Showing posts with label Civil War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Civil War. Show all posts
Monday, May 30, 2016
Clara Harlowe Barton (1821 – 1912)
Clara Harlowe Barton (December 25, 1821 – April 12, 1912), nicknamed "Angel of the Battlefield," was a Union nurse during the American Civil War. Also a teacher and patent clerk, Barton is noteworthy for doing humanitarian work when relatively few women worked outside the home in that era. She nursed the wounded at Antietam and at Virginia battlefields; helped identify and mark graves at Andersonville prison; and later founded the American Red Cross.
The 20¢ stamped card is one of the twenty cards corresponding to the twenty 32¢ American Civil War stamps issued at Gettysburg, PA on June 29, 1995. It was sent to France as US-4015356.
Labels:
1821,
1912,
1995,
American Red Cross,
Civil War,
Clara Harlowe Barton,
founder,
France,
humanitarian,
nurse,
portrait,
PostCrossing,
sent,
stamped card,
union,
US-4015356,
USPS,
woman
Location:
Gettysburg, PA 17325, USA
Thursday, April 7, 2016
Battle of Shiloh Ends
The stamped card with a 20¢ postage, depicting the Battle of Shiloh that ended on April 7, 1862, is one of the twenty cards corresponding to the twenty 32¢ American Civil War stamps issued at Gettysburg, PA on June 29, 1995.
The stamp set has 16 individual portraits and four battle scenes, chosen from a master list of 50 subjects including Presidents, generals, major battles, rank-and-file soldiers, women, African and Native Americans, and abolitionists. With those stamps, USPS intended to show the wide variety of people who participated in the Civil War.
Battle of Shiloh, named after a church on the battlefield, was one of the bloodiest battles of the Civil War. Ironically Shiloh means “place of peace.” Confederates surprised General Ulysses S. Grant at Pittsburg Landing, TN, but lost General A. S. Johnston. Union counterattack at Shiloh Church forced the Southerners to withdraw. After this pivotal battle, it left Union armies in control of the central Mississippi River and large areas of western territories.
Casualties: 13,050 Union, 10,700 Confederate.
Labels:
1862,
1995,
battle,
Civil War,
Confederate,
General,
Shiloh,
stamp,
stamped card,
Tennessee,
Ulysses S. Grant,
union,
USPS
Location:
Hardin County, Tennessee
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
George Washington's Surveying Office
Outgoing postcard US-3373216 to Taiwan shows a vintage card of George Washington's Surveying Office on the Washington Farm, located along the northern bank of the Rappahannock River, across from the city of Fredericksburg, in Stafford County, Virginia.
Also known as the Ferry Farm, it is the George Washington Boyhood Home Site where George Washington spent much of his childhood with the Cherry Tree Myth, and where his father Augustine Washington died on April 12, 1743 at age 49 when George Washington was 11 years old. Augustine had left behind a small set of surveying instruments after he died. The illustration shows the only building remaining which is said to have been used by George Washington as a workshop while acquiring practice surveying.
However, archaeologists later found the building dated to the late 1800s, post Civil War. So it could not have been used by young George as a workshop. "The Surveyor Shed" was a subject of money making schemes by James Beverly Colbert and George Allen England who promoted the non-important structure as a genuine relic, in an attempt to profit from the land's associations with Washington in the 1920s.
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Public Square and Union Terminal Tower, Cleveland, Ohio
Outgoing postcard US-3139451 to Malaysia was a vintage card showing the Union Terminal Tower, a 52-story landmark skyscraper located on Public Square in downtown Cleveland, Ohio. At 235 meters or 771 feet, it was the fourth-tallest building in the world when it was officially dedicated on June 28, 1930 during the skyscraper-building boom. The 4.4-acre Public Square was laid out in the original plan of the city conceived by its founder General Moses Cleveland in 1796. With the Union Terminal Tower on the southwest corner, the Soldiers and Sailors Monument and a Civil War Memorial can be seen in the center of the southeast section of the square on the postcard.
Labels:
1796,
1930,
Civil War,
Cleveland,
downtown,
Malaysia,
memorial,
Ohio,
plan,
postcard,
PostCrossing,
Public Square,
sent,
Soldiers and Sailors Monument,
Union Terminal Tower,
vintage
Location:
Public Square, Cleveland, OH, USA
Friday, July 4, 2014
Battle Born
In this Independence Day on the 4th of July, CNN Interactive is showcasing a natural wonder in each of the 50 states. CNN's choice of amazing natural wonder in Nevada is the Valley of Fire State Park, USPS also issued a Nevada Statehood Forever Commemorative stamp on May 29, 2014, featuring a view in the Valley of Fire State Park, to celebrates the 150th anniversary of Nevada Statehood.
When President Abraham Lincoln needed another Republican state to help support his anti-slavery policies in Congress, people in Nevada answered the call and voted to join the Union, even the population in Nevada back then was not big enough to form a state. Nevada was admitted to the Union in 1864, during the Civil War. Hence the words “Battle Born” have appeared on the Nevada state flag since.
The postcard was made by VistaPrint with one of my photos taken on November 27, 2011.
#CNN50spots
Labels:
#CNN50spots,
4th of July,
Abraham Lincoln,
anniversary,
Battle Born,
Civil War,
flag,
Independence Day,
map,
Nevada,
president,
stamp,
state,
State Park,
statehood,
United States,
USPS,
Valley of Fire,
wonder
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