Item - #CA-027-2  

CANADA COVERS

1868 LARGE QUEEN ISSUE OF CANADA
#27a 6¢ YELLOW BROWN ON CROSS BORDER MOURNING COVER



6¢ Yellow Brown 1868 - Large Queen Issue
 

 
March 28, 1871 Blue Markham,
 U.C. Split Circle Cancel

#27 with blue figured cancel


Front
: Canada #27a 6¢ Yellow Brown on cover with blue figured cancel and matching blue Markham, U.C. split circle cancel.
Reverse: Black striped Mourning cover, soiled and embossed medallion.
Notes: This is a #27a used on cross border mourning cover from Markham, Upper Canada to the small town of Clarence in Cedar County, Iowa (Pop. now 1008). Proper 6¢ usage for mail to the US in this period. When Upper and Lower Canada were established in 1791, John Graves Simcoe was appointed the first Lieutenant-Governor of Upper Canada. Simcoe named the Township of Markham, north of the Town of York (now Toronto), after his friend, William Markham, the Archbishop of York. By 1857 most of the Township had been cleared of timber and was under cultivation. Villages like Thornhill, Unionville and Markham greatly expanded and new, specialized industries such as wagon works, tanneries, farm implement and furniture factories sprang up. In 1871, the Toronto and Nipissing Railway Company, with stations in Unionville and Markham, officially opened its line from Scarborough to Uxbridge. Initially, the railway brought renewed prosperity and rapid development. Farmers and millers had a more convenient means of transporting their products to Toronto. Other merchants had easier access to supplies and business boomed. This cover is from the Chisholm family correspondence, best known for William Chisholm (Upper Canada) (1788-1842), an Upper Canada farmer, businessman and politician and the founder of Oakville, Ontario. Descendants later relocated to Iowa.
Condition: Stamp is fine for the issue with missing upper right corner. Envelope reduced at left.
Contents:  None.
 


Reverse of Cover


Detail of Embossed Medallion
Offered by Berryhill & Sturgeon, Ltd.