Saturday, April 5, 2008

Daryle Lambert: Run Across Any Stamp Collections? What a Gift They Can Be.

Inverted Jenny, a 1918 US Stamp,known for its error, is Valued at $525,000 at famousstamps.org

Forget about the baseball cards, I wish that I had my stamp collection back. The stamps that were given to me as a young child might have been the fortune that got away.

When I was about twelve years old, my father walked out to his car one morning and was astonished to find an older man asleep in the back seat. My father woke him and asked if he needed help. In broken English, the man told him he was hungry. My family took him in, and Mr. Michael stayed with us for several weeks. We began to form a lasting bond with him. It seemed that he was of Greek origin and from a well to do family. However, he had run out of money and needed to reconnect with his family. After a few weeks, my father set him up in a hotel and tended to some of his other needs.

Mr. Michael soon pulled himself together and shared gifts with my family, some of which were several fabulous rifles that had silver and gold inlay. On today’s market, I’m sure they would bring over $25,000 apiece. He eventually left our town, but each Christmas, he sent enough frozen lobster and shrimp to feed an army, and this was a very special treat us. We were an average family at that time, and shrimp and lobster definitely wasn’t on our usual menu.

But, the best gift of all was a collection of Greek Stamp he gave to me. Every few months I received another delivery of the most beautiful stamps I’d ever imagined from Mr. Micheal. He also encouraged me to start collecting American Stamps, and I did. I wish that I knew what happened to this collection over the years.
The reason this comes to mind is that a friend asked if I could help her with her fathers stamp collection. As I started to do some research, my eyes popped out of my head because I recognized some of the stamps as being the same that were in my collection. In today’s market, their value had risen into the thousands.
At an auction house here in Chicago I saw a stamp collection auctioned that took several months to complete. One book sold for over $10,000. I wonder what was in that book.

I suggest that you watch the sales you attend for stamp collections. If my memory serves me well, most of my collection was from the early !900's thru the 1940's. I still run across collections regularly, and I can assure you if I think that they a worthy I will be picking them up. Be sure to check that the stamps aren't glued down on the pages but are connected by hinges. Every stamp that you find might not be a treasure, but it will only take one. And if you buy them cheaply enough, I assure you that you will be well rewarded.

To this day I still wonder what happened to Mr. Michael. One day he was just gone, as if he never was. I continued to ask my father about him, but there was never an answer. It was if he had disappeared off the face of the earth. I pray he is in Heaven.

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Today's Links:

http://www.famousstamps.org/

American Philatelic Society
http://www.stamps.org/

Auction Site Dedicated to Stamps:
http://www.stamps.org/

3 comments:

  1. Daryle,

    I also had a killer stamp collection as a kid, back then you could send away for groups of stamps from a company and they world send them back to you and you had so many days to decide if you wanted them or not.

    I can't remember their name, but I also moved into US uncirculated and until I was 16-17, but when I discovered girls and had my first car I sold all of it for a cool $300 back in 1976 (thought I made a killing too!!)

    I wonder the value of my collection now???

    Anyway, I'd like to share a tip, something I do to help me

    "layer" knowledge.

    Since the most $$$ comes from the rare items, I use my screensaver to help my memory "see" these hard to find items so I remember them.

    I use a program call WEBSHOTS and its a free download that allows folks to organize pics and share them in an online community.

    Now, I'm not into that part of it, but what I do is use their screensaver feature.

    When I'm doing research online and find pics of high $$$ items I save the pic to my "look for list" photo album and then load them into WEBSHOTS and when my screensaver starts it will slideshow a different image from that photo album across the screen ever every 5 seconds.

    So these items get burned into the subconscious memory, subliminally.

    It's proven that visual repetition improves memory.

    It works too!!

    I'm sure there are other programs that do what WEBSHOTS can do, heck you might have something better, but the point I'm trying to make is this, use as many tools as possible to "layer" the knowledge that will help you in your "31 Steps".

    Good Luck Everybody!!

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  2. Hello. This post is likeable, and your blog is very interesting, congratulations :-). I will add in my blogroll =). If possible gives a last there on my blog, it is about the Livros e Revistas, I hope you enjoy. The address is http://livros-e-revistas.blogspot.com. A hug.

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  3. Stephen b - I love your learning tool! What a great idea. Thanks

    Cindy

    ReplyDelete