Space News
space history and artifacts articles

Messages
space history discussion forums

Sightings
worldwide astronaut appearances

Resources
selected space history documents

  collectSPACE: Messages
  Stamps & Covers
  Space Cover 733: Mismatched image and event

Post New Topic  Post A Reply
profile | register | preferences | faq | search

next newest topic | next oldest topic
Author Topic:   Space Cover 733: Mismatched image and event
Antoni RIGO
Member

Posts: 318
From: Palma de Mallorca, Is. Baleares - SPAIN
Registered: Aug 2013

posted 12-23-2023 02:39 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Antoni RIGO   Click Here to Email Antoni RIGO     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Space Cover of the Week, Week 733 (December 24, 2023)

Space Cover 733: Mismatched image and space event

The upcoming launch of an X-37B atop of a Falcon Heavy rocket made me go search through my X-37B covers and I realised that all covers I have were postmarked for launch or landing space event.

This made me wonder if there were covers postmarked before first X-37B launch on April 20, 2010 and... bingo, I found the cover shown here.

The space cover is postmarked Aug 8, 2005 from Korolev mission control for undocking STS-114 Dicovery from ISS. Image used as cachet is an artist conception made in 1999 which can be seen searching X-37B on Wikipedia.

And what is the link between X-37B image and date/place of postmark? None but attract the interest of collectors in buying this cover.

Sometimes I hate covers like this. Image, rubber stamp or cachet should reinforce, help or complement the space event of date and place’s postmark. Obviously, sometimes errors can be made because image is based on imagination of artist and not in a real photo of spacecraft (for secrecy reasons), or a generic cachet applied in multiple times with poor relation, but when error tends to be more attractive the cover for philatelic market, then it is better avoid it, as if the cover never would be existed.

Please, if you have other space covers with mismatched images in front of date/place postmark for this reason, feel free to post here and comment at your best knowledge.

Axman
Member

Posts: 325
From: Derbyshire UK
Registered: Mar 2023

posted 12-23-2023 08:56 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Axman   Click Here to Email Axman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I understand what you are saying. But, in mitigation to the cachet maker, he was Russian, and at first glance the image does look "space shuttle-ish." Without some intensive research I wouldn't know which rockets are pictured on the stamps either! Are the stamps as incongruous as the cachet?

(I shall search for a mismatched cover or two and let you know if I find any.)

Axman
Member

Posts: 325
From: Derbyshire UK
Registered: Mar 2023

posted 12-26-2023 11:17 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Axman   Click Here to Email Axman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Where do I start Antoni? I have so many! I have literally hundreds of launch covers that either display the wrong rocket or the wrong satellite that I'd swamp the thread...

So, instead I've gone for a theme: Manned Apollo missions — and I've narrowed that theme down into the further categories of the ironic, the confusing, and the amusing.

The Ironic.

Here we have not so much a mismatched image and event, so much as a mismatched stamp and location.

This is a postcard from my collection, of initial contact with Apollo 7 from the NASA tracking station on Guam. Like most of the rest of the Apollo series Guam contact covers, this is signed by the Station Director Charles Force. I find it ironic however, that the stamp used is the US 6c "Register & Vote." It's ironic because Guam is part of the USA, but its citizens cannot participate in US elections! I think this is the most inappropriate stamp I've ever seen on any cover I own!!!

The Confusing.

The second and third covers are two Beck US Navy rubber stamp recovery cachets for Apollos 13 and 14. Every time my album pages fall on these pages I think "Why?" Don't get me wrong, I admire Morris Beck and his covers, but, of all the imagery available to his imagination, why did he use the only parts of the moon landing spacecraft that were never ever going to be recovered for his recovery covers?!?

The Amusing.

I love this one. The first time I saw it I had to have it.

Here we have a mid-mission cover for the Apollo 15 moonshot.

It has a Cape Canaveral 1st August 1971 boxed slogan cancellation... "Anniversary of Man's First Walk on the Moon," on a cover entirely dedicated to man not walking on the moon.

Ken Havekotte
Member

Posts: 3761
From: Merritt Island, Florida, Brevard
Registered: Mar 2001

posted 12-27-2023 07:14 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Ken Havekotte   Click Here to Email Ken Havekotte     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Let me add a few mismatched cachet covers along with a couple of error cachet images if they qualify.

The top left cover features a bright colorful Philgraf (artwork by Tenzi) cachet of the Skylab Orbital Workshop Station in orbit with a docked Skylab manned Apollo command/service module attached. The postmark cancel and postage stamp used on it is for the joint American and Soviet Union crewed space rendezvous and docking spaceflight in July 1975. That's two completely different spaceflight missions not related at all.

The Skylab first day cover below at left has a partially correct cachet included, however, towards the bottom of the green-colored Artmaster cachet features a launch of a two-man Titan II rocket with a Gemini spacecraft atop from Launch Pad 19 at Cape Canaveral. There was no direct relationship whatsoever with the manned Gemini program from 1965-66 to Skylab in 1973-74.

The other two covers are Robert Rank Space Voyage cover issues for the passing of famed rocket and space pioneer Dr. Wernher von Braun on June 16, 1977. While Rank was well-known for his accurate and detailed cachet productions for decades, for some reason, he fell short on this von Braun twin cover issue.

Between the two covers there are several (6 total that I can detect) cachet text and picture errors. For starters, the correct spelling is "von Braun" and not "Von Braun." Secondly, von Braun didn't "head NASA during the first moon landing," but directed one of many NASA field spaceflight centers which was the Marshall Spaceflight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. Third: There is a picture illustration of von Braun assisting rocket enthusiast Rudolf Nebel "carrying V-2s at Peenemunde, Germany in early 1940's." They were certainly not carrying nor handling real 47-foot long V-2 rockets as the cachet depicts, but rather a couple of early liquid-propellant rocket models (not the Mirak family of rockets as some captions referred to). And it wasn't at Peenemunde in the early 1940's, but at the German airfield Reinickendorf (also Berlin rocket site) in 1930 that had been used for testing small liquid fueled rocket motor experiments.

Another discrepancy is in the text at bottom right of the White Sands Missile Range cancellation cover that reads, "Von Braun directed the launching of 1000s of V2s at White Sands, N.M., during the late 1940's." It's a huge error in that there were only 65 German/US V-2 rockets test fired from White Sands on U.S. soil during 1946-51.

Also on the Cape-posted cover there is an illustration of von Braun pointing at a rocket launch. The caption reads "Dr. Wernher Von Braun Points at Saturn 5 Launch at Cape Kennedy." It wasn't for a Saturn V launch he was pointing at, but rather an uprated Saturn 1 rocket (SA-8) in May 1965 while inside the blockhouse at the Cape's Launch Pad 37B.

Bob M
Member

Posts: 1892
From: Atlanta-area, GA USA
Registered: Aug 2000

posted 12-28-2023 06:45 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Bob M   Click Here to Email Bob M     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Space Cover #159, of April 29, 2012, entitled: "Space Cover Cachet Errors" also highlighted a number of cachet errors. These errors included an Artcraft FDC picturing John Glenn in the cachet, but pictured a Mercury-Redstone launch instead of an Atlas used for Glenn's MA-6 launch.

Ken Havekotte
Member

Posts: 3761
From: Merritt Island, Florida, Brevard
Registered: Mar 2001

posted 12-28-2023 07:36 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Ken Havekotte   Click Here to Email Ken Havekotte     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Wow! I had forgotten Bob's SCOTW #159 in which he and Juergen already mentioned the many errors found in a Rank Space Voyage Cover nearly 12 years ago.

I even missed the mistake of a "German V-2 rocket on WAC Corporal stage" as Juergen pointed out. But on another note, I didn't too much fault in Rank's mentioning of von Braun surrendering his team to the Americans along with many left-over V-2 rockets and components. The team had indicated to the U.S. Army that they had hidden a lot V-2's for future use if coming over to the U.S. to pursue their rocketry work. So the word "surrender" doesn't really bother me that much.

Perhaps I can include a few others not previously mentioned as there are many. Perhaps the error of Artcraft's first day cover issue, at first, depicting a Mercury Redstone rocket for Glenn's first orbital flight in 1962 is a more common mistake made by the popular first day cover producer.

Fortunately, though, Artcraft did their best to correct the launch vehicle mistake with a proper Atlas rocket, but does anyone know how many Redstone printed cachet covers were done before the error had been detected? It may had been many thousands.

cvrlvr99
Member

Posts: 208
From: Arlington, TX
Registered: Aug 2014

posted 01-16-2024 05:35 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for cvrlvr99   Click Here to Email cvrlvr99     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Great topic Antoni! Here's the poster child for a mixed-up cachet!

This cover was postmarked at Cape Canaveral on April 13, 1969 and the Orbit Cachet shows an Atlas-Agena launch vehicle, a 22,300 mile high orbit around the earth, a guy in a spacesuit, and words about the Manned Orbiting Lab (MOL). Neither an Atlas-Agena nor a 22,300 mile high orbit around the earth have anything to do with MOL. There are a lot of moving parts to this story:

The TRW Space Log shows a classified Atlas-Agena launch from Cape Canaveral on April 13, 1969, the date on the cover. Its orbit elements are not reported, likely classified. So far, so good.

The only launch for MOL was the November 3, 1966 test flight mentioned in SCOTW 731. But the cover above has words about MOL and a picture of a guy in a spacesuit. This is where the story gets crazier…

The TRW Space Log also shows the launch of NIMBUS 3, a weather satellite from Vandenberg AFB on April 14, 1969 (the day after the postmark above) on a Thor-Agena launch vehicle. It went into a polar orbit 1070x1130 miles high (not the 22,300 mile geosynchronous orbit shown on the cover). One of the tasks of NIMBUS 3 was to track an elk named Monique. The elk had an electronic device attached to it and the experiment was named Project MOnique the Elk, or MOE. So the cachet designer must have gotten MOE mixed up with MOL which really confused the cover! Clear as mud? Agreed!

And by-the-way, if you are curious about Monique, NIMBUS 3 tracked her on February 19, 1970 (covers are known). Unfortunately she died, but the backup elk (sounds like something out of "Fargo," eh?) Monique 2 was tracked on April 2, 1970 (covers exist).

End of story.

All times are CT (US)

next newest topic | next oldest topic

Administrative Options: Close Topic | Archive/Move | Delete Topic
Post New Topic  Post A Reply
Hop to:

Contact Us | The Source for Space History & Artifacts

Copyright 1999-2024 collectSPACE. All rights reserved.


Ultimate Bulletin Board 5.47a





advertisement