels must be stamped at the receiving office with the "paid at" stamp and the date stamp of office
Extract from the Queensland postal regulations of 1892, providing advice to postal officials.

As the Newspaper Postage Docket and accompanying stamps were to be retained by the postal service, any surviving examples are extremely rare. I have only ever seen two examples of the docket

Newspaper Postage Docket
1896



In this example, the bulk postage was £2.0.11 for 491 lbs of newspaper cancelled with a rubber stamp with the words 'The Telegraph Newspaper Company' and dated 17 April 1896. Seen in the Queensland Stamp Collecting Facebook Group.

No date
This example courtesy of Dave Elsmore

Stamp accompanying Newspaper Postage Docket
I have several other examples where the stamps that accompanied the docket have been cancelled by the sender using either a rubber stamp or a manuscript cancellation

1893
A composite image of the Maryborough Newspaper Company Ltd rubber stamp, with Maryborough post office datestamps of 1893

A composite image of the Maryborough Chronicle and the Colonist rubber stamp, with Maryborough post office datestamps of 1893

Wide Bay and Burnett News rubber stamp, with Maryborough post office datestamps of 1893. The proprietor's name, William Keith, is included and the paper was published in Maryborough

1894

The Patriot rubber stamp in black and blue ink with a Maryborough post office datestamp of 1894

No dates
Some more examples from Maryborough

The Australian Newspaper in manuscript and also cancelled at the GPO obliterator in Brisbane.

The Moreton Mail in manuscript and also cancelled at the GPO obliterator in Brisbane.  It was a newspaper in Sandgate, Brisbane first issued on 9 January 1886 and from 1890 was known as the Moreton Mail and South Brisbane Times after incorporating the Enoggera, Toombul and Shire express in 1889 and the South Brisbane times in 1889. It ceased publication in August 1899

The Brisbane Newspaper Company in manuscript and also cancelled with a GPO obliterator in Brisbane


The Queensland Newspaper Company rubber stamp and they have also been cancelled in Brisbane with a postal GPO obliterator


The Telegraph Newspaper Company rubber stamp and also cancelled with a postal GPO obliterator in Brisbane. Ex Butler

Saturday, 11 March 2017

Gleneagle

Gleneagle receiving office, 6 km north of Beaudesert. The receiving office opened on 19 August 1889 and was elevated to a post office in 1927. The original receiving office keeper was Mrs Rafferty
  • manuscript cancellation rated Very Rare


Gleneagle manuscript cancellation and rated Very Rare. Seen in Smithies

Friday, 26 August 2016

Mail sent in Queensland without going through a post office

I have recently discovered that it was legal to send mail in Queensland without going through a post office. This newspaper article explains:

Logan Witness (Beenleigh, Qld), Saturday 25 February 1882, page 2

Road Letters

The Governor in Council has been pleased to approve the following new regulation under section 5 of the ‘Postage Act of 1871,’ which is published for general information. 

Notwithstanding anything contained in the postal regulations issued on the 29th May, 1880, and clauses 13 and 16 of the General Conditions attached to Mail Contracts, contractors or other persons employed as mailmen in the conveyance of mails shall when required by any person on the road beyond the precincts of a post town or a distance of one mile from the nearest Post Office, take in charge any letter or packet bearing the proper postage in stamps affixed thereto and deliver such letter or packet at any place on the mail line, before arriving, at a Post Office and such letter or packet shall be deemed to have been sent by post in terms of the ‘Postage Act of 1871.'

Provided that the stamps affixed thereto shall be obliterated or destroyed on delivery by the addressee or receiver in the presence of the mailman: and any person neglecting to so obliterate or destroy such stamps shall be liable on conviction thereof to a penalty not exceeding £5 for each offence, and the mailman or person in charge of the mail shall be liable on conviction to a penalty not exceeding £5 for each case for neglecting to see the stamps so obliterated or destroyed at the time of delivery thereof. And any person again using such unobliterated stamps shall be liable to the penalty provided by clause 68 of ‘The Postal Act of 1871.' Any mailman or other person in charge of the mail receiving or delivering any letter or packet under these regulations without the proper stamps affixed thereto, shall be liable on conviction thereof to a penalty not exceeding £5 for each offence. N.B. Mailmen are not allowed to take money in payment or postage for road letters or packets.

I think I have found two examples of this practice (seen on Stampboards) both addressed to Mt Morgan and would love to see more!



Friday, 29 July 2016

Adavale

Adavale Post office, 170 km north west of Charleville. It opened in 1881
  • Manuscript cancellation seen in 1883-4 rated Very Rare
Adavale numeral 21 HERE. Adavale datestamps HEREAdavale registered HERE


Adavale manuscript cancellation dated 27 January 1882 rated Very Rare. Seen on Ebay. Why a manuscript cancellation exists is a mystery as the post office was operating at this time


Another example of the Adavale manuscript cancellation dated 9 June 1883 and rated Very Rare. Seen in the Queensland Stamp Collecting Facebook Group

Friday, 17 June 2016

Rockhampton

Rockhampton Post Office, 100 km north west of Gladstone. It opened on 1 April 1858
  • Manuscript cancellation seen in 1860 rated Very Rare

Rockhampton 102 HERE. Rockhampton 201 HERE. Rockhampton 201 duplex HERE  Rockhampton 201 on NSW stamps HERE. Rockhampton 201 roller cancel HERERockhampton 308 HERE. Rockhampton 391 HERERockhampton 431 HERERockhampton 447 HERE. Rockhampton 448 HERE. Rockhampton duplex 473 HERE. Rockhampton duplex 509 HERE. Rockhampton duplex 514 HERE. Rockhampton duplex 583 HERE. Rockhampton registered HERE. Rockhampton date stamps HERE. Rockhampton instructional markings HERE


Rockhampton manuscript cancellation and a Rockhampton datestamp dated 9 November 1860. It is not known why this cover was cancelled with a single wavy-line pen stroke, as the Rockhampton 201 ray type numeral has been seen on stamps prior to this date. Rated Very Rare. Seen at Spink Auction 12043 lot no 1143. Ex Griffiths

Springfield

Springfield, Brisbane district. It is not known which receiving office in the Brisbane area was responsible for this item
  • Manuscript cancellation seen in 1868 rated Very Rare


Manuscript cancellation dated 29 December 1868. An entire letter from Springfield, Brisbane "via Southampton" to Scotland and redirected to Edinburgh, bearing 6d. yellow-green and "registered" (6d.) orange-yellow cancelled with manuscript pen stroke and faint "gpo" in barred roller and with faint Brisbane Registered oval datestamp in red  and rated Very Rare. Seen at Spink Auction 14015 lot no 2311

Jimna

Jimna Receiving office, on the Yabba Goldfield 45 km west of Nambour. It opened on 9 September 1891 and closed around January 1909. The receiving office keeper was G. Whittington
  • Manuscript cancellation seen in 1895 - 1907 rated Very Rare
Jimna numeral 108 HERE. Jimna date stamp 1b HERE


Jimna manuscript cancellation with a Kilkoy datestamp of 7 August 1907 and a Kilkoy registered handstamp crossed out and replaced with Jimna and rated Very Rare. Seen on Ebay

Jimna manuscript cancellation dated 1895 and rated Very Rare. Seen in Phoenix auction no 18. Ex Smithies

North Arm

North Arm Receiving office, 13 km north of Nambour, opened at the railway station of the same name sometime after July 1891. It was elevated to a post office in late 1912
  • Manuscript cancellation seen in 1894 rated Very Rare
North Arm registered HERE. North Arm date stamp 6 HERE




North Arm manuscript cancellation dated 25 June 1894 and rated Very Rare. Seen on Ebay

Wednesday, 30 December 2015

Invicta

Invicta receiving office, 22 km west of Bundaberg. The Receiving Office opened in 1897 and was elevated to a post office about March 1908. The receiving office keeper in 1897 was Edward Amos, the manager of the Buss and Others store
  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1900 rated Very Rare
Invicta numeral 661 HERE. Invicta date stamp 5b HERE


Invicta manuscript cancellation dated 13 September 1900 with an indistinct numeral and rated Very Rare. Seen at Premier Postal auction no 118 lot no 1299. Ex Smithies


Probable Invicta manuscript cancellation rated Very Rare. Seen on the Queensland Facebook Group

Kalapa

Kalapa receiving office, 29 km south west of Rockhampton. The Receiving Office opened at the railway station in the early 1920s and was designated a post office in late 1927
  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1932 rated Very Rare

1932

Kalapa manuscript cancellation dated 13 September 1932 and rated Very Rare. Seen on Stampboards. This date was after the post office opened and a manuscript cancel may have been used because the datestamp cancel was lost or damaged, or perhaps the date was recorded incorrectly? The earliest recorded datestamp for this post office is 1949

Kandanga

Kandanga receiving office, 22 km south of Gympie. The Receiving Office opened in 1895 and was elevated to a post office in mid 1914. The receiving office keeper in 1895 was Thomas Sproule, a farmer; in 1898 Augustus Hester, a farmer and in 1900 David O'Farrell, a farmer
  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1902 rated Very Rare


Kandanga manuscript cancellation dated 29 May 1902 and rated Very Rare. Seen on Stampboards

Kenmore

Kenmore receiving office, 10 km south west of Brisbane. The Receiving Office opened in 1887 and was elevated to a post office in 1898. It was again reduced to a receiving office in mid 1913 and closed in 1914. The receiving office keeper in 1887 was William Stanley, a blacksmith
  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1893 - 1897 rated Very Rare
Kenmore date stamp 4a HERE


Kenmore manuscript cancellation dated 23 January 1893 with a type 2a barred numeral 18-, probably 185 (unknown post office) and rated Very Rare. Seen on Stampboards

Jimbour

Jimbour receiving office, 26 km north of Dalby. The post office opened in September 1882 and was reduced to a receiving office sometime after 1912
  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1924 rated Very Rare
Jimbour numeral 340 HERE. Jimbour registered HEREJimbour date stamp 3b HERE


Jimbour manuscript cancellation dated 11 January 1924 and rated Very Rare. Seen at Phoenix Auction no 8 lot no 995

Thursday, 10 December 2015

Moonmerra

Moonmerra receiving office, 9 km north of Mount Morgan. The Receiving Office opened at the railway station in June 1898 and was elevated to a post office in 1927
  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1904 and rated Very Rare

1904
Moonmerra manuscript cancellation dated 16 October 1904 with a Rockhampton 431 barred numeral cancel and rated Very Rare. Seen in the collection of Tony Curtis. Ex Wolfgang Kielmann

Unknown year

Moonmerra manuscript cancellation and rated Very Rare. Seen at Stampboards.com

Moonmera Address
1907
Moonmerra address dated 10 March 1907 and rated Very Rare. Seen at Stampboards.com