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American Topical Association (New York, New York) [102] Buffalo Stamp Club [70] Collectors Club of New York [105] Danville Area Coin & Stamp Club [102] Dutchess Philatelic Society [64] Fort Orange Stamp Club [95] Inter-National Stamp Society [47] International Stamp Club [64] Newburgh Stamp Club [102] Plewacki Stamp Society [102]
One is permanently locked in the New York Public Library's Miller Collection. The other set a record for U.S. stamp sale prices when the Mystic Stamp Company purchased it for $935,000 in 1998.
Collectors Club Philatelist (New York, NY: Collectors Club of New York) ISSN 0010-0838; Gibbons Stamp Monthly (London, Stanley Gibbons Magazines) ISSN 0954-8084; Linn's Stamp News (US) ISSN 0161-6234; Monthly Universal Post - Karachi, Pakistan; The Philatelist (London, Robson Lowe etc.) ISSN 0031-7373; Stamp Collecting, 1913–1984
It was the first international stamp show to be held in New York since FIPEX in 1956. The show brought together stamp collectors, dealers, exhibitors, postal administrations and societies from several countries to sell, buy and discuss all aspects of the hobby known as philately. Between 250,000 and 300,000 visitors were expected to attend the ...
It also publishes numerous handbooks and maintains many checklists listing hundreds of stamps by topic. The organization runs the National Topical Stamp Show as well as supporting 50+ study units on various topics and 40+ local chapters. [2] The American Topical Association is an affiliate of the American Philatelic Society.
The Philatelic Foundation maintains a reference collection of postage stamps and is a major source of authentication of rare and valuable postage stamps for stamp collectors who wish to know if the “valuable” stamp they have is authentic or counterfeit, and, if it is authentic, whether it is free of defect.
2020: Coronavirus. Fast-forward 100 years to news that was eerily similar. The first coronavirus cases were reported in China just before the dawn of a new decade, and the pandemic continues ...
Instead of releasing a single stamp, they would create a set, with values ranging from a penny to five dollars. The APS was appalled and created the “black blot” program. The society published a monthly magazine for members and began to include a list of new stamp issues that were judged to be overpriced or unnecessary.