Showing posts with label Postal History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Postal History. Show all posts

Saturday, September 27, 2025

Postal History | Allied forces helped oversee postal services after World War II

Allied forces helped oversee postal services after World War II

From the article: "...Mail service was particularly important because of the need to communicate both within and outside of the liberated areas.

Mail required postage stamps and postal stationery, some of which was printed by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington. In addition, the payment of fees and taxes on business transactions, licenses and permits required revenue stamps. ..."


Article Reference: chroniclet.com
Postal History, Allied forces helped oversee postal services,

Friday, March 15, 2024

America | First Man on the Moon Stamp | 1969 10c Moon Landing

America | First Man on the Moon Stamp | 1969 10c Moon Landing

America | First Man on the Moon Stamp | 1969 10c Moon Landing
From the article: "...Commemorates man’s first footstep on the moon’s surface by Neil Armstrong, Commander of the Apollo 11 mission. The first jumbo-sized commemorative issue, it celebrated “moon mail.” The First Day Cover was the most popular ever. ..."


Article Reference: www.mysticstamp.com
First jumbo-sized commemorative issue, Stamp Collecting,First Man on the Moon,

Monday, December 19, 2022

History on a stamp: An Post and the Decade of Centenaries

History on a stamp: An Post and the Decade of Centenaries

From the article: "A stamp is an inherently humble physical artefact — paper, ink, adhesive — yet it is also fundamentally part of the bricks-and-mortar of state-building. In the case of commemorative stamps, they express not only political and cultural meanings, but our understandings of the events they represent. Equally, stamps are touched, they move, they circulate, they are collected and saved, they are discarded. Perhaps few symbols of the State hold such universal appeal and are so widely used: stamps are simultaneously temporal, cherished, ubiquitous, and invisible."


Article Reference: www.rte.ie
Stamp Collecting, Postal History,