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When the Federal Postal Administration came into operation in June 1849, a uniform rate was introduced. Article I of the Federal Law relating to postal rates set up four postal zones (Rayons) for letters, as shown in the table below:
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As can be seen from the table above, the normal rate for local mail at the time was 5 Rappen.
However, Article I of the law also made provision for a reduced rate of 2½ Rappen for local delivery in
large metropolitan areas. 1849 Vaud 4![]() 1849 Vaud 4 Since 2½ Rappen was equal to 4 centimes, the Geneva Post Office asked the lithographer Charles Alphonse Schmid, to produce a 4 centimes stamp to be used on local letters. The stamp is called the "Vaud 4", for reasons unknown, other than the fact it was used in Geneva and the district of Nyon in Canton Vaud. It was printed in sheets of 100 but the total printed is also unknown. Earliest use of the stamp is November 1849, but it was made obsolete by the December 1849 currency law, effective on the 22nd January 1850, thus making this stamp a great rarity.
1850 Vaud 5![]() 1850 Vaud 5
The currency law of 1849 decreed that 2½ Rappen would be equal to 5 centimes in Geneva, and this caused the
"Vaud 4" to be changed to a "Vaud 5". The new stamp was printed from the same plate except that the value
figure was changed.
1850 Winterthur![]() 1850 Winterthur
In February 1851, the Zürich postal admistration issued a 2½ Rappen value stamp, to pay reduced postage
for local mail in the important towns of the cantons Zürich, Zug, Schaffhausen and Thurgau.
1851 Neuchâtel![]() 1851 Neuchâtel
The last stamp of the Transitional period, a 5 centimes issue called the "Neuchâtel", is somewhat of a mystery.
Most writers agree that it was issued because the people of Geneva were not pleased with the federal
stamps, that had been issued in Rappen instead of centimes. Therefore, when the supply of the Vaud 5 ran out, the Geneva
Post Office asked Schmid to design a new local stamp that looked like the 2½ Rappen federal stamps
(Orts-Post and Post Locale).
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