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Penny Black Stamps
Penny Black stamps were first issued in 1840 and named so, due to it costing one penny and
made entirely with black ink. This stamp was the world’s earliest prepaid, gummed postage stamp of a public postal
system.
The first stamp was issued in the U.K. and Ireland in May 1840 and planned to be in use
from 6 May of 1840. Initially, however not all of the Post Offices throughout the U.K. received official issues of
the stamps except in London where all of the Post Offices were furnished with the Penny Black .
The Two penny Blue was issued on Friday 8th May 1840.
The Penny Black is quite rare and is a fantastic stamp to collect and is almost sure to
feature in a veteran collectors album.
Prior to the creation of the penny black and the new form of postage, postal fees were
predominantly based on the weight of the package/envelope and the distance involved for each. The tarif was
actually paid by the addressee and not the sender.
With the new postal system and the penny black the payment of the postage was the
responsibility of the sender and the complexity of the individual postage calculation was reduced with a more
straight-forward low rate.
Some rarer Penny Black Stamps Collections include:
Guyana Complete Set 150th Anniversary Penny BlackPostal Service
Guyana Complete Set 150th Anniversary Penny BlackTransportation
Kenya (1990) Penny Black150th Anniversary Stamp.
Back in 2000, the Penny Black was recreated using the original printing press by the Royal
Mail. This event took place at the Stamp Show in London. The British Library philatelic collections provided the
Perkins-Bacon printing press.
Penny Black stamps are an exciting stamp to have in a stamp collection as well as other
great collectables such as Commemorative Stamps.
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