1988 22c Bicentenary Statehood: Connecticut

# 2340 - 1988 22c Bicentenary Statehood: Connecticut

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U.S. #2340
1988 22¢ Connecticut
Bicentenary Statehood

  • 5th stamp in Bicentenary Statehood Series
  • First stamp in series released on exact statehood anniversary date
  • Stamp pictures the Charles W. Morgan, which previously appeared on 1971 Historic Preservation stamp

Stamp Category:  Commemorative, Definitive, Express Mail, semi-postal, airmail
Series: 
Bicentenary Statehood
Value: 
22¢, first-class rate
First Day of Issue: 
January 9, 1988
First Day City: 
Hartford, Connecticut
Quantity Issued: 
155,170,000
Printed by: 
Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method: 
Lithographed, engraved, & photogravure
Format: 
Panes of 50 in sheets of 200
Perforations:  11

 

Why the stamp was issued:  As part of a series honoring the 200th statehood anniversaries of the first 13 US states.

 

About the stamp design:  Connecticut artist Christopher Calle provided several preliminary designs for this stamp depicting the Charter Oak, the state capitol in Hartford, the state bird (robin) with a nutmeg, a statue of Thomas Hooker, and three different images of Nathan Hale.  The selected design pictures the whaling ship Charles W. Morgan in the port at Mystic, Connecticut.  This ship was previously included in the Historic Preservation issue of 1971 (US #1441).  While the scene is an artist’s concept, the buildings in the background are based on real buildings – the Schaefer Tavern and the Mystic Bank.

 

First Day City:  The First Day ceremony for this stamp was held at the Old State House in Hartford, the capital of Connecticut.

 

About the Bicentenary Statehood Series:  The 1935 Michigan Centenary stamp is often considered America’s first statehood stamp.  However, that stamp actually used the wrong date – Michigan ratified its constitution in 1837, but wasn’t granted statehood until 1837.  The first correct statehood stamp marked the 100th anniversary of Arkansas in 1936.  In the years since, many other statehood stamps were issued.  However, among all these statehood stamps, 13 were missing – the first 13 states that formed our nation.  With this series, the USPS planned to honor those state as they deserved.

 

From 1987-1990, the Bicentenary Statehood Series commemorated the signing of the Constitution by representatives of the first 13 Colonies.  The stamps were issued in the 200th year after each state approved the Constitution.  They were issued in the order each colony became a state, though not always on the exact date of ratification.  Each stamp shows traditional symbols or scenes from the state.

 

History the stamp represents:  On January 9, 1788, Connecticut ratified the US Constitution, making it the fifth state to join the young United States.

 

English colonists from Massachusetts founded Connecticut’s first permanent European settlement, Windsor, in 1633.  Most of these settlers left Massachusetts seeking political and religious freedom.  Other settlements quickly followed, including Hartford, New London, Saybrook, and Wethersfield.  In 1636, Hartford, Wethersfield, and Windsor united to form the Connecticut Colony, also known as the River Colony.

 

As the number of Connecticut colonists grew, the native Pequot Indian tribe grew hostile, fearing that settlers would challenge their control of the region.  After several Indian attacks, Captain John Mason led a small army aided by Mohegan and Narragansett warriors against the Pequot in 1637.  Mason quickly defeated the Pequot.

 

The colony of New Haven was founded as a Puritan theocracy, or church-ruled state, in 1638.  Five years later, Branford, Guillford, Milford, Stamford, and Southhold (located on Long Island) joined the New Haven colony.  By 1660, many towns had joined the Connecticut Colony, including Fairfield, Farmington, Middletown, New London, Norwalk, Saybrook, and Stratford.  In 1662, John Winthrop Jr. of the Connecticut Colony, was granted a charter from the King of England.  This charter gave the colony control of a 73-mile-wide strip of land running from Narragansett Bay to the Pacific Ocean (at that time, the distance to the Pacific was unknown).  This area included the New Haven Colony.  Despite objections from the New Haven colonists, the two were united in 1665.

 

A century later, as America waged war on England, the majority of Connecticut colonists favored independence.  And on June 14, 1776, a resolution was passed backing this action.  On July 4, 1776, Connecticut adopted the Declaration of Independence.  Two years later, Connecticut approved the Articles of Confederation – the forerunner of the United States Constitution.

 

When the fighting broke out in Massachusetts in 1775, hundreds of Connecticut men joined the patriot forces.  Connecticut’s governor, Jonathan Trumbull, was the only colonial governor to hold office throughout the revolution, because he sided with the patriots.  Trumbull was a close friend and trusted adviser to George Washington, who called him Brother Jonathan.  Nathan Hale was also a leading patriot from Connecticut.  Hanged by the British for being a spy, Hale’s dying words, “I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country,” have made him a legend.

 

At the Constitutional Convention of 1787, Connecticut’s delegates played an important role in bringing about the Great Compromise, sometimes called the Connecticut Compromise.  Delegates from large states wanted congressional representation to be based on population, while smaller states wanted representation to be equal.  The Connecticut Compromise provided for representation based on population in the House and equal representation in the Senate.  This compromise allowed both large and small states to fully support a central government and earned Connecticut the nickname, “The Constitution State.”  Connecticut ratified the United States Constitution on January 9, 1788, making it the fifth state to join the Union.

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U.S. #2340
1988 22¢ Connecticut
Bicentenary Statehood

  • 5th stamp in Bicentenary Statehood Series
  • First stamp in series released on exact statehood anniversary date
  • Stamp pictures the Charles W. Morgan, which previously appeared on 1971 Historic Preservation stamp

Stamp Category:  Commemorative, Definitive, Express Mail, semi-postal, airmail
Series: 
Bicentenary Statehood
Value: 
22¢, first-class rate
First Day of Issue: 
January 9, 1988
First Day City: 
Hartford, Connecticut
Quantity Issued: 
155,170,000
Printed by: 
Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method: 
Lithographed, engraved, & photogravure
Format: 
Panes of 50 in sheets of 200
Perforations:  11

 

Why the stamp was issued:  As part of a series honoring the 200th statehood anniversaries of the first 13 US states.

 

About the stamp design:  Connecticut artist Christopher Calle provided several preliminary designs for this stamp depicting the Charter Oak, the state capitol in Hartford, the state bird (robin) with a nutmeg, a statue of Thomas Hooker, and three different images of Nathan Hale.  The selected design pictures the whaling ship Charles W. Morgan in the port at Mystic, Connecticut.  This ship was previously included in the Historic Preservation issue of 1971 (US #1441).  While the scene is an artist’s concept, the buildings in the background are based on real buildings – the Schaefer Tavern and the Mystic Bank.

 

First Day City:  The First Day ceremony for this stamp was held at the Old State House in Hartford, the capital of Connecticut.

 

About the Bicentenary Statehood Series:  The 1935 Michigan Centenary stamp is often considered America’s first statehood stamp.  However, that stamp actually used the wrong date – Michigan ratified its constitution in 1837, but wasn’t granted statehood until 1837.  The first correct statehood stamp marked the 100th anniversary of Arkansas in 1936.  In the years since, many other statehood stamps were issued.  However, among all these statehood stamps, 13 were missing – the first 13 states that formed our nation.  With this series, the USPS planned to honor those state as they deserved.

 

From 1987-1990, the Bicentenary Statehood Series commemorated the signing of the Constitution by representatives of the first 13 Colonies.  The stamps were issued in the 200th year after each state approved the Constitution.  They were issued in the order each colony became a state, though not always on the exact date of ratification.  Each stamp shows traditional symbols or scenes from the state.

 

History the stamp represents:  On January 9, 1788, Connecticut ratified the US Constitution, making it the fifth state to join the young United States.

 

English colonists from Massachusetts founded Connecticut’s first permanent European settlement, Windsor, in 1633.  Most of these settlers left Massachusetts seeking political and religious freedom.  Other settlements quickly followed, including Hartford, New London, Saybrook, and Wethersfield.  In 1636, Hartford, Wethersfield, and Windsor united to form the Connecticut Colony, also known as the River Colony.

 

As the number of Connecticut colonists grew, the native Pequot Indian tribe grew hostile, fearing that settlers would challenge their control of the region.  After several Indian attacks, Captain John Mason led a small army aided by Mohegan and Narragansett warriors against the Pequot in 1637.  Mason quickly defeated the Pequot.

 

The colony of New Haven was founded as a Puritan theocracy, or church-ruled state, in 1638.  Five years later, Branford, Guillford, Milford, Stamford, and Southhold (located on Long Island) joined the New Haven colony.  By 1660, many towns had joined the Connecticut Colony, including Fairfield, Farmington, Middletown, New London, Norwalk, Saybrook, and Stratford.  In 1662, John Winthrop Jr. of the Connecticut Colony, was granted a charter from the King of England.  This charter gave the colony control of a 73-mile-wide strip of land running from Narragansett Bay to the Pacific Ocean (at that time, the distance to the Pacific was unknown).  This area included the New Haven Colony.  Despite objections from the New Haven colonists, the two were united in 1665.

 

A century later, as America waged war on England, the majority of Connecticut colonists favored independence.  And on June 14, 1776, a resolution was passed backing this action.  On July 4, 1776, Connecticut adopted the Declaration of Independence.  Two years later, Connecticut approved the Articles of Confederation – the forerunner of the United States Constitution.

 

When the fighting broke out in Massachusetts in 1775, hundreds of Connecticut men joined the patriot forces.  Connecticut’s governor, Jonathan Trumbull, was the only colonial governor to hold office throughout the revolution, because he sided with the patriots.  Trumbull was a close friend and trusted adviser to George Washington, who called him Brother Jonathan.  Nathan Hale was also a leading patriot from Connecticut.  Hanged by the British for being a spy, Hale’s dying words, “I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country,” have made him a legend.

 

At the Constitutional Convention of 1787, Connecticut’s delegates played an important role in bringing about the Great Compromise, sometimes called the Connecticut Compromise.  Delegates from large states wanted congressional representation to be based on population, while smaller states wanted representation to be equal.  The Connecticut Compromise provided for representation based on population in the House and equal representation in the Senate.  This compromise allowed both large and small states to fully support a central government and earned Connecticut the nickname, “The Constitution State.”  Connecticut ratified the United States Constitution on January 9, 1788, making it the fifth state to join the Union.