# CNC22 - 2008 42c Flags of Nation, Samoa
Limited-Edition Fleetwood Flags of Our Nation First Day Cover Can Be Yours – Includes American Samoa Stamp & Coins
This Flags of Our Nation First Day Cover marks the First Day of Issue of the American Samoa Flag stamp. It features two encapsulated uncirculated American Samoa quarters plus a full-cover cachet and First Day of Issue postmark. The reverse side features interesting historical information about the territory and its flag.
American Samoa Ceded To The U.S.
American Samoa’s earliest inhabitants arrived at the islands west of Samoa as early as 1500 BC. Samoa’s Manu’a Islands have one of the oldest recorded histories in Polynesia.
By the time of World War II, American Samoa was an important military base and staging point for the Navy’s offensive strategies in the Pacific. During the war, Samoan men age 14 and older were trained in combat and also served as medical personnel, code personnel, and ship mechanics. When the war was over, the US Department of the Interior created Organic Act 4500 in an attempt to incorporate American Samoa. Samoan chiefs, led by Tuiasosopo Mariota, argued against it and the act was defeated in the US Congress.
Limited-Edition Fleetwood Flags of Our Nation First Day Cover Can Be Yours – Includes American Samoa Stamp & Coins
This Flags of Our Nation First Day Cover marks the First Day of Issue of the American Samoa Flag stamp. It features two encapsulated uncirculated American Samoa quarters plus a full-cover cachet and First Day of Issue postmark. The reverse side features interesting historical information about the territory and its flag.
American Samoa Ceded To The U.S.
American Samoa’s earliest inhabitants arrived at the islands west of Samoa as early as 1500 BC. Samoa’s Manu’a Islands have one of the oldest recorded histories in Polynesia.
By the time of World War II, American Samoa was an important military base and staging point for the Navy’s offensive strategies in the Pacific. During the war, Samoan men age 14 and older were trained in combat and also served as medical personnel, code personnel, and ship mechanics. When the war was over, the US Department of the Interior created Organic Act 4500 in an attempt to incorporate American Samoa. Samoan chiefs, led by Tuiasosopo Mariota, argued against it and the act was defeated in the US Congress.