词条 | Commemoration of the American Civil War on postage stamps | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
Union commander| Confederate commander The Commemoration of the American Civil War on postage stamps concerns both the actual stamps and covers used during the American Civil War, and the later postage celebrations. The latter include commemorative stamp issues devoted to the actual events and personalities of the war, as well as definitive issues depicting many noteworthy individuals who participated in the era's crucial developments. ... the generation that carried on the war has been set apart by its experience ... in our youth our hearts were touched with fire. It was given to us to learn at the outset that life is a profound and passionate thing. While we are permitted to scorn nothing but indifference, and ... above all, we have learned that ... [in one's life work], the one and only success which it is [for each of us] to command is to bring to his work a mighty heart. — Oliver Wendell Holmes[1] The American Civil War is one of the secular crises in American history that produced heroes. Societies venerate people and events of the past and present, and governments likewise use a variety of official mechanisms to honor them, including place names, architecture, currency, and postage stamps.[2] Like other secular crises, the conflict grew from seeds planted a generation before, in this case during the Transcendental Awakening: a sudden change of societal values. Transcendental idealists became abolitionists. Romantic evangelicals became fire-eater secessionists.[3] The lifetime achievements of outstanding individuals from the Civil War era, both elder leaders and younger participants, have been honored on stamps both in the United States and in foreign nations. Civil War stampsDuring the Civil War, heroes of the previous national period were featured on the stamps of both sides of the conflict: Washington, Jefferson and Jackson. Following reunification, and during many decades thereafter, sporadic U. S. definitive issues appeared in honor of Civil War-related statesmen and military leaders—exclusively those, however, who had supported the Union cause. Their Confederate counterparts remained unrecognized on American stamps until 1937, when Lee and Jackson were included among the Civil War generals and admirals pictured in the commemorative Army-Navy issues, a series promoted by President Franklin D. Roosevelt (himself a stamp enthusiast). Even then, however, with the war some seven decades in the past, this inclusion of a stamp honoring Confederate generals proved controversial. After the issue was announced in May 1936, a false rumor spread that Jefferson Davis was to be portrayed along with the two officers, and on June 11 the following Associated Press dispatch appeared in the New York Sun: G. A. R. Opposes Honors For Lee. Denounces Plan to Issue Stamp Series. — At Syracuse, June 11, (A. P.) A proposition to honor Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson and Jefferson Davis, on postage stamps issued bearing their likeness, was denounced by thirty-eight aging veterans of the Civil War, attending the Seventieth Annual Encampment of the United States department of the Grand Army of the Republic. Later the proposed Lee-Jackson stamp was deplored in the Ohio state legislature. After its issue, moreover, southerners inveighed against it as well, objecting that Lee’s right shoulder displayed two stars rather than three, in effect demoting him to the rank of Lieutenant General (this mistake occurred as the result of a design change). Word spread that an act of Congress to recall the stamp was in preparation, but no such legislation materialized.[4] Indeed, given that the conflict remained so touchy a subject, it is not surprising that the Civil War and its various aspects—apart from a small number of personalities associated with it—was left virtually uncommemorated on stamps for almost a century. This article follows the convention of the 1995 Civil War commemoration of 20 stamps related to the Civil War; civilian persons of the Civil War have been pictured beginning with the definitive issue for Abraham Lincoln after his assassination. Notable persons who were Civil War participants have been included in this article including inventors, authors, and subsequent U.S. presidents. U.S.A. and C.S.A. postal serviceNote: A brief note as to the significance of each subject as it is related to the American Civil War is included by each stamp and cover. The generations who led and fought the American Civil War were born into an independent United States and they would determine whether it could continue as a united republic. Steam power on land and sea had begun to shrink the world and the telegraph moved information at the speed of electricity. In 1851, Congress reduced rates for typical uses such as printed matter to one cent, and three-cent letter postage versus five or ten-cent rates. Postal distances for each rate were extended as much as ten times, for example, from three hundred to 3,000 miles.[5] Their world was filled with mechanized innovations that included the first U.S. postage stamps produced from machine perforation to replace the cutting tasks which had been done manually. These were accompanied by innovations in paper types and printing techniques.[6] Confederate stamps were generally issued imperforate to be manually cut.[7] [8] Moreover, while U. S. stamps had always been steel engraved, the first Confederate issues did not employ this state-of-the-art technique, instead being lithographed (1861) and typographed (1862), before steel engraving finally was adopted in 1863. More innovations in technology and organization would develop during wartime. The north-south conflict exploding into war also ripped the nation's communication system in two. The postal system once meant to unify the country through the dissemination of information was used instead used to solidify the break.[9] During the decades preceding the war, the American Anti-Slavery Society sought to promote abolition by educating the populace on the evils of slavery, and for that purpose, mailed thousands upon thousands of anti-slavery tracts. The response in the south led the nation to the edge of disaster, only temporarily eased by the Missouri Compromise, and the Compromise of 1850. But the post roads and routes established by Congress in the late 1850s brought a stronger southern mail system, and with it a rising spirit of southern nationalism. Southern public opinion began to boil over as through the southern mails, the fiery pamphlets of the Southern Rights Association other agitators roused a Southern national sentiment. To compound the irony, solidifying of southern opinion was achieved through a mail service that never paid its own way, subsidized largely at northern expense.[10] {{double image|right|Montgomery Blair, photo three-quarters length seated.jpg|185|JHRegan.jpg|160|United States Postmaster| Confederate Postmaster The secession state by state was at first peaceful, with South Carolina (December 24, 1860) followed by Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas. Most Americans still felt that the issues driving "secession" resolutions would be resolved quickly. The United States Government still considered these jurisdictions part of the Union, and allowed continued use of the U.S. Postal System for mail service within those states and to outside destinations. Forming the Confederacy within a month or less brought about a change in postal policy.[11] But at the onset of the American Civil War, Lincoln's postmaster general, Montgomery Blair faced a federal postal system regionally disabled by seceding states and disloyal postmasters. To prevent possible fraud potentially amounting to $270,000 in postage and stamped envelopes held in the South, the existing stamps were withdrawn and demonetized, and a new series of stamps was hurriedly issued. With the previous contract ending June 10, 1861, the Post Office Department signed a contract with the National Bank Note Company of New York City. Loyal postmasters in seceded states returned stamps to the Department. The new stamps were in use across the Union by mid-August 1861 with the same denominations and honoring the same persons as the previous issue, but all of the designs had changed.[12] Unlike most political appointees, Montgomery Blair took personal charge of the department, organizing an efficient system for the army and navy and abolishing the franking privilege for postmasters. He originated the new practices of free mail delivery and the sorting of mail on railway cars. He developed the return-receipt system for accountability, and innovated the money order system for soldiers to send and receive money from the field. Blair sponsored the first International Postal Congress in Paris in 1863.[13] President Jefferson Davis had appointed John Henninger Reagan on March 6, 1861, to head the new Confederate States of America Post-office Department. The United States Post Office Department continued to handle the mail of the seceded states until June 1 when the Confederate Post office took over collection and delivery throughout the Confederacy, remaining in operation for the duration of the Civil War.[14] The most immediate concerns of the Confederate postmaster general was the organization of his department and providing for the payment of postage so that it would become self-financing. While the recalled U.S. postage could no longer be used to carry the mail by the U.S. Post Office, the Confederacy did use "appropriated" United States postal stationery for some time. General Reagan claimed he never conferred official authority on postmasters to issue interim, "provisional" stamps, but they filled a need in the absence of national Confederate stamps (which were not issued until October, 1861) and stamped envelopes.[15] U.S.A. and C.S.A. stampsThe eight United States postage stamps issued in 1861 pictured Washington (5), Franklin (2) and Jefferson (1), and envelopes signaled the sacredness of the Constitution and rebellion as treason. Confederate stamps pictured Washington, Jefferson, Jackson and Jefferson Davis (a stamp was printed depicting John C. Calhoun but was never put into use). Confederate envelopes focused on the Confederate flag and Jefferson Davis to foster a growth of Confederate nationalism, characterizing Lincoln as the anticonstitutionalist, the North as disloyal and the Southern attempt at nationhood as a renewal of the American Revolution. In the struggle for preserving their rights and liberties, George Washington was on their side.[16]
United States regular issue stamps during the Civil War. In 1861, Postmaster General Montgomery Blair cut off mail service to any state in rebellion. Confederate postage was not recognized by U.S. post offices, and postmasters forwarded mail addressed into the Confederacy to the Dead Letter Office, to be returned to senders.[9]{{clear}} The Confederacy used U.S. stamps pre-1861 with Roman numerals, provisional stamps and regular issue. Postmaster Reagan placed 8,535 of the nation's 28,586 post offices under his control, and initially all postal business was conducted with U.S. money and postage stamps. Until Confederate stamps became available, some local postmasters issued provisional stamps or marked mail "paid" by hand.[9]{{clear}} Contemporary Civil War covers{{See also|Postage stamps and postal history of the Confederate States#Patriotic covers}}During the Civil War, private sector printers throughout the North developed cultural heroes who complemented and expanded the galaxy of official heroes found on stamps. Patriotic covers honored ordinary middle-class individuals, both civilian and military. Military theme covers also commemorate ordinary citizen soldiers. This "democratizing" in American popular icons contributed to a more explicit democratic nationalism.[2] The Union flag was everywhere. In a way rarely seen before the war, mottoes and verses emphasize that the flag symbolized the "Vox Populi," the right of the people to rule. Uncle Sam became a widespread symbol of the nation, as well as figures like President Lincoln and General McClellan. The distribution of tens of thousands of Union Patriotic Covers through the postal system enhanced interconnectedness of the nation and the homogeneity of popular culture, with profound implications for post-war society.[2] Illustrated stationery reveals the strong emotions generated by the Civil War. In the North envelopes bearing patriotic illustrations appeared even before hostilities broke out.[9] {{double image|right|PATRIOTIC_COVER_POINT_LOOKOUT_MD_1864.jpg|200|Civ war union Patriotic cover2.jpg|200|
Soon after the war began, Southern stationers quickly marketed patriotic envelopes picturing flags, cannons, political leaders, slogans, soldiers, and caricatures, among other war-related themes.[9] {{double image|right|CSA 1861 T Jefferson-10c.jpg|190|Fort Delaware POW 1864.jpg|190|
Union forces began blockading southern ports in April 1861, requiring mail to be carried on blockade runners or routed through foreign posts. Without postal treaties with foreign governments, Confederate letters were carried as private "ship" mail. They were charged the inland rates plus two cents, which was paid to the ship's master.[9] {{double image|right|Blockade cover FL.jpg|190|Steamship blockade cover 1865.jpg|220|
The "Gilded generation" born 1822 to 1842, defined the western adventurer of today's imagination. They were the youthful mining 49er in California, the Pony Express rider before and during the Civil War, bringing in Nevada as a state in October 1864.[19] {{double image|right|Stamp US Pony Express 25c.jpg|135|Pony Express 1861.jpg|260|
As Union troops occupied rebel territory, federal mail service was restored, amounting to almost 500 routes by the end of 1865. Almost half of the post offices in the South had been returned to Federal service by the end of 1866.[9] Subsequent commemoratives and definitivesIn the years immediately following the Civil War, the U. S. post office did not offer commemorative stamps at all; and the commemoratives that began appearing in the 1890s were devoted almost exclusively to international trade fairs. The sole exception, the "Lincoln Memorial" (1909), was the first stamp officially designated as a commemorative ever issued in honor of a Civil War figure. After World War I, however, topics were greatly expanded to include noteworthy individuals, places, events and innovations. Commemoratives have communicated an idealized and patriotic vision of the American past, but contests for recognition on a federal stamp also reflect contemporary fights over definitions of U.S. citizenship.[20] Principal actors in the Civil War are arranged into categories of Union officers, Confederate officers, the Common Soldier and Civilians. Events in the Civil War expand beyond Battles to include Reconstruction, Culture, and Technology. Famous people and the Civil War include authors, presidents, and a separate section on Abraham Lincoln. {{clear}} Principal actors in the Civil WarSome groups have seen commemoratives as holding out a romanticized view of America. Others have promoted issues as a part of grander strategies fighting for social and political equality. Commemorative committees, business leaders, and politicians have actively pursued federal postage stamps celebrating regional anniversaries held at battlefields. Others sought stamps honoring military, cultural, and political heroes,[20] such as Robert E. Lee, Susan B. Anthony, and Frederick Douglass. While commemoratives had honored Civil War figures and events in such stamp issues as the Army Navy 1937 series and the Centennial celebration of 1961–1965, comprehensive coverage of the conflict did not appear until 1995, when U.S. Postal Service issued its most ambitious commemorative of the Civil War to date in photogravure sheets of 120 in six panes of 20. The four events pictured were Battle of Hampton Roads between the Monitor and Merrimac (Virginia), Battle of Shiloh, Battle of Chancellorsville and Battle of Gettysburg. Presidents included Jefferson Davis and Abraham Lincoln. Union officers included Ulysses S. Grant, David Farragut, Winfield Hancock, and William T. Sherman. Confederate officers included Robert E. Lee, Raphael Semmes, Stand Watie, Joseph E. Johnston and "Stonewall" Jackson. Civilians included Clara Barton, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, Mary Chestnut, and Phoebe Pember. Note: Several recent issues are not yet available at Wikimedia Commons for use here. For some, place-holders are provided. For previous images readily available for both commemorative and definitive issues, names are linked to their biographical articles in their Civil War career at each stamp description. Links to states take the reader to the "[state] in the American Civil War" series of articles in Wikipedia. Union officersDuring World War I, Theodore Roosevelt believed it to be a "bully" idea to issue a series of stamps honoring American military heroes. Nothing came of the suggestion until his stamp collecting cousin, Franklin Roosevelt was nearing the end of his first term. His Secretary of War recommended both Union and Confederate generals in the series. Political reaction delayed issue until after election. The opposition was primarily from Northern Republicans against the Confederate choices, and Lost Cause southerners against the Union choices.[21] Today stamp collectors from North and South include both Grant-Sherman-Sheridan and Lee-Jackson stamps in their collections. In the 1990s Civil War series, no state legislature objected to Sherman as a villain as some protested for the 1937 issue. The healing process continued.[22]
Naval officers Farragut and Porter. 1937 issue.
Winfield Hancock was featured in the Civil War commemorative sheet of 20. Hancock was the hero general of Gettysburg,[29] subsequently Democratic 1880 nominee for president. 1995 issue. Confederate officersThe Lee-Jackson stamp of 1937 signified a demonstration of national unity of the New Deal. The Confederate generals were no longer traitors but American war heroes pictured alongside George Washington, William Sherman, and Ulysses S. Grant.[30] {{double image|right|Generals Lee and Jackson-1937 Issue-4c.jpg|220|Robert E Lee 30c 1957 issue.JPG|125|
Thomas J. Jackson was Lee's most celebrated corps commander, still studied in military academies world over. With an acute topographical sense, capable of striking "savage and unexpected blows", he established psychological superiority by misleading, surprising, and mystifying his opponent.[31] 1937 issue. This commemorative was included in the 1937 Army-Navy series, with five commemorating the U.S. Army and five commemorating the U.S. Navy.
Raphael Semmes, was featured in the Civil War commemorative sheet of 20. Semmes was a naval commander of the cruiser CSS Alabama and CSS Sumter raiding U.S. commercial shipping in the Pacific and the Atlantic.[33] 1995 issue. Stand Watie was featured in the Civil War commemorative sheet of 20. Watie was a Native American general of a Cherokee faction allied with the Confederacy and represented in its Congress. 1995 issue. Joseph E. Johnston was featured in the Civil War commemorative sheet of 20. Johnston commanded the western armies for the Confederacy. His strategy was the mirror image of Lee's offensive strategies in the Confederate Offensive-defensive strategy, Johnston emphasized the defensive falling back onto Atlanta.[34] 1995 issue. Common soldiers{{double image|right|Grand Army of the Republic issue 1948 3c.JPG|220|United Confederate Veterans 1951 3c.JPG|220|War took its greatest toll on the "Gilded generation" born 1822 to 1842. They were the first American generation to be subject to conscription on both sides. Approximately seven million fought with ten percent dead, one in fifteen from the Union side, one in four in the Confederacy. Over the course of six thousand civil war battles, more died than in all American wars combined, a casualty rate eight times greater than World War II. Nearly half were buried in unmarked graves.[35] 1948 and 1951 saw the issue of two companion stamps commemorating the common soldier of the Civil War.
CiviliansNote: Abraham Lincoln has a section dedicated to him below. {{double image|right|Stanton 1871-7c.jpg|120|25c Frederick Douglass stamp.jpg|125|
Events in the Civil WarBattles{{See also|List of American Civil War battles}}{{double image|right|Fort Sumter Centennial 1961-4c.jpg|210|First Bull Run 2011 U.S. stamp.jpg|240|
Appomattox surrender followed Confederate evacuation of Petersburg and Richmond. Lee's remnant army was surrounded without supply of food or ammunition.[59] Terms were generous, contributing to the nation's healing following civil war.[60] 1965 issue. {{clear}} The Battle of Hampton Roads between the Monitor and Merrimac (Virginia), Battle of Shiloh, Battle of Chancellorsville and Battle of Gettysburg were featured in the Civil War commemorative sheet of 20. 1995 issue.[61] ReconstructionModern historians date Reconstruction from 1863 to 1877. This period witnessed national efforts to integrate the former slaves into American society through the "Civil War" or Reconstruction Amendments, as freedmen in the Thirteenth Amendment, as citizens in every state in the Fourteenth Amendment, and as voters in the Fifteenth Amendment. The Thirteenth Amendment was sent to the states before Lincoln's assassination, the Fourteenth passed over Johnson's active opposition, the Fifteenth passed during Grant's administration.[62]
CultureIn literature the onset of the Civil War occasioned important considerations of nationalism, citizenship and the nature of the American republic. {{double image|right|Kansas Territory centennial stamp 1954 issue.jpg|210|Stamp-kansas-statehood.jpg|220|
in War and Peace
Radical social changes involving communications, women's rights, civil rights, states' rights and other issues had already been set in motion before the Civil War, and accelerated through it into succeeding historical eras.
The Second Wave of Immigration reshaped American society in its diversity and urban numbers leading to an explosion of internal commerce and providing a consumer base for the coming industrial age. At 28 percent, the "Gilded generation" fighting the Civil War included a larger share of immigrants than any other generation in America since colonial times.[19] Tides of immigration reinforced the natural population increases to the advantage of the Union on the battlefield. Both German and Irish immigrants formed several ethnic regiments. Both German and Irish immigration have been commemorated in U.S. stamps.
The 100th anniversary of law creating land-grant colleges and universities was commemorated on November 14, 1962 to coincide with the annual meeting of The Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges. The design by Henry K. Bencsath features a lamp of learning against a bas-relief map of the continental United States.[80] Throughout the Civil War, efforts continued to develop communications with Europe via telegraph by a trans-Atlantic cable. The first had been laid in 1858 but only functioned three weeks. The initial project was led by Cyrus West Field and the Atlantic Telegraph Company. Efforts continued with much improved technology in 1865 and 1866. A 4-cent commemorative was issued on the 100th anniversary of the first attempt.[81] 1958 issue. During the conflict, two additional free-soil states were admitted, which along with Lincoln's reconstruction, moved the country inexorably towards the number for three-forths states required in a constitutional amendment to abolish slavery by December 1865. {{double image|right|WVaCent.jpg|218|Nevada statehood 1964 stamp.tiff|220|
TechnologyInventors contributed to both sides of the conflict, most notably for the Union in fundamentally strategically important venues, enlarging on its material advantages over the Confederacy. {{double image|right|Samuel FB Morse 1940 Issue-2c.jpg|150|Eli Whitney 1940 Issue-1c.jpg|150|
both Union and Confederate| begun 1863 completed 1869
Famous people and the Civil WarAuthors and the Civil WarProminent authors of the Civil War generation later were commemorated in stamps in view of their important career-long contributions to American literature. Several Transcentendalist authors promoted immediate abolition and war. Some authors served as nurses, or wrote without any direct participation in the conflict. "Transcendental" generation, born 1792 to 1821. As a generation in their twenties they provided the original core of the 1830s evangelical and abolitionist movements. Their extremism, whether of William Lloyd Garrison or Nat Turner, ended any attempt at the compromises by the "old men" meeting with Lincoln in the Willard Hotel on the eve of Fort Sumter. At the onset of the Civil War, they were in their fifties, Massachusetts "Black Republicans", and South Carolina "Fire Eaters", "fully prepared to shed younger blood to attain what they knew was right." In their old age, they watched Reconstruction disintegrate and youthful causes fall into scorn.[95] {{triple image|right|RalphWaldoEmerson-1940.jpg|150|1958 CPA 2127.jpg|150|Thoreau1967stamp.jpg|150|
"Gilded" generation, born 1822 to 1842. The same generation who flocked to the California gold rush in their teens were most of the actual participants and combat casualties of the American Civil War. They expected a quick adventure, perhaps glory or profit besides. They would settle all the thundering hatred of their parents abolitionists and 'southrons' and then proceed with the settlement of the western frontier. For Gilded blacks, the war was a march toward "flesh-and-blood freedom". In their old age these Gilded would "later turn bitterly cynical about passionate crusades."[103] {{double image|right|Walt Whitman, 1940.JPG|160|Louisa May Alcott 5c 1940 issue.JPG|160|
Presidents and the Civil War{{See also|U.S. presidents on U.S. postage stamps}}Besides Abraham Lincoln in the United States and Jefferson Davis in the Confederate states, nine U.S. presidents had Civil War experience. {{clear}}
Abraham LincolnAbraham Lincoln is perhaps the most commemorated of the Civil War generation on U.S. postage. Pictured here as his statue in the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC. 1958 issue. In the 2009 issue of 42-cent Lincoln stamps, Lincoln was pictured in four stages of life: as rail-splitter, as lawyer, as politician, and as president. 2009 issue.{{clear}} Lincoln was elected in 1860 and won reelection in 1864, the first president since Andrew Jackson to do so. The Confederacy initiated hostilities while he was seeking to "hold, occupy and possess", not repossess federal property. Lincoln responded with a naval blockade and raising troops to restore the Union, and he successfully expanded the war effort throughout the duration of hostilities. He served as an active commander-in-chief, naming his top generals and admirals. In his presidential capacity he marshaled support for the war across the north, border states and in Congress, and he led the Republican party in the initial steps of reconstruction of former Confederate territory.[118] Lincoln's war policy was to press offensives into the South on multiple fronts to destroy Confederate armies and restore the Union. By December 1864 his peace policy was end of rebel hostilities and the end of slavery. His legislative program included the Homestead Act, a transcontinental railroad, land grants for colleges, a higher tariff and monetary centralization by the national banking act. His Proclamation of Amnesty sought to restore states by 10% of the 1860 vote swearing future loyalty to the union. He preserved the Union and liberated the slaves.[119] Lincoln's appearance in U. S. definitive issues was long considered all but obligatory.{{clear}} See also
Notes1. ^Holmes, Oliver Weldell. In Our Youth Our Hearts Were Touched With Fire, An address delivered for Memorial Day, May 30, 1884, at Keene, NH, before John Sedgwick Post No. 4, Grand Army of the Republic. 2. ^1 2 Boyd, Steven R., "The Medium is the Message: Union Civil War Patriotic Envelopes and their Impact, 1861–1865" Winton M. Blount Symposium on Postal History, November 3–4, 2006. Smithsonian National Postal Museum, Washington, D.C. Abstracts of Papers and Panels. Viewed February 22, 2014. 3. ^Strauss, William and Neil Howe. "Generations" op. cit., pp. 88, 93. 4. ^{{cite book |title=The United States Postage Stamps of the Twentieth Century, Volume IV |year=1937 |publisher=H. L. Lindquist |first=Max |last=Johl}}, pp. 244–45. 5. ^Halmann, Alexander T., "Toppan, Carpenter, Casilear & Co. (1851–1861)", Argo: people, postage and the post, National Postal Museum, online viewed February 17, 2014. 6. ^Halmann, Alexander T., "Classic Period (1847–1893)", Argo: people, postage and the post, National Postal Museum, online viewed February 17, 2014. 7. ^Kaufmann, Patricia. Confederate General Issues, Arago: people, postage & the post. Viewed February 19, 2014. 8. ^A small number of ten cent stamps were perforated and released for use by the Confederate Post Office Department in 1864, but perforation quality was often poor and the experiment was abandoned as unsuccessful {{cite web |url=http://arago.si.edu/index.asp?con=1&cmd=1&tid=2027919 |title=10-cent Jefferson Davis, Type II |publisher=Smithsonian National Postal Museum |accessdate=6 February 2011}}. 9. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 National Postal Museum The Civil War: 10 years. Viewed February 19, 2014. 10. ^Benjamin, Maynard H., The History of Envelopes 2002, Envelope Manufacturers Association and EMA Foundation for Paper-Based Communications. pp. 12–13 viewed February 22, 2014. 11. ^Charles, Harry K., "American Civil War Postage Due: North and South", Postal History Symposium, Nov. 2012. Viewed February 19, 2014. 12. ^"1861 Issues" Smithsonian National Postal Museum. viewed January 31, 2014. 13. ^Smith, Elbert B., "[https://books.google.com/books?id=SdrYv7S60fgC&pg=PA112&dq=American+Civil+War+history+on+stamps&hl=en&sa=X&ei=AMoEU47TEOm4yAHFFw&ved=0CCgQ6AEwADgK#v=snippet&q=postage&f=false Montgomery Blair]", Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: a political, social and military history. {{ISBN|978-0-393-04758-5}}, p. 240, viewed February 19, 2014. 14. ^"History of the Confederate States Post Office Service". New York Times; about.com. Viewed January 31, 2014. 15. ^Benjamin, Maynard H., The History of Envelopes 2002, Envelope Manufacturers Association and EMA Foundation for Paper-Based Communications. p. 16. viewed February 22, 2014. 16. ^Boyd, Steven R. [https://books.google.com/books?id=tsPOCBTwUwsC&pg=PA20&dq=civil+war+stamps&hl=en&sa=X&ei=szEKU62JDsHV0gGGvoCoCA&ved=0CE4Q6AEwBDgU#v=onepage&q=civil%20war%20stamps&f=false Patriotic Envelopes of the Civil War: the iconography of Union and Confederate covers] 2010. {{ISBN|978-0-8071-3796-3}} p. 28 viewed February 23, 2014. 17. ^{{cite book|author=James M. McPherson|title=We Cannot Escape History: Lincoln and the Last Best Hope of Earth|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VnJZAJSNCUsC&pg=PA17|year=2001|publisher=University of Illinois Press|page=17|isbn=978-0-252-06981-9}} 18. ^Halman, Alexander T., "15-cent Lincoln", Argo: people, postage and the post, National Postal Museum, viewed February 17, 2014. 19. ^1 Strauss, William and Neil Howe. "Generations" op. cit., p. 210. 20. ^1 Chapter 4: Shaping National Identity with Commemoratives, 1920s–30s (2006) "Viewing American Stamps" George Mason University. Viewed February 22, 2014. 21. ^Marszalek, John. "Philatelic Pugilists" in Herman Hattaway and Ethan S. Rafuse. [https://books.google.com/books?id=47oEszn2AmMC&pg=PA138&dq=civil+war+stamps&hl=en&sa=X&ei=7yUKU_HAFOjL0wHRkoCgDw&ved=0CDIQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=civil%20war%20stamps&f=false The Ongoing Civil War: New Versions of Old Stories] 2004 {{ISBN|978-0-8262-6253-0}}, p. 128. Viewed February 23, 2014 22. ^Marszalek, John. "Philatelic Pugilists" in Herman Hattaway and Ethan S. Rafuse. [https://books.google.com/books?id=47oEszn2AmMC&pg=PA138&dq=civil+war+stamps&hl=en&sa=X&ei=7yUKU_HAFOjL0wHRkoCgDw&ved=0CDIQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=civil%20war%20stamps&f=false The Ongoing Civil War: New Versions of Old Stories] 2004 {{ISBN|978-0-8262-6253-0}}, p. 138. Viewed February 23, 2014 23. ^Keegan, John. "The American Civil War: a military history" (2009) {{ISBN|978-0-307-26343-8}}, p. 329 24. ^1 Keegan, John. "American Civil War: a military history" op. cit., p. 330 25. ^Keegan, John. "American Civil War: a military history" op. cit., p. 92 26. ^Keegan, John. "American Civil War: a military history" op. cit., p. 118 27. ^Keegan, John. "American Civil War: a military history" op. cit., pp. 207, 268 28. ^Keegan, John. "American Civil War: a military history" op. cit., p. 214 29. ^Keegan, John. "American Civil War: a military history" op. cit., p. 199 30. ^Brennan, Sheila A., "Stamping American Memory" Stamp Collecting in the U.S., 1880s–1930s. George Mason University Doctoral Dissertation, [https://chnm.gmu.edu/staff/sheila/lot49/?page_id=18 Chapter 4.], p. 235. Viewed February 23, 2014. 31. ^1 Keegan, John. "American Civil War: a military history" op. cit., pp. 327–28 32. ^“Stone Mountain Memorial Issue”, Arago: people, postage & the post. Smithsonian National Postal Museum, viewed October 17, 1014. 33. ^Keegan, John. "American Civil War: a military history" op. cit., pp. 281, 285 34. ^Keegan, John. "American Civil War: a military history" op. cit., pp. 84–85 35. ^Strauss, William and Neil Howe. "Generations" op. cit., p. 220. 36. ^"Stanton, Edwin McMasters", Webster's Guide to American History" 1971. G. & C. Merriam Company, Publishers. SBN 87779-081-7. p. 1244. 37. ^Bates, Christopher. [https://books.google.com/books?id=SdrYv7S60fgC&pg=PA112&dq=American+Civil+War+history+on+stamps&hl=en&sa=X&ei=AMoEU47TEOm4yAHFFw&ved=0CCgQ6AEwADgK%23v=snippet&q=alcott&f=false%20Louisa%20May%20Alcott%5D#v=snippet&q=edwin%20m.%20stanton&f=false Edwin M. Stanton]", Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: a political, social and military history. Op.cit., p. 1851, viewed February 20, 2014. 38. ^Heidler, David S., and Jeanne T. Heidler. 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[https://books.google.com/books?id=SdrYv7S60fgC&pg=PA112&dq=American+Civil+War+history+on+stamps&hl=en&sa=X&ei=AMoEU47TEOm4yAHFFw&ved=0CCgQ6AEwADgK%23v=snippet&q=alcott&f=false%20Louisa%20May%20Alcott%5D#v=snippet&q=Mary%20Chestnut&f=false Mary Boykin Chestnut]", Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: a political, social and military history. Op.cit., p. 424, viewed February 20, 2014. 45. ^”[https://store.usps.com/store/browse/productDetailSingleSku.jsp?productId=P_842391&categoryId=subcatGFS_AP_FramesFramedArt 1861 Battle of First Bull Run Framed Art]”, USPS.com, viewed April 1, 2014. 46. ^Keegan, John. "The American Civil War: a military history", op. cit., p. 115. 47. ^Scott 2013 Specialized Catalogue of United States Stamps & Covers. 2012. {{ISBN|0-89487-475-6}}, "Civil War Sesquicentennial" A3452 p. 310 48. ^Keegan, John. "The American Civil War: a military history", op. cit., p. 133. 49. ^1 ”[https://store.usps.com/store/browse/productDetailSingleSku.jsp?productId=S_577044 The Civil War: 1862 stamps] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140407073044/https://store.usps.com/store/browse/productDetailSingleSku.jsp?productId=S_577044 |date=2014-04-07 }}”, [USPS.com], viewed April 1, 2014. 50. ^Keegan, John. "The American Civil War: a military history", op. cit., p. 139. 51. ^Scott 2013 Specialized Catalogue of United States Stamps & Covers. 2012. {{ISBN|0-89487-475-6}}, "Civil War Sesquicentennial" A3556 p. 317 52. ^Keegan, John. "The American Civil War: a military history", op. cit., p. 169. 53. ^Scott 2013 Specialized Catalogue of United States Stamps & Covers. 2012. {{ISBN|0-89487-475-6}}, "Civil War Sesquicentennial" A3557 p. 317. 54. ^Keegan, John. "The American Civil War: a military history", op. cit., p. 201. 55. ^Keegan, John. 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(1988) "Reconstruction: America's unfinished revolution: 1863–1877. {{ISBN|978-0-06-093716-4}} 63. ^"Emancipation Proclamation Issue", Arago: people, postage & the post, National Postal Museum online, viewed March 24, 2014. 64. ^Trotter, Gordon T., "Thirteenth Amendment Issue", Arago: people, postage & the post, National Postal Museum online, viewed March 14, 2014. 65. ^Freehling, William W., "The Road to Disunion: secessionists triumphant 1854–1861" {{ISBN|978-0-19-505815-4}}, p. 131 66. ^"Kansas Territory Issue", Scott 2013 Specialized Catalogue of United States Stamps & Covers. op.cit., A508, p. 110. 67. ^Freehling, William W., "The Road to Disunion: secessionists triumphant 1854–1861" {{ISBN|978-0-19-505815-4}}, p. 511 68. ^"Kansas Statehood 100th Anniversary", Scott 2013 Specialized Catalogue of United States Stamps & Covers. op.cit., A621, p.118. 69. ^Bowman, Shearer Davis. [https://books.google.com/books?id=ARI1y0bu8UMC&pg=PA142&lpg=PA142&dq=douglas+norfolk+doctrine&source=bl&ots=x6UdaSbcME&sig=t3nsFY0MgZEpgKaYbPZY8dqrjzk&hl=en&sa=X&ei=69UIU9TnILXNsQS4-4DgAQ&ved=0CCYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=douglas%20norfolk%20doctrine&f=false At the Precipice:] Americans North and South During the Secession Crisis. {{ISBN|978-0-8078-9567-2}} pp. 142–44. 70. ^Wills, Gary. [https://www.amazon.com/Lincoln-Gettysburg-America-Schuster-Library/dp/0743299639 Lincoln at Gettysburg: the words that remade America] Chapter 1. Oratory of the Greek Revival. Appendices III.B. By Pericles. 71. ^"[https://www.aoc.gov/capitol-buildings/capitol-dome Capitol Dome]" at Explore Capitol Hill: buildings. Architect of the Capitol, viewed February 26, 2014. 72. ^[https://www.aoc.gov/capitol-hill/other-statues/statue-freedom The Statue of Freedom], Explore Capitol Hill: Art, Architect of the Capitol page, viewed February 27, 2014. 73. ^"Greeley, Horace". 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(1950) {{ISBN|978-0-8071-0007-3}} , p. 42. 83. ^"West Virginia Statehood, 100th Anniv.", Scott 2013 Specialized Catalogue of United States Stamps & Covers. op.cit., A664, p. 121. 84. ^"Nevada Statehood, 100th Anniv.", Scott 2013 Specialized Catalogue of United States Stamps & Covers. op.cit., A680, p. 122. 85. ^Goodwin, Doris Kearns. "Team of Rivals: the political genius of Abraham Lincoln" (2006) {{ISBN|978-1-4165-4983-3}}, p. 277. 86. ^Keegan, John. "The American Civil War: a military history" (2009) {{ISBN|978-0-307-26343-8}}, pp. 98, 328. 87. ^"Whitney, Eli." Webster's Guide to American History" 1971. op.cit. p. 1324. 88. ^New Georgia Encyclopedia: Eli Whitney in Georgia. Accessed March 6, 2014. 89. ^"Fulton, Robert", Webster's Guide to American History" 1971. op. cit., p. 966. 90. ^"McCormick, Cyrus." Webster's Guide to American History" 1971. op.cit. p. 1100. 91. ^Keegan, John. "The American Civil War: a military history", op. cit., p. 86. 92. ^"Pacific Railway Act, July 1, 1862." Webster's Guide to American History" 1971. op.cit. p. 235. 93. ^"Whistler, James Abbot McNeill." Webster's Guide to American History" 1971. op.cit. p. 1318. 94. ^"Ericsson, John", Webster's Guide to American History" 1971. op.cit. p. 943. 95. ^Strauss, William and Neil Howe. "Generations: the history of America's future, 1584–2069" (1991) {{ISBN|0-688-11912-3}} (pbk) pp. 191, 196. 96. ^"Emerson, Ralph Waldo. Webster's Guide to American History" 1971. op.cit., p. 942. 97. ^Pannapacker, William A., [https://books.google.com/books?id=SdrYv7S60fgC&pg=PA112&dq=American+Civil+War+history+on+stamps&hl=en&sa=X&ei=AMoEU47TEOm4yAHFFw&ved=0CCgQ6AEwADgK#v=snippet&q=emerson&f=false Ralph Waldo Emerson]", Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: a political, social and military history. {{ISBN|978-0-393-04758-5}}, p. 652, viewed February 19, 2014. 98. ^"Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth. 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[https://books.google.com/books?id=SdrYv7S60fgC&pg=PA112&dq=American+Civil+War+history+on+stamps&hl=en&sa=X&ei=AMoEU47TEOm4yAHFFw&ved=0CCgQ6AEwADgK%23v=snippet&q=alcott&f=false%20Louisa%20May%20Alcott%5D#v=snippet&q=McKinley&f=false William McKinley]", Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: a political, social and military history. Op.cit., p. 1288, viewed February 20, 2013. 118. ^Baker, Jean Harvey, "Abraham Lincoln", Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: a political, social and military history. Op.cit., p. 1185 119. ^Baker, Jean Harvey, "Abraham Lincoln", Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: a political, social and military history. Op.cit., pp. 1185, 1191. References{{reflist|2}}Bibliography
External links
3 : Cultural history of the American Civil War|Postage stamps of the United States|Commemorative stamps |
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