Part 4 Read the following text for questions 21-29. STAMPS My parents called me Penelope and, as often happens with first names in the UK, it was
shortened to Penny. When I first went to school teachers teased me about my name. They started to
call me Penny Black. I had no idea why it was so funny or why they changed my name from White to
Black. Later I discovered that this was the name of the very first stamp. I was so absorbed I had to find
out more; I started collecting when I was eight.
Stamps are one of those everyday items that people, especially children, take for granted. In our
world of email and text messaging it’s almost impossible to imagine a time when you couldn’t
communicate to anyone in writing at all. Before 1635 there was only one person who could send and
receive letters in Britain and that was the monarch – letters were only carried to and from the Royal
Court. It was King Charles I who allowed the use of the Royal Mail to members of the public and that’s
when the Post Office system was founded.
But the whole process of sending a letter was both complicated and expensive. Because the fee was
calculated on how many sheets were written and the distance travelled. So, as a result it was only
businesses and the wealthy who could afford to send letters. All this changed on 6 May 1840 when the
world’s earliest adhesive postage stamp went on sale. Not only was the process of sending a letter made
easier but, at only one penny a stamp, it was also affordable for everyone. The impact of the Pe nny
Black was incredible. First of all literacy standards improved dramatically. Then economic growth
increased as people started to use stamps to invest their hard-earned money. No more saving your
pennies in a sock under the bed!
So a small piece of gummed paper revolutionised a country. But others were quick to follow. The
Brazilians were next issuing their famous ‘Bull’s Eye’ stamps on 1 August 1843, they were followed by
Switzerland in the same year, the USA and Mauritius in 1847 and then France and Belgium in 1849.
But far from having just an administrative function stamps also reflect the society that produces
them. I remember being fascinated by my first stamps from Magyar Posta – first of all I never knew
where
Magyar was and secondly because the stamps had a heroic, working class feel about them. There
were often pictures of young people working in agriculture or industry – scenes which would never
appear on a British stamp. In such a small image there was a clear message about the people’s attitude
to their work and country, and politics. In the UK, we favour portraying individuals famous for their
personal achievements. The person who has appeared on most stamps, other than a British monarch, is
Sir Winston Churchill, the prime minister during the Second World War. The second is the Italian-born
explorer Christopher Columbus although they tend to picture his ships, or places named after him,
rather than an actual portrait of the man.
For me one of the most interesting sets of stamps, historically, is the one issued in January 1900 by the
Nicaraguans. The US government had long been interested in a canal cutting through Central America
but couldn’t decide on whether it should be in Nicaragua or Panama. Then Nicaragua issued a new
definitive series of stamps whose main design showed Mount Momotombo with smoke billowing from
its highest point. A rival to the idea of Nicaragua being favoured circulated the stamps to every US
Congressman and Senator and as a result Panama was chosen. In fact, the volcano had been dormant
for centuries but the artist wanted the mountain to look more interesting!