- Postage stamps and postal history of Jamaica
This is a survey of the
postage stamp s andpostal history ofJamaica .Jamaica was the first British colony to operate its own postal service, appointing a Gabriel Martin as postmaster on
31 October 1671 , shortly after British possession of the island was confirmed. Martin carried mail via posthorse betweenSt. Jago andPassage Fort for several years, then disappeared from the record. In the 1680s, sea captainJames Wale secured the support of theEarl of Rochester to set up a post office (against the wishes of Jamaican governor Molesworth), but the service seems to have been stillborn, and not until1705 was a statute (9 Anne) created to legally establish a postal service (in several islands of the West Indies) and allow the postmaster to charge a fee for the delivery of mail. Letters were carried by a packet service until 1711, then the postal service lapsed again until re-established by GovernorNicholas Lawes in 1720.The local planters typically preferred to entrust their letters directly to merchant ship captains, and considered the charging of fees by postmaster
Edward Dismore to be tantamount to extortion. Matters came to a head in1755 , when a select committee examined the finances of the postal system, but Dismore continued as postmaster into the 1780s, eventually establishing some two dozen post offices across the island.Use of stamps began on
8 May 1858 , with stamps of Great Britain.Until 1860, the postal service under the control of Great Britain, despite repeated efforts by Jamaican authorities to take over. Soon afterwards, British stamps were no longer accepted, and
De La Rue was commissioned to produce stamps for Jamaica, featuring alaureate d profile of Queen Victoria. The first issue consisted of five values ranging from one penny to one shilling, each with a different frame, inscribed "JAMAICA POSTAGE", and werewatermark ed with apineapple design. They were first issued on23 November 1860. Additional stamps in the series appeared through the end of the century.In 1863 four
letter box es were placed around Kingston. Inland delivery was increased from twice/week to three times per week in 1868. Mail carriage was originally via mule, then viarailroad in the 1860s, then back to roads due to difficulties with the trains, not switching back to railroad until the railways were improved in the late 1870s.Jamaica joined the
Universal Postal Union on1 April 1877 .In
1887 , the Legislative Council resolved to use a common stamp design for both postage and revenue purposes, and in 1889 Jamaica issued threekey plate stamps inscribed "POSTAGE & REVENUE", with the value tablet in a different color.In
1900 , Jamaica's first pictorial stamp featured a view ofLlandovery Falls . Originally intended as acommemorative stamp marking the adoption ofImperial Penny Postage in 1889, it was too long delayed, and is considered a regular stamp. Originally issued in red, it was redesigned and issued in red&black the next year.For unknown reasons, Jamaica did not adopt a profile of Edward VII upon his accession. Instead, beginning in 1903, new stamps featured the
coat of arms of the colony. Following a special petition in 1910, Edward VII was recognized posthumously on a two-pence gray stamp issued3 February 1911 . Stamps depicting George V were more timely, first appearing in 1912.A pictorial series in 1919 included twelve stamps, ranging from the
Jamaica Exhibition of 1891 to various statues and scenery. The series was not commemorative, but was a result of repeated requests by local philatelists to governorLeslie Probyn .The next definitive series was issued for George VI in
1938 , with low values being a profile of the king alone, and the higher values including scenes of various local industries. An issue with new scenes and a full-face portrait of George VI marked the granting of self-government in 1944, although it was not issued until August 1945.A set of four stamps with historic scenes marked the 300th anniversary of British control in 1955, followed in 1956 by a series of 16 stamps depicting flora, fauna, and local scenery.
Upon independence in 1962, the 1956 stamps were
overprint ed "INDEPENDENCE" and "1962". In 1964, a set of three depictedMiss World Carole Joan Crawford ; they were soon followed by a new series of 16 with various designs. Only the one-pound value included a portrait of Queen Elizabeth; from independence on, the Queen was rarely included in designs.References
*G.W. Collett, W. Buckland Edwards, C.S. Morton, L.C.C. Nicholson, eds., "Jamaica: Its Postal History, Postage Stamps, and Postmarks" (Stanley Gibbons, 1928, reprinted Postilion Publications)
*"The Stamp Atlas"
*Stanley Gibbons catalogue
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