Color: Blue Subject: Abraham Lincoln Watermark: Watermarked double-lined USPS Paper: Soft porous paper Printing method: line-engraved intaglio on flat plates Printer:The Bureau of Engraving and Printing Perforations: 12 horizontally Scott #: 317 Quantity issued: Not known Issued: February 24th, 1908
Value
An unused stamp with perfect gum:$4,250 An unused stamp with gum and a hinge mark: $2,500-$3,500 A used stamp: -
About the 1902-3 definitive stamps
A Parkhurst Company Coil
Click the image to enlarge
Released between January and June 1903, these 14 definitive stamps feature highly ornate Beaux-Arts framing and mark the first time the subject's name, birth year, and death year were printed on regular stamps.
Other than small tweaks there had not been a change in the design of definitive stamps for twelve years. The 1901 Pan-American series had been a critical success both with the public and the media. Upon seeing this success the Post Office sought to capitalize on it by issuing a new highly designed definitive set.
This set would be heralded by a new value, the 13¢ denomination, meant for foreign mail and the first American Woman on a stamp, Martha Washington. The first woman to be depicted on a US stamp was Queen Isabella on the Columbian Series of 1893.
The bureau hoped that the new 'artistic' designs would create interest in the Post Office. Sadly the reverse was true. The new designs were much disliked by the public and the press. Particularly disliked were the 1¢ Franklin and 2¢ Washington portraits. They were considered caricatures of the presidents and were called Mr Dooleys, after a popular newspaper comic character of the time. So fierce was the backlash against the 2¢ design that it was replaced within a year by the 2¢ shield design.
Although the stamps say 1902 on the design, only two stamps were issued that year, the 8¢ Martha Washington and the 13¢ Benjamin Harrison. The Post Office stated that the date referred to the date of design, not issue. At one time it was proposed that there should be a further series, the 1907 series, including a separate issue for each of the United States twenty seven post offices. This would meant a large expense to philatelists to collect all twenty seven sets, so the idea was dropped.
The 1902 series begat some new experiments, the booklet stamp and coil stamps, both of which proved to be a great success. It also saw the introduction of the imperforate stamp, meant primarily for vending and affixing machine manufactures.
Usage
#315, one of three examples on cover There are no covers with #315
The 5¢ Grant stamp was primarily used to meet the 5-cent U.S. postage rate for letters to foreign countries within the Universal Postal Union (UPU). It was a staple of late 19th-century US international postage
The Inspiration for the Design
Lincoln source photo
The vignette was based on Matthew Brady's 1862 wartime photograph of Abraham Lincoln.
Surrounding the portrait, the stamp features highly symbolic artwork intended to project national patriotism and reconciliation. Flanking Lincoln's image are two allegorical figures—representing the Union and Confederate armies—clasping an olive branch of peace to symbolize a reunited country.