RAFES SC38c Special Signed Cover The Caterpillar Club Flown FDC (Royal Air Forces Escaping Society) with 20.5p Europa GB Stamp Postmarked 40th Anniversary VE Day BFPS 1945 8 May 85 Signed by RAF Falcons Team, Capt F H Dell & Grp Cpt W S O Randle, on reverse Certified Copy No 995 of 1000 & Royal Air Force Lyneham 13 jul 85 in blue/green, good condition. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
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RAFES SC38cx Special Signed Cover The Caterpillar Club Flown FDC (Royal Air Forces Escaping Society) with 20.5p Europa GB Stamp Postmarked 40th Anniversary VE Day BFPS 1945 8 May 85 Signed by RAF Falcons Team, Capt F H Dell, (Grp Cpt W S O Randle Signature is missing) , on reverse Certified Copy No 453 of 1000 with added Certified Copy No 17 of 1200 & Royal Air Force Lyneham 13 jul 85 in blue/green, plus info sheet Capt F H Dell includes Black and White Photo, good condition. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
RAFES SC39a Operation Marathon / Sherwood Flown FDC (Royal Air Forces Escaping Society) with 2.00 French Stamp Postmarked Freteval Loir-et-Cher 6-6-1944 & 6-6-1989, on reverse Royal Air Force Abingdon 16 oct 1989, good condition. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
RAFES Sc1aH Return to Oflag 7C & Colditz Castle Flown FDC (Royal Air Forces Escaping Society) with DDR 20 Stamp (cancelled code D )and Colditz Postmark, Addressed to Norman Park Hotel, 701 Leipzig Postmarked on reverse RAF Northolt 18/11/71 in blue on envelope flap centre right & Townsend Thoreson Car Ferries 29/10/71 in blue at bottom with green car on envelope flap, good condition. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
RAFES SC39a Operation Marathon / Sherwood Flown FDC (Royal Air Forces Escaping Society) with 2.00 French Stamp Postmarked Freteval Loir-et-Cher 6-6-1944 & 6-6-1989, on reverse Royal Air Force Abingdon 16 oct 1989 with info card, good condition. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
RAFES SC40bCG Union Cachet Tribute to the Resistance Organizations Flown FDC (Royal Air Forces Escaping Society) with 19p GB Stamp Postmarked 40th Anniversary Battle of Britain 5 sept 89 BFPS Signed by Rowland T Williams (65 Sqn Aslborg, Denmark 17 may 1944) on reverse Royal Air Force St Mawgan 15 sept 1989 in black & Red Arrows cachet in red with info card, good condition. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
RAFES SC40ca Special Signed Cover Tribute to the Resistance Organizations Flown FDC (Royal Air Forces Escaping Society) with 22p GB Stamp Postmarked 40th Anniversary Battle of Britain 5 sept 89 BFPS Signed by Oliver Philpot, William Brazill, Bill Randle & F H Dell, on reverse Flight Details in black, Royal Air Force Brize Norton 15 sept 1989 in black & Red Arrows cachet in red & Certified Copy No 352 of 450 with info card, good condition. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
RAFES SC40cb Special Signed Cover Tribute to the Resistance Organizations Flown FDC (Royal Air Forces Escaping Society) with 22p GB Stamp Postmarked 40th Anniversary Battle of Britain 5 sept 89 BFPS Signed by Oliver Philpot, William Brazill, Bill Randle & F H Dell, with Comete Line cachet, on reverse Flight Details in black, Royal Air Force Finningley 15 sept 1989 in black & Red Arrows cachet in red & Certified Copy No 12 of 450 with info card, good condition. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
RAFES SC40cc Special Signed Cover Tribute to the Resistance Organizations Flown FDC (Royal Air Forces Escaping Society) with 22p GB Stamp Postmarked 40th Anniversary Battle of Britain 5 sept 89 BFPS 2209 Signed by Oliver Philpot, William Brazill, Bill Randle & F H Dell, on reverse Flight Details in black, Royal Air Force Coningsby 15 sept 1989 in black & Red Arrows cachet in red & Certified Copy No 301 of 450 with info card, good condition. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
RAFES SC40db Special Signed Cover UNEG Cachet Tribute to the Resistance Organizations Flown FDC (Royal Air Forces Escaping Society) with 26p GB Stamp Postmarked 40th Anniversary Battle of Britain 5 sept 89 BFPS Signed by Air Chief Marshal Sir Lewis Hodges, on reverse Flight Details in black, Royal Air Force Coningsby 15 sept 1989 in black & Red Arrows cachet in red & Certified Copy No 61 of 450 with info card, good condition. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
RAFES SC40dc Special Signed Cover Tribute to the Resistance Organizations Flown FDC (Royal Air Forces Escaping Society) with 26p GB Stamp Postmarked 40th Anniversary Battle of Britain 5 sept 89 BFPS Signed by Air Chief Marshal Sir Lewis Hodges, with Comete Line Cachet, on reverse Flight Details in black, Royal Air Force Coningsby 15 sept 1989 in black & Red Arrows cachet in red & Certified Copy No 199 of 450 with info card, good condition. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
RAFES SC40eb UNEG Cachet Special Signed Cover Tribute to the Resistance Organizations Flown FDC (Royal Air Forces Escaping Society) with 13c Wintertaling Sarcelle D'Hiver Belgium Stamp Postmarked Bruxelles Cite Joyeuse 2-9-89 Signed by Commandant H Branders, Lt Col Guy Weber & Lt Col Jean Bloch, on reverse Royal Air Force Aldergrove 15 sept 1989 in black & Red Arrows cachet in red & Certified Copy No 260 of 450 with photo card, good condition. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
RAFES SC40ec UNEG Cachet Special Signed Cover Tribute to the Resistance Organizations Flown FDC (Royal Air Forces Escaping Society) with 13c Pijlstaart Canard Pilet Belgium Stamp Postmarked Bruxelles Cite Joyeuse 2-9-89 Signed by Commandant H Branders, Lt Col Guy Weber & Lt Col Jean Bloch, on reverse Royal Air Force Aldergrove 15 sept 1989 in black & Red Arrows cachet in red & Certified Copy No 481 of 500 with UNEG Info & photo card, good condition. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
JOHN ‘JIMMY’ BUCHANAN OF THE IRISH FREE STATE, MATCH WORN JUNIOR INTERNATIONAL JERSEY, 1930s stitched green shamrock crest, lace-up collar, long sleeved, two interior labels for “Lee” MADE IN IRISH FREE STATE and ELVERY’S of DUBLIN MADE IN IRISH FREE STATE Note: The following lots pertain to John ‘Jimmy’ Buchanan of the Irish Free State.They come from a poignant and important period for both the nation and the sport.Football in Ireland had, since 1880, been controlled by the Irish Football Association (IFA). Shortly after the Irish War of Independence and the country’s partition, a rival Football Association of Ireland (FAI) was set up to govern football in the newly formed Free State.Disputes between members of the IFA and the FAI dated back several years, the former perceived by the latter as a Northern-based Unionist body.Further to these disputes, in the South, popular British sports such as football were treated with a degree of suspicion, the Gaelic Athletic Association going as far as to ban its members from playing or watching the ‘foreign’ game.Whilst to this day, something of a divide lingers, the importance of the creation of the FAI cannot be overstated. In the face of adversity, it fought to popularise the sport in a newly liberated country, setting the foundations for today’s Republic of Ireland team.Anything relating to those early years of Free State football should be viewed as rare and highly collectable. Relatively few fixtures were played before the team changed from the Free State to Éire (1936), and then to the Republic of Ireland (1956).Disputes between the FAI and the IFA continued long after the partition and relate back to those changes. Before the FAI was formally recognised by the Home Nations, and indeed for some time after, both Associations claimed legitimacy over the island of Ireland. As a result, players were selected on a national basis, with at least 38 representing both the North and South. This was until FIFA intervened, implementing restrictions based on the border, this following both teams’ appearance at the 1950 World Cup.It was during the early years of the FAI, Jimmy Buchanan pulled on the national shirt to represent that newly reborn nation. The shirts and caps offered relate to a few of those games, presenting a rich and important insight into the development of the sport.Whilst it remains difficult to say which matches the shirts were worn in, the caps, with their embroidered detail, open a door into two historic fixtures.The first comes from an Irish Free State XI vs. a Scottish Junior League XI, played on the 10th February 1934 at Brockville Park in Falkirk. The Scottish Junior League had begun an annual fixture with the Free State in 1927, an important milestone for the newly formed Association. The Irish team was selected from a league pool, with Buchanan playing for his local side Glenview at the time.The second comes from a game dubbed ‘Ireland vs. England’, played at Dalymount Park in Dublin on Easter Monday 1936 (poignantly, just two decades after the Easter Rising). The game was in fact played by a Free State select XI and players from the Birmingham & District County FA, it being much easier to promote as an Ireland vs. England youth international. Ultimately, England won 3-0, with an interesting aside noting ‘no anthem to be played’ (clearly for political reasons).The fact that caps were bestowed shows how seriously these junior fixtures were taken, Buchanan pulling on that emerald green jersey to represent his country. Indeed, if we look inside the shirts, we see the relatively novel stamp, MADE IN THE IRISH FREE STATE. This perfectly captures the political and historical charge of each object, standing out triumphantly as signifiers of the growth of the nation and the sport.Buchanan was a gifted player and was selected by the FAI on several occasions. At club level, he played for teams including Glenview, Bohemians and Bray Unknowns. Reputedly, there was interest from England, with possible trials offered for Spurs and Arsenal. Ultimately though, a decision to stay in his home country and play in that newly formed Irish League was the more appealing one.This lot offers a rare opportunity to own an important instance of Irish and footballing history.
JOHN ‘JIMMY’ BUCHANAN OF THE IRISH FREE STATE, INTERNATIONAL CAP, 1934 vs. the Scottish Junior League, in emerald green velvet with silver bullion inscription, trim and tassel, stamped maker’s mark to red velvet lining Note: The following lots pertain to John ‘Jimmy’ Buchanan of the Irish Free State.They come from a poignant and important period for both the nation and the sport.Football in Ireland had, since 1880, been controlled by the Irish Football Association (IFA). Shortly after the Irish War of Independence and the country’s partition, a rival Football Association of Ireland (FAI) was set up to govern football in the newly formed Free State.Disputes between members of the IFA and the FAI dated back several years, the former perceived by the latter as a Northern-based Unionist body.Further to these disputes, in the South, popular British sports such as football were treated with a degree of suspicion, the Gaelic Athletic Association going as far as to ban its members from playing or watching the ‘foreign’ game.Whilst to this day, something of a divide lingers, the importance of the creation of the FAI cannot be overstated. In the face of adversity, it fought to popularise the sport in a newly liberated country, setting the foundations for today’s Republic of Ireland team.Anything relating to those early years of Free State football should be viewed as rare and highly collectable. Relatively few fixtures were played before the team changed from the Free State to Éire (1936), and then to the Republic of Ireland (1956).Disputes between the FAI and the IFA continued long after the partition and relate back to those changes. Before the FAI was formally recognised by the Home Nations, and indeed for some time after, both Associations claimed legitimacy over the island of Ireland. As a result, players were selected on a national basis, with at least 38 representing both the North and South. This was until FIFA intervened, implementing restrictions based on the border, this following both teams’ appearance at the 1950 World Cup.It was during the early years of the FAI, Jimmy Buchanan pulled on the national shirt to represent that newly reborn nation. The shirts and caps offered relate to a few of those games, presenting a rich and important insight into the development of the sport.Whilst it remains difficult to say which matches the shirts were worn in, the caps, with their embroidered detail, open a door into two historic fixtures.The first comes from an Irish Free State XI vs. a Scottish Junior League XI, played on the 10th February 1934 at Brockville Park in Falkirk. The Scottish Junior League had begun an annual fixture with the Free State in 1927, an important milestone for the newly formed Association. The Irish team was selected from a league pool, with Buchanan playing for his local side Glenview at the time.The second comes from a game dubbed ‘Ireland vs. England’, played at Dalymount Park in Dublin on Easter Monday 1936 (poignantly, just two decades after the Easter Rising). The game was in fact played by a Free State select XI and players from the Birmingham & District County FA, it being much easier to promote as an Ireland vs. England youth international. Ultimately, England won 3-0, with an interesting aside noting ‘no anthem to be played’ (clearly for political reasons).The fact that caps were bestowed shows how seriously these junior fixtures were taken, Buchanan pulling on that emerald green jersey to represent his country. Indeed, if we look inside the shirts, we see the relatively novel stamp, MADE IN THE IRISH FREE STATE. This perfectly captures the political and historical charge of each object, standing out triumphantly as signifiers of the growth of the nation and the sport.Buchanan was a gifted player and was selected by the FAI on several occasions. At club level, he played for teams including Glenview, Bohemians and Bray Unknowns. Reputedly, there was interest from England, with possible trials offered for Spurs and Arsenal. Ultimately though, a decision to stay in his home country and play in that newly formed Irish League was the more appealing one.This lot offers a rare opportunity to own an important instance of Irish and footballing history.
JOHN ‘JIMMY’ BUCHANAN OF THE IRISH FREE STATE, MATCH WORN JUNIOR INTERNATIONAL JERSEY, 1930s stitched gold shamrock crest, lace-up collar, long sleeved, two interior labels for “Lee” KNITWELL, WEARWELL Made in Ireland and ELVERY’S of DUBLIN MADE IN IRISH FREE STATE Note: The following lots pertain to John ‘Jimmy’ Buchanan of the Irish Free State.They come from a poignant and important period for both the nation and the sport.Football in Ireland had, since 1880, been controlled by the Irish Football Association (IFA). Shortly after the Irish War of Independence and the country’s partition, a rival Football Association of Ireland (FAI) was set up to govern football in the newly formed Free State.Disputes between members of the IFA and the FAI dated back several years, the former perceived by the latter as a Northern-based Unionist body.Further to these disputes, in the South, popular British sports such as football were treated with a degree of suspicion, the Gaelic Athletic Association going as far as to ban its members from playing or watching the ‘foreign’ game.Whilst to this day, something of a divide lingers, the importance of the creation of the FAI cannot be overstated. In the face of adversity, it fought to popularise the sport in a newly liberated country, setting the foundations for today’s Republic of Ireland team.Anything relating to those early years of Free State football should be viewed as rare and highly collectable. Relatively few fixtures were played before the team changed from the Free State to Éire (1936), and then to the Republic of Ireland (1956).Disputes between the FAI and the IFA continued long after the partition and relate back to those changes. Before the FAI was formally recognised by the Home Nations, and indeed for some time after, both Associations claimed legitimacy over the island of Ireland. As a result, players were selected on a national basis, with at least 38 representing both the North and South. This was until FIFA intervened, implementing restrictions based on the border, this following both teams’ appearance at the 1950 World Cup.It was during the early years of the FAI, Jimmy Buchanan pulled on the national shirt to represent that newly reborn nation. The shirts and caps offered relate to a few of those games, presenting a rich and important insight into the development of the sport.Whilst it remains difficult to say which matches the shirts were worn in, the caps, with their embroidered detail, open a door into two historic fixtures.The first comes from an Irish Free State XI vs. a Scottish Junior League XI, played on the 10th February 1934 at Brockville Park in Falkirk. The Scottish Junior League had begun an annual fixture with the Free State in 1927, an important milestone for the newly formed Association. The Irish team was selected from a league pool, with Buchanan playing for his local side Glenview at the time.The second comes from a game dubbed ‘Ireland vs. England’, played at Dalymount Park in Dublin on Easter Monday 1936 (poignantly, just two decades after the Easter Rising). The game was in fact played by a Free State select XI and players from the Birmingham & District County FA, it being much easier to promote as an Ireland vs. England youth international. Ultimately, England won 3-0, with an interesting aside noting ‘no anthem to be played’ (clearly for political reasons).The fact that caps were bestowed shows how seriously these junior fixtures were taken, Buchanan pulling on that emerald green jersey to represent his country. Indeed, if we look inside the shirts, we see the relatively novel stamp, MADE IN THE IRISH FREE STATE. This perfectly captures the political and historical charge of each object, standing out triumphantly as signifiers of the growth of the nation and the sport.Buchanan was a gifted player and was selected by the FAI on several occasions. At club level, he played for teams including Glenview, Bohemians and Bray Unknowns. Reputedly, there was interest from England, with possible trials offered for Spurs and Arsenal. Ultimately though, a decision to stay in his home country and play in that newly formed Irish League was the more appealing one.This lot offers a rare opportunity to own an important instance of Irish and footballing history.
JOHN ‘JIMMY’ BUCHANAN OF THE IRISH FREE STATE, JUNIOR INTERNATIONAL CAP, 1936 vs. England, in emerald green velvet with silver bullion inscription, trim and tassel, stamped maker’s mark to red velvet liningNote: The following lots pertain to John ‘Jimmy’ Buchanan of the Irish Free State.They come from a poignant and important period for both the nation and the sport.Football in Ireland had, since 1880, been controlled by the Irish Football Association (IFA). Shortly after the Irish War of Independence and the country’s partition, a rival Football Association of Ireland (FAI) was set up to govern football in the newly formed Free State.Disputes between members of the IFA and the FAI dated back several years, the former perceived by the latter as a Northern-based Unionist body.Further to these disputes, in the South, popular British sports such as football were treated with a degree of suspicion, the Gaelic Athletic Association going as far as to ban its members from playing or watching the ‘foreign’ game.Whilst to this day, something of a divide lingers, the importance of the creation of the FAI cannot be overstated. In the face of adversity, it fought to popularise the sport in a newly liberated country, setting the foundations for today’s Republic of Ireland team.Anything relating to those early years of Free State football should be viewed as rare and highly collectable. Relatively few fixtures were played before the team changed from the Free State to Éire (1936), and then to the Republic of Ireland (1956).Disputes between the FAI and the IFA continued long after the partition and relate back to those changes. Before the FAI was formally recognised by the Home Nations, and indeed for some time after, both Associations claimed legitimacy over the island of Ireland. As a result, players were selected on a national basis, with at least 38 representing both the North and South. This was until FIFA intervened, implementing restrictions based on the border, this following both teams’ appearance at the 1950 World Cup.It was during the early years of the FAI, Jimmy Buchanan pulled on the national shirt to represent that newly reborn nation. The shirts and caps offered relate to a few of those games, presenting a rich and important insight into the development of the sport.Whilst it remains difficult to say which matches the shirts were worn in, the caps, with their embroidered detail, open a door into two historic fixtures.The first comes from an Irish Free State XI vs. a Scottish Junior League XI, played on the 10th February 1934 at Brockville Park in Falkirk. The Scottish Junior League had begun an annual fixture with the Free State in 1927, an important milestone for the newly formed Association. The Irish team was selected from a league pool, with Buchanan playing for his local side Glenview at the time.The second comes from a game dubbed ‘Ireland vs. England’, played at Dalymount Park in Dublin on Easter Monday 1936 (poignantly, just two decades after the Easter Rising). The game was in fact played by a Free State select XI and players from the Birmingham & District County FA, it being much easier to promote as an Ireland vs. England youth international. Ultimately, England won 3-0, with an interesting aside noting ‘no anthem to be played’ (clearly for political reasons).The fact that caps were bestowed shows how seriously these junior fixtures were taken, Buchanan pulling on that emerald green jersey to represent his country. Indeed, if we look inside the shirts, we see the relatively novel stamp, MADE IN THE IRISH FREE STATE. This perfectly captures the political and historical charge of each object, standing out triumphantly as signifiers of the growth of the nation and the sport.Buchanan was a gifted player and was selected by the FAI on several occasions. At club level, he played for teams including Glenview, Bohemians and Bray Unknowns. Reputedly, there was interest from England, with possible trials offered for Spurs and Arsenal. Ultimately though, a decision to stay in his home country and play in that newly formed Irish League was the more appealing one.This lot offers a rare opportunity to own an important instance of Irish and footballing history.
WALLIS BUDGE E. A. The Book of the Dead, Facsimiles of the Papyri of Hunefer ... etc. Col. facsimiles & other illus. Large folio. Dark cloth. Printed by Order of the Trustees of the British Museum. 1899. Original binding and coloured plates.Some scuffing to boards, most apparent to reverse. Scuffing and discolouration to base of spine. Some yellowing to interior pages and title page. Ingrained dirt to fore-edge. Colour plates crisp and clean. Library stamp to publisher's page.
MILL JOHN STUART. Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy. Half title & adverts. Green cloth with embossed title to upper brd., old shelf label to upper brd. & Philosopher's Reference Library stamp to title, otherwise a good copy. 2nd ed., 1874; also Sir William Hamilton, Discussions on Philosophy & Literature, Education & University Reform, 829pp, adverts, rebacked cloth, 1866. (2).
DAY SAMUEL PHILLIPS. English America or Pictures of Canadian Places & People. 2 vols. Orig. embossed dark blue cloth, blind stamp to title. 1864; also Thomas Greenwood, A Tour in the States & Canada, Out & Home in Six Weeks, illus., orig. cloth, extensive adverts, c.1883, & Jules Verne, The Fur Country, 4th ed. in pict. cloth gilt, 1874. (3).
JAMES DIXON & SONS; a Victorian hallmarked silver desk stand of shaped rectangular form with beaded cast rim, the attached central lidded stamp holder flanked by a pair of cut glass ink bottles with hallmarked silver collars and covers, with presentation inscription 'Presented to Frederick Charles Ulick Vernon Wentworth, by the workmen of the Wentworth Castle Estate as a token of respect on his coming of age June 10th 1887, Sheffield 1861, length 29cm, approx 20.10ozt/625g.Condition Report: Minor nibbles to the rims on the inkwells, otherwise good. Weight does not included glass inkwells.
Stanhope Alexander FORBES (1857-1947) The Old Mine Stamp Godolphin, 1925 Oil on canvas, signed and dated 1925, canvas label to verso in the artist's hand 'For South Africa - The Old Mine Stamp - Godolphin, Cornwall', 72 x 91cm, framed 90 x 110cmNote: This ore crushing mill is the water wheel powered "Maiden" stamps of Godolphin near Helston Cornwall. There were three such mills in the area crushing local ore. The Maided stamp was still operating in the 1940sExhibited Royal Academy, London, 1926 No.96Belgrave Gallery, London, 1998 (label verso)
Stamp albums , stockyards, tins , plus qty minimal of GB face , found in Cafe Creme tobacco tins, Album contains a small handwritten up collection of the German Deutches Reich period of both mint and used, Gay Venture Album of the more school boy type emphasis ,Bundle of Germany on stock cards with an approx PTC at £85-00: looks like ex dealer labels , Then the 8 Tins plus packet of what appears to be mint GB for face but the higher face appears to be no gum. Few odd CI booklets of lower face also seen .2 what appears to be German letter openers :
Large Box for sorting in Albums packets etc.Pickings to be found including GB 1948 RSW MM , 1953 Coronation MM , Then some mint phosphor sets seen with Lifeboat , Nature week , Shakespeare . British Solomon Island 1939-51 set of 13 MM , New Zealand 1040 Centenary of Parliament set of 13 MM . Fiji 1969 Decimal Definitive FDC. Other FDC seen , including Benham , Strike Mail , PHQ , and a few Channel Island Presentation Packs . An Assortment of Thematics , Qty of Spain on numerous Album Pages , also seeing an Egypt Letter Stamp with overprint from the Silver Jubilee 1935, Interesting as there were only 27,000 of these and were originally from booklets . Lots more to sort , and careful investigation will reward .
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165558 item(s)/page