# U635 FDC - 1995 5c Sheep PSE FDC
American Scenes & American Transportation Series
These two series, as well as the American Culture Series, were created for 1995 as part of the USPS process of converting its service-inscribed stamps for discounted bulk mail to non-denominational postage. Bulk mailers could buy the appropriate stamps at a fixed price, affix them to their mail, and then pay the difference between the cost of the stamps and current postage when they mailed them out. This was done so that new stamps wouldn’t need to be created when rates changed.
The first stamps in American Culture series were issued a week later on March 17 at the Postage Stamp Mega-Event at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The two issues were a 15¢ Auto Tail Fin for pre-sorted first-class postcards and a 20¢ Jukebox for pre-sorted first-class letter mail. In describing the new series the USPS said it would “take a look at American creativity and at things that no other country could claim.”
New stamps in each of these series continued into the 2000s with designs including mountains, wetlands, bicycle handlebars, a diner, and more.
American Scenes & American Transportation Series
These two series, as well as the American Culture Series, were created for 1995 as part of the USPS process of converting its service-inscribed stamps for discounted bulk mail to non-denominational postage. Bulk mailers could buy the appropriate stamps at a fixed price, affix them to their mail, and then pay the difference between the cost of the stamps and current postage when they mailed them out. This was done so that new stamps wouldn’t need to be created when rates changed.
The first stamps in American Culture series were issued a week later on March 17 at the Postage Stamp Mega-Event at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The two issues were a 15¢ Auto Tail Fin for pre-sorted first-class postcards and a 20¢ Jukebox for pre-sorted first-class letter mail. In describing the new series the USPS said it would “take a look at American creativity and at things that no other country could claim.”
New stamps in each of these series continued into the 2000s with designs including mountains, wetlands, bicycle handlebars, a diner, and more.