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Vol. 44 No. 3 Whole Number 203 August 2016

View this issue online… President’s Message by Robert G. Rose Garden State Post Card Club Show! Mail Sent Abroad from Morris County: Part I by Don Chafetz Free Franks of New Jersey Signers by Ed & Jean Siskin NJ Straight Line Handstamps: Basking Ridge, NJ by Robert G. Rose The Last U.S. Warship Sunk On […]

POSTAL CARDS and HIRAM E. DEATS

By Larry T. Nix

I became aware of Hiram E. Deats (1870-1963), the famous New Jersey philatelist and collector and member of the American Philatelic Society Hall of Fame, through my interest in postal items related to libraries. Deats had a number of significant connections with philatelic and non-philatelic libraries. In going through thousands of dealer covers and searching eBay for library related items I kept coming across postal items related to Deats.

Vol. 44 No. 2 Whole Number 202 May 2016

View this issue online… President’s Message by Robert G. Rose World Stamp Show NY2016! Postal Cards and Hiram E. Deats by Larry T. Nix Bamberger’s Department Store and the Graf Zeppelin by Linda B. Forgosh NJ Straight Line Handstamps: Westfield, NJ by Robert G. Rose The Last U.S. Warship Sunk On 28 July 1945: NJ-Built […]

THE FIRST U.S. WARSHIP SUNK ON 7 DECEMBER 1941

By Captain Lawrence B. Brennan, U.S. Navy (Retired)

The first and last U.S. warships sunk in the Pacific during World War II were violently destroyed with the massive loss of life; both were built by New York Shipbuilding in Camden, New Jersey; both suffered fatal damage from multiple torpedoes; both capsized within 12 minutes. The battleship, USS Oklahoma (BB 37), was sunk at Pearl Harbor on the morning of Sunday, 7 December 1941, with the loss of 429 officers and men; suffering the second greatest number of casualties that morning…

Vol. 44 No. 1 Whole Number 201 February 2016

View this issue online… President’s Message by Robert G. Rose The First U.S. Warship Sunk On 7 December 1941: NJ-Built Battleship, USS Oklahoma (BB 37) by Capt. Lawrence B. Brennan, USN (Ret.) N.J. Local Posts #8: Fearey’s Mustang Express, Old & New Theories by Larry Lyons Stage Operations and the Mails in NJ: An Update […]

THE HISTORY of the BATSTO Post Office

By Arne Englund

The cover shown in Figure 1 is the first reported example of the stampless-era Batsto, NJ CDS. At NOJEX in 2013 I asked one of the cover dealers if he had any New Jersey covers, and he replied that he only had a few, which he’d just acquired. This cover was on the top of the small stack, where it stayed for all of about two seconds(!).

Vol. 43 No. 4 Whole Number 200 November 2015

View this issue online… President’s Message by Robert G. Rose History of the Batsto Post Office by Arne Englund LAWRENCE KEARNY, A Forgotten New Jersey Hero by John Edge N.J. Local Posts #7: City Letter Express Mail, Newark, NJ by Larry Lyons NJ Straight Line Handstamps: Haddonfield, NJ by Robert G. Rose Jersey City to […]

NJ STRAIGHT LINE HANDSTAMP POSTMARKS: Lawrenceville, NJ

By Robert G. Rose

The U.S. Philatelic Classics Society is in the process of completing an update of the American Stampless Cover Catalog, which was last revised in 1997. That project has been supported by the New Jersey Postal History Society, whose members have researched, collected and compiled data for the catalog’s New Jersey listings. The project has provided the author with the opportunity of taking a fresh look at the listings for the straight line postmarks which are among the most avidly sought by collectors of stampless covers. This article’s focus is on the straight line postmarks from Lawrenceville, which post office produced the widest variety of such markings.

Vol. 43 No. 3 Whole Number 199 August 2015

View this issue online… President’s Message by Robert G. Rose Garden State Post Card Club Show! NJ Straight Line Hand Stamp Postmarks: Lawrenceville by Robert G. Rose Navy Chaplain C.S. Stewart & A 158 Year Old Cover by Capt. Lawrence B. Brennan, USN (Ret.) Moorestown From Morristown Auxiliary Mark by Ed & Jean Siskin N.J. […]