Seaside Architecture

z2014_Seaside_BFDC283
Available varieties of this First Day Cover - subject to stock
StockCode: 42426
Eastbourne, Oh! I do like to be beside the seaside, Special Handstamp
Limited Edition: A limited edition of just 100 copies Worldwide.
£25.00
31 Left

The above Royal Mail Seaside Architecture were issued on 18 September 2014 by Royal Mail and feature the following stamp designs: 1st Eastbourne Bandstand; 1st Plymouth Tinside Lido; 97p Bangor Pier; 97p Southwold Lighthouse; £1.28 Blackpool Pleasure Beach Casino; £1.28 Bexhill-on-Sea Shelter. The Weston Super-Mare British Rail Poster first day cover with the Eastbourne, Oh! I do like to be beside the seaside, Special Handstamp postmark has been produced by Bradbury and features these stamps which can make a very collectible and lovely gift.

Stock Code:42426
Issue Date:18 Sep 2014
Issue:18 September 2014 - Seaside Architecture
Stamp Type:Commemoratives
Stamp Details:1st Eastbourne Bandstand
1st Plymouth Tinside Lido
97p Bangor Pier
97p Southwold Lighthouse
£1.28 Blackpool Pleasure Beach Casino
£1.28 Bexhill-on-Sea Shelter
Producer/Series:Bradbury ( BFDC No 283 )
Postmark:Eastbourne, Oh! I do like to be beside the seaside, Special Handstamp
Notes:

These covers are hand made from the finest quality linen textured paper.

The seaside town evolved as a place where the visitor could find a fantasy environment and enjoy entertainments that could not be found elsewhere.
The seaside holiday is a British invention. Scarborough has the honour of being the world’s first seaside resort and is also the location of the first recorded use of the ‘bathing machine’ (1735). It was in the 18th century that visits to the seaside for the health effects of the sea air became fashionable with the wealthy. Getting to the coast though could pose a problem with the choice of expensive stage coaches or slow sailing vessels. The first piers arose as a solution to reaching these seaside watering places. The first (Ryde Pier, on the Isle of Wight, 1814) was simply a platform to make getting on and off boats easier. With the growth in reliable
steam-driven vessels and regular services to places like Margate and Weymouth, piers became the alternative
to wading through water or being carried ashore from the boats.

Availability:In Stock
Reference Images:

 

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