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Not Lugers, but interesting German history and a lesson for all
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Posted this on the other forum, consolidating information from the original post and a response...
Like many of you, I'm sure, when I was a kid I was introduced to stamp collecting and spent many pleasurable hours matching stamps to spaces in the catalog and carefully affixing them with stamp hinges, sometimes without recognizing the historical context of the stamps. My mentor was a neighbor, an accomplished collector, who kindly provided me with a Harris Statesman album and a cake box full of stamps. As an adult I have collected U.S. Plate Blocks, but have never forgotten the start that kindled my interest. I still have that album and over the Thanksgiving holiday I happened to be reading a book about Hitler's rise to power, published in 1944. One of the chapters in the book discussed the fantastic hyperinflation of 1923, something I was familiar with but had never connected to my early interest in stamps. Something clicked and I pulled out my Statesman album and found the Germany page for 1923. It's fascinating, to say the least. My understanding is that before WWI a German mark was the equivalent of something like an American quarter, or about 4 marks per dollar. A wealthy person might have some tens of thousands of marks in the bank. Early German postage was denominated in pfennigs (100 to a mark, the German equivalent of our penny). By early 1923, inflation in Germany was already high but really took off during the year. The page of 1923 stamps I have pasted below starts with 100 Marks (already a huge amount compared to earlier denominations), but steadily marches upward at an exponential rate. In many cases the rates were changing so rapidly that they took lesser stamps and overprinted them with values thousands of times higher, which you will see over and over on this page. The largest denominated stamp I can find near the bottom is 20 billion marks. The wealth-destroying nature of that inflation, of course, aided and hastened Hitler's cause in railing against the bankers (some Jewish) during his rise to power. Sometimes you have little pieces of history under your nose and don't even realize it. You should be able to click on the image below to examine some details for each stamp if you wish. Follow up: The author of the book I read related a story that stuck with me. This isn't word for word, but the essence was: Quote:
Other modern examples of hyperinflation include Hungary in 1946 and Zimbabwe in 2007-09 - http://www.investopedia.com/ask/answ...rinflation.asp |
Sapcecoast, you have a fascinating stamp collection evidencing an even more interesting story/lesson for us all. Thanks for sharing.
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I spent some time in Argentina 1983-1984, right after the democratic government had been restored. The inflation was so bad that they had just converted their currency from Pesos to Pesos Argentinos by scratching the last 4 or 5 zeros (can't remember exactly). I recall one time we went out for a walk, and I had a fat roll of Pesos bills in my pocket. We stopped somewhere to get some ice cream, and I pulled up the money and started counting. Come to find out, even though I had my pocket full of Pesos bills, there wasn't enough to buy one single cone of ice cream. Fortunately, I had a couple of US dollars and the ice cream guy was more than happy to take that, instead of the worthless Pesos.
It was so bad that the stores were totally crowded on payday. Everybody wanted to spend their money as soon as they got it, to make sure it didn't turn into worthless pieces of paper. I even sent million Pesos bills (IIRC worth less than $1 at the time) to my friends at home, telling them not to spend it all in one place. :D |
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