Paper Money

Auction includes postage in Feuchtwanger-style encasement

Copper encased postage strip is embossed with eagle and snake design encountered on 1837 Feuchtwanger cents.

Images courtesy of Early American History Auctions.

Early American History Auctions' June 26 online auction features a 9-cent encased postage strip housed in a Feuchtwanger cent-embossed copper case.

The sale contains 239 total lots, with nine lots representing Encased Postage Stamps. Other categories offered comprise Autographs, Colonial America, American Revolution, George Washington RelatedFederal Period & War of 1812Civil War EraAbraham Lincoln RelatedBlack History & SlaveryDecorative Arts & Liverpool PotteryPolitical & Historic Americana, Colonial CurrencyColonial CoinageWashington Medals & Buttons and Historic Medals.

A 20 percent buyer's premium will be added to the final closing price of each lot won, according to the terms of sale.

Described in the auction lot listing as Choice About Uncirculated, the encased postage strip is attributed as EP-95a as cataloged in The Standard Catalogue of Encased Postage Stamps by Michael J. Hodder and Q. David Bowers.

Three red George Washington 1863 3-cent stamps are housed between a rectangular piece of clear mica and a copper strip whose top and bottom edges are rolled to keep the stamps contained. The back of the copper strip is embossed with an eagle and snake motif reminiscent of the earlier design of pharmacist Dr. Lewis Feuchtwanger's 1837 Hard Times token, Low 120 as cataloged by Lyman H. Low in Hard Times Tokens.

With a shortage of coinage during the Civil War, merchants resorted to using postage stamps as currency, often securing them behind mica attached to a round metallic piece having the name of the issuer or manufacturer on the side opposite the stamp. These were referred to as encased postage and functioned as money.

The Hodder-Bowers reference suggests that the 9-cent strips and 27-cent strips containing 9-cent stamps are likely fantasies made in New York City, years after John W. Gault ceased selling his encasements.

The authors cite a 1939 article in the American Numismatic Association journal, The Numismatist, in which it is reported that the 9-cent strips were being made in New York City at the close of the 19th century.

 


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