type A
- the value is a small, thin number (see circle)
- there's no dot behind the number (see circle)
- the overprint of the year is 68 or 69 (1)
- there's also a district number (2)
later on, an additional district name is added (3)
- these stamps are rouletted in stead of unperforated
type B
- the value is a large, broad (see circle)
- there's a dot behind the number (see circle)
- the overprint of the year can be 68, 69, 70, 71 or 72 (1)
- there's also a district number (2)
later on, also district names are added (3)
On this B-type, overprints with "anotado" exists too.
There are 41 districts, each number corresponds with one district.
1 | Mexico City | 22 | Durango |
2 | Veracruz | 23 | Oaxaca |
3 | Guadalajara (to 1869) | 24 | Cuernavaca |
4 | Puebla | 25 | Acapulco |
5 | San Luis Potosi | 26 | Campeche |
6 | Guanajuato | 27 | La Paz |
7 | Monterrey | 28 | Chiapas |
8 | Mazatlan | 29 | Victoria |
9 | Matamoros | 30 | Saltillo |
10 | Morelia | 31 | Ures |
11 | Colima | 32 | Tixtla Guerrero |
12 | Queretaro | 33 | Huejutla |
13 | Zacatecas | 34 | Maravatio |
14 | Jalapa | 35 | Tula |
15 | Tulancingo | 36 | Aguascalientes |
16 | Toluca | 37 | Lagos |
17 | Pachuca | 38 | Tabasco |
18 | Orizava | 39 | Tampico |
19 | Merida | 40 | Tlaxcala |
20 | Cordova | 41 | Tacubaya (no stamp usage with "41" on record.) |
21 | Chihuahua | 41 | Guadalajara (1869 and after) |
various Hidalgo-stamps nr 1 to 41 |
Therefore, the unused nr 41 was given to Guadalajara.
The original 41 of Tacubaya (unused so far) got stamps with "1" as they became a subdistrict of Mexico City.
For an already extended collection, one district per stamp type will result in hundreds of stamps.
Additionally one can look for cancels of various cities as well, but that's a study on its own.
more to follow...
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