1981 15c Black Heritage: Whitney Moore Young

# 1875 - 1981 15c Black Heritage: Whitney Moore Young

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U.S. #1875
1981 15¢ Whitney Moore Young
Black Heritage Series

  • 4th stamp in Black Heritage Series
  • Issued 60 years after Moore’s birth & 10 years after his death

Stamp Category:  Commemorative
Series: 
Black Heritage
Value: 
15¢; first-class postage rate
First Day of Issue: 
January 31, 1981
First Day City: 
New York, New York
Quantity Issued: 
159,505,000
Printed by: 
Bureau of Engraving & Printing
Printing Method: 
Photogravure
Format: 
Pane of 50 in sheets of 200
Perforations:  11

 

Why the stamp was issued:  To mark the start of Black History Month, this was the fourth issue in the Black Heritage Series.  It was issued 60 years after Moore was born and 10 years after his death.

 

About the stamp design:  As the with the Black Heritage stamps that came before it, the portrait of Young on this stamp was created by Jerry Pinkney.  It depicts Young at a table, holding his glasses.

 

First Day City:  The First Day ceremony was held at the New York Hilton, in New York, New York, Young’s hometown.  Among the day’s speakers were leaders of the National Urban League, which Young had once led himself.

 

About the Black Heritage Series:  The Black Heritage Series began on February 1, 1978, with the issue of the 13¢ Harriet Tubman stamp (US #1744).  Since then, the USPS has issued a new stamp in the series every year.  A number of them have even been released in February in recognition of Black History month.  As of 2024, it was the USPS’s longest-running stamp series of all time.

Click here to see all the Black Heritage stamps.

 

History the stamp represents:  Civil rights leader Whitney Moore Young Jr. was born on July 31, 1921, in Shelby County, Kentucky.

 

Young’s father was president of the Lincoln Institute, an all African American boarding school, and also served as president of the Kentucky Negro Educational Association.  His mother was a teacher and the first postmistress in Kentucky.

 

Young attended the Lincoln Institute and graduated as valedictorian in 1937.  He attended Kentucky State University where he played on the basketball team and was voted president of his senior class.  During World War II Young worked on a road construction crew of African American soldiers that were supervised by Southern white officers.  The tensions he witnessed there led him to pursue a career in race relations.

 

After the war, Young got a masters degree in social work and joined the National Urban League.  By 1950, he was president of the Omaha, Nebraska, chapter.  There he helped African American workers get jobs that were previously only given to white people.  His tenure also saw membership triple.

 

In the coming years, Young served as dean of social work at Atlanta University and joined the United Liberal Church, which he helped to integrate. He also received a Rockefeller Foundation grant and joined the NAACP, where he befriended Roy Wilkins.

 

In 1961, Young was unanimously voted to become Executive Director of the National Urban League.  During his first four years, Young expanded the number of employees from 38 to 1,600 and increased the annual budget from $325,000 to $6.1 million.  Young also pushed for the organization to be more aggressive in its goals.  He started new programs to help high school dropouts prepare for college and to aid local African American leaders to address problems in their communities.  Young also pushed for major companies to hire more African Americans and served as president of the National Association of Social Workers.

 

Young helped organize the 1963 March on Washington.  He was an advisor to Presidents Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon, but refused an offer for a cabinet post, believing he could do more good with the Urban League.  Young was especially close with President Johnson, who awarded him a Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1969.

 

In 1971, Young was in Lagos, Nigeria, for a conference when he suffered a sudden heart attack and died on March 11.  President Nixon delivered the eulogy at his funeral stating that Young, “knew how to accomplish what other people were merely for.”

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U.S. #1875
1981 15¢ Whitney Moore Young
Black Heritage Series

  • 4th stamp in Black Heritage Series
  • Issued 60 years after Moore’s birth & 10 years after his death

Stamp Category:  Commemorative
Series: 
Black Heritage
Value: 
15¢; first-class postage rate
First Day of Issue: 
January 31, 1981
First Day City: 
New York, New York
Quantity Issued: 
159,505,000
Printed by: 
Bureau of Engraving & Printing
Printing Method: 
Photogravure
Format: 
Pane of 50 in sheets of 200
Perforations:  11

 

Why the stamp was issued:  To mark the start of Black History Month, this was the fourth issue in the Black Heritage Series.  It was issued 60 years after Moore was born and 10 years after his death.

 

About the stamp design:  As the with the Black Heritage stamps that came before it, the portrait of Young on this stamp was created by Jerry Pinkney.  It depicts Young at a table, holding his glasses.

 

First Day City:  The First Day ceremony was held at the New York Hilton, in New York, New York, Young’s hometown.  Among the day’s speakers were leaders of the National Urban League, which Young had once led himself.

 

About the Black Heritage Series:  The Black Heritage Series began on February 1, 1978, with the issue of the 13¢ Harriet Tubman stamp (US #1744).  Since then, the USPS has issued a new stamp in the series every year.  A number of them have even been released in February in recognition of Black History month.  As of 2024, it was the USPS’s longest-running stamp series of all time.

Click here to see all the Black Heritage stamps.

 

History the stamp represents:  Civil rights leader Whitney Moore Young Jr. was born on July 31, 1921, in Shelby County, Kentucky.

 

Young’s father was president of the Lincoln Institute, an all African American boarding school, and also served as president of the Kentucky Negro Educational Association.  His mother was a teacher and the first postmistress in Kentucky.

 

Young attended the Lincoln Institute and graduated as valedictorian in 1937.  He attended Kentucky State University where he played on the basketball team and was voted president of his senior class.  During World War II Young worked on a road construction crew of African American soldiers that were supervised by Southern white officers.  The tensions he witnessed there led him to pursue a career in race relations.

 

After the war, Young got a masters degree in social work and joined the National Urban League.  By 1950, he was president of the Omaha, Nebraska, chapter.  There he helped African American workers get jobs that were previously only given to white people.  His tenure also saw membership triple.

 

In the coming years, Young served as dean of social work at Atlanta University and joined the United Liberal Church, which he helped to integrate. He also received a Rockefeller Foundation grant and joined the NAACP, where he befriended Roy Wilkins.

 

In 1961, Young was unanimously voted to become Executive Director of the National Urban League.  During his first four years, Young expanded the number of employees from 38 to 1,600 and increased the annual budget from $325,000 to $6.1 million.  Young also pushed for the organization to be more aggressive in its goals.  He started new programs to help high school dropouts prepare for college and to aid local African American leaders to address problems in their communities.  Young also pushed for major companies to hire more African Americans and served as president of the National Association of Social Workers.

 

Young helped organize the 1963 March on Washington.  He was an advisor to Presidents Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon, but refused an offer for a cabinet post, believing he could do more good with the Urban League.  Young was especially close with President Johnson, who awarded him a Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1969.

 

In 1971, Young was in Lagos, Nigeria, for a conference when he suffered a sudden heart attack and died on March 11.  President Nixon delivered the eulogy at his funeral stating that Young, “knew how to accomplish what other people were merely for.”