Ethel Bergstresser McCoy

Ethel Bergstresser (Stewart) McCoy (June 20, 1893 August 17, 1980), of New York City, was a philatelist who created a number of stamp collections, and was active within the philatelic community. She was the daughter of Charles Bergstresser (1858-1923), one of the founders of Dow Jones & Co.

Ethel Bergstresser McCoy
BornJune 20, 1893
DiedAugust 17, 1980 (1980-08-18) (aged 87)
NationalityUSA
OccupationEngineer
Spouse(s)Walter R. McCoy
widow of Bert A. Stewart
Engineering career
InstitutionsAmerican Air Mail Society
Essay-Proof Society
American Philatelic Society
Collectors Club of New York
ProjectsWas most noted for her collection of United States airmail stamps
AwardsAPS Hall of Fame

Collecting interests

Ethel McCoy is most noted for her collection of United States airmail stamps, which included a block of four, acquired in 1936, of the famous “Inverted Jenny” listed as C3a in the Scott catalog.

During the 1955 American Philatelic Society Convention, held in Norfolk, Virginia, the very valuable block was stolen. In 1979, the year before she died, she bequeathed the block, if it could be found, to the American Philatelic Research Library. In an investigation led by philatelic "detective" James H. Beal, the two stamps on the left side of the block of four (positions 65 and 75) were eventually recovered.[1]

Philatelic activity

Ethel McCoy was one of the first women to break the appearance of an all-male barrier in the philatelic community, and in 1937 she was named director of the American Air Mail Society.

Honors and awards

McCoy was named to the American Philatelic Society Hall of Fame in 1981.[2]

gollark: > happiness starts with an antenna!Not all of us are amateur radio people.
gollark: Again, you seem to just be explaining things poorly. You remind me vaguely of caveman, who seems to not be on here now.
gollark: It's kind of dodecahedral to go around complaining about people not understanding you (and implying it's some failure on their part) and then refusing to try explaining it in better ways.
gollark: > oh the obvious reality is that people dont know what they dont know, and even i didnt conclude that, tho i see it now. doesnt keep me from being impatient and getting madMaybe you should try explaining better if you think you have some great insight people do not understand.
gollark: My family has a pet one, but it actually just mostly sits in a rock thing in its terrarium.

References

  1. Healey, Matthew (14 September 2014). "$100,000 Reward for Missing 'Jennies'". New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  2. "The APS Hall of Fame 1980-1981". Bellefonte, PA 16823, USA: The American Philatelic Society. Retrieved 20 August 2015.CS1 maint: location (link)
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