Tuesday, August 30, 2022

SCOTT #CE1 AIRMAIL SPECIAL DELIVERY 16 CENT

On August 30, 1934, the US Post Office issued its first Airmail Special Delivery stamp.  Mail with this stamp would travel by plane to its designated post office, where a messenger would then deliver it immediately to the recipient.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was an avid collector, designed the stamp himself!  Its first day of sale, 88 years ago, was at the convention of the American Air Mail Society in Chicago.  Two years later, the stamp was reprinted using two colors – carmine and blue.  Airmail special delivery stamps were only in use for a

brief time.  After 1936, the fees for special delivery service on airmail were to be paid by additional regular special delivery stamps.

 

Sunday, August 21, 2022

SCOTT #C-6 DE HAVILLAND PLANE 24 CENT

 

The De Havilland plane on this stamp eventually replaced the Jenny in carrying the mail.  This stamp was issued to provide payment for night flights from New York all the way to the Pacific Coast

Saturday, August 20, 2022

SCOTT #910 OVER RUN COUNTRY CZECHOSLOVAKIA 5 CENT

 

Did you know… a postage stamp is so powerful it can give a nation hope?

Did you know… a postage stamp is so persuasive it can rally people around a social or political cause?

Did you know… a postage stamp is so influential it can raise money to fight disease, domestic violence, and more?

The truth is, a little postage stamp can do all these things and lots more.  I was reminded of that today while browsing through the Encyclopedia of U.S. Stamps and Stamp Collecting.  It’s a great reference book for us collectors. 

In the section on mid-20th-century commemoratives, authors Rodney Juell and Steven Rod discuss “stamps with agendas.”  They give lots of examples.  I was able to add even more to the list from my years of collecting.  Starting with one of their choices (and my favorite) here’s just a small sample…

Friday, August 19, 2022

SCOTT #C45 WRIGHT BROTHERS 6 CENT

President Franklin Roosevelt declared the first National Aviation Day on Orville Wright’s 68th birthday.

As we all know, the Wright brothers invented the airplane.  Beginning in 1899, the Wright brothers began experimenting with gliders.  Their experiments led to their first heavier-than-air powered flight on December 17, 1903.  The event made such a global impact, many different countries honored it on stamps and coins.  The Wright brothers are two of the most famous figures in aviation history.

1949 Wright Brothers Commemorativ

 

Thursday, August 18, 2022

SCOTT 5409 WOODSTOCK FOREVER

Today marks 53 years since the ending of the most famous rock festival in history – Woodstock.  The USPS issued a Woodstock stamp commemorating the festival’s 50th anniversary.  The stamp’s design uses the same dove illustration found on the original Woodstock promotional flyers.  The festival was also honored in the popular Celebrate the Century Series in 1999.  

 

Sunday, August 14, 2022

PUERTO RICO OVERPRINTS

 

The Spanish-American War marked the emergence of the United States as a world power.  On December 10, 1898, Spain signed the Treaty of Paris granting Cuba its freedom and ceding Guam, Puerto Rico and the Philippines to the US.  After the signing of the treaty, the use of US money and postage was made official, and in 1899, overprinted US stamps replaced the provisional issues used previously.  These Puerto Rico Overprints carried the inscription “PORTO RICO.”  Later overprints were spelled “PUERTO RICO.”

Friday, August 5, 2022

SCOTT #2967 MARILYN MONROE 32 CENT

Early on August 5, 1962, the world was shocked by the loss of a shining star, actress, and entertainer – Marilyn Monroe.  In her short life, she went from an unknown, albeit pretty, face working in a World War II airplane factory, to the world’s most famous blonde bombshell.

Since losing Marilyn, countries around the world have issued postage stamps in her honor.  Each stamp captures a different facet of Marilyn – all the beauty and personality that made her one of the most famous woman of the 20th century.

In 1995, the United States featured Marilyn on the first stamp in the popular Legends of Hollywood Series (#2967) – a fitting place for the legendary Marilyn Monroe.  The design is based on a 1950s painting of her.  Originally, the selvage was supposed to picture the

famous scene from The Seven Year Itch where Marilyn’s dress is blown up by a subway grate, but Marilyn’s estate felt it didn’t do her image justice.  A larger version of the stamp design was used in the selvage instead.