Airmail stamps of Denmark

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Denmark issued ten definitive airmail stamps between 1925 and 1934 in two distinct series.[1] The 1st series, commonly called The Plow and Airplane was first issued in June 1925. These stamps were designed by Danish artist Axel Peder Jensen (1885–1972).[2][3] The 2nd series was issued on June 9, 1934, and depicted an airplane over Copenhagen. The second series remained in use until after World War II.

1925 Plow and Airplane series

The 1925 series comprises Denmark's 1st airmail stamps and their issue corresponded with the opening of

Det Danske Luftfartselskab, the Danish national airline.[1] The 1925 series was issued in denominations of 10, 15, 25, 50 øre and 1 krone
. All the values were reissued in the 1930s.

Summary of 1925 Plow and Airplane Series
Denomination Issue dates Plate numbers and quantities printed Primary purpose
10 øre June 17, 1925, February 15, 1933 273J (151,000), 451J (18,450) The 10 øre paid internal and Nordic airmail letter surcharges (1921) and the European airmail postcard surcharge (1925)[4]
15 øre May 14, 1926, June 10, 1931, February 15, 1933 293A (107,250), 411N (27,170), 451J (23,460) The 15 øre paid European airmail letter and postcard surcharges (1926)[4]
25 øre June 17, 1925, February 15, 1933 273J (150,000), 451J (25,620) The 25 øre paid the 1925 European Airmail letter surcharge[4]
50 øre October 23, 1929, February 15, 1933 365Z (49,770), 451J (12,690) The 50 øre paid the North American Airmail letter surcharge (1927) and combination European rates[5]
1 krone October 23, 1929, June 8, 1932, February 8, 1933 365Z (32,760), 435G (5010), 451J (21,030) The 1 krone paid combination rates and high airmail surcharges to Asia, South America and Africa[6]

Design and production

The Plow and Airplane design was created by Danish artist Axel P. Jensen and the stamps were printed by typography by H. H. Thiele in panes of 30 stamps arranged in five rows of six. During the design and printing process, essays, proofs and color proofs of the stamps were made to finalize the design.

  • Two positions from the 25 øre original layout sheet in black from which a photographic reduction was made to produce the typograph plates.[1]
    Two positions from the 25 øre original layout sheet in black from which a photographic reduction was made to produce the typograph plates.[1]
  • A black essay of 50 øre for the final design on cardstock.[7]
    A black essay of 50 øre for the final design on cardstock.[7]
  • A red unperforated trial colour proof of the 10 øre value.[7]
    A red unperforated trial colour proof of the 10 øre value.[7]
  • A black composite proof of the 50 øre and 1 krone values on cardstock.[7]
    A black composite proof of the 50 øre and 1 krone values on cardstock.[7]
  • A full sheet light blue trial colour proof for the 15 øre value.[7]
    A full sheet light blue trial colour proof for the 15 øre value.[7]
  • A dark blue trial colour proof for the 1 krone value.[7]
    A dark blue trial colour proof for the 1 krone value.[7]

Constant Plate Flaws

The 1925 series is known for several constant plate flaws that appear on the same stamp in each sheet consistently. These plate flaws have descriptive names.[8]

  • 10 øre Stone Under Plow, position 13
    10 øre Stone Under Plow, position 13
  • 10 øre Broken Right Wing, position 23
    10 øre Broken Right Wing, position 23
  • 15 øre Broken Left Wing, position 5
    15 øre Broken Left Wing, position 5
  • 50 øre Blob on K, position 5
    50 øre Blob on K, position 5
  • 1 krone Broken Right Wing, position 2
    1 krone Broken Right Wing, position 2

Usages

Image Description
Earliest known use of the 1925 series on a June 18, 1925, charity receipt.[7]
1925 use to Hungary. This 1925 registered letter travelled via truck from Svebolle to Copenhagen, then by airplane to Berlin (DDL), to Vienna (Sachissche Luftverker AG) and Budapest (Magyar Legiforgalmi R. T.).[9] The 65 øre franking pays the 10 øre foreign printed matter rate, the 30 øre registry fee and the 25 øre European printed matter airmail surcharge.[4]
1928 use to Sweden. This envelope was mailed in Fredericia and travelled via ship to Copenhagen, then via KLM flight #4 to Malmö. From Malmö it went by train to Stockholm, was undeliverable and then forwarded to Gothenburg where it was also undeliverable. Four days later it travelled via ship back to Fredericia.[9] The 60 gram letter was franked with 75 øre to pay the 20-125 gram Nordic letter rate of 30 øre and three times the 15 øre/20 grams Nordic airmail surcharge.[4]
1929 use to Australia. This envelope travelled via Deutsche Luft Hansa flights #8/12a to Basel, then via train to Brindisi, then via Imperial Airways flight #3 to Basra. From Barsa the letter went via ship to Australia.[9] The 60 øre franking paid the 1927 foreign letter rate (25 øre) and the 1927 airmail surcharge (35 øre) to Iraq.[10]
1930 use to England. This registered letter travelled from Copenhagen to Stockholm and back to Copenhagen as undeliverable via A. B. Aerotransport. It was then forwarded to London via Amsterdam on KLM flights #1/4. The 55 øre franking was 5 øre short because the letter required the European rates instead of Nordic rates. Note the Great Britain postage due markings and franking.
1930 use to via German-Russian Derluft flight #3B. The 65 øre franking pays the 30 øre 1927 foreign letter rate, the 1926 25 øre registry fee and the 1928 European airmail surcharge of 15 øre.
1932 use to South Africa. This letter was from the first known through Danish airmail to Cape Town. The letter travelled via Luft Hansa flights #1/8 from Copenhagen to Amsterdam via Hamburg, then on KLM flight #4 to Paris. From Paris the letter travelled via train to Brindisi, then via Imperial Airways flight #3 to Alexandria. From Alexandria the letter went by train to Cairo and then by Imperial Airways flight #5 to Cape Town.[9] The trip took 25 days.
1934 use to
Natal it flew to Buenos Aires.[9]

1934 Airplane over Copenhagen series

The 1934 series was issued in denominations of 10, 15, 20, 50 øre and 1 krone. The issue was designed by Poul E. Johansen and engraved by Jons Britze.

Summary of 1934 Airplane over Copenhagen Series
Denomination Issue dates Quantities printed Primary purpose
10 øre June 9, 1934 580,850 The 10 øre paid the internal and Nordic airmail postcard surcharge (1934)[4]
15 øre June 9, 1934 461,150 The 15 øre paid the internal and Nordic airmail letter surcharge (1934) and the European airmail postcard surcharge (1934)[4]
20 øre June 9, 1934 450,450 The 20 øre paid the European airmail letter and printed matter surcharges (1934)[4]
50 øre June 9, 1934 467,350 The 50 øre paid combination rates and basic airmail surcharges to the Americas, Africa and Asia[5]
1 krone June 9, 1934 336,800 The 1 krone paid combination rates and multiple airmail surcharges to the Americas, Africa and Asia[6]

Usages

Image Description
1935 use to
Saigon.[9] The 190 øre franking paid the 1934 foreign letter rate of 30 øre and the 1934 airmail surcharge to Indochina of 160 øre.[11]
The 15 øre airmail letter shows 1938 internal use and was flown from Aalborg to Copenhagen via DDL and then carried by train to Haderslev.
1938 use to
Pan American flights via Miami and Curaçao to Aruba. The 292 øre franking overpaid by 7 øre. The 1934 foreign letter rate was 30 øre, the 1933 registry fee was 25 øre and the 1935 Netherlands Antilles
airmail surcharge was 230 øre.
1938 use to China. This letter flew from Copenhagen to Berlin on Deutsche Lufthansa flight #7, then to Athens via Lufthansa flight #PF229. From Athens, Air France flight #486 took the letter to
Kulangsu. The 95 øre franking paid the 1934 foreign letter rate of 30 øre and the 1939 Hong Kong airmail surcharge of 65 øre.[12]
1941 use of the 1 krone value on a parcel card mailed from the
World War II period of British occupation
.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Örjan, Lüning (1978). Luftpostens historia i Norden = The history of airmail in Scandinavia. Stockholm: Sveriges Filatelist-Forbund. pp. 242–243.
  2. ^ "Kunstindeks Danmark & Weilbachs kunstnerleksikon". Kulturarv.dk. Retrieved 2008-10-26.
  3. ^ "Weilbachs Kunsterleksikon J". Rosekamp.dk. Archived from the original on 18 September 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-26.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Hedelius, Mats (1992). Dansk Luftpost. Skibby: Forlaget Skilling. pp. 30–33.
  5. ^ a b Hedelius, Mats (1992). Dansk Luftpost. Skibby: Forlaget Skilling. p. 96.
  6. ^ a b Hedelius, Mats (1992). Dansk Luftpost. Skibby: Forlaget Skilling. pp. 40–194.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Orjan, Luning (1978). Luftpostens historia i Norden – The history of airmail in Scandinavia. Stockholm: Sveriges Filatelist-Forbund. pp. 101–102.
  8. ^ Orjan, Luning (1978). Luftpostens historia i Norden – The history of airmail in Scandinavia. Stockholm: Sveriges Filatelist-Forbund. p. 103.
  9. ^ a b c d e f "Les Statistiques du Traffic Aérien". Revue Aéronautique Internationale. 1–8. 1931–39.
  10. ^ Tester, H. E. (1972). Danish Postal Rates. New York.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  11. ^ Hedelius, Mats (1992). Dansk Luftpost. Skibby: Forlaget Skilling. pp. 30–33, 168.
  12. ^ Hedelius, Mats (1992). Dansk Luftpost. Skibby: Forlaget Skilling. pp. 30–33, 171.