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(2) Old Mauritius Metal Two Pence Post Office Postage Stamps
Item #m835
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This item is already sold(2) Old Mauritius Metal Two Pence Post Office Postage Stamps
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The picture below shows a larger front and back view of the (2) Old Mauritius Metal Two Pence Post Office Postage Stamps in this lot. These are not dated and the year that they were made is unknown. We believe that they were intended to be jewelry items such as cuff links, pendant charms, or even key chains. The stamp is one of the rarest stamps in the world (see below). These are made of a gold colored metal. They may be plated. They aare not marked and they have not been tested for gold. They have an image of Queen Victoria and are marked as follows:

POST OFFICE
POSTAGE
MAURITIUS
TWO PENCE

These metal stamps each measure about 15/16'' x 1'' x 1/16''. They appears to be in excellent to mint as made condition as pictured.

Below here, for reference, is some information about the rare 1847 Mauritius postage stamps:

Mauritius “Post Office” stamps
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Country of production: Mauritius
Date of production: 21 September 1847
Perforation: None
Depicts: Queen Victoria
Nature of rarity: First British Empire stamps produced outside Great Britain
No. in existence: 27 (as of 1981)
Face value: Orange red: one penny, Deep blue: two pence
Estimated value: $4 million both on cover (last sale, 1993)

The Mauritius “Post Office” stamps were issued by the British Colony Mauritius in September 1847, in two denominations: an orange-red one penny (1d) and a deep blue two pence (2d). Their name comes from the wording on the stamps reading “Post Office”, which was soon changed in the next issue to “Post Paid”. They are among the rarest postage stamps in the world.

The stamps' history
They were engraved by Joseph Osmond Barnard, born in England in 1816, who stowed away on a ship to Mauritius in 1838. The designs were based on the then current issue of Great Britain stamps (first released in 1841), bearing the profile head of Queen Victoria and issued in two denominations in similar colours: one penny red brown and Two pence blue. Although these locally produced stamps have a distinct primitive character, they made Barnard's “name immortal in the postal history of Mauritius”. Five hundred of each value were printed from a single plate bearing both values and issued on September 21, 1847, many of which were used on invitations sent out by the wife of the Governor of Mauritius for a ball she was holding that weekend. The stamps were printed using the intaglio method (recessed printing), and bear the engraver's initials “JB” at the lower right margin of the bust. The words “Post Office” appear in the left panel, but on the following issue in 1848, these words were replaced by “Post Paid”. A legend arose later that the words “Post Office” had been an error.

The stamps, as well as the subsequent issues, are highly prized by collectors because of their rarity, their early dates and their primitive character as local products. Surviving stamps are mainly in the hands of private collectors, but some are on public display in the British Library in London, including the envelope of an original invitation to the Governor's ball complete with stamp. Another example is included in the Royal Collection of Queen Elizabeth II, and a third in private hands. Two other places where they can be seen, in Mauritius, are at the Postal Museum and at the Blue Penny Museum, both in Port Louis, the capital city. The two stamps also can be seen at the Museum for Communication (Museum für Kommunikation) in Berlin and in the Postal Museum of Sweden in Stockholm. A two pence blue is also at display at the Museum for Communication (Museum voor Communicatie) in The Hague.

The “Post Office” versus “Post Paid” myth
In 1928, Georges Brunel published Les Timbres-Poste de l'Île Maurice in which he stated that the use of the words “Post Office” on the 1847 issue had been an error. Over the years, the story was embellished. One version was that the man who produced the stamps, Joseph Barnard, was a half blind watchmaker and an old man who absent mindedly forgot what he was supposed to print on the stamps. On his way from his shop to visit the postmaster, a Mr. Brownrigg, he passed a post office with a sign hanging above it. This provided the necessary jog to his memory and he returned to his work and finished engraving the plates for the stamps, substituting “Post Office” for “Post Paid”. These stories are purely fictional; philatelic scholars have confirmed that the “Post Office” inscription was intentional. Adolphe and d'Unienville wrote that “It is much more likely that Barnard used 'Post Office' because this was, and still is, the legal denomination of the government department concerned”. The plates were approved and the stamps issued without any fuss at the time. Joseph Barnard was an Englishman of Jewish descent from Portsmouth who had arrived in Mauritius in 1838 as a stowaway, thrown off a commercial vessel bound for Sydney. He was not a watch maker, although he may have turned his hand to watch repairs; not half blind; and certainly not old; he was born in 1816 and was therefore 31 years old when he engraved the stamps in 1847. In addition, several rubber stamps used in Mauritius on letters prior to these stamps also used the words “Post Office”, as did the first two stamps issued by the United States in July 1847.

Philatelic discovery
The Mauritius “Post Office” stamps were unknown to the philatelic world until 1864 when Mme. Borchard, the wife of a Bordeaux merchant, found copies of the one and two pence stamps in her husband's correspondence. She traded them to another collector. Through a series of sales, the stamps ultimately were acquired by the famous collector Philipp von Ferrary, and were sold at auction in 1921. Over the years, the stamps sold for increasing and ultimately astronomical prices. Mauritius “Post Office” stamps and covers have been prize items in collections of famous stamp collectors, including Sir Ernest de Silva, Henry J. Duveen, Arthur Hind, William Beilby Avery, Alfred F. Lichtenstein, and Alfred H. Caspary, among other philatelic luminaries. King George V paid £1,450 for an unused blue Two Pence “Post Office” at an auction in 1904, which was a world record price at the time. Adjusting by inflation rate it is about £143,000 in 2016. The next day, reportedly one of his secretaries commented that “some damned fool” had paid a huge amount of money for one postage stamp, to which George replied, “I am that damned fool”. By 2002, the “Mauritius blue” was estimated to be worth £2 million.

The greatest of all Mauritius collections, that of Hiroyuki Kanai, included unused copies of both the One Penny and Two Pence “Post Office” stamps, the “Bordeaux” cover with both the one penny and two pence stamps which has been called “la pièce de résistance de toute la philatélie” or “the greatest item in all philately”, and numerous reconstructed sheets of the subsequent issues. Kanai’s collection was sold by the auctioneer David Feldman in 1993, the Bordeaux cover going for the equivalent of about $4 million.

In popular culture
One of the “Post Office” stamps is the MacGuffin in a 1962 episode of The Avengers titled “The Mauritius Penny”. Theresa Rebeck's play Mauritius is about two sisters who inherit a stamp collection perhaps worth a fortune, which includes both the deep blue two penny and the orange one penny “Post Office” stamps (to which the title refers). One of the Billy Bunter novels is titled “Billy Bunter and the Blue Mauritius”, where the blue two pence stamp is stolen and recovered.

Click on image to zoom.
(2) Old Mauritius Metal Two Pence Post Office Postage Stamps


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