The explorer Henri Morton Stanley (1841-1904). No’s 162-167
Stanley, Henry Morton (1841-1904)
Explorer/author/journalist.
Originally named John Rowlands. Welsh-born reporter working for the "New
York Herald." Went first to Africa in 1871 to find the famous lost
missionary David Livingstone. Stanley, with Dr. David Livingstone, in the 19th
century explored and mapped much of what is today Congo. Books describing this
exploration: "The Congo and the Founding of its Free State" (1885)
and "In Darkest Africa" (1890).
Date of issue: 15 January 1931
Expiration date: 1 July 1938
Design:
Engraving: Graphical Institute of Paris
Printing:
Impression de Papiers-Valeurs, Paris
Typographical overprinting: Atelier du Timbre, Malines
Perforation: 14
Size: two different sizes are known (in the same sheet)
Sheet: 100
Marginal inscriptions: the stamps were printed in two plates, either a “1” or “2” is printed in the lower margin and “Atelier du Tembre Malines”
Circulation: see the series
No 162. 40c on 35, green, 1,563,300 stamps
No 163. 1,25F on 1Fr, pink-carmine, 539,600 stamps
No 164. 2F on 1,60, gray-black, 620,000 stamps
No 165. 2F on 1,75Fr, blue, 1,515,300 stamps
No 166. 3,25F on 2,75, lilac, 500,000 stamps
No 167. 3,25F on 3,50, carmine, 500,000 stamps
The series:
Stanley%20with%20new%20value%20162-167_bestanden/image002.jpg)
There are no variations or curiosities known for any of the above shown material.
No164 is known in a dark and a slightly lighter version