1996 32c Utah Statehood

# 3024 FDC - 1996 32c Utah Statehood

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US #3024
1996 Utah Statehood

  • First Day Cover
  • Commemorates 100th anniversary of Utah’s statehood
  • First stamp issued in 1996

Category of Stamp:  Commemorative
Value: 
32¢, First Class mail rate
First Day of Issue: 
January 4, 1996
First Day City: 
Salt Lake City, Utah
Printed by: 
sterling Sommer for Aston-Potter (USA) Ltd.
Printing Method:
Lithographed
Format: 
Panes of 50 (10 across, 5 down)
Perforations: 
11.1

Reason the stamp was issued:  This stamp was issued to honor the centennial of the state of Utah joining the Union.  It was the first stamp issued in 1996.

About the stamp design:  Utah artist, McRay Magleby, crated the artwork for this stamp on his computer.  It pictures the Delicate Arch located in Utah’s Arches National Park.  Magleby based his image on postcards and photographs of the famous red sandstone landmark.

First Day City:  The First Day of Issue Ceremony was held at the Utah State Fairgrounds in Salt Lake as part of the Utah Philatelic Society’s Centennial Philatelic Exhibition. 
Unusual thing about this stamp:  The Utah statehood Centennial Commission submitted a design for a stamp honoring the state’s 100th anniversary to the Postal Service.  The stamp was shaped like the state, a rectangle with the top right corner missing.  The Postal Service responded that it doesn’t accept unsolicited stamp designs.

History the stamp represents: 
The first people to settle in Utah arrived thousands of years ago. These Indians made their homes in pueblos and caves. When the first Europeans arrived in 1776, there were four major Indian groups living in the area – the Goshute, Paiute, Shoshone, and Ute. The Navajo moved into the region in the 1860s.

Spanish explorers reached the Grand Canyon in today’s Arizona in 1540. These explorers may have reached Utah. For more than 235 years after this, no European explorer reached the area. During the American Revolutionary War, in 1776, two Spanish Franciscan friars explored Utah, reaching Lake Utah. A few other Spaniards came to Utah, but the Spanish were not interested in settlement because of the harsh environment.

The first Americans believed to have reached Utah were members of a fur-trading party. They crossed present-day northern Utah in 1811-12. Famous frontiersman and scout Jim Bridger is thought to be the first white person to see the Great Salt Lake. Bridger tasted the salty water in the winter of 1824-25, and believed he had reached the Pacific Ocean. Soon, more trappers and traders came to Utah. A trail connecting Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Los Angeles, California, brought many travelers through the area.

Following the death of Mormon leader Joseph Smith in 1844, Brigham Young took his place and traveled America searching for a place where his people wouldn’t be persecuted for their religious beliefs. After moving from Ohio, Missouri, and Illinois, Young led the Mormons west. In 1847, they reached the Great Salt Lake and settled the area. Two years later, they established the Perpetual Emigrating Fund which helped about 50,000 Mormons move to Utah. The Mormons established the State of Deseret in 1849, with a temporary government led by Young. A constitution was adopted, and the settlers asked to be admitted to the Union. However, Congress was embroiled in great debates about slavery at the time. With the Compromise of 1850, the Utah Territory was established.

Between 1849 and 1895, Utah tried to join the Union several times. Congress refused because of an uncommon Mormon practice called polygamy – marriage to more than one spouse. Few Mormons actually practiced polygamy, but as long as they allowed it Utah was denied statehood. US President James Buchanan wanted to take the government of Utah away from the Mormons, so he replaced governor Brigham Young with Alfred Cumming of Georgia. Buchanan dispatched federal troops to back Cumming, sparking the Utah War. The war was short lived, but the troops stayed for three tense years.

In 1862, Congress outlawed polygamy and again sent troops to Utah. These troops were ordered to prospect for minerals, in hopes that mining could attract non-Mormons to the area. Gold and silver were discovered in 1863, but transportation difficulties reduced the profits from Utah’s mineral wealth. Though many mining companies were established, few new settlers came to the area.
The Federal Government began enforcing the laws against polygamy during the 1880s. About 1,000 Mormons were fined or sent to prison. In 1887, a law was passed allowing the Federal Government to seize church property for use by public schools. In 1890, the church began discouraging polygamy, and by 1904, it was prohibited.
Utah submitted a new constitution to Congress in 1895. This constitution outlawed polygamy and protected the government from church domination. As a result, Utah achieved statehood on January 4, 1896.

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US #3024
1996 Utah Statehood

  • First Day Cover
  • Commemorates 100th anniversary of Utah’s statehood
  • First stamp issued in 1996

Category of Stamp:  Commemorative
Value: 
32¢, First Class mail rate
First Day of Issue: 
January 4, 1996
First Day City: 
Salt Lake City, Utah
Printed by: 
sterling Sommer for Aston-Potter (USA) Ltd.
Printing Method:
Lithographed
Format: 
Panes of 50 (10 across, 5 down)
Perforations: 
11.1

Reason the stamp was issued:  This stamp was issued to honor the centennial of the state of Utah joining the Union.  It was the first stamp issued in 1996.

About the stamp design:  Utah artist, McRay Magleby, crated the artwork for this stamp on his computer.  It pictures the Delicate Arch located in Utah’s Arches National Park.  Magleby based his image on postcards and photographs of the famous red sandstone landmark.

First Day City:  The First Day of Issue Ceremony was held at the Utah State Fairgrounds in Salt Lake as part of the Utah Philatelic Society’s Centennial Philatelic Exhibition. 
Unusual thing about this stamp:  The Utah statehood Centennial Commission submitted a design for a stamp honoring the state’s 100th anniversary to the Postal Service.  The stamp was shaped like the state, a rectangle with the top right corner missing.  The Postal Service responded that it doesn’t accept unsolicited stamp designs.

History the stamp represents: 
The first people to settle in Utah arrived thousands of years ago. These Indians made their homes in pueblos and caves. When the first Europeans arrived in 1776, there were four major Indian groups living in the area – the Goshute, Paiute, Shoshone, and Ute. The Navajo moved into the region in the 1860s.

Spanish explorers reached the Grand Canyon in today’s Arizona in 1540. These explorers may have reached Utah. For more than 235 years after this, no European explorer reached the area. During the American Revolutionary War, in 1776, two Spanish Franciscan friars explored Utah, reaching Lake Utah. A few other Spaniards came to Utah, but the Spanish were not interested in settlement because of the harsh environment.

The first Americans believed to have reached Utah were members of a fur-trading party. They crossed present-day northern Utah in 1811-12. Famous frontiersman and scout Jim Bridger is thought to be the first white person to see the Great Salt Lake. Bridger tasted the salty water in the winter of 1824-25, and believed he had reached the Pacific Ocean. Soon, more trappers and traders came to Utah. A trail connecting Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Los Angeles, California, brought many travelers through the area.

Following the death of Mormon leader Joseph Smith in 1844, Brigham Young took his place and traveled America searching for a place where his people wouldn’t be persecuted for their religious beliefs. After moving from Ohio, Missouri, and Illinois, Young led the Mormons west. In 1847, they reached the Great Salt Lake and settled the area. Two years later, they established the Perpetual Emigrating Fund which helped about 50,000 Mormons move to Utah. The Mormons established the State of Deseret in 1849, with a temporary government led by Young. A constitution was adopted, and the settlers asked to be admitted to the Union. However, Congress was embroiled in great debates about slavery at the time. With the Compromise of 1850, the Utah Territory was established.

Between 1849 and 1895, Utah tried to join the Union several times. Congress refused because of an uncommon Mormon practice called polygamy – marriage to more than one spouse. Few Mormons actually practiced polygamy, but as long as they allowed it Utah was denied statehood. US President James Buchanan wanted to take the government of Utah away from the Mormons, so he replaced governor Brigham Young with Alfred Cumming of Georgia. Buchanan dispatched federal troops to back Cumming, sparking the Utah War. The war was short lived, but the troops stayed for three tense years.

In 1862, Congress outlawed polygamy and again sent troops to Utah. These troops were ordered to prospect for minerals, in hopes that mining could attract non-Mormons to the area. Gold and silver were discovered in 1863, but transportation difficulties reduced the profits from Utah’s mineral wealth. Though many mining companies were established, few new settlers came to the area.
The Federal Government began enforcing the laws against polygamy during the 1880s. About 1,000 Mormons were fined or sent to prison. In 1887, a law was passed allowing the Federal Government to seize church property for use by public schools. In 1890, the church began discouraging polygamy, and by 1904, it was prohibited.
Utah submitted a new constitution to Congress in 1895. This constitution outlawed polygamy and protected the government from church domination. As a result, Utah achieved statehood on January 4, 1896.