|
1985
Eugene
N. Costales
(August 19, 1894 November 2, 1984) New York City
Costales
was a famous dealer, auctioneer, cataloger and philatelic advisor
of and about stamps of the United States. He entered the stamp business
in 1909 and joined the Scott Stamp and Coin Co. in 1916. From then
until 1926, he assisted John
N. Luff in editing the Scott catalogs. In 1923, he became the
first editor of the new Scott Specialized Catalogue of United
States Stamps, continuing until 1926 when he left the company.
He was to resume this task for Scott Publications in 1955, and remained
its advisor and pricer until 1971.
In 1932, Costales
founded his own stamp company, and began holding auctions in 1942.
Among his 61 auctions were portions of the Col. E.H.R. Green collection
and the important U.S. collections of Henry B. Close and E.F. Gore.
His sales included important sales of U.S. covers, especially western
covers. In 1950 Costales sold a portion of the Alfred
F. Lichtenstein collection, including a selection of western
covers and franks.
In 1952, Costales
donated a part of his philatelic library to the Smithsonian
Institution. In 1955 he joined Scott Publications and resumed his
editing of its U.S. specialized catalog. He was, from 1955 to 1971,
the pricing editor for Scott's Standard Catalogue.
“Gene” served as
expert for the APS for many years, and served the ASDA in many capacities.
He was an active member of the Collectors Club of New York and many
other societies. In 1982, the Philatelic Foundation presented him
with its award “for Meritorious Service to Philately” (now called
the Neinken Medal). In 1983, the U.S. Philatelic Classics Society
awarded him the Dr. Carroll Chase Cup for his establishing the Scott
Specialized Catalogue of United States Stamps. Costales received
the Luff Award in 1974 for Exceptional Contributions to Philately.
Mortimer
L. Neinken
(May 16, 1896 November 14, 1984) New York City
Neinken
was an outstanding collector, student and writer on U.S. classic
stamps. His 1960 book, The United States Ten Cent Stamps of
1855-1859, extended the earlier work of Stanley
B. Ashbrook, with whom he had studied and collaborated. Neinken
wrote United States: The 1851-57 Twelve Cent Stamp (1964),
a book for which he received numerous awards. He also extended and
advanced the earlier work of Ashbrook on the 1851-1857 U.S. one-cent
stamps in his 1972 book, The United States One Cent Stamp of
1851-1861.
Neinken was one
of the founders of the U.S. 3¢ 1851-1857 Unit of the APS (now the
U.S. Philatelic Classics Society). “Mort” was general chairman of
the “Perforation Centennial” of the first perforated U.S stamps
that was held at the National Philatelic Museum in Philadelphia
in July 1957.
Neinken received
the Luff Award in 1962 for Distinguished Philatelic Research and
the Lichtenstein Medal in 1971. He was the first recipient of the
Cryer Research Award given by the American Philatelic Research Library
for outstanding philatelic research.
He served as chairman
of the Philatelic Foundation as well as expert. In 1984 the Philatelic
Foundation presented Neinken its award “for Meritorious Service
to Philately.” He passed away soon afterward, and the award was
renamed the Mortimer L. Neinken Medal.
Dr.
Joseph Schatzkés
(August 28, 1898 April 28, 1984) France
Dr.
Schatzkés was renowned for his extensive research on French and
Mexican classic stamps and postal history. His French philatelic
studies included unusual cancellations on early French stamps, French
Offices Abroad and Military Markings of Colonial Mail. Dr. Schatzkés
collected several Latin American countries including Argentina,
Brazil, Chile, Peru and Uruguay. He also studied the postal history
and postmarks of early Mexico, and his book, The Cancellations
of Mexico, 1856-1874, published in 1964, received that year's
Crawford Medal.
Dr. Schatzkés served
as president of L'Académie de Philatélie, Club Philatélique (Paris)
and was on the Board of Trustees of the Musée Postal Française,
Paris. He signed the Roll of Distinguished Philatelists in 1963,
received the Lichtenstein Medal in 1974, and the Lindenberg Medal
in 1983.
1986
Robert
P. Alexander
(November 26,
1904 August 24, 1985) Washington, DC
Alexander
was a world-famous collector, expert, and writer on the stamps and
postal history of Japan. He was a founder, in 1946, of the International
Society for Japanese Philately and held membership number seven.
He served the ISJP for nearly 40 years in various offices, including
president. At the time of his death, Alexander was president emeritus.
Alexander edited
and published Japanese Philately from 1950 to 1955 and
was a frequent author. He had an outstanding collection of the Dragon
issues of Japan, but his collecting and writing covered the entire
scope of Japanese philately. He was editor emeritus when he died.
Lucien
Berthelot
(November 6, 1903
October 30, 1985) France
Berthelot
was a major figure in world philately, serving as vice-president
and then president (1947-1972) of the Fédération Internationale
de Philatélie (FIP). He led the FIP as it re-established itself
after World War II, organized world-wide international philatelic
exhibitions, and modified its rules and regulations to reflect the
changes made in the styles and categories of philately. Besides
his administrative functions, he usually served as a member of the
jury during his 25-year presidency.
Berthelot was also
active in French philately. He served as president of the Fédération
Français and was a member of L'Academie de Philatélie. Berthelot
signed the Roll of Distinguished Philatelists in 1972.
Richard
H. Thompson
(June 28, 1903
January 5, 1985) Baltimore
Thompson
was an ardent collector and philatelic activist. He was president
of the American First Day Cover Society (1964-1966) and won its
Philip H. Ward Award
for his writing on U.S Air Mail first day covers. He was also president
of the Bureau Issues Association (now the United States Stamp Society)
from 1968 to 1973, and chairman of its Board of Governors (1974-1977).
Thompson was president
of the American Air Mail Society (1973-1974). He served as a director
of the Society of Philatelic Americans from 1972-1977. His collecting
interests spanned the subject matter of all these organizations.
He used his skills as a practicing attorney to serve both the APS
and the SPA as a legal consultant.
From 1929 until
his death, Thompson was an active member of the Baltimore Philatelic
Society. He served as president on several occasions and was chairman
of its annual BALPEX stamp show. Thompson received many awards,
including the Luff Award for Exceptional Contributions to Philately
in 1982.
1987
Harrison
Donald Seaman Haverbeck
(October 9. 1913 September 26, 1986) New York
Haverbeck
was a world famous expert, collector, and author on the issues
of the Indian Feudatory States, Nepal, and Tibet. He wrote several
books, including The Postage Stamps and Postal History of
Tibet (1962), The Postage Stamps of Nepal (1963)
and Die Briefmarken von Bahawalpur (1964), as well as
many articles in these areas. From 1948 to 1986 he served on the
editorial board of the Collectors Club Philatelist, and
succeeded Henry
Goodkind as editor in 1970. He wrote extensively in the journal,
and served the Collectors Club of New York in many offices. It
awarded him its Lichtenstein medal in 1966.
Haverbeck served
on the expert committee of the Philatelic Foundation where
he used
his knowledge of eastern languages and of the stamps and postal
history of the Indian sub-continent. He signed the Roll of
Distinguished
Philatelists in 1970.
Dr.
Soichi Ichida
(December 30, 1910 June 30, 1986) Japan
Dr.
Ichida was an outstanding student and writer on classic Japanese
stamps. He was also a strong promoter of the advance of Japanese
philately on the international scene.
He wrote important
books and numerous articles on the classic issues of Japan. Most
notable are: The Dragon Stamps of Japan 1871-1872 (1959,
2nd edition 1971); The Cherry Blossom Issues of Japan 1872-1876
(1965, completely revised and expanded in 1971); The Six Sen
Violet Brown Native Paoper Stamp 1874 which includes
an abridged English Text. He received the 1966 Crawford Medal
for the Cherry Blossom book.
Dr. Ichida was
president of the All-Japan Philatelic Federation from 1961 to
1973, and a member of the FIP council from 1969 to 1984. He was
founding president of the Inter-Asian Philatelic Federation (FIAP)
in 1974.
He signed the
Roll of Distinguished Philatelists in 1971, received the Lichtenstein
Medal in 1972 and the Lindenberg Medal in 1981. He was presented
with the Luff Award in 1984 for Distinguished Philatelic Research.
Ernest
Anthony Kehr
(September 10, 1911 November 13, 1986) New York
City
Kehr
was one of philately's most distinguished spokesmen. He became
hobby news editor of the New York World-Telegram in 1935
and then stamp news editor of the New York Herald Tribune
from 1939 until the newspaper closed in 1966. He continued as
stamp columnist for Newsday (Long Island, NY) until his
death.
Over a forty-year
period, Kehr presented more than 2,000 radio and television programs
promoting philately. He wrote several popular books of which The
Romance of Stamp Collecting (1947) was a philatelic bestseller.
In 1964 he founded the Philatelic Press Club (later known as the
International Philatelic Press Club), and was chairman emeritus
when he died.
“Ernie” frequently
wrote on the current state of philately in the Collectors
Club Philatelist. Kehr received numerous honors. He was an
Honorary Fellow of the Collectors Club of New York and was awarded
its Lichtenstein medal in 1974. He signed the Roll of Distinguished
Philatelists in 1975. He received the Luff Award in 1976 for Exceptional
Contributions to Philately. In 1991, the APS established the Ernest
A. Kehr award for excellence in the promotion of Youth Philately.
1988

James
H. Beal
(February 23, 1922 July 26, 1987) Ohio
Beal
was a well-known expert on the stamps of Mexico and on philatelic
fakes and forgeries. He was one of the “Committee of Five,” who
led the APS effort to put the notorious philatelic counterfeiter
Raoul Ch. De Thuin out of business. He was an associate editor
of The Yucatan Affair (1974, reprint 1980) that describes
the story of this successful effort.
Beal served as
Chairman of the APS Stamp Theft Committee (1981-1987), and through
his efforts in working with the FBI, recovered many stolen stamps.
Beal and Herbert A. Trenchard were instrumental in the recovery
of a major part of the stamps stolen from the New York Public
Library in May 1977. Beal and James H. DeVoss have recovered two
of the "inverted Jennies" (Scott No. C3a) stolen from Ethel
B. McCoy in 1955.
Beal received
the Luff Award in 1985 for Exceptional Contributions to Philately.
Herbert
J. Bloch
(November 21, 1907 September 7, 1987) New York City
Bloch
was the leading expert of his time on European stamps. In 1936
he emigrated to the United States and became a stamp dealer. In
1943 he joined the H. R. Harmer organization and was the describer
for auctions of the famous collections of Alfred
H. Caspary and President
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Bloch was a member
of the Friedl Expert Committee, specialists in European stamps,
along with Otto Friedl and Edwin
Mueller, from its inception until it was disbanded in the
early 1970s. After it was disbanded, he became chairman of the
expert committee of the Philatelic Foundation. It presented him
its Neinken Award in 1986.
“Herbie” joined
Edwin Mueller at the Mercury Stamp Company in 1956 and continued
it after Mueller's death. He and Mueller sold some of the most
important European collections of that period. During his long
career, he helped build many famous collections. He
received many honors for his long and valuable service to philately.
In 1978, Scott Publications presented him its first "Outstanding
Philatelist" award.
Bloch signed
the Roll of Distinguished Philatelists in 1968. In that same year
he received the Luff Award for Exceptional Contibutions to Philately.
Bloch received the Lindenberg Medal in 1986.
William
Reynolds Ricketts
(July 29, 1869 October 14, 1956) Forty Fort, Pennsylvania
Ricketts
was the greatest philatelic indexer of all time. He was also one
of the greatest students and collectors of philatelic literature.
Ricketts built an enormous philatelic library which he used to
compile numerous indexes and bibliographies.
He wrote a series
of Reports of the American Philatelic Society's Committee on Philatelic
Literature from 1910 to 1917. He was librarian of the Southern
Philatelic Association in the 1910s and 1920s, writing various
indexes and bibliographies.
In the 1920s
and 1930s, Ricketts was a librarian of the Collectors Club of
New York, writing extensively about literature in general and
the Collectors Club Library in particular. During his lifetime,
he gave it portions of his library, including most of his foreign
language journals. He was one of the initial group of signatories
when he signed the Roll of Distinguished Philatelists in 1921.
His greatest
bibliographic contributions to philately were his two monumental
indexes of the articles and notes published about stamps and about
stamp collecting. One index catalogued everything about the stamps
themselves. The other contained the articles about the literature
of stamps and the history of stamp collecting. He began both in
the early 1890s.
In 1910, the
APS agreed to publish his index on the stamps, The American
Philatelic Society Philatelic Index, as a supplement to The
American Philatelist. Ricketts prepared the index cards, assisted
by Clifford W.
Kissinger and then sent them to Clifton
A. Howes who arranged, edited and prepared them for publication.
The index appeared
in the AP from 1911 to 1926. It went alphabetically from
the letter A through the letter G. Ricketts then decided he would
next publish his “U.S. Index”, which he had begun around 1908.
But the APS decided not to continue publishing his index. Stung
by this rebuke, Ricketts went on to other projects, mainly with
the Collectors Club, and added very little to his “U.S. Index”
during the rest of his life.
Ricketts privately
prepared and distributed the companion index, The Philatelic
Literature Bibliography Index, serially from 1912 to 1917.
It included the articles pertaining to the literature and history
of stamps and stamp collecting. The index covered the letters
A through Library. It has never been reprinted.
Only a portion
of Ricketts' index of United States stamps was published in his
lifetime. The sections on U.S. locals, carriers, postmaster provisionals
and Sanitary Fairs were published serially from 1912 to 1914 in
the United Stamp Company Herald (Chicago). These sections
were reprinted in 1990 in the Philatelic Literature Review,
journal of the American Philatelic Research Library.
In 1945, Ricketts
decided to sell his philatelic library. It was sold at auction
and privately by Paul Bluss of New York City. Among the items
for sale was the group of the “U.S. Index” cards that Ricketts
had worked on for over 30 years. George
T. Turner bought them. Turner also visited Ricketts to
see if any other index cards remained. Turner thus obtained
the edited cards Ricketts had used for his 1912-1914 United
Stamp Company Herald index, and the index to Ricketts' library.
On Turner's death
in 1979, these index cards and most of his library were bequethed
to the Smithsonian Institution. In 1993, when the National Postal
Museum was established, the Smithsonian Institution Libraries
took possession of the Ricketts index cards. In 1994, the SIL
agreed to allow the APRL to edit and publish Ricketts United
States Index. The cards were edited by Gini Horn, Director
of Library Services and published in PLR from 1995 to 1997.
1989
Dr.
Cyril Franklin dos Passos
(February
7, 1887 October 29, 1986) Philadelphia, New Jersey
Dr.
dos Passos was a renowned specialist and researcher on a variety
of challenging and controversial philatelic subjects. He wrote prolifically
on many topics, among them the 10-cent and 24-cent (1861-67) first
and second (premiere gravure) issues, all of the grills -
notably the rare B-grill - and all the Bank Note issues - especially
the 15-cent secret marks and the 10-cent and 24-cent varieties.
His works were
published mainly in The American Philatelist, the Essay-Proof
Journal, the SPA Journal and in the books of the American
Philatelic Congress. Dos Passos widely disseminated reprints of
his papers to his fellow students and specialists.
He had an exceptional
collection of U.S. locals, with a highly-specialized collection
of the Boyd's locals. He collaborated closely with Elliott
Perry on this and other philatelic subjects.
In 1981, dos Passos
decided to sell his collections and philatelic library through Robbins
Auctions, Inc (Louis K. Robbins). The sale of the U.S. material
and the library took place September 2223, 1981. In addition
to a large collection of proofs and essays, his specialized collections
were there, many lots including his detailed research notes containing
unpublished information.
His library contained
numerous important research documents. In particular, dos Passos
owned a typescript original of the work on U.S. locals written by
the controversial Henry C. Needham. Both dos Passos and Perry had
published information proving that Needham had tampered with covers
and published false information.
Dos Passos owned
a unique document of great historical interest to the students of
U.S. locals. This was the 36-page ledger kept by printer Thomas
Wood between 1854 and 1866 of the stamps he printed for George Hussey.
The recorded stamps (each with a copy tipped in) not only listed
the stamps used by Hussey for his own private mail service, but
also the imitations and reprints made of other locals which Hussey
then sold to the stamp collectors of the time. The flood of these
reprints and imitations made collecting U.S. locals in the early
days of philately a daunting task.
Vincent
Graves Greene
(February 11, 1893 July 22, 1988) Canada
Greene
was one of the best known Canadian philatelists, aptly called “Canada's
Grand Old Man.” His adult interest in stamps began in 1925 when
he specialized in Canada and the Provinces. He co-authored, with
C.M. Jephcott and J.H.M. Young, The Postal History of Nova Scotia
and New Brunswick, 1754-1867 (1964).
“Vinnie” was chairman
of CAPEX in 1951, 1978, and 1987. He served in nearly all of the
Canadian stamp societies and many international ones as well. In
1975 he established the Vincent Graves Greene Philatelic Foundation
in Toronto. Greene signed the Roll of Distinguished Philatelists
in 1963 and received the Lichtenstein Medal in 1964.
William
Hubert Miller Jr.
(September 1932 November 4, 1988) New York City
Miller
was an outstanding contributor to the advance of organized philately.
His collecting interests, begun when he was ten, centered on aerophilately.
He specialized in Zeppelin flights and Pigeon Posts, writing on
these and other subjects.
He was president
of Aero Philatelists, Inc. when it merged in 1973 with the American
Air Mail Society, becoming AAMS vice-president. From 1973 to 1985
he was its general counsel and a director.
He was chairman
of the Philatelic Foundation from 1978 to 1983, and from 1985 until
his death. He was awarded its Neinken Medal in 1985. He served as
president of the Council of Philatelic Organizations from 1984-1986.
Miller was a tireless
worker for the Collectors Club of New York, serving in many positions,
and acting as its counsel in obtaining tax-exempt status. In 1985,
he received its Lichtenstein Medal.
Prescott
Holden Thorp
(April 28, 1897 June 1981) New Jersey
Thorp
was recognized as a world famous expert and dealer of U.S. stamped
envelopes. In 1943 he followed in the footsteps of J.M.
Bartels, editing the fifth edition of Bartels Catalogue
of the Stamped Envelopes and Wrappers of the United States and Possessions.
He received the Crawford Medal in 1945 for this work.
"Pep" edited
the sixth edition, renamed the Thorp-Bartels Catalogue
of the Stamped Envelopes and Wrappers of the United States,
in 1954. This work received a number of awards. His Catalogue
of the 20th Century Stamped Envelopes and Wrappers of the United
States was published in 1968. Thorp also wrote a popular book,
Complete Guide to Stamp Collecting (1953), and was editor
and publisher of the monthly The U.S. Envelope World from
1949 until 1970.
Return
to Top
These
biographies were prepared by the APS Hall of Fame Committee. For
comments or suggestions, please contact Herbert A. Trenchard, Chairman,
APS Hall of Fame Committee, 6909 40th Ave., Hyattsville, MD 20782-1420,
or E-mail NPMLIB@yahoo.com.
|