Archer's Prince Consort Essay
Archer
proposed to the British Government that he could manufacture
perforated surface printed stamps at a lower price than Perkins Bacon
& Co. The below are examples of
the Prince Consort Essay created for the proposal.
According to the Report from the Select
Committee on Postage Stamps (1852) the Prince Consort Essays were
apparently ordered by an engraver in Archer’s employment , Robert Edward
Branston, and executed by Samuel William Reynolds.
The first essay design depicted Queen
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Red Brown |
Black Perf..
16 |
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Plate Position
“H.” Matched Pair. One printed in black and
perforated 16 and other in red-brown imperforate. See figures 1-2 |
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Crack on bottom
"O" of ONE and "P" of PENNY (Fig 1) |
Gash at top of
"G" of POSTAGE (Fig 2) |
The
Prince Consort Essay was printed from electros taken from one master plate
of twelve. The twelve positions all have unique features and are
identified as positions “A” through “L.”
Position “H” has the above shown characteristics (fig. 1-2). The
essays were printed finished in brown,
red-brown, black, blue
and unfinished in blue, are known imperforate,
rouletted and perforated 16. The essays were surface printed in sheets of 36 (3 horizontal rows of
12), in sheets of 240 and in sheets of 252 (21 panes of 12) .
There are
38 examples recorded perforated examples known including four in red-brown;
three in blue and the balance in black.
Two of the three blue copies are included in the Royal and Phillips
Collections. The other blue copy and all of the red-brown copies are in
private hands. The only known rouletted example is in the Royal Collection