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1/15 f/6.3 4.1 mm ISO 80

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netherlands
6556
HR 6556
mailmaster
hasler
roodfrankering
frankeermachineafdruk
franking machine impression
postage meter
franking machine
frankeermachine
HR
nederland
holland
frankeerstempel
meter stamp
postal meter


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Dutch franking machine impression – Hasler Mailmaster

Dutch franking machine impression – Hasler Mailmaster
When the Uniform Penny Post was introduced in 1840 in the United Kingdom, sending letters became very popular. Some years later, in 1873, the General Postal Union was established, making sending letters abroad easier. The success created problems too, because all these letters needed stamps and people to affix the stamps and other people to cancel the stamps. Stamps could also be stolen. This let to the invention of the franking machine, basically a machine that could make postage impression on letters and a counting device, which kept track of the postage used. Franking machine impressions didn’t need to be cancelled, that saved time.

The first franking machine was patented in 1884, but it took until 1921 until the franking machine was accepted by the Universal Postal Union. Franking machines were also used by post offices, for use at the counters.

Before the introduction of the euro Dutch franking machine impressions had elegant designs. Each manufacturer had a different design, some just line art, others had postal horns, the winged petasus (hat worn by Mercury), carrier pigeons or crown. See below for a good example:

Netherlands stamp type CB1.jpg
"Netherlands stamp type CB1" by Richard Stambaugh - Richard Stambaugh. Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.

When the euro was introduced, the Dutch postal authorities enforced a similar design for the value section for all franking machines. The name of the Dutch postal authority became part of the impression.

In 2007 the Dutch postal authorities only allowed digital meters, which could connect to the Post Office to download postage and the correct rates. Up till then franking machines were like gas meters. The Post Office visited everybody with a franking machine periodically to see how much postage was used and to check whether the seals hadn’t been broken. The impression of the new digital meters had no special design anymore, just a barcode which could be read by sorting machines.

For other examples of Dutch franking machines impressions, see here:
en.wikibooks.org/wiki/International_Postage_Meter_Stamp_Catalog/Netherlands

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