# M12130 - Framed Everglades Stamps and Medal
Limited-Edition Everglades Stamp and Medal Panel
This neat commemorative panel was created to celebrate Everglades National Park and the National Wildlife Refuge System. It includes a quote from President Theodore Roosevelt, who created the National Wildlife Refuge System in 1903.
This neat framed panel includes three stamp issues â the 1947 Everglades National Park stamp, the 1957 Wildlife Conservation stamp, and the 2003 Southern Florida Wetlands stamp sheet. It also includes the 2003 National Wildlife Refuge System Centennial medal.Â
A great way to honor the Everglades and the National Wildlife Refuge System. Order yours today.Â
Dedication Of Everglades National ParkÂ
Americans didnât attempt to settle in the Florida Everglades until the late 1800s. Before that, the area had been home to the Seminole Indians that had fled there during the Seminole Wars.
Upon their arrival, American settlers sought to develop the land for agriculture and settlement. The 1880s marked the first modern canals in the Everglades. But after the turn of 20th century, politicians used canalization as a campaign tool. Massive drainage of the wetlands occurred between 1905 and 1910. The canals removed water for sugar cane fields and brought on a land boom. Land was often sold before homes were built, and even before construction was planned. People built their homes on the recently drained lands and removed mangrove trees to create better views.
Click here to visit the Everglades National Park website.
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Limited-Edition Everglades Stamp and Medal Panel
This neat commemorative panel was created to celebrate Everglades National Park and the National Wildlife Refuge System. It includes a quote from President Theodore Roosevelt, who created the National Wildlife Refuge System in 1903.
This neat framed panel includes three stamp issues â the 1947 Everglades National Park stamp, the 1957 Wildlife Conservation stamp, and the 2003 Southern Florida Wetlands stamp sheet. It also includes the 2003 National Wildlife Refuge System Centennial medal.Â
A great way to honor the Everglades and the National Wildlife Refuge System. Order yours today.Â
Dedication Of Everglades National ParkÂ
Americans didnât attempt to settle in the Florida Everglades until the late 1800s. Before that, the area had been home to the Seminole Indians that had fled there during the Seminole Wars.
Upon their arrival, American settlers sought to develop the land for agriculture and settlement. The 1880s marked the first modern canals in the Everglades. But after the turn of 20th century, politicians used canalization as a campaign tool. Massive drainage of the wetlands occurred between 1905 and 1910. The canals removed water for sugar cane fields and brought on a land boom. Land was often sold before homes were built, and even before construction was planned. People built their homes on the recently drained lands and removed mangrove trees to create better views.
Click here to visit the Everglades National Park website.
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