Iringa
In 1869, German missionaries established the first German presence in the territory that would become German East Africa. In 1884, the Company for German Colonization was founded by German explorer Carl Peters, and immediately began establishing treaties with local chiefs in the coastal region.
Over the next decade, the newly-founded German East Africa Company would increase German influence in the area by opening customs houses and forming agreements with local chiefs and Sultans. In the last years of the 1880s, however, Arabs opposed to the increased European presence began raiding and killing German settlers. The German East Africa Company requested assistance from the Imperial government, which quickly came in the form of ships and men under the command of newly-appointed Imperial Commissioner Hauptmann Hermann von Wissmann. Within a year, the insurrection was crushed, and in 1891, Germany acquired sovereignty over the entire territory.
A military station opened at Iringa in mid-1896. In May 1898, a post office was opened there, to be run part-time by noncommissioned officers from the colonial troops stationed at the military post. It remained open until forced to close in August 1916 due to the war.
Iringa Boma, with PO in Right Side
Postmark Information
Catalog:
- Friedemann 18
- ArGe Kolonien IRINGA D-O-A
Dates of Use:
-
24 May 1898 to 20 August 1916
Notes:
-
Violet ink – July 1908
-
Blue ink – July 1909
-
Provisional “15” year slug – 1915
-
Provisional large “16” year slug – 1916
-
Provisional Berlin “16” year slug – from June 1916
Iringa
PO Information
Opened: 24 May 1898
Closed: 20 August 1916
In 1869, German missionaries established the first German presence in the territory that would become German East Africa. In 1884, the Company for German Colonization was founded by German explorer Carl Peters, and immediately began establishing treaties with local chiefs in the coastal region.
Over the next decade, the newly-founded German East Africa Company would increase German influence in the area by opening customs houses and forming agreements with local chiefs and Sultans. In the last years of the 1880s, however, Arabs opposed to the increased European presence began raiding and killing German settlers. The German East Africa Company requested assistance from the Imperial government, which quickly came in the form of ships and men under the command of newly-appointed Imperial Commissioner Hauptmann Hermann von Wissmann. Within a year, the insurrection was crushed, and in 1891, Germany acquired sovereignty over the entire territory.
A military station opened at Iringa in mid-1896. In May 1898, a post office was opened there, to be run part-time by noncommissioned officers from the colonial troops stationed at the military post. It remained open until forced to close in August 1916 due to the war.
Postmark Information
Catalog:
- Friedemann 18
- ArGe Kolonien IRINGA D-O-A
Dates of Use:
-
24 May 1898 to 20 August 1916
Notes:
-
Violet ink – July 1908
-
Blue ink – July 1909
-
Provisional “15” year slug – 1915
-
Provisional large “16” year slug – 1916
-
Provisional Berlin “16” year slug – from June 1916
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