Stamp of the Day

Historical Figures & Events

The Best and Worst of American Medical Association

Doctors are the subject of today’s #stampoftheday, a 3-cent stamp issued on June 9, 1947 commemorating the 100th anniversary of the founding of the American Medical Association (AMA) in May 1847. I’m not sure why they waited until June to issue the stamp. Perhaps they were running late. The stamp pictures of Sir Luke Fildes’ […]

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The Comstock Lode, Silver, and the Scopes Monkey Trial

Digging into today’s #stampoftheday – a 4-cent stamp, issued on Jun 8, 1959, that commemorates the 100th anniversary of the Comstock Lode in Nevada – I unearthed a story that starts with mining, continues to bitter fights over national economic policy, and ends with an infamous trial in which a leading political figure took issue

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Daniel Webster and the Challenges of Leadership

Political leadership, for good and for ill, is one of the messages I receive from today’s #stampoftheday, a 10-cent stamp picturing Daniel Webster, who in the first half of the 19th century was one of the nation’s leading politicians and one of its best lawyers as well. Webster, who was known as one his era’s

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David Farragut Reminds Us that Sometimes You Have to “Damn the Torpedoes” and go “Full Speed Ahead”

Today’s #stampoftheday, a $1 stamp picturing Admiral David Farragut that was issued on June 5, 1903, is yet another old stamp that in some ways connects to today’s turmoil, albeit in less insightful ways than some of the other recent stamps. Still, it reminds us that even in the face of real obstacles and danger

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Swedish Pioneers and Minnesota’s Lack of Diversity

The odd ways that old stamps can illuminate current issues is again the theme for today’s #stampoftheday, the 5-cent Swedish Pioneer Centennial stamp, which was issued on June 4, 1948. The stamp , which commemorates the 100th anniversary of Swedish pioneers traveling to the Midwest, pictures a Swedish pioneer’s covered wagon traveling westward. On either

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John Adams: The Founding Father Who Didn’t Own Slaves

Today’s #stampoftheday, which is a 1938 2-cent stamp picturing John Adams, the second president of the United States, offers yet another opportunity to use the past to better understand our present predicament. The stamp was one of series of 29 stamps issued in 1938 honoring all the presidents from George Washington to Calvin Coolidge, a

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Ulysses S. Grant and the Unfinished Business of Reconstruction

For the past several days, my #stampoftheday discussion has used the day’s stamp to delve into deeper issues including what’s not shown on the stamp in question, often by exploring the backstory (and the untold backstory) behind whatever was being honored in the day’s stamp. Doing this has made me think a lot about the

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Kentucky, Alaska, Seattle, and the Long Reach of History

Kentucky and Alaska are the subjects for today’s #stampoftheday. The first is a 3-cent stamp issued on June 1, 1942 to mark the 150th anniversary of Kentucky, which had been part of Virginia, becoming America’s 15th state on June 1, 1792. Kentucky joined the nation as a slave state but because its land didn’t lend

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Bleeding Kansas and the Long National Debate (and Silence) About Race

Today brings yet another stamp marking an historic milestone that relates (in less-than-visible -ways) to this week’s horrific events. In this case it’s a 3-cent stamp issued on May 31, 1954 to mark the 100-year anniversary of the creation of the Kansas Territory. Acquired by the US in 1903 as part of the Louisiana Purchase,

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