The C&T as told by a stamp collector
Posted: Wed Jan 24, 2018 8:08 pm
Hello all,
My name is James and I am from Oklahoma. This is my first post as a new Friend of the Cumbres & Toltec so please bear with me as I start to negotiate this forum.
Stamp collecting is a huge part of my life. Not so much the stamps themselves, but their use on mail that can be a window to the past. By studying the mail that was sent from a place, you can travel back to that place in time. Back to the time when a penny postcard or a two cent letter was the quickest and cheapest way to stay in touch. At tangible thing that you can hold in your hand and feel that connection to a long ago place.
As the attached story tells, my wife's family owns a cabin in the valley just east of the Toltec Gorge. It is a timeless wonderland that 4 generations have enjoyed.
In 2015 we took a family vacation to the cabin and on our way out we took a trip on the C&T. Despite my wife's family owning the cabin since the '50s, it was her first time as well as mine. We were enraptured by the line. It was again that tangible thing that you can experience and feel a connection to a long ago place.
When a docent mentioned that Osier once had a post office, the philatelist in me was on it like a dog on a steak. I had to research and figure out how the mail interacted with the Cumbres and Toltec.
In 2016 I had my first short article published (attached) that was a good start at telling the story of the C&T through stamp related materials. Next month I will exhibit for the first time my exhibit "A Philatelic Trip on the Cumbres and Toltec Scenic Railroad" at AmeriStamp Expo in Birmingham, AL. Once that exhibit is shown, I will add a .pdf of it to this forum.
I honestly describe myself as a philatelist first. I pick little areas like the C&T and go crazy with it. It is nice to have a place to share my crazy with others that might understand.
All the best,
James Weigant
Bartlesville, OK
My name is James and I am from Oklahoma. This is my first post as a new Friend of the Cumbres & Toltec so please bear with me as I start to negotiate this forum.
Stamp collecting is a huge part of my life. Not so much the stamps themselves, but their use on mail that can be a window to the past. By studying the mail that was sent from a place, you can travel back to that place in time. Back to the time when a penny postcard or a two cent letter was the quickest and cheapest way to stay in touch. At tangible thing that you can hold in your hand and feel that connection to a long ago place.
As the attached story tells, my wife's family owns a cabin in the valley just east of the Toltec Gorge. It is a timeless wonderland that 4 generations have enjoyed.
In 2015 we took a family vacation to the cabin and on our way out we took a trip on the C&T. Despite my wife's family owning the cabin since the '50s, it was her first time as well as mine. We were enraptured by the line. It was again that tangible thing that you can experience and feel a connection to a long ago place.
When a docent mentioned that Osier once had a post office, the philatelist in me was on it like a dog on a steak. I had to research and figure out how the mail interacted with the Cumbres and Toltec.
In 2016 I had my first short article published (attached) that was a good start at telling the story of the C&T through stamp related materials. Next month I will exhibit for the first time my exhibit "A Philatelic Trip on the Cumbres and Toltec Scenic Railroad" at AmeriStamp Expo in Birmingham, AL. Once that exhibit is shown, I will add a .pdf of it to this forum.
I honestly describe myself as a philatelist first. I pick little areas like the C&T and go crazy with it. It is nice to have a place to share my crazy with others that might understand.
All the best,
James Weigant
Bartlesville, OK