07/14/2008 Contact:
Dana Guyer
Also available in pdf format
Wild West Portraits Have Hartford
Connection
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Marshall Islands will issue a special
Portraits of the Wild West pane of sixteen 42-cent
stamps at 10:30 a.m. on August 14 — the first day of the
four-day APS StampShow 2008 at the Connecticut Convention Center
in the heart of Hartford. The Marshall Islands Wild West pane has
echoes of a U.S. issue of the mid-1990s, as well as unique connections
to Hartford and U.S. history that you won’t find on any United
States stamps.
The
sixteen men and women celebrated on these 42-cent stamps are the
same as those who were showcased on a 20-stamp Legends of the West
pane produced by the United States Postal Service in 1993–94.
The
Marshall Islands’ Portraits of the Wild West stamps honor
the same thirteen men and three women honored on the U.S. Legends
of the West pane: cowboy and rodeo performer Bill Picket (1870–1932);
scout, stagecoach driver and legendary gunslinger and lawman Wild
Bill Hickok (1837–1876); hunter, trapper, scout, and “mountain
man” Jim Bridger (1804–1881); Chiricahua Apache guerrilla
war leader Geronimo (1823–1909); Texas Ranger, Indian fighter,
and cattleman Charles Goodnight (1836–1929); Nez Percé tactician
and war leader Chief Joseph (circa 1840–1904), frontiersman,
trapper, guide, Indian agent and soldier Kit Carson (1809–1868);
fur trader, scout and “mountain man” Jim Beckwourth
(1798–1866); stagecoach driver and lawman Wyatt Earp (1848–1929);
lawman, hunter, scout and gambler Bat Masterson (1853–1921);
frontiersman, scout, buffalo hunter and lawman Bill Tilghman (1854–1924);
sharpshooter Annie Oakley (1860–1926) star of the “Wild
West Show” of Buffalo Bill Cody (1846–1917), scout,
Pony Express rider, hunter, guide, Indian fighter and impresario;
nurse, prospector, “Angel of Tombstone,” and anti-violence
activist Nellie Cashman (circa 1849–1929); Shoshone mother
and indispensable guide to the Lewis & Clark Expedition Sacagawea
(circa 1787–1812); and explorer, general, California senator,
and later Arizona Territory John Fremont (1813–1890).
Calle
created the images on these 2008 stamps as Legends of the West
first-day cover cachets for Fleetwood fifteen years ago. Unicover
Corp., which prints and markets Marshall Islands stamps to customers
in North America, decided to reuse Calle’s colorful designs
in this new 2008 issue.
The Marshall Islands stamps differ
in many ways from the U.S. adhesives that preceded them. One of
the most significant differences is in the depiction of important
historical sidearms on three of the stamps.
The Wyatt Earp stamp
depicts Earp’s Colt Single Action Army
revolver with its distinctive, non-standard 5½-inch barrel
at left, a Colt Buntline revolver with a 16-inch barrel and an
adjustable sight mounted on the backstrap (like the one in the
Colt collection at the Connecticut State Library at Hartford) at
right, and an engraved 1869 nickel-plated .45-caliber Schofield
top-break revolver similar to one the lawman reportedly carried
displayed across the foot of the design. (While no such pistol
was ever used by Earp, the Buntline revolver with its absurdly
long barrel is associated with the lawman through dime novels that
were written during the period that popularized and exaggerated
his exploits.)
Across the foot of its design, the
Wild Bill Hickok stamp illustrates one of his matched pair of .36-caliber
Colt Model 1851 Navy revolvers with Liberty Eagle ivory grips,
engraved on the backstraps “J.
B. Hickock, 1869,” as featured in the 1992 book The
Peacemakers: Arms And Adventure In The American West by noted firearms researcher
and author R.L. Wilson, who was appointed Curator of Firearms at
Hartford’s Wadsworth Atheneum at the age of 23.
The Annie
Oakley stamp pictures an ensemble of three presentation-grade gold-plated
pistols with mother-of-pearl grips that were assembled for the
famed sharpshooter as a gift by her husband, Frank Butler: a Stevens-Gould
No. 37 single-shot pistol and Schofield Model No. 3 .45-caliber
revolver at left, and at right a single-action Smith & Wesson
Model 1891 single-shot .22-caliber target pistol.
Hartford is a
fitting place to issue stamps depicting firearms. Connecticut was
the hub of the U.S. firearms industry that also had important roots
in the northeastern states of Massachusetts and New York. Along
with its Colt connections, Hartford was where Sharps Rifle Manufacturing
Co. was founded in 1851, later moving to Bridgeport, Connecticut.
New Haven Arms Co., founded in Connecticut 1856, was acquired by
Winchester a decade later, and produced famous firearms there for
the next 140 years. Connecticut-born John M. Marlin, founder of
the firearms company that bears his name, worked for Colt in Hartford
before producing his own guns in New Haven in 1870. Connecticut
Shotgun Manufacturing Co. is based in New Britain, and Union Metallic
Cartridge Co. manufactured ammunition in Bridgeport for Remington
Arms until 1970.
This issue is not the first time that
U.S. and Marshallese stamps have diverged in their treatment of
the same subject — no surprise, given that many Marshall
Islands stamps cater explicitly to Western and American topical collectors and
interests.
Although no official ceremony is planned
for the Portraits of the Wild West stamps by the Marshall Islands
Postal Service, the American Philatelic Society is working with
Calle, the Connecticut-based designer of these and many other U.S.
and Marshall Islands stamps, and with local officials and organizations
to ensure that the first day for these historical adhesives is
as colorful as the men and women whose lives they celebrate — an
event that no collector will want to miss.
On Thursday, August 14
at noon, StampShow 2008 also will host a first-day-of-issue ceremony
for a 42-cent U.S. stamp honoring the landscape paintings of Albert
Bierstadt, depicting Bierstadt’s 1864 painting Valley of
the Yosemite. And on Friday, August 15, there will be a special
unofficial first-day ceremony for the release of a new 42-cent
U.S. Sunflower definitive stamp.
Look for additional details of
exciting first-day events you’ll want to
be a part of at StampShow 2008 as August approaches.
For complete details of the
many events at Hartford StampShow 2008, please the shows
section of
the website.
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