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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edward Wilfrid Baxby (Ted) Proud (18 April 1930 – 6 February 2017) was a British postal historian, philatelic writer, and philatelic dealer who signed the Roll of Distinguished Philatelists in 2008.
Ted Proud was born on 18 April 1930.[1] His birth was registered in the Willesden district of London. Baxby was his mother's maiden name.[2]
Proud married twice, firstly to Doreen J. Dolley in Bromley, Kent, in 1951,[3] and secondly to Karoline Ulrike Springer in Westminster, London, in 1966.[4] He had seven children by his first marriage, and four by his second.
Proud founded the Proud-Bailey Company Limited in 1961[5] through which he published handbooks covering the postal history of over eighty different British colonies and which illustrate more than 50,000 postal markings. Proud-Bailey became a major postal history dealer. He sold the firm to Stanley Gibbons in March 1987, as a result of which he became joint deputy-chairman of that firm. The consideration for the sale was £1.6m, satisfied by the issue of 13 million new ordinary 10p shares in Stanley Gibbons at 12.25p each.[6]
He was a past president of the International Federation of Stamp Dealers Associations and was the founder of Postal History International magazine in 1972.[1] He was on the council of the Philatelic Traders Society.[6] He won a gold medal for his display of Aden at Espana 2004 and exhibited "India used in Malaya" in the Court of Honour at Singapore. In 2005, he won the Webb Cup from the Hong Kong Study Circle for his work The Postal History of Hong Kong 1841-1997.[7]
In 2008, he was invited to sign the Roll of Distinguished Philatelists.[8]
Proud died on 6 February 2017.[9] He received an obituary from Patrick Pearson in The London Philatelist.[1] The copyright to his books was owned by a charity known as the International Postal Museum which also owned the copyright to the works of Ronald Alcock, both of which were given to the Royal Philatelic Society London after Proud's death along with the stock of unsold books, his research information and the cash funds of the charity.[10]
Proud wrote and published handbooks in three principal series along with a selection of other works and one non-philatelic book on S.M.S.Emden.[11] In some cases, he was the co-author.
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