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Jersey's Black History - £1.37 Sheet

Jersey's Black History - £1.37 Sheet

£13.70

A Sheet of 10 Stamps from our 'Jersey's Black History' issue.
South African artist Pola Maneli hilights individuals who played a part in Jersey's Black History with his powerful illustration style.
The stamp sheets give the discerning collector access to all the printer’s marks and any additional information on the selvedges. The selvedges include the traffic lights which is a term used by collectors to denote the check dots (or colour dabs) printed in the sheet margins of stamps printed by modern offset litho or photogravure methods. They assist in checking that all the colours have printed correctly.
Most of our selvedge sheets also contain a plate number; a numeral, occasionally with a letter suffix, usually inscribed on the sheet margins to denote the plate from which the stamps were printed - for example 1A.
All our mint/cto products are carefully prepared by our own team and supplied in glassine bags to ensure you receive them in pristine condition.

Date of issue 20-10-2022
Withdrawal date 20-10-2024
Printer bpost, Belgium
Size Stamp die size 40mm x 30mm
Process four colour process offset lithography plus litho metallic gold ink
Denominations £1.37

Additional Information

John Jea - Esteemed Methodist Preacher

Born in 1773 and kidnapped into the slave trade at the age of two, John was sent to church as a punishment by his enslavers but found faith in Christianity. Later travelling the world as a Methodist preacher, he was known for his 1811 autobiography, ‘The Life, History, and Unparalleled Sufferings of John Jea, the African Preacher’. Falling ill whilst preaching on the Island in 1817, he passed away and was buried in St Helier.

Additional Information

John Jea - Esteemed Methodist Preacher

Born in 1773 and kidnapped into the slave trade at the age of two, John was sent to church as a punishment by his enslavers but found faith in Christianity. Later travelling the world as a Methodist preacher, he was known for his 1811 autobiography, ‘The Life, History, and Unparalleled Sufferings of John Jea, the African Preacher’. Falling ill whilst preaching on the Island in 1817, he passed away and was buried in St Helier.


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