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Roll of Distinguished Philatelists

Philatelic award From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Roll of Distinguished Philatelists
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The Roll of Distinguished Philatelists (RDP) is a philatelic award of international scale, created by the Philatelic Congress of Great Britain in 1921 to honour those who have advanced philately through research, expertise, or service. The Roll consists of five pieces of parchment to which the signatories add their names. New honorees continue to be added annually.

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First two pages of the Roll on display at the London 2022 International Stamp Exhibition, February 2022.
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King George V was the first signatory to the Roll.
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Selection of the signatories

Those who have assisted the development of philately through their research, expertise or giving their time can be candidates to sign the Roll if they are sponsored by one of the existing signatories. The following four years, the candidate is examined once a year with the other current ones by a Board of election.[1]:33

The ceremony of signature of the Roll happens at the annual Philatelic Congress of Great Britain.[1]:37–38 Under the Congress' rules, the signatories can talk and vote during the Congress.[2]

Forty-two philatelists were honoured posthumously on the first page of the Roll as "Fathers of Philately".[3]:9–27

Four other names were added in the 1950s at the bottom of the first page. In 1951, Edward R. Woodward (died 1931) and J. Stanley Telfer (died 1938) were honoured by the Board of election because they were two important philatelists and member of the Board. In 1956, because the Board was sure they would have been called to sign the Roll if they would have lived longer, United States citizen Clarence W. Hennan and A. Tort Nicolau of Spain were added too.[3]:26–27

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History of the Roll

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On 30 October 1919, Percy C. Bishop, a member of the London Stamp Club, proposed the institution of an "Philatelic Order of Merit" to honour philatelic writers. This order would be given more importance than existing philatelic prizes and would have an international importance. In late 1919, F. H. Vallencey, president of the club, presented the idea to the readers of his Stamp Collecting paper. In March 1920, a jury of five[4] published a list of twenty-five names who the jury selected from the ninety-one names sent by the readers and British associations.[5]

However, to gain official recognition, the London Stamp Club let the associative members of the 1920 Philatelic Congress of Great Britain in Newcastle upon Tyne decide the future of Bishop's idea. A sub-committee was constituted to find a new name and write rules of the award.[6]

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At the 1921 Congress in Harrogate, the "Roll of Distinguished Philatelists" was created without any discussion.[7] The subcommittee has already got the signature of King and philatelist George V on the printed parchment, the twenty-four of the selected by the first jury and fifteen other philatelists were already invited to sign the Roll on the last day of the Congress.[8]

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Starting in 1922, the selection of the signatories was annual except between the Congresses of 1940 and 1946 because of World War II.[9]

The "fathers of philately"

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The names of forty-two deceased philatelists are printed on the Roll page that was signed between 1921 and 1935. They were placed in the ribbons that ornate the two columns on each side of the page. They were included as "fathers of philately".[3]

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Mount Brown
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Philipp von Ferrary
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James Lindsay, 26th Earl of Crawford
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Thomas Keay Tapling

In 2021, two new names were added to the "fathers of philately" to represent the many German and Austrian philatelists who were omitted due to anti-German feeling when the roll was created immediately after the end of the First World War:

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List of signatories

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1921

Among the forty first signatories are twenty-four out of the twenty-five proposed by the initial jury[4] in 1920:[18]

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Edward Denny Bacon
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Edward B. Evans
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William Russell Lane-Joynt

Chosen by the 1920 jury, the British A. B. Creeke was forgotten by the Philatelic Congress' subcommittee in 1921.[8]

The subcommittee added fifteen philatelists in 1921[8] with a larger majority of Britons than in the 1920 jury's selection.[25]

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Frederick John Melville
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Charles Stewart Wilson

Finally, before the day of the first signing ceremony on 6 May 1921, King George V was the first to sign the upper part of the Roll ("George R.I.").[26] He was invited to do so because, when Duke of York, he was President of the Royal Philatelic Society London from 1896 to 1910, and was still a collector and philatelist with the help of the late John Alexander Tilleard and Edward Denny Bacon.

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See also

References

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