# CSA4 - 1862 5c Confederate States - Jefferson Davis - blue, soft paper
CSA #4 – A Symbol of Confederate Ingenuity
Acquire the scarce 1863 5¢ Confederate stamp and get tangible proof of Southern determination and resourcefulness.
Faced with limited resources during the Civil War, the South used stone lithography to produce its first postage stamps. The process involves the use of a grease-based medium on a stone surface. When ink is applied, the natural repulsion of grease and water creates a pattern.
One of the two stones used to create CSA#4 – depicting Confederate President Jefferson Davis – was also used to print CSA#1. As such, they are the first stamps issued on American soil to feature a living president.
As you might expect, this stamp will have small flaws – saving you off Mystic’s U.S. Stamp Catalog price without interfering with its beauty or desirability.
Someone lovingly preserved these scarce stamps throughout America’s most tragic war and the following century. Now it’s your turn to cherish this historically significant stamp. Order yours today.
Jefferson Davis Elected Confederate President
On November 6, 1861, Jefferson Davis was elected the first and only President of the Confederate States of America.
Jefferson Davis was born in Kentucky and grew up in Mississippi and Louisiana. He married Sarah Knox Taylor, former US President Zachary Taylor’s daughter, though she died of Malaria three months into the marriage. Davis later developed a sprawling plantation in Mississippi, remarried, and raised a volunteer regiment for the Mexican-American War. After suffering an injury in the war, Davis served in the senate.
Captured on May 10, 1865, Davis spent two years in prison before being released on a bond of $100,000, which was raised by a group of prominent citizens. While he became a symbol of the Confederate “Lost Cause,” Davis urged loyalty to the nation during Reconstruction.
CSA #4 – A Symbol of Confederate Ingenuity
Acquire the scarce 1863 5¢ Confederate stamp and get tangible proof of Southern determination and resourcefulness.
Faced with limited resources during the Civil War, the South used stone lithography to produce its first postage stamps. The process involves the use of a grease-based medium on a stone surface. When ink is applied, the natural repulsion of grease and water creates a pattern.
One of the two stones used to create CSA#4 – depicting Confederate President Jefferson Davis – was also used to print CSA#1. As such, they are the first stamps issued on American soil to feature a living president.
As you might expect, this stamp will have small flaws – saving you off Mystic’s U.S. Stamp Catalog price without interfering with its beauty or desirability.
Someone lovingly preserved these scarce stamps throughout America’s most tragic war and the following century. Now it’s your turn to cherish this historically significant stamp. Order yours today.
Jefferson Davis Elected Confederate President
On November 6, 1861, Jefferson Davis was elected the first and only President of the Confederate States of America.
Jefferson Davis was born in Kentucky and grew up in Mississippi and Louisiana. He married Sarah Knox Taylor, former US President Zachary Taylor’s daughter, though she died of Malaria three months into the marriage. Davis later developed a sprawling plantation in Mississippi, remarried, and raised a volunteer regiment for the Mexican-American War. After suffering an injury in the war, Davis served in the senate.
Captured on May 10, 1865, Davis spent two years in prison before being released on a bond of $100,000, which was raised by a group of prominent citizens. While he became a symbol of the Confederate “Lost Cause,” Davis urged loyalty to the nation during Reconstruction.