United Nations 2022 Stamp Program

Issues and details are subject to change.

Commemorative Issues

14 January: Sport For Peace
(6 mini sheets of 6 stamps)
58¢, $1.30, CHF 1,00, CHF 2,00, €0,85, €1,80

18 March: Endangered Species
(3 sheets of 16 stamps – 4 designs per sheet)
$1.30, CHF 1,50, €1,00
3 maximum cards
2022 Endangered Species Collection Folder
Limited-edition silk cover

1 April: Wangari Maathai
Definitive stamp
(Sheets of 20 stamps) €0,85

5 May: Planet Mars
(Sheets of 20 stamps)
58¢, $1.30, CHF 1,00, CHF 1,50, €0,85, €1,00
Souvenir sheets – $1.30, CHF 2,00, €1,80

27 August: World Heritage
(Sheets of 20 stamps)
58¢, $1.30, CHF 1,00, CHF 1,50, €1,00, €1,80
Prestige booklets

10 October: World Mental Health Day
TBD
Souvenir card

4 November: Crypto Stamps
(3 mini sheets of 1 stamp) TBD
2022 Annual Collection Folder

Special Events Sheets:

21 January: Chinese Lunar Calendar Year Of The Tiger
(New York special event stamp sheet of 10 Stamps) $1.30

14 February: #TROLLSFOODHEROES
(New York special event sheet of 10 stamps) $1.30

3 June: World Bicycle Day
(Geneva special event sheet of 10 stamps) CHF 1,50

20 July: World Chess Day
(Vienna special event sheet of 10 stamps) €1,00)

18 November: Seventieth Anniversary Of Guided Tours At
United Nations Headquarters
(New York special event stamp sheet of 10 stamps) $1.30

APS Names Gilson Distinguished Philatelist

The American Philatelic Society has named VSC member Dennis Gilson its 2022 Summer Seminar Distinguished Philatelist, for his long record of service and dedication to the APS and philately. Not mentioned in the citation below for the 2016 Luff Award winner is that he was the project manager for the conversion of the Match Factory into the American Philatelic Center.The image above expands quite a bit if you click on it, making it easier to read.

APS Announces 2022 Summer Seminar Courses

The American Philatelic Society’s 2022 Summer Seminar course descriptions are now available on the APS website [direct link]. The 43rd Annual Summer Seminar runs from Sunday, June 19 to Thursday, June 23, 2022.

The subjects include revenues, stamp technology, Russian philately, forensic philately, the Kansas-Nebraska Overprints, research, auxiliary markings, Argentina’s stamps, Machins, intermediate to advanced exhibiting, and U.S. stamps of 1920-1933.

Scott Catalogue U.S. Update (December 2021)

5644 (58¢) Christmas – Santa Claus on Roof
5645 (58¢) Christmas – Santa Claus in Fireplace
5646 (58¢) Christmas – Head of Santa Claus
5647 (58¢) Christmas – Santa Claus, Sleigh and Reindeer in Flight
a. Block of 4, #5644-5647
b. Convertible booklet pane of 20, 5 each #5644-5647

5648 (58¢) Otters in Snow – Otter in Water
5649 (58¢) Otters in Snow – Otter, Tail at Right
5650 (58¢) Otters in Snow – Otter, Tail at Left
5651 (58¢) Otters in Snow – Otter in Snow
a. Block of 4, #5648-5651
b. Convertible booklet pane of 20, 5 each #5648-5651

2021 Holiday Shipping Deadlines (USPS, UPS, FedEx)

Consumer Reports has compiled the dates for each company’s various services, and you can find them here. While the article does ask you to log in, you can read all of it for free.

One important point: See what your retailer says about its expected delivery windows. It won’t matter what the shipping company’s deadline is if the retailer doesn’t get the product out the door for two weeks!

U.S. Post Offices’ Holiday Hours

[press release]
Postal Service Closed Christmas Day and New Year’s Day

WASHINGTON, DC — Post Office locations nationwide will be closed on Christmas Day, Saturday, Dec. 25, 2021, and New Year’s Day, Saturday, Jan. 1, 2022.

All Post Office locations will be open, and regular mail delivery will resume, on Monday, Dec. 27, 2021, and Monday, Jan. 3, 2022.

This post office will close early on Christmas Eve.

Some Post Office locations may have extended hours leading up to the holidays, while others may have limited hours on Christmas Eve, Friday, Dec. 24. There are currently no plans for limited hours on New Year’s Eve, Friday, Dec. 31. Customers are advised to always check with their local Post Office for hours of operation.

Blue collection boxes with final collection times before noon will not be affected by an early closing Dec. 24.

If a box has a final collection time after noon, its mail may be picked up earlier. For mail pickup on Dec. 24, customers are asked to either put their mail into blue collection boxes by noon regardless of the final collection times posted on the box, or take their items to one of our more than 34,000 Post Office locations.

The Alexandria, VA post office will close at 2 on Christmas Eve, rather than 6.

Customers who are unable to mail items before the scheduled collection box pickup times on Dec. 24 should visit the online Postal Locator tool at tools.usps.com to find Post Office locations that may be open late.

As a reminder, blue collection boxes are not serviced on Sundays.

The Postal Service generally receives no tax dollars for operating expenses and relies on the sale of postage, products and services to fund its operations.

GASS 2022: Old Sacramento Underground

The sights at Old Sacramento State Park — about a mile from Great American Stamp Show — aren’t just above-ground.After several devastating floods they decided to raise the city by hauling in dirt. The project began in 1868 and finished in 1873.  This basically made the first floors of many buildings become the basements and the second floor became the first floor. Today, there are tours of Sacramento underground.There’s even an underground (or mostly underground) passageway back to the convention center area.

Shreve to Head US Museum’s Council

[press release]
National Postal Museum Appoints New Chairman to Its Council of Philatelists
Charles F. Shreve To Lead Council

The Smithsonian’s National Postal Museum has announced the appointment of Charles F. Shreve as chair of its Council of Philatelists. The council provides the museum with philatelic advice, advises on engagement with the global philatelic community, promotes and advocates for the museum’s mission, purpose and programs to the nation and helps build the financial base of the museum. Members are appointed by the Smithsonian’s Board of Regents.

“Charles Shreve’s leadership was pivotal in helping the National Postal Museum create the William H. Gross Stamp Gallery, the finest collection of philatelic exhibitions in the world,” said Elliot Gruber, director of the museum. “He assumes chairmanship of the museum’s Council of Philatelists at a crucial time as the museum re-imagines its atrium level galleries and public spaces, as well as our strategic commitment to develop and launch new digital engagement experiences.”

Shreve has served on the museum’s Council of Philatelists since 2001. He is a life-long professional philatelist who has made a career of his hobby for more than four decades. In the early 1980’s he developed an innovative style of describing and presenting stamps in luxuriant auction catalogues, which allowed him to be counted among the premier auctioneers of high-quality U.S. and International stamps and postal history. In 1993 he founded Shreves Philatelic Galleries, and the firm quickly rose to a leading position in the international philatelic marketplace. In 2007 he sold his firm to an international auction company based in London and became an independent consultant for high end collectors. In 2012 he joined Robert A. Siegel Auction Galleries as director of their International auctions. In his career Charles has been involved in the sale of nearly one billion dollars’ worth of rare philatelic material.

Charles maintains numerous memberships in the hobby, including being a life member of the American Philatelic Society, the U.S. Philatelic Classics Society and the American Stamp Dealers Association. In addition, Charles is a Fellow of the Royal Philatelic Society of London.

Shreve succeeds Donald Sundman as chair of the museum’s Council of Philatelists. Sundman served as chair since 2003 and will continue serving as a member of the council. “Don Sundman has been a central guiding force for the National Postal Museum,” said Gruber. “His dedication and passion to the National Postal Museum has been instrumental in broadening the reach of the museum within the global philatelic community.”

Other members of the National Postal Museum’s Council of Philatelists are listed on the museum’s website.

About the Smithsonian’s National Postal Museum
The National Postal Museum is devoted to presenting the colorful and engaging history of the nation’s mail service and showcasing one of the largest and most comprehensive collections of stamps and philatelic material in the world. It is located at 2 Massachusetts Ave. N.E., Washington, D.C., across from Union Station. The museum is currently open Friday through Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. For more information about the Smithsonian, call (202) 633-1000.