Classic stamp

Williams suggests that the classic period extends from 1840 to 1875, and James A. Mackay, in his World of Classic Stamps, New York (1972) applied the term to stamps produced from 1840 to 1870.

Other collectors consider the classics cover regular issues to 1869, but include the re-issues of 1875.

[1] The U.S. Philatelic Classics Society (USPCS) is a society dedicated to the study of United States postal issues and postal history from the Stampless era up to 1893.

To some extent it conveys collectors' prejudices for or against particular countries or specialties.

For instance, the Canadian stamps of the 1930s are highly regarded for their design and production quality, and are routinely called "classics"; but the term is much less likely to be used of the US stamps of the same period, and very few would characterize the poorly printed Mexican stamps of the 1930s as "classic", even though Mexico's first stamps, the Hidalgo issue, are equally poor but always considered classics.

The 1-dollar "Black Bull" of the 1898 Trans-Mississippi issue is one of the great classic stamps.