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VERY FINE. ONE OF THREE RECORDED COVERS FROM TAHITI THAT WERE SENT VIA THE HONOLULU POST OFFICE, OF WHICH ONLY TWO HAVE BOTH TAHITI AND HONOLULU POSTAL MARKINGS.
This cover and another to Cognac with similar markings were carried in the same mail packet, so we shall describe their travels together. They were brought from Tahiti to Honolulu on the steamship City of Norfolk en route from Melbourne to San Francisco via Tasmania, Tahiti and Honolulu. The City of Norfolk left Tahiti on Jan. 28 and arrived in Honolulu on Feb. 16, where she docked until continuing her trip to San Francisco on Feb. 24. The mail from Tahiti entered the Honolulu post office and the covers were datestamped on Feb. 24. The City of Norfolk arrived in San Francisco on Mar. 19, and from there the mail was carried to Panama on the John L. Stephens, which departed Mar. 31 and arrived Apr. 13. After crossing the isthmus on the new Panama railroad, the covers were carried to New York on the George Law, which departed Apr. 15 and arrived Apr. 24. At New York they were placed on the Collins Line's Pacific, which departed on May 2 and arrived at Liverpool on May 13. After the channel crossing to Calais, they entered the French mail system and were delivered to their addressees, each of whom paid 8 decimes for ship-letter postage. The correct U.S. postage should have been 28c on each cover (26c for the American Packet rate to France from the West Coast and the 2c ship fee). The "31" cent on this cover incorrectly included 29c postage (the West Coast rate to England).
Mail between Tahiti and Hawaii was exchanged in accordance with a postal treaty signed on Nov. 24, 1853, and printed in The Polynesian on Dec. 10. The impetus for negotiating a postal treaty between Tahiti and Hawaii was Honolulu Postmaster Whitney's desire to be reimbursed for U.S. postage he paid to San Francisco on letters and newspapers sent between the U.S. and Tahiti via Honolulu. Accounts were maintained between the three postal entities which facilitated reimbursement.
Three covers from Tahiti to Honolulu are recorded. One is a newspaper wrapper from Tahiti to R. C. Wyllie in Honolulu, which he forwarded to the United States outside the mails, probably by diplomatic pouch (ex Pietsch). Only the two covers to France dated Jan. 27 have both Tahiti and Honolulu postmarks. The cover offered in this sale as lot 98 is from the Levegne correspondence, but it is dated two years earlier and, without any indication of origin, it cannot be traced to Tahiti.
Ex Adm. Harris (Image)
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VERY FINE. AN EXTREMELY RARE EXAMPLE OF MAIL FROM THE MISSIONARY SETTLEMENT AT NUKUHIVA TO HAWAII VIA TAHITI AND SAN FRANCISCO WITH POSTMARKS OF THREE DIFFERENT POSTAL SYSTEMS.
Nukuhiva is the largest of the Marqueses Islands in French Polynesia. Herman Melville wrote Typee based on his experiences on the island. In 1853 the Rev. James Kekela went as a pioneer missionary to the Marquesas Islands, where for a half-century he worked to eliminate cannibalism and tribal warfare. In 1864 he was honored by President Abraham Lincoln for rescuing an American seaman from cannibals. (Image)