I am new to this blog stuff, so please laugh! I do. And it's 3:30am, ugh. But 3:30 makes me think of Planet Clare- something about "she shines at 3:30 in the morning" or something. Anyway, as you can see, this blog tends to wander from a serious academic subject to a non-comprehensible unrelated ramble, but then that's me. My family just shrugs their shoulders.
Stampless Letters have no dedicated forum or group. We see many articles and other writings within other magazines and clubs or societies or online sites, but nothing exclusively encompasses this area of postal history.
I do, in fact, have plenty to say about Stampless Letters that has not been discussed. There are interesting observations that can emerge about the time, place and society in which they were written; yet, it may be that the studier of these letters will become the studiee. Huh? Well, OK, I am a historian and a librarian and a philosopher and some say an as@#... never mind. But all this talk is really in full swing on a couple of sites I follow where the subject is postal history:
http://www.philamercury.com/
http://philgen.org/
First, Philamercury. It contains many of the big names in stamp collecting- otherwise known as Philately. However, since my ego will not fit on that board, I started this blog. Really I just want to emphasize the stampless letter, that's all.
Philgen is the child of Jim Miller, who is a philatelist and a genealogist. Like me, Jim sees postal history as history, and this history needs to be captured in digital form to share w/ the public. Jim sees the value of each cover, letter, manuscript and folded letter in an overlapping genealogical sense. Both Philgen and Philamercury are open source sites and encourage the public to contribute in order to digitally capture the multitude of material that is floating around the world- American letters do simply reside in America.
Each letter is usually written by one individual and is, of course, unique. So say 175-200 years have passed and one wonders who the heck the person is that wrote it? For example, I am working on one letter of about 3 I have found from a woman in Pocotaligo, SC. One heck of a story emerges. ...more later.
So what about this woman? She sounds interesting....
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