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Louise Boyd Dale
Already
a stamp collector with a major collection, on the death of her father,
Alfred F.
Lichtenstein (1876-1947), the Vassar-educated Louise Boyd Dale (1913-1967)
inherited her father's world class collection. One should recall, however, that
in the 1940's philately was almost exclusively a "For Men Only" fraternity. This
did not deter the daughter of the great philatelist. She energetically continued
to build upon the great collection. Not content
to rest upon her father's philatelic laurels, she became a major philatelist
in her own right. She greatly expanded the U.S. area of the collection,
and many of the choice U.S. items from the April 19, 1989 auction of Harmers
of New York, like the unique imperforate pairs of the 1875 Government
Reprints of the 1857 issue, were her acquisitions. She also immersed herself
in philatelic scholarship and research, and she presented lectures at
the Collectors Club, most notably on "The Bordeaux Issues of France."
Long before women were fully accepted
in American society (e.g., at the time of her death in 1967, women
were still barred from attending Yale, Harvard or Princeton Universities),
Louise Boyd Dale rose to the top of American philately. In 1952
she was named Chairman of The Philatelic Foundation's Expert Committee.
Working with Executive Secretary Ethel Harper, Dale oversaw the
first move of the PF to its own facilities. In 1953, she persuaded
Alfred H. Caspary to serve as Honorary Chairman of the Expert Committee.
She continued to build up the Foundation's Reference Library and
Reference Collection, oversaw the establishment of the PF's weekly "Philately
on the Air" syndicated radio broadcasts, instituted the first
PF Seminars, inaugurated the PF's series of publications and entered
into an arrangement with Columbia University to grant college degree
credits for Winthrop Boggs' "Foundations of Philately" Course.
These were years of tremendous growth and expansion,
and under the tenure of Louise Boyd Dale the PF entered the modern
age. Dale was also an accredited philatelic judge, and in 1956
became the first woman to serve on the jury for an International
Philatelic Exhibition (FIPEX, New York). The philatelic community
mourned the passing of Louise Boyd Dale in 1967 at the age of 54.
In October, 1968, the H. R. Harmer firm commenced
a series of eleven sales of the first part of the famed Dale-Lichtenstein
Collection. In 1989, Harmer's of New York started bringing down
the gavel on the second part of this legendary Collection. This
series of auctions ranks with the greatest philatelic auctions
of all time, and stands as a monument to both Alfred Lichtenstein
and to Louise Boyd Dale. |