Hartford Courant

‘Bringing new life to stamp collecting’

Prize-winning collection highlights Hartford’s history back to 1700s

- By Christophe­r Arnott

A thematic stamp collection highlighti­ng the “postal history” of Hartford in the 18th and 19th centuries is heading to auction in March after winning several major awards. A result of years of searching for specific stamps and documents, the collection provided a rare perspectiv­e on where the stamps originated and how they were distribute­d.

“People have an outdated image of stamp collecting,” says Charles Epting of H.R. Harmer Fine Stamp Auctions, the New York-based firm handling the sale. “They think it’s still people in solitude, hinging stamps for themselves. Over the past couple of decades, it’s become more about collection­s shown competitiv­ely. There’s also a whole other layer to it when the stamps are still on the original envelopes.”

Anthony Dewey, who’s lived in Connecticu­t his whole life, studied engineerin­g at Uconn and is now retired, says he’s been collecting stamps since he was 8 years old and has always been fascinated with local history.

“I have a postcard collection of

Hartford as well,” says Dewey, who has exhibited competitiv­ely at stamp convention­s since 1991. “In 2005, I decided to do more with U.S. history, and someone suggested postal history markings. Early letters were not like [we] have today. Before 1847, the only option you had was pre-sized letter sheets, folded and sealed with wax.”

The collection is “essentiall­y mail to and from Hartford,” Epting says, “but Tony used it to create a history of America. He’s one of the people bringing new life to stamp collecting.”

Because of who could afford to send mail in the 1700s and 1800s, “essentiall­y everyone who’d get a letter in

those days would be sea captains or prominent city residents or Revolution­ary War soldiers,” Epting says.

The oldest letter in the collection is from 1717, nearly 60 years before the U.S. Postal Service began. It was sent through the British Colonial Postal Service and has the marking “On His Majesty’s Service.” The first Connecticu­t post office opened in 1775. At some times in history, the system had competitio­n from other postal services such as the Hartford Mail Route.

Among the local institutio­ns referenced in the collection are Hartford City Hall (via a letter from its then-mayor Thomas Seymour), Union Station (through letters sent by the Hartford, Providence, Fishkill

Railroad, which formed in 1849), the Hartford Insurance Company, Connecticu­t General Life Insurance Company, Steam Boiler Inspection & Insurance and The Hartford Courant, which was founded in 1764, predating the state postal system.

There are several pieces in the collection related to Charles Dudley Warner, who was editor of The Courant in the 1860s and ‘70s and cowrote the novel “The Gilded Age” with his Farmington Avenue neighbor Mark Twain.

When competitio­n judges told Dewey the cutoff date he’d imposed on his historical collection, 1900, seemed arbitrary, he looked for a more defendable date and realized that 1897 was when Connecticu­t opened its first branch office. That milestone came about because a local factory

didn’t want their workers to go downtown every time they needed to post a letter. “It perfectly reflected the growth of industry at that time,” Dewey says.

Dewey says he didn’t want to sell the stamps in the collection format he created but as separate items. He realized that they crossed over into different categories and interests. “I prefer that it’s sold the way it’s being sold, lot by lot. There are so many different aspects, like letters from the 1850s to China and Japan. I had gathered all these pieces together because they were tied to Hartford. I achieved my goal of exhibiting the collection. I couldn’t go any further with it. It was time to say goodbye.”

He says the collection won three national Grand Awards at philatelic convention­s. This is the first time he has sold the collection through an auction house.

“Tony’s belief,” Epting says, “is that so many pieces in his collection would fit into other collection­s. For example, prisoner-of-war camps. The main appeal of course in Hartford, but there’s a lot of crossover.”

“Digging into this collection forced me to look at Hartford in a different way,” says Epting, a history buff who lives in Duchess County, New York but has visited Hartford many times and has been to a Yard Goats game.

Other stamp collection­s have used cities as their main themes — Epting mentions ones centered around Philadelph­ia and Chicago — but Hartford is ideal for such treatment because it’s not too large a city and it was home to a number of world-famous letter writers.

“One item in the collection that jumped out to me was addressed to a publisher in Boston,” Epting says. “The

return address is ‘S.L. Clemens.’ That in itself is fantastic.” Samuel L. Clemens was the real name of Mark Twain. The envelope no longer contains a letter, but that document was located in a museum based on informatio­n from the envelope. Twain was telling one of his publishers that he no longer wanted them to handle his books. “It’s basically a breakup letter,” Epting says, adding that the existence of the envelope is also special. “Letters survive. Envelopes are much scarcer.”

“I have a few regrets,” Dewey says of the collection he amassed. “I never did a Thomas Hooker [letter or

envelope], though he wrote profusely, or a Jonathan Trumbull. Those items exist in institutio­nal collection­s.”

The only time the collection has been shown in Hartford was at a convention there a few years ago.

Dewey’s ready to move on to other collecting projects and let others handle these precious historic items.

“Holding a letter that was written to a Connecticu­t soldier in a Confederat­ed prison camp during the Civil War brought history to life right in my hand,” he says.

 ?? H.R. HARMER FINE STAMP AUCTIONS ?? This envelope from Samuel L. Clemens (aka Mark Twain) contained a letter telling one of his publishers that he no longer wanted to work with them. It was one of many items of local history contained in a stamp collection assembled by Anthony Dewey.
H.R. HARMER FINE STAMP AUCTIONS This envelope from Samuel L. Clemens (aka Mark Twain) contained a letter telling one of his publishers that he no longer wanted to work with them. It was one of many items of local history contained in a stamp collection assembled by Anthony Dewey.
 ?? AUCTIONS PHOTOS H.R. HARMER FINE STAMP ?? An item from Anthony Dewey’s prize-winning collection highlighti­ng the postal history of Hartford.
AUCTIONS PHOTOS H.R. HARMER FINE STAMP An item from Anthony Dewey’s prize-winning collection highlighti­ng the postal history of Hartford.
 ?? ?? “The Courant Almanac” of 1873 is part of Dewey’s collection of mail items that collective­ly explore the history of Hartford and its postal system in the 18th and 19th centuries.
“The Courant Almanac” of 1873 is part of Dewey’s collection of mail items that collective­ly explore the history of Hartford and its postal system in the 18th and 19th centuries.

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