Stamp of the Day

March 2021

Alexander Graham Bell Got the Call, But Was He Really Listening

“Mr. Watson, come here, I want to see you,” may be the one of the most famous lines in American history. These are the words, of course, that Alexander Graham Bell supposedly said on the first time he successfully used his newly invented telephone on March 10, 1876. Thinking about the call and Bell –

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What do we remember when we “remember the Alamo”?

What, exactly, are we remembering when we “Remember the Alamo.” I used to know the answer to that seemingly simple question. We remembered a heroic stand by a vastly outnumbered group of men, all of them white, who fought for freedom against Mexican oppressors. The men who died in that fight were a “Hall of

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My Mother, AAA TripTik’s, and Other Travel Artifacts

Before there were Google Maps, before there was MapQuest, there was something my daughters called “GrannieQuest.” GrannieQuest was a remarkable, personalized navigation service. If you were driving somewhere, you would call my mother and ask for directions. You would quickly get accurate, detailed directions (told from memory) even if it had been years since my

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Talk About Pyhrric Victories: Influenza and World War I

The third wave of the great 1918-1919 influenza pandemic peaked early in March of 1919. Although the third wave wasn’t as deadly as the apocalyptic second wave in mid 1918, it was much deadlier than the first wave, and hit particularly hard in several major cities, including Los Angeles, New York, Memphis, Nashville, San Francisco

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From Oiho and Washington to DH Lawrence and Missile Mail

Is there anything interesting to say about a stamp honoring the 150th anniversary of Ohio becoming a state and a stamp honoring the 100th anniversary of when the Washington Territory was created? That’s the question I’ve been pondering this evening as I’ve been getting ready to write about the two stamps, which, since they were

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