The Collections include a unique proof sheet of 26 Revenue 1765 Newspaper and Pamphlet one penny impressions showing the registration certificate, held in the
Board of Inland Revenue Stamping Department Archive. These were issued to apply the
Stamp Act 1765 intended to raise taxes to fund the defence of the American Colonies from the French. The tax applied to legal documents, licences, newspapers, pamphlets and almanacs in the
American Colonies, Quebec, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, Florida, the Bahamas and the
West Indian Islands. The taxes resulted in public protest and rioting. The tax was abandoned after a few months due to its unpopularity but the political damage contributed to the
War of Independence in 1775. , the first stamp designed for Queen Elizabeth II. Held in the British Library Crown Agents Collection. The largest object in the British Library is the Perkins D cylinder press developed by
Jacob Perkins and patented in 1819. This press was one of several used to print the first postage stamps of Great Britain and Ireland which were issued in 1840. The press was used for printing many early stamps for British Colonial territories from 1853 including for Cape of Good Hope,
Ceylon, Mauritius, St Helena, Trinidad, Western Australia,
Ionian Islands, New Brunswick, New South Wales, New Zealand and Victoria. The
£1 stamp issued in Jamaica (1956–1958) in the reign of
King George VI shows Tobacco Growing and Cigar Making. The first stamp for
Queen Elizabeth II was to be in the same design (chocolate and violet) but was abandoned after printing. There are only seven examples in existence. The cover of the British Library pocket guide
Treasures in Focus - Stamps features the 1913
King George V seahorse master dye proof, part of the Harrison Collection. The engraver, J.A.C. Harrison, took proofs during the creation of the die of which this image is one. The engraving was used on the high value stamps
2/6, 5/-, 10/- and £1. The Collections feature these rarities which demonstrate international scope: • Gold Coast: 1883 (May) 1d on 4d magenta, unique • India: 1854
4 annas blue and pale red, error head inverted, two used on a cover, unique. • Mauritius 1847
1d red used on cover and 2d blue, the "Post Office" issue 1d. orange-red, used on cover. The first British Colonial postage stamps were issued in Mauritius in 1847. • New South Wales: 1850 1d and 3d essays of the Sydney View issue. The first stamps of New South Wales, being 1d, 2d and 3d values, were issued in 1850. • Spain: 1851 2 reales, error of colour, one of three known. • St Helena:
1961 Tristan Relief Fund 5c.+6d., 7½c.+9d., and 10c.+1/-, used on a postcard. Only the Colonial Office in London could authorize new stamps, a fact clearly unknown to the Governor, and the issue was withdrawn. These are among the rarest of modern stamps as only 434 sets were sold. • Switzerland: Zürich:
1843 4 rappen, the unique unsevered horizontal strip of five. • Uruguay: 1858 120 centavos blue and 180 centavos green, in
tête-bêche pairs, two of five known. • Western Australia:
1854-55 4d blue, error frame inverted. • United States of America -
Inverted Jenny, one of a set of 100 postage stamps first issued on May 10, 1918, with probably the most famous error in American
philately and one of the most expensive stamps ever produced ==See also==