AUG 27 1901
CUMMINGS & CO.
Mr. Cummings must have had a past that included acting. By 1901 he was one of the most senior members of the New York Stock Exchange.
AUG 27 1901
CUMMINGS & CO.
Mr. Cummings must have had a past that included acting. By 1901 he was one of the most senior members of the New York Stock Exchange.
Featured last Sunday on this site was a stock memorandum of sale with four pairs of $1 R184, all stacked on top of each other and cancelled with three cuts that penetrated all 8 stamps and the memo itself. The cuts were simple, penetrating the paper and not perforating or removing paper in the process. The purpose of that post was to feature the eight stacked stamps; today will feature the cutting devices and other types of cut cancels.
Down below is reprised the circular from the Commissioner of Revenue and the Treasury that mandated these cuts that was initially issued on December 1, 1899. By January of 1990, businesses had rushed in to supply the necessary equipment to apply the 3 cut cancels efficiently. Two firms advertised their new cutting devices in the January 6, 1900 edition of The American Stationer. David Thompson tipped me to the first of the adverts below:
The Canadian Bank of Commerce merged with the Imperial Bank of Canada in 1961 to form the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC), now one of the Big Five Canadian banks.
Reverse side of document fragment:
Stamp washing and reuse was somewhat common on the 1898 dollar values, prompting ink experimentation that would help prevent effective cancel washing, and rules regarding stamp cancellation that required not only ink cancellation but mutilation through cuts or punch-outs.
By late 1899, cancel washing and stamp reuse had become so common that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue made it mandatory for all revenue stamps of 10 cents or more be mutilated by three parallel cuts into the stamp. So from January 1900, many of the dollar denominated revenue stamps are found with cut cancels. The regulation seems to have been mostly ignored for the documentary battleships.
Today is featured 8 $1 stamps that have been appropriately cut cancelled. However, they have been stacked on a stock sale memorandum. While the regulations regarding cancelling don't address stacking the stamps this way, I do not believe this way of applying the stamps to the document would have been approved by revenue agents.
A Malcom & Coombe sale memorandum to Eames & Moore for 400 shares of Southern Railway requiring $8 of revenue stamps:
A review of section six of the earler 1898 war revenue law makes no mention of a prohibition of stacking stamps before cancelling them. However, the law does say:
That in any and all cases where an adhesive stamp shall be used for denoting any tax imposed by this Act, except as hereinafter provided, the person using or affixing the same shall write or stamp thereupon the initials of his name and the date upon wich the same shall be attached or used...
It seems to me that it is implicit that in order for the above to be enforced, all the stamps on the document must be visible. At least in this sense the stacking on the Malcom & Coombe memo is not permitted.
Certainly, stacking wasn't necessary to fit all the stamps on the memo of sale. Here are two examples of extensive real estate use on stock sale memos:
While I don't have absolute confirmation of the identity of this cancel, I'm pretty certain that these stamps were canceled by the Bank of Montreal:
Again, the design remained unchanged, but as the $3 denomination had been discontinued June 30, 1901, there are only five stamps of this set -- $1, $2, $5, $10, $50. The color selected was blue-green. Each sheet required three impressions. First--the green ink of the stamp itself. Second--a colorless overprint about 14 mm. square in the center of each stamp. Third--a large black numeral on each stamp, corresponding to the denomination, part of which always falls on the colorless overprint. The overprinted numerals measure 24 mm. tall on the $1, $2, and $5, and 19 1/2 mm. tall on the $10 and $50, and instead of being a simple outline, are filled in with a net work pattern. These stamps were in use barely six months and seem not to have been successfully washed. They turn blue readily and even careful soaking in pure cold water is liable to remove part of the overprint numeral.
Reverse of document fragment: