Showing posts with label manuscript. Show all posts
Showing posts with label manuscript. 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

Monday, 5 August 2024

Doolbi

Doolbi receiving office, 2.5 km east of Childers. The Receiving Office opened at the railway station on 12 March 1894 and was designated a post office in late 1927. The original receiving office keeper was the gatekeeper, Mrs Frances Foster
  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1901 rated Very Rare

1901
Doolbi manuscript cancellation dated 16 September 1901 and rated Very Rare. Seen in the collection of Tony Curtis. Ex Wolfgang Kielmann


Opening of the Receiving Office
Memorandum dated 7 March 1894 on the establishment of the Doolbi Receiving Office. Text: It has been approved to open a Receiving Office at Doolbi on the Childers Railway Line, and the postmaster at Maryborough has been instructed to supply the usual stores. Doolbi will also be a parcel post office

Memorandum dated 14 March 1894 on the establishment of the Doolbi Receiving Office. From the National Archives of Australia and supplied by Tony Curtis

Sunday, 1 October 2023

Wooroolin

Wooroolin receiving office, 12 km south south west of Wondai, opened in 1900 and was elevated to a post office in February 1907
  • Manuscript cancellation (August 1905) rated Very Rare -$100 on cover
Wooroolin numeral 635 HERE. Wooroolin registered HERE. Wooroolin date stamp 5b HERE

1905
Wooroolin registered manuscript cancellation dated Brisbane 30 August 1905 and rated Very Rare. Seen on Facebook

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, 16 July 2021

Wootha

Wootha receiving office, 7 km south west of Maleny. The Receiving Office opened in January 1907 

  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1909 - 1910 rated Very Rare

1909
Wootha manuscript cancellation dated 8 June 1909 with a numeral ray 170 for Maleny and rated Very Rare. Seen on Ebay

1910
Wootha manuscript cancellation with a numeral ray 170 for Maleny dated 1 April 1910  and rated Very Rare. Seen on Ebay

Mungallala

Mungallala receiving office, 43 km east of Morven. The Receiving Office opened 1887 and was elevated to a post office in May 1911

  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1904 and rated Very Rare
Mungallala numeral 724 HERE. Mungallala railway numeral 153 HERE. Mungallala registered HERE. Mungallala date stamp 6 HERE

Mungallala manuscript cancellation on a registered letter with a Roma date stamp dated 16 October 1904  and rated Very Rare. Seen in Phoenix auction no 67

Guymer

Guymer receiving office, 13 km north east of Gayndah. The Receiving Office opened on 1 January 1903 and closed in mid-1911

  • Manuscript cancellation rated Very Rare

Guymer manuscript cancellation and rated Very Rare. Seen in Phoenix auction no 67

Redlynch

Redlynch receiving office, 8 km north west of Cairns. The Receiving Office opened in December 1887

  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1899 rated Very Rare

Redlynch registered manuscript cancellation on a registered letter with a Cairns date stamp dated 27 January 1899  and rated Very Rare. Seen in Abacus auction no 234 lot no 224

Mullet Creek

Mullet Creek receiving office, 14 km east of Rosedale. The Receiving Office opened in 1896

  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1911 rated Very Rare

Mullet Creek manuscript cancellation dated 15 March 1911 with a TPO NCR No 4 down date stamp cancel of the same date  and rated Very Rare. Seen in Phoenix auction no 65

Yandaran

Yandaran receiving office, 22 km east southeast of Rosedale. The Receiving Office opened in September 1888 and was elevated to a post office around November 1908

  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1904 rated Very Rare

Yandaran manuscript cancellation dated 5 December 1904 and rated Very Rare. Seen in the Queensland Stamp Collecting Facebook Group

Thursday, 3 June 2021

Merinda

Merinda receiving office, 8 km from Bowen. The Receiving Office opened in 1898 and closed about 1901 before reopening in 1903. It was elevated to a post office in early 1911

  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1904 rated Very Rare
Merinda date stamp 6 HERE



Merinda manuscript cancellation dated 26 February 1904 and rated Very Rare. Seen in the Queensland Stamp Collecting Facebook Group. Ex Campbell

Ironside

Ironside receiving office, 4 km from the Brisbane General Post office. The Receiving Office opened on 1 July 1892 and closed sometime between September 1910 and March 1911. The receiving office keeper in 1892 was David Guyatt

  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1901 rated Very Rare


Ironside manuscript cancellation with a Brisbane datestamp dated 1901 and rated Very Rare. Seen in the Queensland Stamp Collecting Facebook Group. Ex Campbell

Saturday, 2 January 2021

Cordalba

Cordalba receiving office, 11km north west of Childers. The Receiving Office opened in 1893 and was elevated to a post office at the end of 1896

  • Manuscript cancellation dated 1895 rated Very Rare
Cordalba date stamps HERE. Cordalba registered HERECordalba numeral 537 HERE


Cordalba manuscript cancellation with a Childers datestamp and Childers 456 barred numeral and rated Very Rare. Seen at Phoenix Auction no 65

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

Monday, 11 December 2017

Mail sent to Queensland Receiving Offices

This page lists known examples of mail being sent to Queensland Receiving Offices

Postcard sent from Brisbane to Linville Receiving Office on 12 April 1906. Received in Moore on 14 April 1906 and then presumably delivered to Linville. Linville, 30 km north north west of Toogoolawah, was a Receiving Office from 1898 to January 1910, when it was elevated to a post office. From 1905 onwards the receiving office keeper was E. Wells, a storekeeper. Seen in the Queensland Stamp Collecting Facebook Group

Postcard sent from Berlin to Fassifern Receiving Office on 1 June 1913. Fassifern, 11 km west of Boonah, was a Receiving Office from 1897 - 1927. From 1911 the receiving office keeper was Hermann Schultz a dairy farmer. Seen in the Queensland Stamp Collecting Facebook Group

Postcard sent from Pittsworth to Traveston, 18 km from Cooroy, on the North Coast Line in December 1907 (date stamp Pittsworth type 3c dated DE 20 07 rated common). The receiving office opened in the Traveston Railway Station in 1892 and remained an RO until 1916/17 when it was elevated to a post office

Postcard from Purga in the Ipswich district, date stamped Ipswich 23 August 1907 and sent to Armstrong Creek near  Moreton Bay. Both Purga and Armstrong Creek were receiving offices at the time. It has a Missent handstamp, the line is 40 mm long and the letters 10 mm high. The post office where the handstamp was applied is not known. Seen in the Queensland Stamp Collecting Facebook Group

Postcard from Peak Mount (probably posted from the Flinders receiving office) in the Ipswich district, date stamped Ipswich 28 April 1907 and sent to Armstrong Creek near  Moreton Bay. It has a Missent handstamp, applied at an unknown post office. Seen in the Queensland Stamp Collecting Facebook Group

Postcard from Laidley Creek, date stamped Laidley 28 May 1909 and sent to Kunloon near  Nanango. Both Laidley Creek West and Kunloon were receiving offices at this time. Seen in the Queensland Stamp Collecting Facebook Group

Postcard from Bundaberg, date stamped 13 November 1909 and sent to Toorong (date stamped 15 November 1909) where it was redirected to Gooroolba. Gooroolba was a receiving office at this time

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

Monday, 28 November 2016

Dakabin

Dakabin Receiving office, 16 km south of Caboolture. It opened in February 1903 and was designated a post office in late 1927. The first receiving office keeper was A. McPhie. All examples seen also have an electric telegraph cancel in violet. It was probably used in lieu of a datestamp cancellation, as no datestamp cancellations for this post office during this period are known
  • Manuscript cancellation seen in 1932 to1937 rated Rare


Dakabin electric telegraph cancel with a manuscript cancellation dated 31 May 1935 and rated Rare. Seen in the Queensland Facebook Group


Dakabin electric telegraph cancel with a manuscript cancellation dated 30 July 1936 and rated Rare. Seen in a private collection


Probable Dakabin electric telegraph cancel with a manuscript cancellation dated 19 February 1937 and rated Rare. Seen in a private collection 


Dakabin electric telegraph cancel with a manuscript cancellation dated 28 August 1935 and rated Rare. Seen at Phoenix Auction no 55

Dakabin electric telegraph cancel with a manuscript cancellation dated 29 May 1935 and rated Rare. Seen Here

Dakabin electric telegraph cancel with a manuscript cancellation dated 1 August 1933 and rated Rare. Seen Here


Dakabin electric telegraph cancel with a manuscript cancellation dated 28 December 1932 and rated Rare. Seen in Smithies


Dakabin electric telegraph cancel with a manuscript cancellation dated 13 October 1932 and rated Rare. Seen at Phoenix Auction no 58