$5 Green
Printing Method: Flat Plate
Subject: John Marshall
Number issued: 217,167
Perforations: 10
Watermark: Unwatermarked
Scott #: 480
Issued: March 22nd, 1917
Used
$18 - $25
No postmark with gum (MH)
$100 - $400
Full perfect gum, no postmark
no trace of stamp hinge mark (MNH)
$180 - $250
Earliest known use of #480, April 6, 1917
A scarce plate block
Sold at Harmers, April 2021 for $2,478
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Early in 1917 there was a sudden demand for high value postage stamps. This country was sending numerous shipments of machine parts to Russia by Parcel Post and valuable shipments of Liberty Bonds also required large amounts of postage. The demand was unexpected and the Bureau had no time to prepare new designs so the series of 1902 master dies were used to prepare new plates, as the original plates and transfer rolls had been destroyed. These new plates were of 200 subjects, cut vertically into panes of 100 leaving the horizontal row blocks intact.
These stamps were replaced by a new issue about a year and a half later, but the Bureau delivered the two dollar stamps as late as the fiscal year of 1920 and the five dollar stamp up to 1924. Having been used in quantities on heavy industrial parcels, used blocks are quite common, the $2 being more desirable as the five dollar was usually used in larger blocks
#480 was issued with the following plate #
Number only
8016
The vignette portrait was based on the 1832 painting of John Marshall by Henry Inman