Cancellation query
Cancellation query
Dear All,
I have a very interesting block of eight KE8 stamps used, presumably on a bulky letter or package. The cancellation has the date: 1. (blank) PM/16 FE/37 inside the inner circle, while round it, within the outer circle is: ABBEY.WOOD.S.O.SE2 with a 3 blocked solid on either side.
It is the S.O. that has me puzzled, indeed it might be 5.D. or similar as it is very hard to decipher.
Can somebody help, please?
Incidentally, I reduced the blue in Photoshop to help enhance the black (legibility) of the cancellation. The stamps are actually a good rich blue!
Aside from the postmark, the block is scattered with white spots, the un-inked paper showing through because some scatter of grains or round specks must have been on the roll on the web, that came off when the block was soaked to come off the peice it was adhered to.
Best wishes,
Robin R.
Transfer from previous board: original post 1755
The cancel is a Circular Combined cancel. There were four (4) Post Offices in Abbey Wood S.E.2. The S.O. 'Sorting office' refers to the Main Abbey Wood office. The other three (3) were at Bostall Lane, Bostall Hill and Wickham Lane.
Transfer from previous board: original post 1758
Brilliant!
Many thanks and good luck!
Robin
Many thanks and good luck!
Robin
Transfer from previous board: original post 1759
"S.O." was (and is) a standard and frequently seen abbreviation for "Sorting Office".
Regards
Maurice Buxton
Maurice Buxton
Transfer from previous board: original post 1763
Many thanks to both of you! Greatly appreciated! Robin
Transfer from previous board: original post 1764
Hi Caesley,
If this is fun for you - here's another...
Double circle, 1936.
The upper name is clear but unfinished: HEPPLEF
And the lower part is perfect as MORPETH NORTH.
I guessed the Hepplef... might be Heppleford, but Google only gave me a lot of stuff about an aristocrat in a novel. Here in Caracas, I have no atlas of England... Is there, or was there a post office named Heppleford? Or is it another name?
Thanks a ton, cheers, Robin
If this is fun for you - here's another...
Double circle, 1936.
The upper name is clear but unfinished: HEPPLEF
And the lower part is perfect as MORPETH NORTH.
I guessed the Hepplef... might be Heppleford, but Google only gave me a lot of stuff about an aristocrat in a novel. Here in Caracas, I have no atlas of England... Is there, or was there a post office named Heppleford? Or is it another name?
Thanks a ton, cheers, Robin
Transfer from previous board: original post 1779
I have looked at a map and there is a village called HEPPLE about 14 miles NW of Morpeth. If you put HEPPLE Northumberland into Google it will come up with the correct information.
I cannot explain where the 'F' fits.
Edward.
I cannot explain where the 'F' fits.
Edward.
Transfer from previous board: original post 1782
Brilliant! Thanks a ton!
We'll be in England next month and I'll buy a map of some kind to help me with exactly this kind of thing.
As a matter of interest - and please only trouble to reply if the answer is yes - have many villages and towns changed names in the last 75 years or so?
When we get back to England and manage to see more then the motorways connecting airports and places where the kids live, the changes in the cities is dramatic, but rural England seems to have changed little.
Cheers, Robin
We'll be in England next month and I'll buy a map of some kind to help me with exactly this kind of thing.
As a matter of interest - and please only trouble to reply if the answer is yes - have many villages and towns changed names in the last 75 years or so?
When we get back to England and manage to see more then the motorways connecting airports and places where the kids live, the changes in the cities is dramatic, but rural England seems to have changed little.
Cheers, Robin
Transfer from previous board: original post 27455
Regarding semi-legible cancellations, i have found
that creating a 'negative' image often assists, as white on black can be clearer.
HTH
Tony
that creating a 'negative' image often assists, as white on black can be clearer.
HTH
Tony