The United States Postal Service will honor the beginning of airmail
service by dedicating two United States Air Mail Forever stamps this year.
The
first commemorates the pioneering spirit of the brave pilots who first flew the
mail in the early years of aviation.
The
first-day-of-issue ceremony for this stamp will take place May 1, 2018, at 11
a.m. at the Smithsonian National Postal Museum in Washington, DC. The event is
free and open to the public. Followers of the U.S. Postal Service’s Facebook
page can view the ceremony live at Facebook.com/USPS.
On
May 15, 1918, in the midst of World War I, a small group of Army pilots
delivered mail along a route that linked Washington, Philadelphia, and New
York, initiating the world’s first regularly scheduled airmail service.
The
United States Post Office Department, the predecessor to the U.S. Postal
Service, took charge of the U.S. Air Mail Service later that summer, operating
it from Aug. 12, 1918, through Sept. 1, 1927. Airmail delivery, daily except on
Sundays, became part of the fabric of the American economy and spurred growth
of the nation’s aviation industry, post office officials note.
The
second stamp will commemorate this milestone with its first-day-of-issue to
take place later this summer.
Both
stamps, printed in the intaglio print method — a design transferred to paper
from an engraved plate — depict the type of plane typically used in the early
days of airmail, a Curtiss JN-4H biplane.
The
biplane was also featured on the stamps originally issued in 1918 to
commemorate the beginning of regularly scheduled airmail service, officials
noted.
The
United States Air Mail stamp is being issued as a Forever stamp. This Forever
stamp will always be equal in value to the current First Class Mail one ounce
price.
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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