The Szekula Family of Stamp Dealers

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This website is dedicated to the Hungarian born stamp dealers Béla, Géza, Eugen and Frank Sekula. Each one of them ran his own stamp business with emphasis on international stamp trade, likely driven by their business acumen rather than a particular preference for philately. All four assumed Swiss nationality and were based in Lucerne side by side for years. Especially Béla’s business ideas provoked more than one scandal during his career. However, the history of philately would arguably be poorer without the Sekula brothers.

Eugen Sekula

 
B/W photo of Eugen Szekula at age of about 25
Eugen Szekula
at about the age of 25
Magazine ad
We will pay high prices for your stamps!
(Nebelspalter 1944)

Eugen Sekula (1888–1950) was born as Jenő Szekula in Szeged on March 9, 1888. When he was old enough, he joined Géza as an employee at Béla’s Internationale Philatelisten. In April 1910, Eugen took over as responsible editor of Béla’s Händler-Zeitung (newsletter for stamp dealers), and by 1911 he was also office manager at Internationale Philatelisten. On August 19, 1912, he married Elisabeth (Erzsébet) Zenner (born September 26, 1893) in Budapest. Advertisements placed in the Hungarian Stamp Collector that same year show that he also was already trading in stamps on his own account at that time. Like his brothers he then moved to Lucerne, initially still working for Béla. In October 1913, Eugen traveled to the United States representing Béla’s company at New York’s first stamp exhibition, the New York Philatelic Exhibition. First philatelic ads with the address Zürichstr. 62 appeared in Swiss newspapers in 1915, including those offering unused Belgian stamps confiscated by Germany during the occupation. In September 1916 he moved to Grendelstr. 19, where he opened his own Briefmarken-Import und -Export (= stamp import and export) business Eugen Szekula in January 1917. On July 5, 1919 he became a naturalized Swiss citizen of Geuensee. Four weeks later, Eugen had to go through the same bitter experience as his two older brothers before him: On August 3, 1919, his daughter Erika Dorottya died at the age of just seven months. In September 1919, Eugen closed his business at Grendelstrasse 19 and reopened it as Briefmarken-Import und -Exporthaus (= stamp import and export house) at the new address Hertensteinstrasse 56. Around July 1922, Eugen moved into the extravagant Villa Heimeli at Steigerweg 15. Like the rest of the family he changed the spelling of his name to Sekula in March 1923. In 1924, his daughter Susy Susanna Eva was born, and two years later his second daughter Maya. Apparently his business went well for many years, but in early 1933, in the wake of the global economic crisis and increasing German hostilities towards all stamp dealers bearing the name Sekula he was facing bankruptcy. As a result, in August of that year Eugen converted his stamp import and export firm into the corporation Eugen Sekula AG at Dreilindenstr. 47, with himself as director. In August 1934 the Eugen Sekula AG changed its name to Atlas Briefmarken AG in Luzern (Atlas Stamp Ltd. Lucerne). In February 1935 the board of the Atlas Briefmarken AG in Luzern decided to leave Lucerne and move to Lugano; the corporation was renamed to Atlas Briefmarken AG in Lugano (Atlas Stamp Ltd. Lugano). After less than three years, in November 1937 the Atlas Briefmarken AG in Lugano moved again, this time to Zurich, and became Atlas Briefmarken AG in Zurich (Atlas Stamp Ltd. Zurich) – first at Titlisstr. 14, from October 1940 onwards at Bahnhofstrasse. 74. The company continued to sell stamps for another decade, but in its final years the business apparently no longer made enough profit. In September 1946, Eugen joined his son-in-law Hans Bollmann and his daughter Susy with a limited partnership share of CHF 10,000 in founding the import and export company Hans Bollmann & Co. – possibly not least in order to have a second source of business outside the stamp trade. Nevertheless, a few years later he was finally facing financial ruin, not only in his business but also in his personal life – with dire consequences. On Sunday the 29th of January, 1950, the police was called to Sekula’s home at Rigistr. 18 where they found the lifeless bodies of Eugen Sekula, his wife Elisabeth and their disabled daughter Maya. Both parents were already dead when the police arrived; Maya was hospizalized but died one day later without regaining consciousness. All three had taken an overdose of sedative drugs, presumably due to their desperate financial situation. Already on February 15, bankruptcy proceedings against Atlas Briefmarken AG in Zurich were opened, and three months later, in April 1950, the company was dissolved.

Although he was much less of a traveler, Eugen Sekula’s business acumen probably came close to that of Béla. A failed attempt to establish his own postage paid labels in the Swiss postal system in 1930 shows that he was similarly creative, but he also employed the same sale tactics as Béla sending out unwanted stamp selections and then aggressively demanding payment – eventually with the same result: In July 1934 the U.S. Post imposed a short-lived embargo on both of them, marking mail to them as fraudulent and returning it to the sender.



Cover — February 4, 1931

Registered mail sent on February 4, 1931, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Chicago, Illinois, United States. Arrived on February 18, 1931.

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Cover — February 19, 1931

Sent on February 19, 1931, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Vienna, Austria. Arrived on February 19, 1931.

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Cover — February 23, 1931

Sent on February 23, 1931, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Batavia, New York, United States.

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Cover — March 30, 1931

Registered mail sent on March 30, 1931, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Munich, Germany. Arrived on March 31, 1931.

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Cover — March 30, 1931

Registered airmail sent on March 30, 1931, from Tintigny, Belgium, to Lucerne, Switzerland. Arrived on March 31, 1931.

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Cover — May 25, 1931

Registered airmail sent on May 25, 1931, from Saint-Ursanne, Switzerland, to Lucerne. Arrived on May 25, 1931.

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Cover — May 27, 1931

Sent on May 27, 1931, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Columbus, Ohio, United States. Arrived on May 27, 1931.

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Scans provided by Albert Little.


Cover — June 2, 1931

Sent on June 2, 1931, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to New York City, United States. Arrived on June 10, 1931.

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Cover — June 4, 1931

Registered airmail sent on June 4, 1931, from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, to Lucerne, Switzerland. Arrived on June 13, 1931.

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Postal Card — June 17, 1931

Sent on June 17, 1931, from Tarrasa, Spain, to Lucerne, Switzerland. Arrived on June 20, 1931.

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Cover — July 10, 1931

Registered mail sent on July 10, 1931, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Werdau, Saxonia, Germany. Arrived on July 11, 1931.

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Cover — July 17, 1931

Registered mail sent on July 17, 1931, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Fabbenstedt (today part of Espelkamp, North Rhine-Westphalia), Germany.

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Postcard — July 28, 1931

Sent registered via airmail on July 28, 1931 to Steingau (today part of Dietramszell, Bavaria), Germany, to collect payment by cash on delivery. Acceptance refused and returned on August 1.

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Return Envelope — July 29, 1931

Sent on July 29, 1931, from Valparaíso, Chile, to Lucerne, Switzerland. Arrived on July 29, 1931.

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Postcard — July 30, 1931

Registered COD airmail sent on July 30, 1931, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Oberiflingen (today part of Schopfloch, Baden-Wuerttemberg), Germany. Arrived on July 31, 1931.

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Postcard — August 28, 1931

Sent on August 28, 1931, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to New York City, United States.

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Scans provided by Albert Little.


Postcard — September 17, 1931

Postcard sent on September 17, 1931 via airmail to Vienna, Austria, to collect payment by cash on delivery. Returned to Lucerne on September 21 (backstamp) because receiver refused delivery.

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Cover — October 15, 1931

Registered mail sent on October 15, 1931, from Riga, Latvia, to Lucerne, Switzerland. Arrived on October 17, 1931.

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Cover — December 4, 1931

Sent registered on December 4, 1931 to Anaconda, Montana, USA. Acceptance refused and returned to Lucerne on January 9, 1932.

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Postcard — December 12, 1931

Postcard sent on December 12, 1931 via airmail to Oberifflingen, Germany, to collect payment on delivery.

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Cover — December 31, 1931

Sent on December 31, 1931, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Schenectady, New York, United States. Arrived on December 31, 1931.

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Postcard — March 15, 1932

Sent on March 15, 1932, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Benton Harbor, Michigan, United States.

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Cover — March 17, 1932

Registered mail sent on March 17, 1932, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States. Arrived on April 1, 1932.

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Cover — May 10, 1932

Registered airmail sent on May 10, 1932, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Nitra, Czechoslovakia (today Slovakia).

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Cover — June 4, 1932

Registered mail sent on June 4, 1932, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. Arrived on June 17, 1932.

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Postcard — July 4, 1932

Registered COD airmail sent on July 4, 1932, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Hauzenberg, Bavaria, Germany. Arrived on July 6, 1932.

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Postcard — August 30, 1932

Sent on August 30, 1932, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to New York City, United States.

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Cover — November 19, 1932

Registered airmail sent on November 19, 1932, from Habana, Cuba, to Lucerne, Switzerland. Arrived on December 6, 1932.

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Cover — May 5, 1933

Sent on May 5, 1933, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Liestal. Arrived on May 5, 1933.

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Cover — May 27, 1933

Sent on May 27, 1933, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Ennenda (today part of Glarus). Arrived on May 27, 1933.

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Cover — August 26, 1933

Registered mail sent on August 26, 1933, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Königstein, Saxony, Germany. Arrived on August 28, 1933.

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Cover — September 26, 1933

Registered airmail sent on September 26, 1933, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Pardubice, Czechoslovakia (today Czech Republic).

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Cover — December 12, 1933

Registered mail sent on December 12, 1933, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to La Salle, Illinois, United States. Arrived on December 27, 1933.

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Cover — December 14, 1933

In 1933, Eugen converted his company into a corporation to avoid bankruptcy. On August 22, the Eugen Sekula company was replaced by the Eugen Sekula AG (Eugen Sekula Inc.) with him as director.

Registered mail sent on December 14, 1933, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Solothurn. Arrived on December 15, 1933.
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Cover — December 21, 1933

Registered mail sent on December 21, 1933, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Williamsport, Pennsylvania, United States.

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Cover — March 26, 1934

Printed matter sent on March 26, 1934, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Wooster, Ohio, United States.

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Cover — April 7, 1934

Registered mail sent on April 7, 1934, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Reading, Pennsylvania, United States. Arrived on April 7, 1934.

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Cover — June 15, 1934

Sent registered on June 15, 1934, from Lucerne to Nantes, France. Arrived on June 16. Possible Eugen Sekula cover because of typical franking and sender’s address at Steigerweg.

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Cover — June 18, 1934

Registered mail sent on June 18, 1934, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Columbus, Ohio, United States. Arrived on June 29, 1934.

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Cover — July 31, 1934

Registered mail sent on July 31, 1934, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Bentonville, Arkansas, United States. Arrived on August 11, 1934.

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Cover — August 11, 1934

Printed matter sent on August 11, 1934, from Lucerne, Switzerland, to Knoxville, Tennessee, United States.

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Referral program with participation in profits.
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Letter — August 27, 1934

On August 20, 1934, the Eugen Sekula AG in Lucerne changed its name to Atlas Stamp Ltd. Lucerne.
The letter below was sent one week later to inform a customer in St. Louis, Missouri, USA, about the name change.

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Cover — September 18, 1934

Express mail sent on September 18, 1934, from Lugano, Switzerland, to Algiers, Algeria. Arrived on September 21, 1934.

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Postcard — September 25, 1934

Registered COD airmail sent on September 25, 1934, from Castagnola (today part of Lugano), Switzerland, to Ustrzyki Dolne, Poland.

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Cover — October 29, 1934

Official mail sent on October 29, 1934, within Lucerne, Switzerland, and forwarded to Lugano.

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Postcard — February 20, 1935

Sent on February 20, 1935, from Singen, Germany, to Lucerne, Switzerland.

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Cover — March 16, 1935

Registered mail sent on March 16, 1935, from Castagnola (today part of Lugano), Switzerland, to Søborg (today part of Gladsaxe municipality), Denmark. Arrived on March 19, 1935.

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Cover — April 16, 1935

Registered mail sent on April 16, 1935, from Castagnola (today part of Lugano), Switzerland, to New York City, United States. Arrived on April 25, 1935.

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Cover — May 1, 1936

Registered mail sent on May 1, 1936, from Castagnola (today part of Lugano), Switzerland, to Maplewood, New Jersey, United States. Arrived on May 9, 1936.

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Cover — May 21, 1936

Registered mail sent on May 21, 1936, from Castagnola (today part of Lugano), Switzerland, to New York City, United States. Arrived on May 29, 1936.

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Cover — July 29, 1936

Registered mail sent on July 29, 1936, from Brussels, Belgium, to Lugano, Switzerland. Arrived on July 30, 1936.

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Cover — October 2, 1936

Registered mail sent on October 2, 1936, from Castagnola (today part of Lugano), Switzerland, to Paterson, New Jersey, United States. Arrived on October 14, 1936.

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Cover — February 4, 1937

Sent on February 4, 1937, from Lugano, Switzerland, to German: Peterswald bei Karbitz (=Petrovice u Chabařovic), Czechoslovakia (today Czech Republic).

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Cover — March 3, 1937

Registered mail sent on March 3, 1937, from Lugano, Switzerland, to Chicago, Illinois, United States. Arrived on March 15, 1937.

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Postcard — April 12, 1937

Sent on April 12, 1937 from Montreux to Atlas Stamp Ltd., Lugano, on the occasion of the forthcoming Montreux Convention Regarding the Abolition of the Capitulations in Egypt (concluded on May 8, 1937).

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FDC — May 12, 1937

Registered mail sent on May 12, 1937, from Kingston, Jamaica, to Lugano, Switzerland.

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Cover — June 11, 1937

Registered airmail sent on June 11, 1937, from Castagnola (today part of Lugano), Switzerland, to New York City, United States. Arrived on June 22, 1937.

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Cover — June 17, 1937

Sent on June 17, 1937, from Alozaina, Málaga, Spain, to Lugano, Switzerland.

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Cover — June 20, 1937

Sent on June 20, 1937, from Alozaina, Málaga, Spain, to Lugano, Switzerland.

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Cover — July 8, 1937

Sent on July 8, 1937, from Lugano, Switzerland, to New York City, United States.

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Cover — July 10, 1937

Registered mail sent on July 10, 1937, from Castagnola (today part of Lugano), Switzerland, to Konolfingen. Arrived on July 12, 1937.

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Cover — July 16, 1937

Sent on July 16, 1937, from San José, Costa Rica, to Lugano, Switzerland.

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Cover — August 5, 1937

Registered mail sent on August 5, 1937, from Brussels, Belgium, to Lugano, Switzerland.

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Covers — October 29, 1937 – December 12, 1937

Two philatelic covers franked with Spanish charity labels, postmarked in Barcelona, Spain; first one on October 29, 1937, and addressed to Atlas Stamp Ltd., Lugano, Switzerland, the other one dated December 12, 1937, and addressed to Zurich where Atlas Stamp had moved in November.

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Cover — November 22, 1937

Registered mail sent on November 22, 1937, from Barcelona, Spain, to Lugano, Switzerland.

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Cover — December 1, 1937

Registered mail sent on December 1, 1937, from Lugano, Switzerland, to Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, United States. Arrived on December 18, 1937.

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