About | Contact | RSS

Fund. A.D. MMIV (a.u.c. MMDCCLVII)

Top Sites

Top Blogs

Friendly Blogs

Reviews

Periodicals

Church

Art & Design

Cape of Good Hope

France

Netherlands

Mitteleuropa

Scandinavia

Livonia

Muscovy

India

Argentina

The Levant

Knickerbockers

Academica

Miscellaneous

New York in Philately

Wandering around the merry old world wide web I stumbled upon these stamps, which I bring to you for your own enjoyment. Above we have the Great Metropolis itself, the island of Manhattan in its swankier days. Below we have a view of the Crown of the Hudson, West Point, with the beautiful Cadet Chapel designed by that American Master, Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue himself, presiding over the campus of the United States Military Academy.

The postage stamp was once a thing of beauty and composition, but it’s heartening to see that some still design beautiful stamps. Just examine Elliott Banfield’s stamp of General Washington, based upon the staute in Union Square. Mr. Banfield believes that the decline in the design of postage stamps is due to a “moral void” most readily shown when the Postal Service unveiled its famous ‘Elvis Stamp’ a few years back.

“Elvis was important in the popular culture, yes,” writes Mr. Banfield. “But how important is the pop culture? Important only to those who can’t see anything higher or better. It’s scary to think that people like that are in charge of public policy. But they are, and the Elvis stamp proves it.”

Hear! Hear!

An irrelevant stamp, after the jump.


This United States Postal Service stamp commemorates the millennial anniversary of A.D. 966, when Mieszko I was baptised into the Christian faith, and Poland was born.

Friday, August 4th, 2006 1:29 pm | Categories: Architecture Design Military New York
1 Comment so far
  1. 5 August 2006
    2:48 pm

    We want more “irrelevant stamps”! Please.

    Fiendish
Post a comment

Name (required)

Email (required)

Website

Comment

Please support andrewcusack.com. Click here to make a financial contribution.









All text © Andrew Cusack 2004–present, unless otherwise stated. | About | Contact | RSS (Atom)