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What we collect!
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Asia/Other : "Mlty Admn." Burmese

 

Author
Postings
NoahM

16 Jun 2016
04:21:46pm
I have a fairly large pane (not a full sheet) of Burmese 1 pie stamps from WWII with Mlty. Admn. overstamp. They come from a family member who was atttached to the RAF there during the war and are unused. How would I evaluate them monetarily?

Image: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c6/Burma_Military_Administration_stamps_1945.jpg/220px-Burma_Military_Administration_stamps_1945.jpg like these, but larger and un-cancelled.
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michael78651

16 Jun 2016
04:44:45pm
re: "Mlty Admn." Burmese

They are Burma, Scott #35, and Gibbons #35. Minimal value assigned by both catalogs.

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smauggie
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17 Jun 2016
12:32:00pm
re: "Mlty Admn." Burmese

Here are the stamps in question:

Image Not Found

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nigelc
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17 Jun 2016
01:22:38pm
re: "Mlty Admn." Burmese

Nice block smauggie Happy

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malcolm197

26 Jun 2016
10:05:19pm
re: "Mlty Admn." Burmese

Mint stamps were "kiddie fodder" in the 50s and 60s.

Used other than Rangoon ( and possibly Mandalay) are not common.

Malcolm


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NoahM

23 Dec 2016
12:21:25am
re: "Mlty Admn." Burmese

"Kiddie fodder"?

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michael78651

23 Dec 2016
01:39:55am
re: "Mlty Admn." Burmese

""Kiddie fodder"?"



Meaning that the stamps were given away in small packets as a free gift to entice people to ask for a selection of approvals. Such advertisements were found on match books, and magazines like "Boy's Life" and "Popular Science".
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Author/Postings
NoahM

16 Jun 2016
04:21:46pm

I have a fairly large pane (not a full sheet) of Burmese 1 pie stamps from WWII with Mlty. Admn. overstamp. They come from a family member who was atttached to the RAF there during the war and are unused. How would I evaluate them monetarily?

Image: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c6/Burma_Military_Administration_stamps_1945.jpg/220px-Burma_Military_Administration_stamps_1945.jpg like these, but larger and un-cancelled.

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michael78651

16 Jun 2016
04:44:45pm

re: "Mlty Admn." Burmese

They are Burma, Scott #35, and Gibbons #35. Minimal value assigned by both catalogs.

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Members Picture
smauggie

17 Jun 2016
12:32:00pm

re: "Mlty Admn." Burmese

Here are the stamps in question:

Image Not Found

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Members Picture
nigelc

17 Jun 2016
01:22:38pm

re: "Mlty Admn." Burmese

Nice block smauggie Happy

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malcolm197

26 Jun 2016
10:05:19pm

re: "Mlty Admn." Burmese

Mint stamps were "kiddie fodder" in the 50s and 60s.

Used other than Rangoon ( and possibly Mandalay) are not common.

Malcolm


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NoahM

23 Dec 2016
12:21:25am

re: "Mlty Admn." Burmese

"Kiddie fodder"?

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michael78651

23 Dec 2016
01:39:55am

re: "Mlty Admn." Burmese

""Kiddie fodder"?"



Meaning that the stamps were given away in small packets as a free gift to entice people to ask for a selection of approvals. Such advertisements were found on match books, and magazines like "Boy's Life" and "Popular Science".
Like
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this post
        

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