Source: North Carolina Postal History Society Note: To view postal mark scans
for each Alleghany County town,
please visit the National Postal Museum website. The listing of postmasters by township has been included on this NCGenWeb Project website so it can be searchable through the site search engine.
In 1996, the North Carolina
Postal History Society published a four-volume set of books titled,
“Post Offices and Postmasters of North Carolina.” These carefully
prepared books, under the editorial leadership of Vernon S. Stroupe,
documented not only the post offices and postmasters of 6915 different
post offices in North Carolina from the pre-revolutionary times to
modern times, but also illustrated all known postmarks from these
offices used before the twentieth century.
A long-term project is now
underway to update that catalog with new postmark information from the
nineteenth century and to add the known postmarks from the twentieth
century. Since it will take several years to complete this work, the
North Carolina Postal History Society wants to share the development of
the new catalog as it is being completed, county by county. In this way
we hope to make available postmark data which is known now and not wait
until the whole catalog is completed.
The format we will use comes from
the original catalog. Each post office is listed alphabetically within
a county along with the postmasters of that office. Also shown are the
known postmarks of that office. The data has been created for each
county in pdf files that can be downloaded if desired for each county
separately.
In many cases, the file sizes are
large; however, we feel that those interested in downloading the
information for their own use will find a suitable means to access the
large files. They are easily downloaded for users with high-speed
internet access.
After downloading a file, the
catalog information is available to be used or to be printed out. All
the data from the original catalog is presented along with the added
new information. For each postmark, we will provide either the black
and white tracing from the original catalog or a color scan of a new
marking made from actual postmarks if available.
Some of the “color scans” will be
from black and white photocopies since that format was the only
information available. Each marking will show a new type number, the
dimension of the marking, the color of the marking, and the dates of
use that we have observed.
The rights to the digital
information contained in these files belongs to the North Carolina
Postal History Society; therefore, any use other than personal is
prohibited without the consent of the North Carolina Postal History
Society.
In determining the classification
criteria of the new markings, we have used the classification systems
that have been published by twentieth century postal historians. The
classification of duplex metal handstamps was published by Richard W.
Helbock and Dan Meschter in La Posta (May 1988). The Doane and 4-Bar
postmark classifications were published by Doug DeRoest in La Posta
(September 1990).
Tony Crumbley, who maintains the
Doane database for North Carolina, has provided the latest information
on North Carolina Doane cancels. The machine cancellation types have be
validated by members of the Machine Cancel Society. This society has
shared with us the current information of North Carolina machine
markings from their extensive database of United States machine cancels.
A large part of the new
information for this catalog has come from the Postal History
Collection at the North Carolina State Archives. Their support of this
project has been monumental. In addition, a substantial amount of data
has come from the Post Mark Collectors Club Research Center in
Bellevue, Ohio, where they maintain the largest postmark collection
found anywhere in the world.
Many new markings also have come
from Tony Crumbley’s extensive collection of North Carolina postal
history. Important updates also have come from the massive records
maintained by the editor of the previous catalog, Vernon S. Stroupe,
who never stopped collecting information about North Carolina postmarks
and graciously shared this data until his untimely death in 2006.
This page was last updated January 14, 2011. © 1997-2011 by the Alleghany County
Coordinator |