Stamp of the Day

Culture & Society

American Wildlife: Should the Wild Turkey Be Our National Bird?

The main #stampoftheday for May 5 is the 3-cent 1956 stamp issued to emphasize the importance of wildlife conservation in America. The first of three stamps with a similar theme, it showcases wild turkeys and was issued at the convention of the Wisconsin Federation of Stamp Clubs, in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. As many people […]

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Who Was James Farley Who Gave the Authority to Print Stamps Honoring the Charter Oak, a California World’s Fair, and More…

The #stampoftheday for is a “souvenir sheet” consisting of four 3-cent stamps issued (actually re-issued) in conjunction with the Third International Philatelic Exhibition, held in New York City in May 1936. The stamps commemorate the Connecticut Tercentenary, the California Pacific Exposition, the Michigan Centennial, and the Texas Centennial. The first celebrated the 300th anniversary of

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Seven (Count Em) Reflections on the 1939 NY World Fair

Several possible options today for #stampoftheday but I’m going to go with two related to the 1939 New York World’s Fair, which opened on April 30, 1939 on over 1,200 acres of land at Flushing Meadows-Corona Park. (Apologies for such a long post but I’m having fun here…) Over 200,000 people attended the fair’s opening

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Casey Jones Actually Appeared on a Stamp

And now for something completely different! The #stampoftheday for April 29 is 1950’s 3-cent stamp commemorating the role of railroad engineers in building America. The stamp pictures folk hero John Luther “Casey” Jones, who was killed in a train wreck near Vaughn, Mississippi. The stamp was issued in Jackson, Mississippi, on the 50th anniversary of

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Finding My Footing at the XVIIth Congress of the International Chamber of Commerce and the National Capital Sesquicentennial

Day 3 of my my #stampoftheday project brings us 1959’s 8-cent stamp honoring the XVIIth Congress of the International Chamber of Commerce. And a bonus of 4 different 1950 stamps honoring the National Capital Sesquicentennial with stamps of the White House, the Supreme Court building, the Capital, and the statue of Columbia on top of

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Beginning Where It Ultimately Ends…in Brussels at the Universal and International Exhibition

Day 2 of the first-day cover project is not off to a good start because I can’t find a cover for April 19. So instead here’s one from April 17, 1958, which was my father’s 33rd birthday (he would have been 95 last Friday). It’s the ever popular 3-cent “Compliment to the Brussels Universal and

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