Postage Stamps
Postage stamps have served as money in areas as diverse as
America, Europe, and the Far East. During the American Civil War merchants,
struggling with a shortage of small coins, began the practice of making small
change with postage stamps. Daily purchases of stamps increased fivefold in New
York City alone, and individual stamps circulated until they became too dirty
and tattered for recognition. John Gault, a Boston sewing-machine salesman,
proposed the encasement of stamps in circular metal discs with transparent mica
on one side showing the face of the stamp. Soon the metal side of the discs was
bearing inscriptions of advertisements; one series of encased stamps bore the
slogan, “Ayer’s Sarsaparilla to Purify the Blood.” Denominations of encased
stamp money ranged from 1 cent to 90 cents, and one rectangular encasement had
three 3-cent stamps, making a 9-cent coin.
The government took up the idea of postage money and begin issuing postage
currency in denominations of 5-, 10-, 15-, and 50-cent stamps, and some of the
postage currency was even perforated around the edges to resemble stamps. The
postage currency soon dropped any association with postage stamps and became
simple fractional currency in denominations of 3 cents to 50 cents and bearing
the inscription “Receivable for all U.S. stamps.”
The British South Africa Company issued stamps affixed to cards bearing the
statement, “Please pay in cash to the person producing this card the face value
of the stamp affixed thereto, if presented on or after the 1st August 1900. This
card must be produced for redemption not later than 1st October 1900.”
Either during or immediately after World War I postage stamps circulated as
money in Germany, Austria, France, Russia, Italy, Norway, Denmark, Belgium,
Greece, and Argentina. Germany and Austria imitated the American practice of
encasing the stamps in a circular metal disc with a transparent face, and a
reverse side bearing an advertisement. France issued similar discs, but put a
numeral on one side indicating the value of the encased stamp. Russia issued
stamps on stout cards that bore the inscription “On par with silver currency.” The Russian stamps
were intended to circulate as money, but could also be used as postage
stamps.
During World War II Ceylon and the Indian state of Bundi issued small change
in the form of cards printed with contemporary stamps. In 1942 Filipino
guerrillas fighting the Japanese issued 5-peso notes to which stamps of the
appropriate amount were affixed.
In both World War I and World War II the British government declared postage
stamps legal tender, but the stamps were never encased for special protection,
or affixed to a special card.
Postage stamp money has usually emerged as money for domestic circulation
when wartime finance has mobilized hard currency for purchasing military goods
abroad.
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