Gary Sidney Ryan (Died 2007) was an eminent philatelist who specialised in the stamps and postal history of Hungary and later in revenue stamps.
Ryan was awarded the Crawford Medal of the Royal Philatelic Society London in 1988 for his work on the cancellations of Hungarian Post Offices on the first stamps of Hungary and he signed the Roll of Distinguished Philatelists in 1980. His philatelic writing won him a rarely awarded Grand Prix award for Literature at Frankfurt in 1989.[1]
With Robson Lowe and Ronald Butler, Ryan was one of the founders of The Revenue Society of Great Britain in 1990 and his involvement with the FIP (Federation Internationale de Philatelie) was instrumental in raising the profile of Revenue stamps within the organisation.[1] Ryan's extensive collection of judicial revenue stamps was the basis for "Judicial Stamps of Great Britain and Pre-1922 Ireland" by Roger Booth and Clive Akerman published in 1997.[1]
Ryan's profession as a lawyer helped him obtain revenue stamps used on documents with which to expand his collection.[1]
After his death, Ryan's collection was auctioned by Christies.