There should be some new slogans in June. but we can start off with the British Heart Foundation standard slogan from Edinburgh Mail Centre on 01-06-2026, thanks to JH.
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| British Heart Foundation Edinburgh Mail Centre 01-06-2026 |
This will be interrupted in the next few days as Royal Mail honour our Armed Forces.
Armed Forces Week should start on 19 June for deliveries on 20th - 23rd.
Armed Forces Day should start on 23rd June for deliveries on 24th - 26th June.
The British Heart Foundation should follow again after that.
So let's hope some of us receive stamped mail with some of these usages.
Armed Forces Week 22nd - 28th June 2026. LT has sent a good example from Sheffield 20/06/2026, and JM a similar one from North West Midlands 22/06/2026
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| Armed Forces Week North West Midlands 22/06/2026 |
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| Armed Forces Week Sheffield Mail Centre 20/06/2026 |
I actually received one of these from Nottingham dated 23rd but it isn't as good as these!
Armed Forces Day 27 June 2026
Again, thanks to LT for one from Sheffield dated 26/06/2026 - a very clean example! And JM has sent a one at the other extreme. so much so that I can't work out where it is from!
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| Armed Forces Day Sheffield Mail Centre 26/06/2026 |
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| Armed Forces Day, ? Mail Centre 24?-06-2026 |
British Heart Foundation standard slogan was then reused; here's an example from Manchester Mail Centre 29/06/2026.
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| British Heart Foundation Manchester Mail Centre 29/06/2026 |
OTHER POSTMARKS AND POSTAL MARKINGS
This year marks the 50th birthday of the Postal Mechanisation Study Circle. I'm not a member of this (but I am a member of several specialist societies), but I exchange information with their Jeremy Meal.
"The Circle's liaison contact at Royal Mail has been able to
produce a further development of our 25th (and before that, as an
ordinary slogan die cancel, a 15th) Anniversary slogan for our
current 50th Anniversary celebrations; kindly produced towards the
end of May at Bristol MC on an IMP.
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| 50th Anniversary of Postal Mechanisation Study Circle |
Jeremy writes:
Please find attached a scan of the slogan itself (above) plus the
whole envelope with the commemorative text description in the
style of the previous series of PMSC covers, but not numbered 301
as we stopped production at 300 in the series.
I now have
permission, on a first come first served basis, to make spares
available (while stocks last!) to slogan collectors more widely
but only on a one per person basis on application to me at the
address on the cover at a price of £4 (UK), £7 (International) to cover production costs
and mailing out.
Please make your cheque payable to the Postal
Mechanisation Study Circle (written in full NOT abbreviated PMSC)
and NOT made out to Jeremy but please remember to tell him your
address so it can be posted back out to you!! Just to repeat,
Jeremy's address is on the illustration of the cover here on this
blog entry, please don't write to us at Norphil!
Thanks to JF for these three branch postmarks. Firstly one that simply reads MARK 09 JUN 2026. Now if you didn't know there was a village with the simple name of MARK you might think that there was something missing! I actually went through it last year, when we were in Somerset. The origin of the name is believed to mean A boundary of property from the Old English mærc.
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| Mark, Somerset, Morse-style counter datestamp. |
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| Mark Post Office & Village Stores from Google Streetview. |
Staying in Somerset, the name of Windwhistle is a historic, rural hamlet and high ridge in South Somerset near Cricket St Thomas, best known for the 17th-century Windwhistle Inn, said to be the only pub with that name in the country - and now even that seems to be closed.
But the post office is in the Bournville area of Weston-Super-Mare (who knew that there was another one, where they don't make chocolate?!), and is apparently named after another Windwhistle inn (Facebook link) which opened in 1954, was replaced in 1963, and later demolished for more modern housing. (We visited a Windwhistle west of Christchurch in New Zealand; that one is a gorge rather than a ridge, used for white water sports.)
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| Windwhistle self-inking datestamp 30 DE 24 |
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| Windwhistle post office from Google Streetview 2024 |
Fore Street post office in Taunton, Somerset, is located in T G Jones, ex W H Smith, so it may not be in this location for much longer. JF obtained s copy of the self-inking datestamp dated 12 MY 26.
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| Fore Street Post Office self-inking datestamp 12 MY 26 |
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| Fore Stret Taunton from Google Streetview |
There are many semi-anonymous postmarks in this blog, and MANOR STORES joins them as another one. This seems to actually be LOCKING post office, Somerset, which is located in a Spar Shop and which is quite difficult to see on the limited Google Streetview images.
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| Self-inking datestamp for Locking post office inscribed Manor Stores. |
This Google Streetview snap from 2024 shows the Post Office sign quite clearly
but only if there are no cars parked in front of the sign! In 2017 the logo on the building was higher, but the introduction of the Spar put a stop to that!
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| Locking (Somerset) post office, aka Manor Stores. |
It can't have escaped your notice that this year marks the 250th Anniversary of the United States of America. They have a number of different nationwide slogans. RW has sent this example from Wichita KS, of the 'Freedom 250' slogan.
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| USPS Freedom 250 slogan Wichita KS, June 2026. |
Remember,
slogan postmarks appearing in June will be added to this post, so
check here before you spend time scanning and emailing.
A reminder of what these monthly listings are for.
For each month I record the different slogans in use, plus the default slogan that is used when there is nothing else.
For
each of these I try to record only one of each of the basic two types,
plus any that are reversed on square envelopes, which normally only
gives three or four.
Occasionally a slogan appears with different line spacing in the same format.
I
do not record multiple versions of the same as any of these unless I
later get a much better example of one that I showed purely for the
record, but which is otherwise not very clear.
The only exception to this, which doesn't seem to happen much these days, is when a slogan is used well out of time.
I mention this only to avoid readers unnecessarily duplicating what has already been provided.