The values are all over the place for early stamps. The first ones were issued in the 1850s. You will have to identify the specific stamp, a tricky task in this time frame. Consult a stamp catalog, try your local library, and learn what you can about identification.
20,000 1 cent stamps with $200.
You can purchase 1 cent or 2 cent stamps.
you have to pay for them...1 cent each
one cent each
In the US you can buy two 10- cent stamps, four 5-cent stamps. five 4-cent stamps, ten 2-cent stamps or twenty 1-cent stamps for 20 cents at most post office windows.
42 cents. But if you don't want to buy a 42 cent stamp then go ahead and put 42 1 cent stamps on there.
Scott Specialized Catalog of US Stamps 2011 has a section for vending machine stamps. Titled 'Vending & Affixing Machine Perforations on pages 521 to 526. There are over 100 - 1 cent & 3 cent stamps in this section. Values range from about $1 to $1000's of dollars. Identification of these vending machine stamps are very specific for each stamp because of issue and perforations.
Most of them are not rare , but in used condition are worth more than the smaller stamps -- around 1/2 cent to 1 cent wholesale.
Depends on the face value and the numismatic value. Stamps are denominated in values from 1 cent to $1. The half-cent and quarter-cent stamps have been discontinued. Some rare 24-cent-denominated stamps cost $1 million. First-class letter will require 42 cents postage for first ounce, 17 cents for each additional ounce.
I think that only Washington and Jefferson are the only US presidents to appear on 1-cent stamps.
In the U.S. you could never send a letter for as little as 1 cent, but the rate for postcards was 1 cent from 1898 through the end of 1951.
That all depends on how much is in it. It goes by weight. See the U.S. domestic postage website at the link below. Anyway, it's not about "how many stamps" but "how much postage." Stamps come in denominations from 1 cent on up.