The St. Louis Bears are a set of Provisional stamps issued by the St. Louis Post office in 1845-46 to facilitate prepayment of postal fees at a time when the United States Post Office had not yet issued postage stamps for national use. St. Louis, whose postmaster, John M. Wimer, instigated the production, was one of eleven cities to produce such stamps. Bears were offered in three denominations: 5â, 10â and 20â; the earliest known postmark date on a stamp of the issue is November 13, 1845.
The use of provisional stamps became practical after an act of Congress on March 3, 1845 standardized postal fees throughout the nation at 5â for a normal-weight letter transported up to 300 miles and 10â for a letter transported between 300 and 3000 miles. (Before standardization, the many different postal rates in different jurisdictions had made fees too unpredictable to prepay all letters with stamps as a matter of course, with the result that recipients of lettersâÂÂrather than sendersâÂÂgenerally paid the postage on them.) St. Louis was one of eleven U. S. cities that issued these so-called Postmasters' Provisionals, andâÂÂowing to its distance from Atlantic population centersâÂÂthe only one to offer a provisional denomination larger than 10â. Moreover, none of the ten other cities produced a provisional stamp design so ambitious in its visual content (its homespun artistic realization notwithstanding). Some provisionals were merely handstamps; others offered engraved letters and numerals and/or reproduced signatures; while two presented portraits of George Washington, one of themâÂÂthe New York Postmaster's ProvisionalâÂÂengraved with considerable skill by a firm specializing in bank notes. The use of provisionals ceased in the U. S. after national postage stamps became available on July 1, 1847.
The following notice appeared in the Missouri Republican on November 5, 1845:
The stamps owe the name "bears" to the image that appears upon them: a drawing of the Great Seal of Missouri, on which two standing bears hold a heraldic disc rimmed with the slogan "Unite[d] we stand[,] divide[d] we fall." The drawing is meant to suggest that the bracketed final "d"s are covered by the bears' paws, but fails in this aim because artist miscalculated the letter-spacing. A third bear is discernible within the disc (in the bottom-left quadrant), which also contains a crescent moon and a sketch of the Great Seal of the United States. A ribbon beneath the bears' feet contains the State of Missouri's motto: Salus populi suprema lex esto (Let the well-being of the people be the highest law.)
The Bears were printed from a copper plate of six images arranged in two vertical rows of three, made by a local engraver, J. M. Kershaw. The plate was of the type intended to produce visiting cards; and another improvisatory aspect of the production is that each of the six stamps on the plate was engraved individually, with the result that no two are identical; each denomination exists in distinctive variants. (This is quite different from the state-or-the-art technique used for the New York Postmaster's Provisional, printed from a plate containing identical images replicated from a single die.) Although in use for only a year-and-a-half, the St. Louis plate was twice modified. In its original form, it produced only 5â and 10â stamps (the former in the left vertical row, the latter in the right). At some time in 1846 the Postmaster decided that a 20â denomination would be of use, and had the two top left images altered to replace their "5"s with "20"s. After sufficient quantities of 20â stamps had been stocked the plate was again reworked to restore the original 5â denominations. It is known that the first two printings produced 2,000 5â stamps, 3,000 10â stamps and 1,000 20â stamps; the final printing probably added 1,500 5â stamps and 1,500 10â stamps to the total.
"The use of these stamps of the St. Louis postmaster was entirely optional, and they never became very popular. The writer has examined a number of files of letters written from St. Louis in 1845, 1846 and 1847 without finding a single stamp thereon." Most of the bears were apparently acquired by two firmsâÂÂNisbet & Co., Private Bankers, and Crow & McCreery, Wholesale Dry GoodsâÂÂwhich used them for business correspondence and made them available to their employees and their families for private letters.
The first known listing of St. Louis Bears in philatelic literature occurred in 1873, but few examples of these stamps were known until 1895, when a porter in the Louisville Kentucky courthouse found a trove of 137 St. Louis Bears while burning waste papers in the furnace. These were authenticated by the noted philatelic expert Charles Haviland Mekeel and enabled him to confirm the existence of the 20â denomination (some experts had believed that the few previously known copies were forgeries). At that time, Mekeel could write "No stamps in the world have commanded the price that certain of the stamps of St. Louis have realized." More Bears have since surfaced and their prices have been far outstripped by scarcer philatelic treasures; nevertheless they remain impressively rare, particularly examples of the 20â value. Almost all of them, moreover, are in very poor condition. The most common varieties of 5â and 10â Bears (on greenish paper) are valued in the Scott catalogue at $8,000 in used condition and the 20â on gray lilac paper is listed at $50,000. Examples on other paper types are more costly still.