Report: USPS Aiding Immigration Crackdown

The law enforcement arm of the U.S. Postal Service is reportedly aiding federal immigration efforts to find people in the U.S. illegally. According to the Washington Post, the Postal Inspection Service has joined a Department of Homeland Security task force. The PIS may provide photographs of the outsides of envelopes and packages, account data and IP addresses, among other information.

The Postal Inspection Service normally is responsible for maintaining the safety of the mail system. On its website, the agency says “The Postal Inspection Service enforces over 200 federal statutes related to crimes that involve the postal system, its employees, and its customers.” Sources tell the Post that USPS officials agreed to participate in the program because they were afraid the Trump administration could seize control of the USPS.

Postal inspectors participated in a recent drug enforcement and immigration raid in Colorado Springs, according to video posted on social media, X. An image from that video is shown above.

The USPS did not comment to the Washington Post, but in a statement, a senior Homeland Security official said collaboration with the Postal Inspection Service was “a key part of ensuring law enforcement has the resources they need to fulfill President Trump’s promise to the American people to remove violent criminals from our streets, dismantle drug and human trafficking operations and make America safe again.”

“The Inspection Service is very, very nervous about this,” one of the people familiar with the matter told the newspaper. “They seem to be trying to placate Trump by getting involved with things they think he’d like.”

“This is the Postal Service,” the person said. “Why are they involved in deporting people?”

80th Anniversary VE Day (UK 2025)

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Valour and Victory: Stories of the Second World War:
Royal Mail Stamps Mark the 80th Anniversary of VE Day

  • Issue date: 1 May, 2025
  • The main set of 10 stamps honour men and women who made extraordinary contributions during the Second World War
  • Also celebrated in a mini-sheet of stamps is national icon Dame Vera Lynn, shown in four images from different aspects of her wartime career
  • The stamps and a range of collectible products are available at www.royalmail.com/valour and by telephone on 03457 641641

Nations wage wars, but it is individuals who fight them. The 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War is an opportunity to acknowledge just some of the remarkable men and women who made extraordinary contributions during the war. These incredible people were working for the war effort both at home and behind enemy lines, and volunteering from across the Commonwealth.

It was the courage and dedication of these individuals, and so many more, that led to the eventual victory in 1945. Royal Mail is issuing a set of stamps to honour the courage and dedication of individuals whose actions saved lives, changed history and shaped Britain’s war effort.

The Second World War is often called ‘the people’s war’ and the people depicted on the stamps represent some of the diverse individuals who made up ‘the people’ in wartime.

Each of the 10 stamps in the main set features an image of the person being honoured, capturing their wartime role – be it pilot, nurse, Commando, SOE operative, codebreaker, engineer or firefighter.

Shown on the stamps are:

  • George Arthur Roberts – a military veteran, activist and the first Black man to join the London Auxiliary Fire Service, in 1938, serving bravely throughout the Blitz.
  • Mary Morris – her diaries describe how she nursed troops returning wet and wounded from Dunkirk and later travelled to Normandy to care for casualties after the D-Day landings.
  • Tommy Macpherson – a Commando known for his audacious actions, including being dropped by submarine in North Africa, where he sabotaged enemy positions.
  • Violette Szabó – joined the Auxiliary Territorial Service before volunteering for the Special Operations Executive (SOE) and working undercover in occupied France.
  • John Harrison – served in the Royal Navy on the destroyer HMS Belfast and was responsible for maintaining ‘A’ and ‘B’ gun turrets at the front of the ship.
  • Bhanbhagta Gurung – fought in Operation Longcloth in Burma, now Myanmar, and was awarded the Victoria Cross for his bravery under heavy fire.
  • Thomas Peirson Frank – a civil engineer and surveyor whose rapid-response teams repaired over 100 breaches of the Thames wall during air raids, saving many lives.
  • Mahinder Singh Pujji – a pilot and Squadron Leader with the Royal Air Force (RAF) and Indian Air Force, awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for his outstanding courage and leadership over Japanese-occupied territory.
  • William Tutte – a brilliant mathematician and codebreaker, William (‘Bill’) Tutte’s work was key to decrypting the Lorenz cipher, the German code used for top-level communication and intelligence.
  • Lilian Bader – after being forced to leave the Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes (NAAFI) canteen because of her ethnicity, Bader volunteered to join the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF) in 1944, and went on to train as an Instrument Repairer, becoming one of the first members of the WAAF to qualify in this role.

A further four stamps, presented in a miniature sheet, pay tribute to the late Dame Vera Lynn, her tireless efforts to support the troops and her advocacy for military veterans.

The stamps capture Dame Vera Lynn in different aspects of her wartime career, including her Entertainments National Service Association (ENSA) performances, BBC wartime radio programme, and morale-boosting visits to British troops and civilians during the conflict.

Royal Mail worked with historian Professor Lucy Noakes on the stamp issue. Since 2017, she has been Rab Butler Professor of Modern History at the University of Essex and has served as the President of the Royal Historical Society since 2024.

To mark the launch of the stamps, they will be unveiled today (24 April) to an audience of family members of all the individuals who featured on the stamps, and other guests, at an event held at the Imperial War Museum North.

Royal Mail will be applying a special VE80 postmark on stamped mail in the week of the actual anniversary that takes place on Thursday 8 May. The business is also supporting VE Mail, a letter-writing initiative connecting schoolchildren with Second World War veterans. Marking the 80th anniversary of VE Day, Together Coalition – an organisation aiming to build kinder, closer and more connected communities – has arranged for youngsters to receive personal letters from veterans who share their personal experiences of the war and their reflections on victory. The students then write returning letters expressing theirthoughts and gratitude of the sacrifices made 80 years ago. It’s a unique opportunity to connect generations and encourage children to engage with the past.

Emma Gilthorpe, CEO, Royal Mail said: “Behind every victory of a nation, there are countless unsung heroes whose courage and sacrifice shaped the future of the world. On VE Day, we remember not only the leaders and generals, but the silent warriors whose contributions echo through history. For the 80th anniversary of VE Day, Royal Mail is proud to issue these stamps honouring the courage, sacrifice, and resilience of those who fought for freedom and peace.”

The stamps, and a range of collectible products, are available at www.royalmail.com/valour and by telephone on 03457 641 641. A Presentation Pack including all 14 stamps is priced at £24.70. The stamps go on general sale from 1 May.

Stamp-by-Stamp

George Arthur Roberts, BEM, MSM (1891–1970)
George Arthur Roberts was a military veteran, activist, and firefighter during the London Blitz. Born in Trinidad, Roberts had travelled to Britain and joined the British Army, fighting on the Western Front during the First World War. Settling in South London, he was a founding member of both the British Legion and the League of Coloured Peoples.
Too old for combat in the Second World War, he was the first Black man to join the London Auxiliary Fire Service, in 1938, serving bravely throughout the Blitz. Roberts was awarded the British Empire Medal (BEM) for bravery and for his work setting up and leading discussion and education groups in the Fire Service.

Mary Morris (1921–1997)
Mary Morris nursed on the home front and in mainland Europe after D-Day in 1944. Born in County Galway, Ireland, she moved to London in 1939 to train at Guy’s Hospital. Morris’s diaries describe how she nursed troops returning wet and wounded from Dunkirk, badly burnt pilots (both British and German) of the Battle of Britain, and victims of the London Blitz. Joining the nursing branch of the British Army, she travelled to Normandy in 1944, caring for casualties of the landings and describing her ward as a “multi-national microcosm of a Europe at war.” Her diaries were published in 2014.

Tommy Macpherson CBE, MC, TD, DL, CROIX DE GUERRE, LÉGION D’HONNEUR (1920–2014)
Colonel Sir Ronald Thomas (‘Tommy’) Stewart Macpherson was a Commando known for his audacious actions. These included being dropped by submarine in North Africa, where he sabotaged enemy positions before being caught. After several escape attempts from Italian camps, Macpherson was imprisoned in Austria, Germany and Poland. Escaping to Britain, he was parachuted into central France in 1944 to join with the Resistance as part of Operation Jedburgh.

Destroying bridges, railways, and roads vital to the German occupation, Macpherson eventually accepted the surrender of thousands of Axis troops. At one point, 300,000 francs (more than one million pounds in today’s money) was offered for his capture. He was later sent behind enemy lines in Italy and was on standby to fly to Japan when the end of the war came.

Violette Szabó GC, CROIX DE GUERRE WITH STAR, MÉDAILLE DE LA RÉSISTANCE (1921–1945)
Born in Paris to British–French parents, Szabó grew up in both Picardy, France, and London. She joined the Auxiliary Territorial Service before volunteering for the Special Operations Executive (SOE) in 1942. Szabó undertook two missions to France for the SOE and was captured after a fierce gun battle in 1944. After interrogation in Paris, Szabó was transferred to Ravensbrück Concentration Camp, where she was executed alongside her comrades Denise Bloch and Lilian Rolfe in February 1945. She was 23 years old and left behind a young daughter. Szabó was posthumously awarded the George Cross, the Croix de Guerre with Star, and the Médaille de la Résistance.

John Harrison (1914–2020)
John Harrison served in the Royal Navy on the destroyer HMS Belfast as an Ordnance Officer responsible for maintaining ‘A’ and ‘B’ gun turrets at the front of the ship. Conditions at sea were often hard, and he was saved from being washed overboard in the Arctic Ocean only when his hand froze onto the metal handle of the turret door. When HMS Belfast was badly damaged by a magnetic mine in November 1939, John Harrison suffered two broken vertebrae in the explosion. The ship was out of action for three years, but he transferred to HMS Atherstonebefore undertaking shore duties.

Bhanbhagta Gurung (1921–2008)
Havildar (Sergeant) Bhanbhagta Gurung was awarded the Victoria Cross while serving as a Rifleman in the 2nd Gurkha Rifles in Burma, now Myanmar, in 1945. Born in the Gorkha District of Nepal, Bhanbhagta Gurung joined the Gurkha Rifles in 1940.

He fought in Operation Longcloth, the first Chindit mission in Burma in 1943, and was awarded the Victoria Cross for his bravery under heavy fire during attempts to clear Japanese soldiers from their position on high ground near Tamandu, Burma, in March 1945.

After the war, he returned to Nepal to care for his family. In 2000, the Gurkha training block at Catterick Camp in Yorkshire was named after him.

Thomas Peirson Frank (1881–1951)
Sir Thomas Peirson Frank was a civil engineer and surveyor, serving as London County Council Coordinating Officer for Road Repairs and Public Utility Services from 1939 to 1945, and was known as ‘the man who saved London from drowning’.

As war approached, Peirson Frank worked in secret to identify the most vulnerable areas of the city, establishing flood defences and the rapid-response Thames Flood Prevention Emergency Repairs Unit. During the Blitz, flooding was a risk to low-lying areas of London – including the Underground, where so many sought shelter from the bombs. Peirson Frank’s rapid-response teams repaired over 100 breaches of the Thames wall during air raids and saved many lives.

Mahinder Singh Pujji, DFC (1918–2010)
Born in Simla (present-day Shimla, India), Singh Pujji was a pilot and Squadron Leader with the Royal Air Force (RAF) and Indian Air Force, who fought in Europe, the Middle East and Southeast Asia. Training as a pilot in the 1930s, he volunteered for service with the RAF, arriving in Britain in 1940. Flying both Hurricanes and Spitfires, Singh Pujji was involved in many dogfights with Luftwaffe pilots and was forced down twice. In 1945, Singh Pujji was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for his outstanding courage and leadership over Japanese-occupied territory. He eventually settled in London and worked as an air-traffic controller at Heathrow Airport.

William Tutte, OC, FRS, FRSC (1917–2002)
A brilliant mathematician and codebreaker, William (‘Bill’) Tutte’s work was key to decrypting the Lorenz cipher, the German code used for top-level communication and intelligence. The son of a housekeeper and a gardener from Newmarket, Tutte won a scholarship to the University of Cambridge before joining the Research Section at Bletchley Park, the centre of British codebreaking.

Tutte’s groundbreaking work on the structure of the Lorenz machine enabled the team at Bletchley Park to crack the Lorenz cipher, a system even more complex than Enigma, providing information vital for D-Day planning and invasion. After the war, Tutte emigrated to Canada, becoming a Professor at the University of Waterloo.

Lilian Bader (1918–2015)
Leading Aircraftwoman Lilian Bader was born in Liverpool and raised in a Middlesbrough convent after being orphaned at the age of nine. When war broke out, she worked at a Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes (NAAFI) canteen but was forced to leave because of her ethnicity. Undaunted, she volunteered to join the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF) in 1944, and went on to train as an Instrument Repairer, passing her course ‘First Class’ and becoming one of the first members of the WAAF to qualify in this role.

She excelled at her job and was soon promoted to Acting Corporal. Bader went on to take a degree at London University and became a teacher.

Philatelic products:These include the limited-edition uncirculated coin cover shown above (£19.99); a silver proof coin cover (£75.00), a gold proof coin cover (£1,475.00), a prestige booklet (£28.65), a collectors sheet (£18.20), a gold stamp set (£149.99), and EuroPhilEx Limited Editions of the full set of stamps (£18.20) and the miniature sheet (£6.80).

Community Foundation (Giraffes) (Canada 20250

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Canada Post Community Foundation’s new fundraising stamp stands tall for Canada’s children and youth
100 per cent of funds raised provide grants to schools, charities and community organizations across Canada

OTTAWA – Canada Post has issued a new Community Foundation stamp as part of its annual fundraising campaign to support community programs for Canadian children and youth.

The stamp features a charming illustration of giraffes caring for their young, highlighting the importance of giving every child the opportunity to thrive in a supportive and enriching environment.

The Community Foundation distributes grants to local and national non-profit groups that offer programming for children and youth across Canada. Since 2012, it has awarded $14.8 million to more than 1,300 community projects in every province and territory.

Grants from the Foundation are funded through customer donations in post offices, employee contributions and a portion of the proceeds from the sale of the stamp and postcard. Every dollar raised provides grants to schools, charities and community organizations that make a difference in the lives of children and youth (up to age 21).

About the stamp
Designed by Paprika and illustrated by Anne-Julie Dudemaine, the 2025 Community Foundation stamp artwork features playful and original typography that was created specifically for this stamp issue. The design was selected by Canada Post employees and signifies what the Foundation wants childhood to be for every child: lighthearted and carefree.

The stamp, Official First Day Cover (below) – cancelled in Ottawa – and colourful postage-paid postcard are available at post offices and online at canadapost.ca/shop. A $1 surcharge from the sale of each booklet of 10 stamps, or an extra 10 cents from the sale of each OFDC and postcard, goes straight to the Foundation.About the Foundation
A registered charity, the Canada Post Community Foundation’s mission is to improve the lives of Canadian children and youth. Through its grassroots, community-based approach, the Foundation plays a key role in helping Canada Post achieve its purpose, A Stronger Canada – Delivered. Supporting initiatives that benefit children and youth helps strengthen communities for all Canadians.

(Postcard face, above; reverse below) To donate to the Community Foundation, purchase a booklet of stamps at a local post office or visit canadapost.ca/community.

YouTube Video:

250 Years of Delivering (U.S. 2025)

This 20-stamp issue was announced as part of the USPS celebration of its semiquincentennial. According to the April 28th press release, the design

by cartoonist Chris Ware that invites the public to spot a fun array of familiar postal items and icons while following a mail carrier on her rounds through four seasons of the year.

The USPS says this issue will be released in July. Further information will be posted below the line, with the most recent near the top.

Here is a look at the design of the rear of the pane of 20:


Updated May 2nd:
These stamps will have a “special dedication ceremony” on the second day of Great American Stamp Show, August 15th, in Schaumburg, IL. It is believed the first-day will be July 26th.

Benjamin Franklin (U.S. 2025)

This stamp will only be available with the purchase of a “prestige booklet,” Putting a Stamp on the American Experience, “only the fourth ever issued by the Postal Service.” According to the April 28th press release

Two self-adhesive sheets of a new intaglio printed stamp featuring Benjamin Franklin are available exclusively with the booklet. The stamp is based on an 1875 reproduction of an 1847 5-cent stamp, one of the first official U.S. postage stamps.

The USPS says this issue will be released in July. More details will be posted below the line, with the most recent nearest the top.


Updated May 2nd:
This stamp will have a “special dedication ceremony” on the second day of Great American Stamp Show, August 15th, in Schaumburg, IL. It is believed the first-day will be July 26th.

Two Issues To Celebrate 250th (US 2025)

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
U.S. Postal Service Announces Stamps Celebrating Its 250th Anniversary

WASHINGTON — On July 26, 1775, the Second Continental Congress established a postal system for the United Colonies and appointed Benjamin Franklin as the first postmaster general. The U.S. Postal Service [April 28th] announced two stamp issues to celebrate its 250th anniversary — one of which is only available in an exclusive booklet.

The 32-page booklet — Putting a Stamp on the American Experience — celebrates the cultural importance of U.S. stamps.

Highlighting the popular series and subjects that give the stamp program its range and depth, this booklet — only the fourth ever issued by the Postal Service — commemorates the 250th anniversary of our nation’s postal system and celebrates the enduring influence of stamps on our shared heritage.

Two self-adhesive sheets of a new intaglio printed stamp featuring Benjamin Franklin are available exclusively with the booklet. The stamp is based on an 1875 reproduction of an 1847 5-cent stamp, one of the first official U.S. postage stamps.

The second release, 250 Years of Delivering, is a pane of 20 stamps by cartoonist Chris Ware that invites the public to spot a fun array of familiar postal items and icons while following a mail carrier on her rounds through four seasons of the year.

Both the prestige booklet which includes the Ben Frankin Stamp and the 250 Years of Delivering pane are scheduled to be released in July. There will be additional stamps in the 2025 stamps program announced soon. These designs are preliminary and may change.

Hey, Martha! What about stamp collecting?

In a new article on the Martha Stewart website, an article titled “10 Hobbies for Older Adults That Improve Brain and Body Health” lists walking, learning languages, quilting, photography, dancing, video games, even juggling — but not stamp collecting.

In fact, a search for “philately” on the site only found two articles on addressing wedding invitations. “Stamp Collecting” as a search produces nine hits, including “How to Have a Collecting Hobby If You’re a Minimalist” (a passing mention after “holiday decorations”) and “10 Collectibles That Could Be Worth Serious Money.” We get first mention in that one, but are only ranked #8, with one short paragraph that has little useful information and, in fact, is somewhat misleading:

While your basic forever stamp might not be worth more than 73 cents, there are rare stamps that can fetch a pretty penny. If you inherit a stamp collection or find one at a secondhand store for a song, consider looking through it for presidential stamps or specific issues featuring important historical events.

There’s some good advice in “How to Value and Sell Your Antique or Vintage Collectibles” but absolutely no mention of stamps. Except, of course, for the last item: “Know When To Restore.” For stamps, that answer is “never” and “restoring” could get you in trouble.

The lack of information about philately makes me wonder about the other advice on the site. Someone should inform them of the oversight. I think I will.

Contemporary Dutch Writers (Netherlands 2025)

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
PostNL pays tribute to Dutch writers with RomanReuzen stamp sheet
10 contemporary writers immortalized in special issue

The Hague, April 22, 2025 – On April 22, 2025, PostNL will present the RomanReuzen stamp sheet, an ode to ten remarkable Dutch writers. The issue is part of the national project of the same name that encourages reading among young people. The ten stamps feature portraits of Kader Abdolah, Abdelkader Benali, Peter Buwalda, Adriaan van Dis, Jessica Durlacher, Bregje Hofstede, Mensje van Keulen, Astrid Roemer, Manon Uphoff and Tommy Wieringa.

Stimulating reading among young people
The RomanReuzen initiative was launched by journalist Frénk van der Linden and photographer Fjodor Buis, in collaboration with libraries, the Reading and Writing Foundation and the Libris bookstore chain. Through interview sessions with pupils, podcasts, masterclasses, a book and a travelling exhibition, literature is brought to the attention of young people in a fresh way.

Journalist Frénk van der Linden, who interviewed 52 writers for the project, emphasises the importance of reading: “Just like us, they see how incredibly important it is to stimulate reading, especially among young people. The essence of people is that we tell each other stories. Reading stimulates empathy and that is what connects us as people.”

The 52 podcasts with writer interviews can be listened to via romanreuzen.nl.

A visual ode to the novel
The stamps were designed by graphic designer Lex Reitsma, based on portrait photos by Fjodor Buis. Each stamp shows a black-and-white portrait of a writer in a drawn book cover, creating the impression of a table full of books on display in a bookstore. The drawing continues visually across the stamps and the sheet edge, as a reference to the wealth of literature.

Fjodor Buis says about his approach:
“It had to be a series with sufficient similarities, but at the same time with enough differences to avoid monotony. Photographing outdoors is exciting, because something unexpected always happens. Like with Tommy Wieringa, who I photographed behind his house at the moment his chickens escaped. That is why he is holding one in his arms.”

Availability
The RomanReuzen stamp sheet contains ten stamps with value indication 1, intended for mail up to and including 20 grams with a destination within the Netherlands. The price is € 12.10. The stamps are available – while stocks last – from 22 April at Bruna stores, via www.postnl.nl/bijzondere-postzegels and can be ordered by telephone via Collect Club: 088 868 99 00.

Note: PostNL does not sell directly to collectors in North America. Its website refers to a company called Nordfirm, which says it sells Dutch new issues at face value. The Virtual Stamp Club has no connection to this company.

Collectors may also wish to contact the U.S. firm Bombay Stamps, which can also obtain first day covers upon request, with lower shipping fees. The email is sales@bombaystamps.com Again, The Virtual Stamp Club has no connection to this company.

[in Nederlands voor kranten]
PostNL brengt ode aan Nederlandse schrijvers met postzegelvel RomanReuzen
10 hedendaagse schrijvers vereeuwigd op bijzondere uitgifte

Den Haag, 22 april 2025 – PostNL presenteert op 22 april 2025 het postzegelvel RomanReuzen, een ode aan tien markante Nederlandse schrijvers. De uitgifte maakt deel uit van het gelijknamige landelijke project dat lezen onder jongeren stimuleert. Op de tien postzegels prijken portretten van Kader Abdolah, Abdelkader Benali, Peter Buwalda, Adriaan van Dis, Jessica Durlacher, Bregje Hofstede, Mensje van Keulen, Astrid Roemer, Manon Uphoff en Tommy Wieringa.

Lezen stimuleren onder jongeren
Het initiatief RomanReuzen werd in het leven geroepen door journalist Frénk van der Linden en fotograaf Fjodor Buis, in samenwerking met onder andere bibliotheken, Stichting Lezen en Schrijven en boekwinkelketen Libris. Via interviewsessies met scholieren, podcasts, masterclasses, een boek, en een reizende tentoonstelling wordt literatuur op een frisse manier onder de aandacht gebracht bij jongeren.

Journalist Frénk van der Linden, die voor het project 52 schrijvers interviewde, benadrukt het belang van lezen: “Net als wij zien zij in hoe ontzettend belangrijk het is om lezen te stimuleren, met name onder jongeren. De essentie van mensen is toch dat wij verhalen aan elkaar vertellen. Lezen stimuleert empathie en dat is toch wat ons mensen met elkaar verbindt.”

De 52 podcasts met schrijversinterviews zijn te beluisteren via romanreuzen.nl.

Een visuele ode aan de roman
De postzegels zijn ontworpen door grafisch ontwerper Lex Reitsma, op basis van portretfoto’s van Fjodor Buis. Elke postzegel toont een zwart-witportret van een schrijver in een getekend boekomslag, waarmee de indruk ontstaat van een tafel vol uitgestalde boeken in een boekhandel. De tekening loopt visueel door over de postzegels en de velrand, als verwijzing naar de rijkdom aan literatuur.

Over zijn aanpak zegt Fjodor Buis:
“Het moest een serie worden met voldoende overeenkomsten, maar tegelijkertijd met genoeg verschillen om eentonigheid te vermijden. Buiten fotograferen is spannend, want er gebeurt altijd iets onverwachts. Zoals bij Tommy Wieringa die ik achter zijn huis fotografeerde op het moment dat zijn kippen ontsnapten. Vandaar dat hij er 1 in zijn armen houdt.”

Verkrijgbaarheid
Het postzegelvel RomanReuzen bevat tien postzegels met waardeaanduiding 1, bedoeld voor post tot en met 20 gram met een bestemming binnen Nederland. De prijs is € 12,10. De postzegels zijn – zolang de voorraad strekt – vanaf 22 april verkrijgbaar bij de Bruna-winkels, via www.postnl.nl/bijzondere-postzegels en telefonisch te bestellen via Collect Club: 088 868 99 00.

USPS Celebrates 250th Anniversary

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
U.S. Postal Service Celebrates 250 Years
A new eagle takes flight to commemorate the milestone

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Postal Service is celebrating 250 years of continuous and reliable delivery to the American people.

Before the invention of telegraphs, telephones and televisions, the Postal Service was created and has evolved to serve the nation through decades of technological, cultural and economic changes. As the organization’s anniversary approaches, USPS honors its past while focusing on delivering now and into the future.

“The founders of our great nation saw the intrinsic need of postal services as the United States was born — even before the country itself was formed. Since that time, our universal mail system has strengthened the bonds of friendship, family and community,” said acting U.S. Postmaster General Doug Tulino. “The Postal Service remains a great organization connecting our nation and helping power our economy. We are proud to help set the stage for the 250th anniversary of the United States next year, and we look forward to continuing to serve the American public for another 250 years.”

The bald eagle has been featured on the official USPS seal since 1970, when the Postal Reorganization Act was signed into law. The eagle encompasses everything USPS stands for and embraces the symbol the nation’s founders chose to represent America’s strength and freedom. That symbolism was carried over into the creation of the current Postal Service “sonic eagle” logo in 1993 and now has been evolved further in honor of the 250th anniversary.

The new Eagle in Flight symbol was created in collaboration with the Turner Duckworth agency to showcase the iconic and unique role of connecting the nation through the past, present and future. The face of the Eagle in Flight honors the Postal Service’s roots while amplifying the notion of delivering into the future through the wings. As it takes flight, its wings show confidence and purpose, while the vibrant colors exude a spirit of celebration. The Eagle in Flight does not replace the sonic eagle logo but will be used to help celebrate throughout 2025.

In addition to unveiling the Eagle in Flight symbol, USPS will commemorate this historic milestone with several exciting events and releases throughout the year, including:

  • Commemorative stamps;
  • A USPS-licensed coffee table book;
  • A 250th anniversary edition of “The United States Postal Service: An American History,” available online and in print;
  • Assorted branded merchandise;
  • A special episode of the “Mail with Mr. ZIP” YouTube series that will focus on the 250th anniversary;
  • Special advertising campaigns using the “Delivering since 1775” theme;
  • Social media, podcasts and blog posts to commemorate the milestone; and
  • Other exciting events to be announced as the anniversary approaches.

News and updates of the U.S. Postal Service’s 250th anniversary activities can be found at usps.com/news or by using the hashtag #USPS250 on social media.

Armed Services: One First-Day or Three Separate?

The US Postal Service will issue all three stamps on the same day in Washington, rather than in three separate ceremonies, as expected. How do you feel about that?

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