Stabroek News Sunday

West Indies Cricket and Postage Stamps

In this week’s edition of In Search of West Indies Cricket, Roger Seymour looks at the first postage stamps issued to commemorat­e the game in the Caribbean.

-

Today, it seems as though every internatio­nal cricket tournament or Test series is acknowledg­ed by the host nation’s postal services issuing yet another first day cover and special souvenir packs of stamps, much to the delight of philatelis­ts and serious collectors of cricket memorabili­a. It wasn’t always like this. In fact, it wasn’t until 1962 that the world got its first postage stamp on the subject of cricket, issued by, of all places, Cape Verde Islands, the former Portuguese colony, located 660 kilometres off the coast of Senegal on the West Coast of Africa, where cricket was virtually unknown.

Over the next 17 years, stamps paying tribute to the game continued to trickle out at a relatively slow pace, and by the summer of 1979, only 75 stamps had been released in 38 separate issues by 24 territorie­s, including all the (then) Test playing countries, and diverse places such as New Caledonia, a French Overseas Territory in the South Pacific, and Sharjah on the Persian Gulf (which later served as a venue for nine Pakistan Test matches [2002 – 2016] and has staged the most

ODIs, 247, as of June, 2023). Surprising­ly, more than half of these stamps were issued by territorie­s in the West Indies.

First stamp

When Barbados attained independen­ce on the 30th November, 1966, four stamps were issued to commemorat­e the occasion. One of the stamps, which were released on the 2nd December, 1966, featured the island’s most famous cricketer, the world’s leading all-rounder, Garry Sobers, playing a flowing cover drive. The stamp was designed by Victor Whiteley (1922 -2002), an Englishman and one of the premier Commonweal­th stamp designers, who was credited with almost 500 creations in a portfolio of diverse subjects covering innumerabl­e territorie­s.

The first set of stamps dedicated solely to honouring the game in the West Indies was released by the Guyana General Post Office on the 8th January, 1968, to commemorat­e the visit of the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), the banner under which England touring teams appeared until 1977. The three stamps, also designed by Whiteley, were printed on a horizontal strip to form a composite scene of a match featuring intentiona­lly unidentifi­able players; a West Indies wicketkeep­er, an Englishman batting, and a West Indies bowler. The three stamps were released in denominati­ons of five cents, six cents, and 25 cents, respective­ly. The MCC Tour commenced in Barbados in late December 1967, and the Tour party did not arrive in Guyana until March. The same stamps were also issued by Jamaica on the 8th February, 1968, the first day of the Second Test match, with all three having the same value of 6d – sixpence. The issuing of stamps on the first day of Test matches has since become standard practice in the Caribbean, by the respective host country.

A third set of stamps commemorat­ing the English tour, also designed by

Whiteley, was issued by St Lucia on the 8th March, 1968, the first day of the match between the Windward Islands and the MCC at Victoria Park, Castries, St Lucia.

The stamp, issued in two denominati­ons of ten cents and 35 cents, featured a batsman playing a pull shot, along with an inset of a portrait of Sir Frederick Clarke, then president of the St Lucia Cricket Board and a member of the West Indies Cricket Board. Sir Frederick, who had captained St Lucia in the Windward Island tournament­s in the 1940s and the 1950s, also served as the island’s speaker of the House of Assembly and its first native governor upon attainment of associated statehood in 1967.

On the 1st August, 1969, under the title ‘Celebratio­n of Cricket’, Grenada released a set of four stamps in three, ten, 25 and 35 cents’ denominati­ons. The very colourful stamps all featured batsmen and were designed by M Shamir and L W Denyer. On the 26th November, 1969, Dominica followed its Windward Island counterpar­ts, St Lucia and Grenada, and released a single stamp designed by De La Rue and Co Ltd. The 38 cents stamp featured boys playing cricket at the Grammar School in Roseau, (the island’s capital), within a large ornate letter D with a portrait of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.

Antigua was the first of the Leeward Islands to join the fray, when it released a set of three stamps on the 15th December, 1972, to commemorat­e the 50th anniversar­y of the Rising Sun Cricket Club of Antigua. The trio were issued in denominati­ons of five cents, 35 cents and $1, and displayed a batsman playing an on-drive and a map of Antigua, a batsman cover driving whilst watched by a wicketkeep­er, and the emblem of the Rising Sun CC, respective­ly. The Rising Sun stamp incorporat­ed a laurel wreath design with 1922 – 1972 inset, and a portrait of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. The club was founded by Clemenceau A Perry, whose name appears on the $1 stamp, on the 22nd February, 1922.

All three stamps were designed by the prolific stamp designer Julian Vasarhelyi (1929 – 2013), who was born in Hungary and eventually settled in England in 1965, where he designed 7,500 stamps for 165 countries.

When the West Indies won the inaugural Prudential World Cup Tournament in June, 1975, a decision was taken at the Caricom Council of Ministers held in Jamaica in early July 1975 that a special stamp should be issued throughout the region to commemorat­e the West Indies’ triumph. The communique issued after the meeting stated, “Council noted the outstandin­g achievemen­t of the West Indian cricket team in winning the first-ever World Cup cricket series.

“It considered this achievemen­t to be a symbol of the unity of the region and an indication of the potential of regional cooperatio­n as a vehicle for projection of the region internatio­nally.

“It agreed that there should be a special commemorat­ive stamp issue throughout the Caribbean Community in recognitio­n of this outstandin­g achievemen­t.”

The repeat triumph in 1979 was never honoured with the issue of a set of stamps.

Twenty-six stamps were issued by 12 territorie­s (see box), including Belize, in a show of solidarity, although it is not associated with West Indies cricket. Antigua started the ball rolling, releasing its set of three stamps, which featured the first two sons of the soil to represent the West Indies – Andy Roberts and Viv Richards – and a photo of the West Indies World Cup. The stamps were designed by Vasarhelyi and issued in denominati­ons of five cents (Viv), 35 cents (Andy), and $2 (WI team). The stamp was overprinte­d with the name of Antigua’s sister island, Barbuda, and released on the same day with identical denominati­ons. Antigua appears to have acted on its own here, since all the other territorie­s issued the identical stamps, the following year albeit at varying dates and a wide range of denominati­ons. The first stamp featured a map of the Caribbean area, with stumps, crossed bats and a bat motif, with the issuing countries highlighte­d in red, while the second stamp, the higher value, displayed the Prudential Cup. In addition, three territorie­s, namely St Christophe­r-Nevis-Anguilla, St Lucia, and Trinidad & Tobago, produced miniature sheets containing the two stamps printed adjacently and enclosed within a decorative border. The stamps were designed by Guyanese artist Cletus Henriques (See postscript).

Bermuda, a British Overseas Territory, also issued a set of four cricket stamps on the 16th August, 1976 (In Search of West Indies Cricket, Bermuda’s Annual Cup Match, 27th August, 2023, for photos), commemorat­ing the 75th Anniversar­y of the annual cricket match between the Somerset Cricket Club and the St George’s

Cricket Club. The very attractive stamps were designed by Englishman Clive Abbot (1933 – 2008) and featured the silver trophy and the two clubs’ flags (5 cents), St George’s CC Badge and the club’s pavilion (17 cents), Somerset CC Badge and the club’s pavilion (20 cents), and the Somerset Ground (25 cents). All the stamps incorporat­ed the Crown Royal Cypher and EIIR.

Antigua issued four more stamps on the 28th December, 1976 under the title of 1976 Special Events, one of which featured the island’s two favourite sporting heroes of the day, Viv Richards and Andy Roberts on the 50 cent denominati­on. The stamp was designed by BG Studio.

On the 7th February, 1977 Barbados released three stamps to celebrate the Silver Jubilee of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, designed by Abbot. The first captured the knighting of Sir Garfield Sobers by Queen Elizabeth II at an open-air ceremony at the Garrison Savannah Racecourse on the 19th February, 1975 during the Royal Visit to Barbados. The stamps were reissued for the Royal Visit later that year on the 31st October,

Turn to 28A

 ?? ?? First Day Cover of 1975 Prudential World Cup Triumph issued by St Vincent
First Day Cover of 1975 Prudential World Cup Triumph issued by St Vincent
 ?? ?? First Day Cover of 1975 Prudential World Cup Triumph issued by Antigua
First Day Cover of 1975 Prudential World Cup Triumph issued by Antigua
 ?? ?? The first set of cricket stamps issued in the West Indies, Guyana edition - 1968
The first set of cricket stamps issued in the West Indies, Guyana edition - 1968
 ?? ?? First West Indies cricket stamp issued by Barbados in 1966 - Garry Sobers
First West Indies cricket stamp issued by Barbados in 1966 - Garry Sobers
 ?? ?? Mickey Mouse cricket stamp issued by Grenada in 1979
Mickey Mouse cricket stamp issued by Grenada in 1979

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana