The Carl Kilgas Collection of China
June 14, 2023

Carl A. Kilgas was born in Wisconsin in 1905 but lived most of his life on the US Pacific Coast, first in Seattle, Washington, where he began to collect China in the 1920s. He continued to expand the collection after moving to Portland, Oregon, eventually settling in Los Angeles. Joining the very active Southern California chapter of the China Stamp Society, Carl befriended several enthusiastic China collectors and became an active supporter of the annual Los Angeles Sescal stamp exhibition, regularly supplying exhibits of small portions of his collection. Over the years, he published articles in the China Clipper from 1976 to 1985. A member of the Collectors Club of New York, he published a series of articles in the CCNY journal outlining China's postal history, with illustrations of stamps and covers of from his own collection to tell the story.

It is difficult for philatelists today to imagine what it was like collecting China in the years before the Ma Catalogue's publication in 1947. Back then, collectors had to depend on general worldwide catalogues such as Scott, Stanley Gibbons and Yvert & Tellier. Imperial China's 1878-1883 Large Dragons were listed as only three major stamps, rather than the twelve we recognize today. The Dowagers were listed as one set of nine. Other printings were regarded as mere shade varieties. The only sense we can get of how things were back in those pioneering days is from the few articles that appeared in M.D. Chow's Philatelic Bulletin, Shanghai's Asia Stamp Journal, the British Journal of Chinese Philately, the China Clipper in America, and occasional books such as Lloyd Ruland's Express Stamps and Starr-Mills Chinese Air Post.

Fortunately, a few collectors were in the right place at the right time, and had a combination of patience, technical skill, intellectual curiosity, audacity, and love of Chinese stamps. The most well-known China collection formed by a foreigner during that period was that of the American Major James Starr, whose philatelic friendship with M.D. Chow in Shanghai was supported over many years by mail, through which they exchanged ideas on subjects such as plating the Large Dragons. Major Starr died in 1949, but his collection was held intact until 1991, when it was auctioned, 42 years later.

Despite his regional activities, Carl Kilgas was unknown to the international China philatelic community. All that changed when he was asked to provide a few album pages to the 1984 Rocpex exhibition in Taipei. Over the next few years, his telephone would often ring in the middle of the night. When he picked up the handset, a voice at the other end, usually some dealer in Taiwan, would identify himself and demand to buy his China collection. This happened too often and became so annoying that Carl decided not to sell anything. Almost forty years later, we benefit from this decision since the comprehensive collection that we are now pleased to offer has remained completely untouched.
The first part of the Carl A. Kilgas collection contains selections of his extensive holding of the Large Dragons, Dowagers and Chinese Imperial Post Coiling Dragons. Additional sales will follow later this year.
We hope you enjoy these sales and good luck in bidding

ImagesDescriptionCurrent Bid
Lot #274
CHINA Postage Dues
1904 1/2c-30c blue, complete set of eight, each overprinted "Specimen", fine-v.f.
S
Catalog #J7-14S
Price Realized
$500.00

Lot #275
CHINA Postage Dues
1904 1/2c blue, horizontal pair, imperf. between, h.r., v.f.,
*
Catalog #J7a
Catalog Value $3,000
Unsold
Lot #276
CHINA Postage Dues
1911 1/2c, 4c, 5c and 20c brown, set of four, first one without gum, others l.h. or h.r., fine-v.f., pencil signed Livingston (Early in 1911, six values in the new color reached Shanghai. They were placed in storage waiting for the blue stock to run out. The 1c and 2c were released on February 22nd. After the Republican Revolution, all Imperial stamps were to be overprinted for the New Republic, including all blue and brown Postage Dues. In later years, a few unoverprinted "brown dues" appeared; 5c was actually listed in the 1929 Scott catalogue. In 1946, when President Roosevelt's collection was auctioned off, the four unused values offered here, were discovered in the "Stamp Gift Album" given to FDR by Chiang Kai-shek in 1941. Complete sets of the four values are virtually impossible to find) (Chan DU1-4, $41,900)
*(*)
Price Realized
$65,000.00

Lot #277
CHINA Postage Dues
1912 1/2c-30c Republican Overprints by the Statistical Department, complete set of nine, l.h. or h.r., fine-v.f.,
*
Catalog #J25-33
Catalog Value $333
Price Realized
$200.00

Lot #278
CHINA Postage Dues
1912 1c brown, red overprint inverted, h.r., fine, signed D.Z.Chun,
*
Catalog #J26b
Catalog Value $550
Price Realized
$250.00

Lot #279
CHINA Postage Dues
1912 5c brown, red overprint inverted, l.h., fine,
*
Catalog #J30a
Catalog Value $550
Price Realized
$250.00

Lot #280
CHINA Postage Dues
1912 5c brown, red overprint inverted, used, fine,
O
Catalog #J30a
Catalog Value $340
Unsold
Lot #281
CHINA Postage Dues
1912 1/2c-30c Republican Overprints by the Waterlow & Sons, London, complete set of nine, l.h. or h.r., fine-v.f.,
*
Catalog #J34-42
Catalog Value $249
Price Realized
$220.00

Lot #282
CHINA Postage Dues
1912 1c brown, inverted overprint, upper left sheet corner margin block of four with gutter at left, n.h. but dried gum, fine and impressive multiple,
Box *
Catalog #J36a
Catalog Value $1,400
Price Realized
$1,000.00

Lot #283
CHINA Postage Dues
1913 1/2c-30c blue, two complete sets of eight, one overprinted "Specimen" in red, fine-v.f.
*S
Catalog #J43-50,J43-50S
Price Realized
$300.00

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