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Encyclopedia > Postage due

Postage due is the term used for mail sent with insufficient postage. While the problem of what to do about letters not paying the full correct fee had existed since the creation of regular postal systems, it was greatly heightened by the advent of postage stamps, since customers were now making their own decisions about the right amount to pay, without the assistance of a presumably-knowledgeable postal clerk.

France 1-centime postage due, 1882
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France 1-centime postage due, 1882

While at various times some countries have simply adopted the expedient of returning the letter to the sender, many others have taken the approach of delivering the letter and collecting the fee from the recipient. Initially the process was handled by a clerk writing something like "Due 3 cents" on the cover, but this was subject to abuse by letter carriers, who might write it on themselves and pocket the difference.


The problem was solved by France in 1859, with the issuance of official postage due stamps, affixed at the delivery office before being taken out to the recipients. Many other countries followed suit.


Postage due stamps (or "labels", to clarify that they have no value of their own) are not always affixed to individual letters; in the case of business mail, the total due might be summed, and the appropriate stamps added to the top letter in a bundle, or to a bundle's wrapper. The labels have also been used to collect money for other purposes, such as magazine subscriptions.

Czechoslovakia 500- postage due of 1918, used in 1926
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Czechoslovakia 500-haleru postage due of 1918, used in 1926

Since postage due stamps are almost always used only within a single country, they are usually quite simple in design, mostly consisting of a large numeral, and an inscription saying "postage due", "porto", etc; often there is no country name. As with definitive stamps, a variety of values are needed to make up specific amounts.


More recently, many countries have replaced postage due stamps with postal meters.

GB 6d postage due, 1959-63
GB 6d postage due, 1959-63

While technically there is no reason for postage dues to reach private hands unused, postal administrations have always been willing to sell them to collectors, and the postage dues of many countries exist in vast numbers, almost all unused and of negligible value. Valid usages on cover are much less common.


Reference

  • Richard McP. Cabeen, Standard Handbook of Stamp Collecting (Harper & Row, 1979), pp. 468-470

External link


  Results from FactBites:
 
Postage due - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (348 words)
Postage due is the term used for mail sent with insufficient postage.
Postage due stamps (or "labels", to clarify that they have no value of their own) are not always affixed to individual letters; in the case of business mail, the total due might be summed, and the appropriate stamps added to the top letter in a bundle, or to a bundle's wrapper.
While technically there is no reason for postage dues to reach private hands unused, postal administrations have always been willing to sell them to collectors, and the postage dues of many countries exist in vast numbers, almost all unused and of negligible value.
Postage dues can take many different forms (1403 words)
Postage due stamps have been used by many nations to ensure that proper payment is made for the delivery of mail.
Postage due stamps may look quite plain to some collectors, but generally they are utilitarian stamps, manufactured for function rather than for beauty.
Postage due stamps were used in addition to handstamped markings to provide some accountability for the funds collected while processing this mail.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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