# 5834-43 offer - 2024 First-Class Forever Stamps - Underground Railroad
Special 2024 Underground Railroad Portfolio Set Can Be Yours
This is your chance to get a special collector's set for the 2024 Underground Railroad Forever stamps. Includes double-sided fold-out booklet. Detailed timeline of the underground railroad with historic images on one side. Vintage photographs of each person pictured on the stamps plus biographical information on the other side.
You'll also receive 7 progressive proofs of the mint stamp sheet: 2 mint stamp sheets, 1 proof with just the sheet headline, 1 proof with just the sheet frame, 1 proof with just cyan parts of the stamps, 1 proof with just magenta parts of the stamps, 1 proof with just yellow parts of the stamps, and 1 proof with just black parts of the stamps.
The final pieces of the portfolio are an art print of Lamong Sandridge's Freedom Land (2024) and an informational card with details about the print.
This portfolio set is a great way to dive into the rich history of the underground railroad and the heroes pictured on the stamps. Quantities are limited, get yours today.
Ready on to learn more about the 2024 Underground Railroad stamps...
US #5834-43
2024 Underground Railroad
• Honors the countless people who made their way to freedom or helped others reach freedom through the Underground Railroad
• Pictures 10 individuals associated with the Underground Railroad
Stamp Category: Commemorative
Value: 68¢ First Class Mail Rate (Forever)
First Day of Issue: March 9, 2024
First Day City: Church Creek, Maryland
Quantity Issued: 20,000,000
Printed by: Ashton Potter (USA) Ltd.
Printing Method: Offset
Format: Panes of 20
Watermark: Nonphosphored Type III, Block Tag Applied
Why the stamps were issued: To commemorate the Underground Railroad and the many people who helped slaves or former slaves escape the South.
About the stamp designs: Each pictures a sepia-toned portrait of a man or woman who escaped slavery and/or helped others escape. Each stamp also includes eight lines of text which read: BLACK/WHITE; COOPERATION; TRUST/DANGER; FLIGHT/FAITH; COURAGE/RISK; DEFIANCE/HOPE; UNDERGROUND; RAILROAD/USA. On the reverse side of the pane of 20, there is a map picturing routes taken on the Underground Railroad from the South to North. The reverse side also includes a list of people pictured on the stamps plus biographical information on them. Designed by Antonio Alcalá using existing images.
First Day City: The First Day of Issue Ceremony was held at the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Visitor Center in Church Creek, Maryland.
History the stamps represent: The Underground Railroad was a secret highway that ferried Black Americans to freedom before and during the Civil War. According to John Rankin, the network was named “because they who took passage on it disappeared from public view really as if they had gone into the ground.”
Those who worked on the Underground Railroad played several roles. “Conductors” were responsible for leading escaped slaves to “stations” which consisted of safe houses owned by free Black Americans or White abolitionists (often Quakers). These “station masters” risked it all to help former slaves find their freedom, as, in many cases, the law required fugitives be returned to their enslavers. Station masters used their own money to provide food, clothing, and even medicine to their “passengers.” Some churches and other groups donated money and supplies, too.
Due to the nature of its work, the Underground Railroad did not have any maps or printed guidelines advertising it. It was all dependent on word of mouth and trusting that each person who knew about it would keep its workings a secret. Codes were also established to help relay information in a safer way.
In 2024, the US Postal Service issued 10 stamps picturing men and women who helped operate the Underground Railroad. To the Black Americans who fought to escape the inhumanity of slavery, the people running the Underground Railroad were real-life saints.
Special 2024 Underground Railroad Portfolio Set Can Be Yours
This is your chance to get a special collector's set for the 2024 Underground Railroad Forever stamps. Includes double-sided fold-out booklet. Detailed timeline of the underground railroad with historic images on one side. Vintage photographs of each person pictured on the stamps plus biographical information on the other side.
You'll also receive 7 progressive proofs of the mint stamp sheet: 2 mint stamp sheets, 1 proof with just the sheet headline, 1 proof with just the sheet frame, 1 proof with just cyan parts of the stamps, 1 proof with just magenta parts of the stamps, 1 proof with just yellow parts of the stamps, and 1 proof with just black parts of the stamps.
The final pieces of the portfolio are an art print of Lamong Sandridge's Freedom Land (2024) and an informational card with details about the print.
This portfolio set is a great way to dive into the rich history of the underground railroad and the heroes pictured on the stamps. Quantities are limited, get yours today.
Ready on to learn more about the 2024 Underground Railroad stamps...
US #5834-43
2024 Underground Railroad
• Honors the countless people who made their way to freedom or helped others reach freedom through the Underground Railroad
• Pictures 10 individuals associated with the Underground Railroad
Stamp Category: Commemorative
Value: 68¢ First Class Mail Rate (Forever)
First Day of Issue: March 9, 2024
First Day City: Church Creek, Maryland
Quantity Issued: 20,000,000
Printed by: Ashton Potter (USA) Ltd.
Printing Method: Offset
Format: Panes of 20
Watermark: Nonphosphored Type III, Block Tag Applied
Why the stamps were issued: To commemorate the Underground Railroad and the many people who helped slaves or former slaves escape the South.
About the stamp designs: Each pictures a sepia-toned portrait of a man or woman who escaped slavery and/or helped others escape. Each stamp also includes eight lines of text which read: BLACK/WHITE; COOPERATION; TRUST/DANGER; FLIGHT/FAITH; COURAGE/RISK; DEFIANCE/HOPE; UNDERGROUND; RAILROAD/USA. On the reverse side of the pane of 20, there is a map picturing routes taken on the Underground Railroad from the South to North. The reverse side also includes a list of people pictured on the stamps plus biographical information on them. Designed by Antonio Alcalá using existing images.
First Day City: The First Day of Issue Ceremony was held at the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Visitor Center in Church Creek, Maryland.
History the stamps represent: The Underground Railroad was a secret highway that ferried Black Americans to freedom before and during the Civil War. According to John Rankin, the network was named “because they who took passage on it disappeared from public view really as if they had gone into the ground.”
Those who worked on the Underground Railroad played several roles. “Conductors” were responsible for leading escaped slaves to “stations” which consisted of safe houses owned by free Black Americans or White abolitionists (often Quakers). These “station masters” risked it all to help former slaves find their freedom, as, in many cases, the law required fugitives be returned to their enslavers. Station masters used their own money to provide food, clothing, and even medicine to their “passengers.” Some churches and other groups donated money and supplies, too.
Due to the nature of its work, the Underground Railroad did not have any maps or printed guidelines advertising it. It was all dependent on word of mouth and trusting that each person who knew about it would keep its workings a secret. Codes were also established to help relay information in a safer way.
In 2024, the US Postal Service issued 10 stamps picturing men and women who helped operate the Underground Railroad. To the Black Americans who fought to escape the inhumanity of slavery, the people running the Underground Railroad were real-life saints.