- PHQ card
PHQ Cards are
postcards depicting the design of acommemorative stamp issued by theBritish Post Office .What are PHQ Cards?
The 'PHQ' stands for Postal Headquarters, all items published by the Post Office are given a number which is prefixed by letters. The first card issued, was the 3p
W.G. Grace stamp from the set of stamps commemorating CountyCricket , issued on 16th May 1973, this card was numbered PHQ 1, the numbering sequence has continued to the present day.
There is, however, one gap in the sequence. The number PHQ24 was originally set aside for the 9pSilver Jubilee card {this card was issued after the rest of the set}, when it was issued the card was numbered PHQ22E. The set of Wildlife cards, issued 5th October 1977, had already been allocated the number PHQ25, so the number PHQ24 was never used.History
Although the
Cricket stamps were issued in May, the card was not released until mid-July, subsequent cards have been issued about two weeks prior to the release of the stamps, this enables collectors to obtain the cards before the issue of the stamps so that they can attach the relevant stamp and obtain First Day of Issuepostmarks .When they were first issued, PHQ Cards were intended to be just an occasional picture
postcard for sale to the public at Post Offices and Philatelic Counters. However, right from the first card issued, some enterprising Stamp Dealers realised that there was a potential newStamp collecting area, and stamps were fixed either to the face of the card, or the back, and postmarks for variouscricket matches played between July and September 1973 were obtained.In August 1973 a second card was issued for one of the stamps in the set to mark the 400th anniversary of the birth of
Inigo Jones ,architect anddesigner . Over the next three years several more single cards, and a few sets were issued, from July 1976 onwards there has been a set of cards issued for every new set of commemorative stamps that has been issued.The first two cards issued, 1973
Cricket and 1973Inigo Jones , are larger than the current cards, measuring 120 mm x 172 mm in size, while all cards issued from PHQ 3 onward are 104 mm x 148 mm in size. This can be confusing for new collectors coming across the first two issues for the first time, if they are not aware of the size difference, they tend to think they are worthless copies.Collecting PHQ Cards
There are three main collecting areas, many collectors like to collect only the unused cards. Other collectors like to obtain
First day of issue postmarks or special handstamps that have some connection to the stamp subject matter.Some collectors will put the stamp on the back of the card, but a very popular area is for the stamp to be applied to the face of the card, so that thepostcard picture, stamp andpostmark are all visible on the same face.Postmarks & Handstamps
The first card was not put on sale until two months after the issue date of the stamps, so would not have been eligible for a
First day of issue postmark . However the card is known to exist with 16th May 1973, Birmingham FDI cancellation (back-dated by favour), but it is much more collectable with the July and September pictorialcricket postmarks. Thecricket postmarks to look out for are 21st July, Benson & Hedges, and 1st SeptemberGillette Cup .The early issues
Below are the issue dates of all the early cards, issued up until July 1976, after this time a full set of cards has been issued for every commemorative set, and some of the definitive issues. (#cards = number of cards in the issue)
Acknowledgements
Stanley Gibbons Concise Stamp Catalogue .
Collect Post Office Cards (Published byRosendale Stamps )
[http://www.gibbonsstampmonthly.com Gibbons Stamp Monthly]
Royal Mail Stamp Guide
Royal Mail British Philatelic Bulletin
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