Share your favorites on Show & Tell

1909 Fancy Cancel on Postcard

In Office > Postal Antiques > Show & Tell and Stamps > US Fancy Cancel Stamps > Show & Tell.
Postal Antiques2 of 174Cast Iron Notary/EmbosserVintage Postal Stamp Machine
9
Love it
0
Like it

WatchsearcherWatchsearcher loves this.
kwqdkwqd loves this.
NewfldNewfld loves this.
PhonoboyPhonoboy loves this.
kev123kev123 loves this.
Vynil33rpmVynil33rpm loves this.
CisumCisum loves this.
dav2no1dav2no1 loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
See 7 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 12 months ago

    MishMasher
    (46 items)

    I like the fancy cancel on this one. I've seen some even neater ones online. I read that there are collectors of cancellation or post marks. I wows me that there a so many different collectable things on a postcard.

    logo
    Postal Antiques
    See all
    VINTAGE POST OFFICE DOOR AND FRAME 50'S-60'S Georgia Tech, Dual Dial
    VINTAGE POST OFFICE DOOR AND FRAME ...
    $15
    VINTAGE PAIR (2) Of POST OFFICE DOORS AND FRAME 50'S-60'S
    VINTAGE PAIR (2) Of POST OFFICE DOO...
    $28
    Rare Vintage Small USPS Post Office Brass Box Door With Combination
    Rare Vintage Small USPS Post Office...
    $20
    VINTAGE PAIR (2) Of POST OFFICE DOORS AND FRAME 50'S-60'S
    VINTAGE PAIR (2) Of POST OFFICE DOO...
    $28
    logo
    VINTAGE POST OFFICE DOOR AND FRAME 50'S-60'S Georgia Tech, Dual Dial
    VINTAGE POST OFFICE DOOR AND FRAME ...
    $15
    See all

    Comments

    1. keramikos, 12 months ago
      Hi, MishMasher. Very interesting. :-)

      Per a stamp community dot org forum source:

      *snip*

      There are approximately 8000 flag cancel varieties documented in Frederick Langford's "Flag Cancel Encyclopedia", 4th ed, 2008.

      *snip*

      https://www.stampcommunity.org/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=66295

      I have to say, though, that what caught my eye about this postcard was the name of the addressee's town, "Keonig." That just jumped out at me.

      It was possible that there was a town named "Keonig" in MO. Names get spelled wrong, and get codified in law as such, and never get corrected.

      However, it does appear that the postcard writer is one of Mother Nature's 'spellers.'

      There is a Koenig, MO, and it's a little over ninety miles from Sedalia:

      Sedalia to Koenig
      via US-50 E

      https://maps.app.goo.gl/WUeWUMkaQW3m7LMW7

      Then I started reading what the postcard sender wrote:

      *snip*

      hello elsie
      how are you
      I am fine
      I wish you
      would have
      come up here
      with lena
      Did lena
      tell you what w.g. said
      from a kind
      frind [sic]
      wB

      *snip*

      Who was "wB," and were they truly a kind friend of Elsie?

      Then there is the postcard itself.

      Google Lens uncovered a twin, along with a mirror near twin (the text on the mirror twins isn't the same), and a couple of mirror cousins:

      (Uncorrected OCR from the eBay listing):

      *snip*

      Text from card (OCR/Computer Generated, may not be accurate so check the images above):
      U Darling sweetest
      You are exacily to my mipd
      You color all my wagog though
      My nightly dreams wim you ars fra

      Whererentore has touched the ground,
      It is the time of roses,
      ry wreaths-within whase round
      The loving soul reposes.
      100

      ess and quess trul
      Where is he who iS all thr owns
      eh for a spell on thy lips neloves
      Say, is my name, Dearest!writ on thy neart?

      Lady of my love
      he moon in splendor
      upon her lips,
      sunshine to attend her
      00
      Made in Gerinany
      co000000000000odo
      OOOCO

      oooooooooooo
      Post Caro (3)
      pe

      Post Carol
      0000000000000000

      ooooooooooooc
      Coord
      Bococco 0000000ood

      *snip*

      https://www.ebay.com/itm/364286903701

      I can't really get into the mind set of somebody from 1909, but these postcards are indeed romantic. Would somebody who was merely a kind friend send something like this?

      Questions, questions. };-)
    2. keramikos, 12 months ago
      MishMasher, Just following up a bit. :-)

      Poor little Koenig, MO. Per the USPS, Koenig is a name to avoid using for zip code 65013. :-(

      They recommend using Belle, MO instead:

      https://tools.usps.com/zip-code-lookup.htm?citybyzipcode

      However, the residents of Belle can't seem to agree on the origins of their city's name:

      https://cityofbellemo.org/about/

      So why did "wB" use "Keonig, Mo" as the address for Elsie (we'll overlook the misspelling)?

      It appears that Koenig, MO did have it's own post office 1892-1920:

      https://www.postalhistory.com/postoffices.asp?task=display&state=MO&county=Osage&searchtext=&pagenum=2

      It was named for a former postmaster, although this source doesn't really explain why they used "Koenig" instead of "King" (it strikes me as likely that King anglicized his surname):

      https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_RfAuAAAAYAAJ/page/n107/mode/2up

      Still, it looks to me like Koenig, MO isn't necessarily impoverished. Whoever lives here probably has more than a couple of bucks to rub together:

      Koenig
      Jefferson Township, MO 65013

      https://maps.app.goo.gl/LoJk3D4eMvAEAiws8

      Anyway, I figure Elsie did get the postcard, despite the misspelled city name. Who "wB," lena, and "w.g."were, what all went on during that trip, and why it should concern Elsie remain mysteries. };-)
    3. keramikos, 12 months ago
      More followup. I may have found "Lena":

      https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/19553630/lena-schultz

      The name is spelled "Lina" on the headstone; however, the person who identified her seems to be a relative, so I trust their judgment.

      No joy on finding Elsie in any of the area cemeteries :-( :

      https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/29712/koenig-cemetery

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.