Jusqu-a Airmail Markings- A Study Ian Mcqueen ^new^ -
A cover from Paris to Buenos Aires with a Jusqu’à marking reading “Jusqu’à Rio de Janeiro” would fly to Rio, then travel the rest of the way to Buenos Aires by steamer or rail.
The study is organized not chronologically but geographically and operationally, a structure that proves brilliant. McQueen first dissects the French colonial system, where Jusqu’à markings (often truncated to “Jusqu’à”) were highly formalized, specifying hub cities like Jusqu’à Beyrouth or Jusqu’à Hanoï . He contrasts this with the more improvisational British Imperial Airways system, where handstamps like “VIA AIR MAIL – TO KARACHI ONLY” served an identical function but lacked the linguistic elegance of the French term. The author’s exhaustive tables of known dies, ink colors, and recorded dates provide an indispensable reference for collectors, yet they never feel dry; each variant tells a story of a specific contract, a temporary route, or a commercial compromise. Jusqu-a Airmail Markings- A Study Ian McQueen
Whether you are a seasoned specialist in Latin American airmails or a general collector who has just discovered a strange violet handstamp on a 1930s envelope, Jusqu’à Airmail Markings – A Study is your map, your guide, and your final authority. Seek it out. The forgotten airways of the Aéropostale await. A cover from Paris to Buenos Aires with
It covers the classic era of airmail development, particularly the 1930s through the 1960s, a period of rapidly shifting airline routes and complex postal rates. Verdict for Collectors If you are serious about aerophilately postal history He contrasts this with the more improvisational British

