Page 138 - Standing Display
P. 138
in
(2
9.
12.
11.
10.
1867,
Trade,
Office.
State
includes
Minister,
items),
The
Lord
There
KING
Lord
Grahame Boutle.
last
Balmoral
Official
Order of Service
are
Alfred,
Admission
Paid
three
Cavendish,
Nottage, Lord Mayor of
Castle,
Deacon's Court member.
Lord
GOVERNMENT
from 1883, 1885 and 1918.
card",
and
OHMS
Official overprinted stamps.
GEORGE
a
Chamberlain,
the
Kitchener, cards in respect of
items
display includes a Timetable of
VI
plain
are
Privy
MISCELLANEOUS NOT
murdered in Phoenix Park, Dublin in
Tennyson,
Special
of Commemoration,
envelopes
Sandringham
Secretary
Purse,
for
to
Army
envelopes
ABLES.
Bonar
examples
House,
DEPARTMENTS,
MOURNING
the
sympathy
with
of
Law
William
Tickets to Westminster Abbey and In Memoriam cards.
and
Buckingham
Board
letters,
MISCALLANEOUS ITEMS OF INTEREST.
OHMS
Windsor
various
Funeral
a
Dr
Order telegram
of
etc.
Palace
These
Castle,
Gladstone,
There is a variety of
James
cachets;
The
COVERS/CARDS.
The
Admiralty and three blue envelopes for Income Tax, all stamped with 1
who
Bearer Pass
Undertakers
and the
Education,
notification,
Board
at
Wood,
in 1905, and Sir Charles Slingsby and the Newby Hall ferry disaster in 1869.
James ' Palace and a purple bordered Windsor Castle Bearer attendance card.
d I. R.
and
forty people drowned in Regent' s Park Lake in
Mourning Warehouse dress makers, whose bills are edged with a black border
was
1882, the Watts Town Colliery disaster
a
include Earl
the
relating to major personalities re Lying in State, Funeral notices, Admission
Prime
War
documents
display
London 1885, Benjamin Disraeli, William Gladstone
These include the Duke of Wellington, Viscount Palmerston, George
the
The
St
the Funeral Procession, a purple-edged "Lying
of
of
use of
When a
mourning.
growth of
member of
as harbingers of
the use of
The official period of
a black
Mourning covers were a visible part of
briefly displayed.
DECEMBER 2016
death and messengers of
grief
tradition has a black border as a mark of
border on the edges of
BEREAVEMENT BLACK BORDERS
A SUMMARY OF A STATIC DISPLAY AT
Government Departments when a sovereign dies.
respect.
THE ROYAL PHILATELIC SOCIETY LONDON
and sympathy.
mourning is six months into the new reign.
Black edged stationery envelopes and letter headings are used by
less coming to an end in the 1930s, though some are still used today.
death or funeral
The first posted mourning cover was recorded in Luxembourg in 1767.
The stationery used by the Royal Household and family, by
notices, on memorial and burial cards to honour the dead, and also the
Mourning covers are defined as black-edged letters, cards or envelopes,
the culture and social behaviour
people particularly in the Victorian and Edwardian eras. The gradual
the Royal Family dies, there is a six-month period of
used in many countries particularly in the mid-19th to mid-20th centuries,
black edges stationery for letters to and from those in mourning, is
In Britain it reached its peak in the late 1800s to early/mid 1900s, more or