It was while working on the final stages of this edition that I realised a thread of early postal history runs through its contents. When the first stamps were released in 1840, they paid a flat, pre-paid penny rate regardless of how far a letter was sent, in contrast to the previous system, which charged by the number of sheets sent (‘Philatelic Firsts’). Initially, the Penny Black and Two Penny Blue transformed the way people in the UK communicated with one another, but their success led to stamp introductions around the world.
These new issues included Uruguay and Peru in 1856 and 1857, respectively (‘New Stamps’). In Switzerland, the different cantons introduced their own issues from 1843, along with the mysterious Winterthur issue of 1850 (‘View from Europe’), before the…
