# 2533 - 1991 29c Vermont Statehood
US #2533
1991 Vermont Statehood
- Marks the 200th anniversary of Vermont’s statehood
Category of Stamp: Commemorative
Value: 29¢, First Class mail rate
First Day of Issue: March 1, 1991
First Day City: Bennington, Vermont
Quantity Issued: 179,990,000
Printed by: American Bank Note Company
Printing Method: photogravure
Format: Panes of 50, from printing cylinders of 200 (10 across, 20 down)
Perforations: 11
Reason the stamp was issued: This stamp was issued in honor of the 200th anniversary of Vermont entering the Union. It was the first state after the original 13 to become part of the US. The 29¢ stamp reflects an increase in the First-Class mail rate.
About the stamp design: Vermont artist Sabra Field was chosen to create the artwork for the stamp honoring her home state. She specializes in woodcut prints. The image portrays a Vermont farm scene, with the red hay barn and rows of cut hay waiting to be baled. The Green Mountains are in the background.
First Day City: The Vermont Statehood stamp was dedicated in a ceremony on the campus of Bennington College.
Vermont Becomes 14th State
Vermont served mainly as a hunting ground for the tribes of Algonquian Indians before white settlement. France's Samuel de Champlain was one of the first Europeans to explore the Vermont area. He reached Lake Champlain, which bears his name, in 1609.
The royal governors of New Hampshire and New York both made land grants to settlers in the Vermont area. Unfortunately, their claims often overlapped. In 1764, England ruled that the claims made by New York were legitimate, and ordered settlers with New Hampshire grants either to pay New York or leave. This resulted in the formation of the Green Mountain Boys, a military force organized to protect land claims granted by New Hampshire. The Green Mountain Boys drove the New York settlers from Vermont.
In 1790, Vermont paid New York $30,000 to resolve its land claims and New Hampshire relinquished its claims in Vermont. As a result, Vermont joined the Union on March 4, 1791, and was the first state admitted to the Union after the 13 original colonies.
US #2533
1991 Vermont Statehood
- Marks the 200th anniversary of Vermont’s statehood
Category of Stamp: Commemorative
Value: 29¢, First Class mail rate
First Day of Issue: March 1, 1991
First Day City: Bennington, Vermont
Quantity Issued: 179,990,000
Printed by: American Bank Note Company
Printing Method: photogravure
Format: Panes of 50, from printing cylinders of 200 (10 across, 20 down)
Perforations: 11
Reason the stamp was issued: This stamp was issued in honor of the 200th anniversary of Vermont entering the Union. It was the first state after the original 13 to become part of the US. The 29¢ stamp reflects an increase in the First-Class mail rate.
About the stamp design: Vermont artist Sabra Field was chosen to create the artwork for the stamp honoring her home state. She specializes in woodcut prints. The image portrays a Vermont farm scene, with the red hay barn and rows of cut hay waiting to be baled. The Green Mountains are in the background.
First Day City: The Vermont Statehood stamp was dedicated in a ceremony on the campus of Bennington College.
Vermont Becomes 14th State
Vermont served mainly as a hunting ground for the tribes of Algonquian Indians before white settlement. France's Samuel de Champlain was one of the first Europeans to explore the Vermont area. He reached Lake Champlain, which bears his name, in 1609.
The royal governors of New Hampshire and New York both made land grants to settlers in the Vermont area. Unfortunately, their claims often overlapped. In 1764, England ruled that the claims made by New York were legitimate, and ordered settlers with New Hampshire grants either to pay New York or leave. This resulted in the formation of the Green Mountain Boys, a military force organized to protect land claims granted by New Hampshire. The Green Mountain Boys drove the New York settlers from Vermont.
In 1790, Vermont paid New York $30,000 to resolve its land claims and New Hampshire relinquished its claims in Vermont. As a result, Vermont joined the Union on March 4, 1791, and was the first state admitted to the Union after the 13 original colonies.