# 3611 - 2002 34c Nature of America: Longleaf Pine Forest
34¢ Longleaf Pine Forest
Nature of America Series
City: Tallahassee, FL
Quantity: 7,000,000
Printed by: American Packaging Corp. for Sennet Security Products
Perforations: Serpentine Die Cut 10.5 x 10.75 and 10.75 x 10.5
Quantity: 7,000,000
U.S.P.S. Introduces Nature Of America Series
Before settling on Nature of America, the U.S.P.S. discussed issuing a set of four American desert stamps, based on the popularity of the 1981 Desert Plants stamps. Over time, the concept for the stamps evolved into a set of six stamp sheets depicting six ecosystems found in America.
The first sheet in the Nature of America series was issued on April 6, 1999. Picturing the Sonoran Desert, its first day ceremony was held at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum in Tucson, Arizona. According to a U.S.P.S. representative at the ceremony, “these stamps will help promote a greater appreciation for the diversity and beauty of our desert lands, and serve as a nature lesson for the enjoyment of young and old alike.” Among the ceremony’s participants were some of the animals pictured on the new stamps.
Click any of the images above or below to learn more about the stamps and regions they picture. And click here to get the complete set of 12 Nature of America sheets.
34¢ Longleaf Pine Forest
Nature of America Series
City: Tallahassee, FL
Quantity: 7,000,000
Printed by: American Packaging Corp. for Sennet Security Products
Perforations: Serpentine Die Cut 10.5 x 10.75 and 10.75 x 10.5
Quantity: 7,000,000
U.S.P.S. Introduces Nature Of America Series
Before settling on Nature of America, the U.S.P.S. discussed issuing a set of four American desert stamps, based on the popularity of the 1981 Desert Plants stamps. Over time, the concept for the stamps evolved into a set of six stamp sheets depicting six ecosystems found in America.
The first sheet in the Nature of America series was issued on April 6, 1999. Picturing the Sonoran Desert, its first day ceremony was held at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum in Tucson, Arizona. According to a U.S.P.S. representative at the ceremony, “these stamps will help promote a greater appreciation for the diversity and beauty of our desert lands, and serve as a nature lesson for the enjoyment of young and old alike.” Among the ceremony’s participants were some of the animals pictured on the new stamps.
Click any of the images above or below to learn more about the stamps and regions they picture. And click here to get the complete set of 12 Nature of America sheets.