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<B>UNITED STATES [M] Scott #C3a, 24c Carmine rose and blue, Center Inverted</B><P>From position 73 i

Currency:USD Category:Everything Else / Other Start Price:NA Estimated At:100,000.00 - 125,000.00 USD
<B>UNITED STATES [M] Scott #C3a, 24c Carmine rose and blue, Center Inverted</B><P>From position 73 i
<B>UNITED STATES [M] Scott #C3a, 24c Carmine rose and blue, Center Inverted</B><P>From position 73 in the sheet of 100, nicely centered with radiant colors and lightly hinged original gum. There is a truly insignificant pinpoint thin speck that, without the benefit of previous auction descriptions, it is doubtful we would have even noticed. In fact, it is not mentioned in the accompanying 1999 PSE certificate. The discoverer and original owner of the "Inverted Jenny" (the name "Jenny" derives from the nickname for the pictured airplane, the Curtiss JN-4) was William T. Robey. Robey bought the full sheet of 100 inverts over the counter at a Washington, D.C. post office on May 14, 1918, the day after the stamp was placed on sale. Soon afterwards, in order to forestall government agents, who were making an effort to have the sheet confiscated, Robey sold the sheet to the prominent Philadelphia stamp dealer, Eugene Klein, for $15,000 (a nice profit on the sheet's face value of $24). Klein, in turn, sold the sheet to Col. Edward H. R. Green for $20,000. Green, together with Klein, then divided the sheet into singles and blocks and sold all but a few key position blocks. This example is from the "Burghard" block (position 63-64/73-74), one of the original twelve blocks separated from the sheet by Green and Klein. This world-famous stamp can be found in a wide range of conditions. The one being offered here is extraordinarily fresh with outstanding color, bright paper and clean, fresh gum. It is one of the more attractive examples of this storied stamp in existence. Scott $170,000.00