t zi _/ -,V-, L-Ize- z. ^ ^.v ^.^. a^ ^..^ Ali BNAPS AIIR MAIL STUI3Y GROUP

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BNAPS AIIR MAIL STUI3Y GROUP Volume 2 ^- Number 1 December 1993 Study Groups This newsletter is designed for two way communication within the members range of interest. What is there that you want to know that does not appear in your references? Would you like to be able to offer some duplicates to sell or trade? What would you take to a "show and tell" at your local stamp club. For examples Why does the AAMS Vol 4 not show the flights to Wabowden, and Cross Lake on or about May 6th, 1929 as Holmes, Robson Lowe, etc do? Does anyone have these covers? Can you help identify these markings? One of our very knowledgeable members has asked what the on an air mail letter means. The hand stamp is purple in color. As evidence these covers were cancelled in Winnipeg, arc there is no back stamp. C-1 is dated March 25, 1930; C-3 is February 22, 1932 (First Day). One is on the stamp and the other is not. Any information? Please share it with us. t zi _/ -,V-, L-Ize- z. ^ ^.v ^.^. a^ ^..^ Ali 4

AIR MAIL NEWS LETTER PAGE 2 AIR MAIL AFTER ALL - UP SERVICE One goal of the Air Mail Study Group is to learn more about the air mail service that has taken place after the flights listed in the American Air Mail Catalog Volume Four. That is to say after April 18, 1950. First flights did not end when the book was published and it is a great help to note that we have a list that uses the above flight # 3651 as it's first listing. It continues on to April 4, 1992 and also includes special flights made, for example to the Winter Olympics, the Concorde to the North Pole and experimental and research flights. This is a 10 page listing and can be had on one side or both sides of the paper. This listing was originally sent to Dick Malott and he has allowed us to offer it for $2.50 (US) or $3.00 (Cdn) postage paid. So that you can see the information format here is page 1i DATE AIRLINE FROM/VON TO/NACH AIRCRAFT DM 18.04. 50 TORONTO NEW YORK AVRO JET 31.00 30.04. 50 NORTHWEST ORIENT MINNEAPOLIS EDMONTON 22.00 03.05.50 NORTHWEST ORIENT SEOUL EDMONTON 95.00 03.05. 50 NORTHWEST ORIENT TOKYO EDMONTON 155.00 ( 14.05. 5 0 NORTHWEST ORIEN T ANCHORAGE EDMONTON 22. 00 (12.10.50 AIR FRANCE PARIS MONTREAL 22.00 06.10.50 AIR FRANCE MONTREAL PARIS 19.00 07.10. 50 CANADIAN PACIFIC TOKYO VANCOUVER 83.00 01.02. 52 CANADIAN PACIPIC AUCKLAND VANCOUVER DC 4 30.00 27.10.52 KLM AMSTERDAM MONTREAL CONSTELL. 25.00 04.10.53 TRANS CANADA AIRLIN DUSSELDORF MONTREAL 65.00 15.05.54 PACIFIC AIRLINES AUCKLAND VANCOUVER' 25.00 15.05.54 QANTAS NADI VANCOUVER CONSTELL. 44.00 15.05.54 QANTAS SYDNEY VANCOUVER CONSTELL. 33.00 16.05.54 QANTAS CANTON ISLAND VANCOUVER CONSTELL. 48.00 17.05.54 QANTAS VANCOUVER SYDNEY CONSTELL. 34.00 19.05.54 TRANS CANADA AIRLIN DUSSELDORF MONTREAL CONSTELL. 49.00 11.01.55 KLM STUTTGART MONTREAL 95.00 11.04.55 AIR CANADA MONTREAL WINNIPEG VISCOUNT 18.00 ')8.06.55 CANADIAN PACIFIC VANCOUVER AMSTERDAM DC 6 41.00 27.04. 56 LUFTHANSA FRANKFURT MONTREAL 9.00 27.04. 56 LUFTHANSA HAMBURG MONTREAL 9.00 06.10. 57 SABENA BRUSSEL MONTREAL DC 7 14.00 02. 04. 58 TRANS CANADA AIRLIN MONTREAL BR USSEL 22.00 1.4.04.58 SAS KOPENHAGEN MONTREAL DC 6 15.00 14.04.58 SAS OSLO MONTREAL DC 6 11.00 14.04. 58 SAS STOCKHOLM MONTREAL DC 6 12.00 1 9.0 5. 58 AIR CANADA ZURICH MONTREAL 1 35.0 0 04.07. 58 SAS KOPENHAGEN MONTREAL DC 6 22.00 04.07.58 SAS STOCKHOLM MONTREAL DC 6 18.00 27.08.58 CANADIAN PACIFIC TOKYO VANCOUVER BRITANNIA 46.00 1.9.12.58 BOAC LONDON MONTREAL 'COMET 15.00 02.05. 59 AIR CANADA DUSSELDORF MONTREAL DC 8 12.00 02.05.59 AIR CANADA WIEN MONTREAL DC 8 15.00 02.05. 59 AIR CANADA WIEN TORONTO DC 8 25.00 01.06.59 WESTERN AIRLINES CALGARY GREAT FALLS 10.00 11.09. 59 QANTAS SYDNEY VANCOUVER B 707 13.00 1.2.09.59 QANTAS VANCOUVER SYDNEY B 707 14.00 02.03.60 ALITALIA MONTREAL MAILAND DC 7 38.00 02.03.60'ALITALIA MONTREAL ROM DC 7 34.00 03.03.60 ALITALIA ROM MONTREAL DC 7 35.00 03.03.60 ALITALIA VATICAN MONTREAL DC 7 55.00 06.03.60 ALITALIA MAILAND MONTREAL DC 7 25.00 19.03.60 AIR FRANCE PARIS MONTREAL B 707 12.00 01.04. 60 AIR CANADA MONTREAL VANCOUVER DC 8 12.00 01.04.60 SABENA BRUSSEL MONTREAL B 707 12.00 01.04.60 SABENA MONTREAL BRUSSEL B 707 18.00 24.04. 60 AIR FRANCE MONTREAL PARIS B 707 16.00 13.05. 60 LUFTHANSA FRANKFURTI- MONTREAL B 707 85.00 13.05. 60 LUFTHANSA MONTREAL SAN FRANCISCO ', B 707 115.00 13.05.60 LUFTHANSA PARIS MONTREAL B 707 120.00 i

AIR MAIL NEWS LETTER PAGE 3 MARITIME and NEWFOUNDLAND AIRWAYS: As most collectors of Canadian Semi -Official Air Mail know this line never got off the ground. However, it is still in the books and there are a number of unanswered questions that need to be cleared up. 1. What was the make up of a sheet of stamps? A. Holmes 8th Edition says on page 161 sheets of 20, perf. B. Not listed in 11th Edition. C. Armand Singer says in Sept 22. 1951 Weekly Philatelic Gossip (on page 80) that they were 20 per sheet. D. Ed Richardson wrote on page 351 of the Airpost Journal dated September, 1960.,- "These were printed in sheets of 25, - - ".- E. The BNAPS Semi-Official Study Group report of January 1985 says that the stamps were printed 4 x 5 in sheets of twenty. They also mention that the imprint "Printed In The U.S.A." does not occur in the margin of all sheets. Ed Richardson was a member of group. 2. Which of the stamps issued were originals from the company and which were reprints? A. Ed Richardson makes a complete and numbered'listing in his Sept 1960 Airpost Journal article. B. The Study Group report of January 1985 does not agree on listing. These questions beg for further study and a good collective answer. The Air Mail Study Group has been awarded a grant to cover the publication of a monograph, in color, that will clear up some of the questions. So that we have a starting point with a good listing here is the Ed Richardson listing of this company's stamps. 1. Section I - Authorized Issues 0-1 OFFICIAL - Black on Silver surface colored paper. Perf 2 sides. Notes The Mar 1931 APJ mentions that this stamp had the word OFFICIAL mis-spelled "OFFICAL". However, this spelling did not occur on the issued stamps. It did appear, acccording to Morgan, on the original proofs, which were printed in sheets of 3, imperf. P-1 PUBLIC - Bright-Red on Yellow-Orange paper. Perf. P-2 PUBLIC - Red on Yellow Paper, Perf. P-3 PUBLIC - Red on Yellow paper. Imperf. 2. Section II - Reprints RO-1 OFFICIAL - Black on Silver surface colored paper. Imperf RP-1 PUBLIC - Brown-Red on yellow-orange paper. Perf. RP-2 PUBLIC - Brown-Red on Yellow-Orange paper. Imperf. RP-3 PUBLIC - Brown-Red on Yellow-Orange paper. Part perf. Imperf Vert. 3. Section III - Overprinted Reprints RP-4 PUBLIC - Stamp # RP-2 overprinted with faint horizontal silver line Imperf. RP-5 PUBLIC -Stamp # RP-4 with additional overprint made up of heavy vertical purple lines. Imperf. Notes Full sheets of RP-5 show a break in all vertical lines between the bottom two rows of stamps. 4. Section IV - Reprints in New Colors RP-6 PUBLIC - Green on Green paper. Perf. RP-7 PUBLIC - Green on Green paper. Imperf. RP-8 PUBLIC - Green on Bluish-green paper. Perf RP-9 PUBLIC - Black, on Pink on Yellow SAFETY paper. Perf. RP-10 PUBLIC - Black, on Pink on Yellow SAFETY paper. Part Perf. imperforate vertically. Please advise the editor if you have any, or all of these and would be willing. to help in this project. Also if you have a complete sheet and the nnvpr w1, r,ra crl,+

AIR MAIL NEWS LETTER PAGE 4 ' VIA AIRMAIL Since the subject of Aerophilately is seldom treated with'^respect by" the rest of the philatelic world it is resfreshing to see that a work has been published for us. It is a hard cover book published by the AAMS and sells for $20.00 to non-members and $16.00 (US) fore members of AAMS. In case any members of the BNAPS Air Mail Study Group would like a copy I will be happy to arrange it for you. So that you can see if any of the subjects besides the article by Dick Maldtt fit into your collecting interests I have reproduced, with permission, the index page. To Canadian addresses $27.00 and $22.00 CDN. Checks can be sent to Basil Burrell. Vii Airmail An Aerophilatelic Survey of Events, Routes and Rates Edited by Simine Short with Cheryl Ganz, Associate Editor United States Domestic Airmail Rates...James R. Adams 11 Beacon Airmail Rates to Foreign Destinations...Kent J. Kobersteen 27 United States Zeppelin Mail Rates...Cheryl Ganz 61 World's First Night Airmail, the 1870 Paris Balloon Le General Uhrich...Ernst M. Cohn 75 The 1911 Chicago Air Meet...Stephen Neulander 89 Early Chicago Area Airports and Airmail Dedications...Raymond Brow 103 Canadian Airmails, 1918-1934...Richard K. Malott 115 Origins and Rates of the North Atlantic German Catapult Airmail...James W. Graue 127 The Lindbergh Circle...George Sioras 143 Mermoz Trans-Atlantic Flights, 1930...E.P. Sloan 153 The Chicago 1933 Gordon Bennett Cup Race...Erich Schroder and Stephen Neulander 163 The Hong Kong Flights of Eurasia Airline...Dr. Peter Moeller 173 The New Zealand Survey Flights of 1937 and 1939, Conducted by Pan American Airways...Greg Schmidt 183 Winged Cargo, One of Many Non-Skeds...Simine Short 199 Concorde SST: Flying with the Sun - Now Flying into the Sunset...Dr. Reuben A. Ramkissoon 207 The World's First Cosmographs...:...Les Winick 215 FISA - today......roland F. Kohl 221 D

AIR MAIL NEWS LETTER PAGE 5 Klondike Airwayst Jack Wallace was kind enough to pass on the 1979 photo of a building that carried the Klondike Airways sign on its side. Also included was what the photographer knew about the history of the buiding. The advertise. ment for Klondike Airways on this building refers to a mail and freight delivery business which was started in 1929, but no longer operates. Klondike Airways Building Although the construction date of this building is unknown, a bakery tent appeared on the site in a 1901 photograph. The current building appeared as a wood frame structure in a 1906 photograph. At some later date it was enclosed within galvanized iron. The Klondike Airways sign on the side of the building was an advertisement for a mail and freight delivery business acquired by T.C. Richards and Willard Phelps in 1929. The name "Klondike Airways" is misleading. Although they hoped some day to buy a plane, they never did. Using snowmobiles and caterpillars, they carried about 110,000 pounds of mail to Dawson each year. Before 1921 only first class mail was delivered in the winter. The remaining mail waited in Whitehorse for the ice to break up and the steamers to sail sometime in May. When Klondike Airways won the mail contract in 1929, all classes of mail were delivered weekly without fail. If the weather made overland travel impossible arrangements were made with White Pass to deliver mail by plane. In the 1930s the building was owned and used as a carpentry shop by Jack French. - The AIR MAIL STUDY GROUP - is a study group under the BRITISH NORTH AMERICA PHILATELIC SOCIETY. This newsletter is published three times a year. Membership fees are $5.00 US / $6.00 Cdn and are payable to the Treasurer. Chairman - Ed Christman, Jr. 5419 Jason Street Houston, Texas 77096 USA Secretary/Treasurer Basil Burrell 911 Huckleberry Lane Glenview, Illinois 60025-2301 USA

_,_ NOV 2 4 1992 AIR MAIL NEWS LETTER. PAGE 6 LAURENTIDE AIR SERVICE. LTD. Did you see anything strange about the'stamp at the top of the first page of this Newsletter? It is a real 'tamp, It was offered for sale by dealer within the past year. The reason you want one in your collection is that is it Pert 8 x Imperf, or so the dealer says. The potential buyer was not satisfied with this explanation as there is no such animal in the references available to. him. Therefore he sent it to the APS for their'expertizing service. Since there is no other stamp ever noted or written up this was a good idea. The result is shown here with their comment about the trimmed edges. Other experts feel'that the perf 8 fits neatly into the roulette pattern and was an enhancement of the roulette. An alternate opinion is that it came from a perf 8 booklet pane, but I can find no reference to this. The stamp is still around,i am sure,so beware. The American Philatelic Expertizing Service P.O. BOX 8000 STATE COLLEGE, PA. 16803 CERTIFICATE :.83341. Members of The American Philatelic Expertizing Service have examined the item submitted and it is their opinion that it is Canada, Scott No. CL4, perforated 8.at top and bottom variety,..._u.nused, original gum, previqusly hinged, genuine, but with roulet.teyyimm, from left and right