Great Britain, May 6, 1840 First Issues Collectors Club of stamps and philatelic material

South Russia: Don Cossack Republic.

October, 1918.

South Russia Scott #6
South Russia Scott #6

Perforated 14 x 14½ and imperforate, wove paper, no watermark, typographed.

Printed by Pryazovskii Krai, a newspaper in Rostov-on-Don.
Rostov issues. Surcharge on Russian stamps of 1909 -17
Description # issued Scott #
Imperforate. October, 1918
25 kopecks on 1 kopeck orange 1,400,000 6
25 kopecks on 2 kopecks gray green 10,000 7
25 kopecks on 3 kopecks red 20,000 8
Perforated 14 x 14½. November, 1918
25 kopecks on 1 kopeck orange yellow 100,000 1
25 kopecks on 2 kopecks dull green 250,000 2
25 kopecks on 3 kopecks carmine 150,000 3
25 kopecks on 4 kopecks carmine 200,000 4
50 kopecks on 7 kopecks blue 50,000 5

All issue quantities are approximate.

First issue consisted of 25 (kopecks) surcharges on contemporary 1, 2 & 3 kopeck imperforate Arms stamps (various printings). The printing order is known to have been given on September 26, 1918; actual issue date is unknown.

The press' limitations necessitated surcharging office sheets of 100 stamps one pane (of 5 X 5 stamps) at a time, and that somewhat awkwardly. As a result, there is a wide range of impression characteristics, due to the uneven pressures it exerted.

A fair number of mint copies (with a few cancelled by favour) were taken back to Germany by soldiers returning from World War I; postally used examples of these, however, are scarce (# 1) to rare (#s 2 & 3).

When these were issued, the ordinary letter rate was 25 kopecks. But after a little over a month in use, (in January of 1919), the Don Republic was obliged to subordinate itself to the Special Conference Government of General Denikin, which set the rate at 35 kopecks, making these almost useless for anything but the payment of money order- and parcel card fees, exascerbating the scarcity today of examples which actually went through the postal system and survived.

As with most Russian Civil War material, forgeries (both of the stamps themselves and of postmarks on them) are not uncommon.

All information on this page was generously contributed by Bill Wagner (WSRP, BSRP). He, and he alone, deserves all credit. Any errors in the presentation are solely the responsibility of the webmaster.

Get an overview of the South Russia issues around 1918 - 1920.

This page was last modified on Monday, 03-Nov-2003 13:57:22 PST