Sale 1242 — The Gordon Eubanks Collection: United States 1851 to 1856 Imperforate Issue
Sale Date — Tuesday-Wednesday, 12-13 October, 2021
Category — Three-Cent: Private Perforations
3c Dull Red, Type I, Chicago Perf 12-1/2 (11 var). Unofficial perforations all around which are scissors-separated at sides, slightly blunting some perfs, tied by large "PAID" grid with red "Boston Mass. 21 Jul." (1856) circular datestamp on folded letter to Fisherville Ten., contents include "I wrote you from Chicago"VERY FINE. ONE OF ONLY FOUR KNOWN 3-CENT CHICAGO PERF COVERS WHICH ORIGINATE FROM OUTSIDE OF CHICAGO.
The origin of the Chicago perforation was revealed in an article published by Jerome S. Wagshal in Chronicle 130 (May 1986). To briefly summarize his research, the inventor of the machine used to create the Chicago Perf stamps was Dr. Elijah W. Hadley, a Chicago dentist. He probably constructed the machine in 1854. Over a two-year period, beginning in November 1854, Dr. Hadley's device was offered for sale to the Post Office Department through R. K. Swift, a prominent Chicago banker and businessman. The distinctive 12.5-gauge Chicago Perf was applied to sheets of the 1c (Plates 1 Late and 2) and 3c 1851 Issue, the 1c being considerably rarer (see lot 126 for an example of the 1c).
The stamp on this letter was carried by a traveler from Chicago to Boston, a fact established by the contents. Wilson Hulme recorded only two such covers in his 1997 Chronicle articles about the Chicago Perfs--one from Rosedale Wis. (Sale 1224, lot 57) and one from New York (Sale 996, lot 3186). The cover offered here and the cover from Fort Des Moines, Iowa, in lot 182 are additions to the census.
With 2008 P.F. certificate. Scott value $8,000.00
