What is the most expensive stamp worth

At first glance it could be an old scrap of paper that has had blackcurrant juice knocked over it. In reality it is, in terms of size, weight and material, arguably the most valuable object in the world. When it goes to auction in June it is expected to sell for between $10m and $15m – more than a billion times its original value.

The scrap of paper is the British Guiana One-Cent Magenta, which was created in 1856 and is the most famous and valuable stamp in the world. “It is the Mona Lisa of philately,” said David Beech, a philatelic expert. “It is the one stamp that every philatelist and every collector would have heard about and seen an illustration of.”

The stamp, the only one of its kind, has gone on display at Sotheby’s London headquarters before its sale in New York and will be on public view this week. Beech, formerly the curator of the British Library philatelic collections, said its fame was enhanced by the people who had owned it – and those who desperately wanted to own it.

The stamp was created in British Guiana, now Guyana, when a shortage of stamps usually imported from England threatened to disrupt the colony’s postal service. The one cent stamp was mainly used for delivering newspapers, and most of those would have been thrown away. Beech said the surprise was less “why does only one exist today?” and more “it is a miracle that one stamp has survived”.

It was discovered in 1873 by a budding 12-year-old philatelist called Vernon Vaughan, a Scottish boy living in British Guiana. He found it in his uncle’s papers, thought it looked valuable and sold it for six shillings.

The stamp was passed through collectors before being spotted by Count Philipp La Rénotière von Ferrary of Paris, who devoted his life to philately and amassed the greatest and most comprehensive collection of stamps in history. He died of a heart attack in 1917, leaving his stamps “with pride and joy to my German fatherland”.

France seized the collection from Berlin in 1920, selling the stamps at auction with the proceeds deducted from Germany’s war reparations. The auction was attended by the agents of the world’s greatest collectors, including King George V of England and King Carol II of Romania. The winning bidder, setting a world record for a single stamp, was a Bradford-born industrialist called Arthur Hind, who made his fortune in the US making upholstery fabrics.

Subsequent owners included an Australian engineer called Frederick T Small who kept his ownership so quiet that, it is said, his wife didn’t even know he had bought it.

It was sold in 1980 for a record $935,000 to an anonymous bidder, who was later revealed as John du Pont, the eccentric millionaire, amateur sportsman and dedicated stamp collector who murdered the wrestler Dave Schultz – a bizarre story told in the film Foxcatcher starring Steve Carell.

Its current owner is the American designer Stuart Weitzman, known as the shoe designer to the stars.

Previous owners have made their own small marks on the back of the stamp. Weitzman’s mark is a stiletto heel alongside his initials SW.

In philately the stamp is something of a holy grail. Beech recalled seeing it an exhibition in Brussels in 1972. “You viewed the thing inside a small safe and there was a queue of people. It was a bit like seeing the crown jewels, you had about five seconds to peer into this dark safe.”

Each of the four times the stamp has sold at auction it has achieved a world record price for a single stamp, and that is expected once more at the 8 June sale in New York. Proceeds will benefit charitable ventures, the auction house said.

David Goldthorpe, a senior director at Sotheby’s, said the stamp’s provenance was fascinating. “It is the ultimate collectible, it speaks about the mania of collecting, the thrill of the chase. And there is only one.”

LONDON, June 9 (Reuters Breakingviews) - The sale of the world’s most expensive postage stamp will test the value of shared ownership. London-listed philatelic specialist Stanley Gibbons (SGI.L) on Tuesday paid $8.3 million for a British Guiana One-Cent Magenta stamp, issued in 1856. The company, which has a market value of just $19 million, wants to make the stamp more accessible by selling fractional shares, allowing owners to admire it digitally and profit from future increases in its value.

It’s an admirable attempt to cash in on the vogue for digital assets. But Stanley Gibbons faces a hard sell. The sale price at a Sotheby’s auction was below the $9.5 million the stamp fetched in 2014. It’s one of the few rare assets that has not soared in value in recent years – prices of luxury collectables on average doubled in the past decade, according to Knight Frank. Stanley Gibbons is funding its purchase through a five-year interest-free loan from its majority shareholder. Stamp collectors are enthusiasts for specimens with errors. This could also be a mistake. (By Karen Kwok)

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What draws people to stamps?  Why do we get a thrill from seeing Wonder Woman, astronauts, presidents and Americana on these small pieces of affixable paper? One possibility is that they are at once so many things: they’re art, they’re history, they’re antiques, they’re money, they’re miniatures—all wrapped up in the romanticism of the letters they set into motion. Those most devoted to the collection of stamps—philatelists—are readying themselves for a giant moment. In October, the collection of U.S. bond king William H. Gross will go up for auction at Robert A. Siegel Auction Galleries in New York. As noted by Cheryl Ganz, curator emerita of the Smithsonian National Postal Museum in Washington, Gross’s collection of American stamps is unrivaled in the history of private stamp collecting. As philately readies itself for a major reveal, we look back at 10 of the rarest stamps in American history.

1. The Inverted Jenny

What is the most expensive stamp worth

(Courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery)

Debatably the rarest stamp error in U.S. history, the Inverted Jenny is among the most mythical. The plane depicted on the stamp is the JN-4HM, built by the Curtiss company in the middle of World War I (95 percent of U.S. pilots trained on JN-4s during WWI). Philately, like many other hobbies, enjoys the self-referential: this was the first plane used to deliver mail. A printing error caused the blue vignette—the airplane and the air around it—to be printed upside down, while the red border framing the scene was printed correctly. The error only appeared on a single sheet of 100 stamps, which has since been broken up, so that mostly single examples of the stamp exist, though there remain two blocks of four. In 2016, a single Inverted Jenny sold at auction for $1,351,250.

The Jennies—military biplanes—were modified for government airmail service with extra fuel tanks, a different engine, and a hopper for mail. They often crashed. In fact, the very first U.S. Post Office Department airmail flight on May 15, 1918 ended in disaster. The pilot flew in the wrong direction and crashed in a farmer’s field, ironically next to a property owned by Otto Praeger, the postmaster official in charge of airmail. “None of the first day’s mail made it,” says Scott Trepel, president of Siegel Auction House. “They had to send it the next day.”

2. 1847 Issue Block of 16 of Ben Franklin

What is the most expensive stamp worth

1847 Ben Franklin stamps (courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery); The Boston Tea Party (Credit: Ed Vebell/Getty Images)

The year 1847 is a huge one for stamps: this was the first year that you could purchase stamps from the United States government and affix them to a piece of mail as a method to prepay for its delivery (the legislation was passed in 1845). These are examples of the very first U.S. Federal stamps. Naturally, a great deal of correspondence was exchanged before 1847—the United States Post Office Department was established in 1792—but those letters were mostly paid for by the receiver.

Benjamin Franklin, who along with George Washington graced the first stamps, has a fascinating history with the post, filled with intrigue. In 1775, upon his return from England, Franklin was named postmaster general of the independent colonies by the Continental Congress. But long before, the Crown had named him postmaster general of the American colonies in 1753, a post he shared with William Hunter. Franklin was fired from that job when, in 1774, it was discovered that he had been opening mail (between English authorities) and feeding the correspondences’ contents to his rebel friends—in what’s become known as the Hutchinson Affair.

What is the most expensive stamp worth

(Courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery); The Battle of Yorktown (Credit: Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images)

The Stamp Act, passed by British Parliament in 1765, often cited as one of the immediate causes of the American Revolution, was, in fact, a tax. It was levied on American paper used for legal, official or everyday useful documents: ship’s papers, business licenses, calendars, declarations, inventory, etc. —even playing cards. The “stamp” was applied to paper to denote that the tax had been paid. While the money demanded by the act was quite low and the act was repealed the following year, the damage was done.

The colonies were incensed at the notion that they could be taxed by anyone outside their elected assemblies. Mob violence and intimidation followed, forcing stamp tax collectors to resign their positions and driving away ships carrying stamp papers at seaports. Colonial orators, like Patrick Henry, as well as newspapers, seized on the issue of English tyranny taking the form of taxation without representation, building the wave to revolution some 10 years later.

4. ‘Blue Boy’ Alexandria Postmaster’s Provisional

What is the most expensive stamp worth

“Blue Boy” stamp (courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery); The Blue Boy by Thomas Gainsborough, 1770. (Credit: Francis G. Mayer/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images)

In the world of U.S. stamp collecting, the Blue Boy is akin to the Mona Lisa. Between 1845, when Congress established federally standardized rates for postage and 1847, when the first federal postage stamps were produced, postmasters in counties and cities within the 29 states issued their own provisional stamps. Postmasters got creative with the designs. For example, the St. Louis provisional stamps display the image of two bears holding the United States coat of arms between them.

Of particular interest are such provisional stamps from Alexandria, which was retroceded to the state of Virginia (from the District of Columbia) in these years. Seven such stamps are known to exist, but most of them are “buff” or a brownish-yellow color. Only one of them is bright blue—found on a love letter sent in 1847, that was supposed to be burned by its recipient—earning it the name “Blue Boy,” after the famous portrait—of a boy in fancy blue clothes—by English painter Thomas Gainsborough.

5. 1869 Pictorials—Inverted Center Errors

What is the most expensive stamp worth

Inverted 1869 pictorial stamp (courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery); The Signing of the Declaration of Independence, by John Trumball. (Credit: GraphicaArtis/Getty Images)

Stamp collectors love rarities, firsts and errors—and these stamps have all three, plus some politics. While the stamps were printed under President Ulysses S. Grant, their issue was conceived in 1868, during the fraught days after Andrew Johnson had been impeached, but still held on to power. Highly controversial and discontinued after one year, these were the first U.S. stamps printed using two colors. They also denoted scenes, like Columbus’s arrival in America (previously stamps had only featured portraits). The pictorials are also the first example of a printing error by the Post Office Department. To print in more than one color, each color had to be printed separately; the careless placing of several sheets upside down in the press resulted in the first American invert errors.

When a four-stamp block of the 1869 Pictorials (24-cent inverts featuring John Turnbull’s painting, Declaration of Independence) was sold at auction in London in 1938, it attracted worldwide attention. It was the first time a transatlantic telephone line was used to purchase a lot at an auction.

6. Two-Cent Blue Hawaiian Missionary

What is the most expensive stamp worth

Blue Hawaiian missionary stamp (courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery); Stanley Donen’s 1963 comedy Charade, starring Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn. (Credit: Movie Poster Image Art/Getty Images)

In 1963, Life magazine said this stamp “Pound for pound, is the most valuable substance on earth.” The stamp dates back to 1851, when Hawaii was a sovereign nation and a popular destination for American missionaries spreading the gospel. Yet the Kingdom of Hawaii’s postmaster was American, and Honolulu’s and San Francisco’s post offices were well-connected. Collectors love these stamps for both the rarity of their survival, as well as their fanciful numerals.

Interestingly, the 2-cent stamp didn’t serve much of a purpose—the only use was for a newspaper or the captain’s fee (ship captains received 2 cents for every letter they carried). Audrey Hepburn fans will recognize a stamp similar to this one from her 1963 picture with Cary Grant, Charade, but there’s a catch. In that film, where a Hawaiian Missionary stamp plays a key part in the intrigue, its value is 3 cents, but there was no such thing as a 3-cent Missionary, only 2-cent, 5-cent and 13-cent.

7. 1860 Stolen Pony Cover

What is the most expensive stamp worth

Stolen Pony Express mail (courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery); A Pony Express rider being chased by Native Americans. (Credit: Ed Vebell/Getty Images)

This stamp offers a peek into the American mythos of “cowboys and Indians.” Established in 1860, the Pony Express was a private mail service using a network of young riders and stations wherein mail could travel from across the country in approximately 10 days (the alternative was stagecoach or ship). Its parent company, Central Overland California and Pike’s Peak Express Company, is stamped on this cover. One Express rider, traveling east through Nevada in 1860, disappeared. Two covers from his mailbag, which was recovered two years later, survive to this day and bear the handwritten words: “Recovered from a mail stolen by the Indians in 1860.”

For all the Pony Express’s legends (both Buffalo Bill Cody and Wild Bill Hickok claimed to be riders; there’s no evidence either was), the outfit lasted only 19 months and was, in fact, somewhat of a publicity stunt by three businessmen attempting to win a government mail contract.

8. Pan American Inverts

What is the most expensive stamp worth

Pan American invert stamp (courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery); The assassination of President McKinley. (Credit: DEA/A. Dagli Orti/De Agostini/Getty Images)

Transportation was the key theme of the six commemorative stamps—featuring the bridge at Niagara Falls and a steam engine, among others—issued in 1901 to commemorate the Pan American Exhibition held in Buffalo, NY. Because these stamps were printed in two colors, the opportunity was ripe for error, and pictorials on the sheets of the 1, 2 and 4-cent denominations were inverted.

The Pan-American Expo is less remembered for its stamps or Jumbo—the 9-ton elephant, a hero of Britain’s wars in Afghanistan (who turned on his owner and was later executed for it)— than for the assassination of President William McKinley on September 6. McKinley was shot twice at close range by anarchist Leon Czolgosz as he greeted admirers at the fair. He died from his injuries eight days later (his vice president, Teddy Roosevelt, had been so confident of the president’s recovery, he went camping in the Adirondacks).

9. CIA Invert

What is the most expensive stamp worth

Inverted CIA stamp (courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery); The official seal of the Central Intelligence Agency. (Credit: Bettmann Archive/Getty Images)

They’re tricky, those CIA agents. Between 1975 and 1981, the Post Office released a series of Americana stamps, four of which depicted light sources. Of these, a $1 stamp—depicting a colonial rush lamp and candle holder—was printed as an invert on a single sheet of 100 stamps. In 1986, nine CIA agents who noticed the error, purchased the sheet with the 95 remaining stamps at the post office in Mclean, Virginia (the post office had unknowingly sold the other five to be used as everyday postage). The agents replaced the rare stamps with regular $1 issues, then sold a sheet with 85 of the inverted rush lamp stamps (plus one damaged stamp) to a collector for $25,000. Each of the agents kept one stamp for themselves. A scandal soon followed, and the agency demanded that the agents return the stamps or face termination (they had been purchased with taxpayer money, after all). Four agents returned their stamps, four quit or were terminated, and one agent claimed they had lost theirs and kept their job.

10. Stock Exchange Invert

What is the most expensive stamp worth

New York Stock Exchange stamp (courtesy of Siegel Auction Gallery); The New York Stock Exchange meeting under Buttonwood Tree on Wall Street. (Credit: Bettmann Archive/Getty Images)

This stamp gets recognition not only because it’s an invert, but because it’s the last invert that the United States Post Office printed, back in 1992—on a stamp commemorating the 200th anniversary of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Only 56 of these stamps are known to be in existence. Surrounded by a green border with red numerals, the inverted images include one scene of modern traders, depicted standing beneath a hub of monitors on the stock exchange, and an exterior view of the exchange’s neoclassical facade, at 11 Wall Street.

The NYSE was unofficially created on May 17, 1792, when 24 stock brokers signed the Buttonwood Agreement, which stated that the brokers could only trade with each other and that they were to earn a commission of 0.25 percent. It was signed outside of 68 Wall Street, under a buttonwood tree. The agreement was reached after William Duer’s overzealous borrowing (and defaults) caused a financial panic earlier that year.