#183 1878 2¢ Soft Paper

Basic Information

Color: Vermilion
Subject: Andrew Jackson
Paper: Soft porous paper
Printing method: line-engraved intaglio on flat plates
Printer: American Bank Note Co.
Perforations: 12
Scott #: 183
Quantity issued: 547,073,700
Issued: August 19, 1878

Value

An unused stamp with perfect gum: $170-$270
An unused stamp with gum and a hinge mark: $4-$8
A used stamp: $1-$3

About the large bank note stamps

A full pane of #183

"Large Bank Note" stamps refers to a major definitive series of postage stamps issued between 1870 and 1890. They are called "Bank Notes" because they were produced under contract by three private security printing firms—the National, Continental, and American Bank Note Companies—before the Bureau of Engraving and Printing took over production in 1894.

Key Characteristics
Size: They are called "Large" to distinguish them from the "Small Bank Notes" (or "Baby Bank Notes") issued from 1890 to 1894, which were reduced in size to cut production costs.
Paper and Grills: Early issues (National) often feature "grills" (embossed patterns intended to prevent reuse), while later issues moved from hard paper (National and Continental) to soft porous paper (American).
Secret Marks: To identify which company printed which stamp, "secret marks" (tiny design modifications) were often added to the original plates when contracts changed hands.

Historical Timeline
National Bank Note Co. (1870–1873): The original printers who introduced the designs.
Continental Bank Note Co. (1873–1879): Took over the contract and added secret marks to the 1¢ through 15¢ denominations.
American Bank Note Co. (1879–1890): After merging with Continental, they printed the same designs on soft porous paper and later introduced re-engraved versions with slightly modified details.

Usage

#183 on a hand drawn cover to New York City

#183 was primarily issued to pay for the local letter rate following a color change designed to eliminate confusion with the 10¢ Jefferson stamp. The change, implemented by the Continental Bank Note Company, updated the color of the 2¢ stamp.

#183a, #183b

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Double Impression
#183a
Click image to enlarge
Half used as 1¢ on cover
#183b

Plates

#183 was issued with the following plate #'s

338-39, 391-94, 412-13

The Inspiration for the Design

Bust of Andrew Jackson by Hiram Powers

The design was taken from the portrait bust of Andrew Jackson by Hiram Powers. Now at Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.

Model Origin: The image used was a direct adaptation of the realistic neoclassical bust sculpted from life by Hiram Powers in 1834–1835, which portrayed Jackson in his late sixties as "Old Hickory".
Design Characteristics: The portrait was chosen for its stark realism, showing Jackson’s sunken cheeks and wrinkles
Context: This design was the follow-up to the 1863 "Black Jack" stamp, continuing to use Jackson as the portrait for 2-cent mailings, which were frequently used for newspapers, magazines, and drop letters.