Showing posts with label Emily Dickinson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emily Dickinson. Show all posts

Saturday, April 25, 2026

The Women of the U.S. Postage Stamp—Part 3


By Jennifer Uhlarik

 

Hello, Readers! Happy April. Wait, what? How are we nearly through FOUR months of this year already? Can you believe it?

 

I’m back again with Part 3 of my series on the ladies who have been featured on American postage stamps. So far, we’ve seen many interesting figures, from former First Ladies to foreign monarchs, social reformers, and more. So let’s dig in and see who else we might meet from past postage stamps.

 

This month, we’ll start with Mary Cassatt, who was featured on US postage three separate times—in 1966, 1988, and 2003. Born in 1844, Cassatt was one of seven children born to her stockbroker father and a well-educated mother. As part of her early education, she traveled abroad, learned several foreign languages, and was exposed to drawing and music. By age fifteen, she’d made the decision that art would become her career, and she began studying at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts against her parents’ wishes. During the years of the Civil War, she went to Europe and studied there. After years of struggle, she did finally find success with her paintings, in part due to a platonic friendship with renowned impressionist painter Edgar Degas. 


This Mary Cassatt Postage Stamp debuted in 1966

The 1988 Mary Cassatt stamp

Here is the 2003 Mary Cassatt stamp,
featuring some of her artwork.


 

Our next lady is Lucy Stone. Born in Massachusetts in 1818, she went on to become the first woman in the state to earn a college degree, which she attained in 1847. After seeing how she and other female teachers were paid a much lower rate than male teachers, she began fighting for equal pay for herself and other women. She both spoke publicly and published her thoughts on matters of slavery, women’s suffrage, and more, and ultimately influenced the likes of Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton—two other well-known abolitionists and suffragists. The three together were known as the “Triumvirate” of Women’s Rights Reformers in the late 1800s. Lucy’s stamp debuted in 1968. 


Lucy Stone's stamp, circa 1968


Next on our list of famous ladies from the postage stamps is Anna Mary Robertson Moses. In 1860, Anna was born, the third of ten children of her farming parents. She attended school only briefly, where she was exposed to art. She’d fallen in love with painting, and her father would sometimes purchase her paper by the sheet so that she could create, using grape or orange juice, grass, and other natural substances as her paints. But by age twelve, Anna went to work for a neighboring farm family and continued to do so until she met and married her husband when she was twenty-seven. The pair had ten children together, five of whom survived past infancy. As a wife and mother, she decorated her home with embroidered or quilted items, as well as made such items as gifts for family and friends. After her husband’s death and her own retirement from farming, she continued with such folk-art activities until arthritis made quilting and embroidery too painful. Upon her sister’s suggestion, seventy-six-year-old Anna took up painting again. For nearly three full decades, she painted and sold her art, creating more than 1500 pieces in that time. When her art debuted to the public, the media dubbed Anna “Grandma Moses” despite the fact she wished to be known as Mrs. Moses. The name stuck. Her inspiring life should show everyone that it’s never too late to reinvent yourself. Her name and artwork was featured on a 6-cent postage stamp in 1969. 


Grandma Moses's stamp
debuted in 1969

 

The next two ladies are both writers. The first is Emily Dickinson, the prolific poet who wrote nearly 1800 poems in her brief fifty-five years. Dickinson never married and lived a large portion of her later life as a recluse. It was only after her death that her remaining siblings discovered her extensive writings. During her life, ten of her poems were published, but posthumously, her poetry has grown to be world-renowned and greatly respected. Dickinson was featured on her postage stamp in 1971. The second writer in this pair of wordsmiths is Willa Cather, who spent some of her early childhood in Nebraska, where she was exposed to the westward migration of many immigrant families. This inspired her many novels of the American west and the lives of immigrants in the American frontier. Her stamp debuted in 1973.

Poet Emily Dickinson's stamp

Novelist Willa Cather's stamp


 

The same year, the next lady graced a postage stamp. I have already written a blog post about Elizabeth Blackwell—also known as America’s first female doctor. Check her out here


First female doctor, Elizabeth Blackwell's
stamp.


 

Now let’s drop back in history to the American Revolution, as that’s where the next lady of the postage stamp is from. Sybil Ludington was born in 1761, the daughter of Colonel Henry Ludington. Sybil was honored on a stamp because of a Paul Revere-type ride she supposedly made on April 26, 1777. (I say supposedly, because there are questions whether the ride actually happened, and according to my resources, her descendants have been unable to provide documentation proof of her ride). But as the story goes, sixteen-year-old Sybil rode on horseback some forty miles from her hometown of Fredricksburg, New York (close to Danbury, CT), to alert her father and his 400 militia men that the British had attacked Danbury’s supply depot. Whether the ride actually happened, the United States Postal Service honored Sybil with her own stamp in 1975.


Sixteen-year-old Sybil Ludington rode 40
miles at night to warn her father and the militia
of a British attack.


 

The story behind our next woman is probably the saddest of the list thus far. Clara Maass was born in 1876 to a poor family and eventually went to nursing school to support herself and her family. After graduating school, she worked in her field, getting promoted to head nurse at Newark German Hospital in 1898. When the Spanish-American War broke out, she volunteered her services but was sent home after contracting dengue fever. She returned later and helped to nurse many soldiers—but not because of injury as much as the many illnesses they contracted, among them Yellow Fever. In 1900, the U.S. Army developed a Yellow Fever Commission to study how the illness was transmitted—whether through mosquito bites or through human contact. The Army asked humans to volunteer for the study, in which they would allow themselves to be bitten by infected mosquitoes in exchange for $100/bite (with inflation, this amount would be in the thousands today). While we don’t know her reasoning for this, Maass agreed and purposely allowed herself to be bitten by infected mosquitoes multiple times in the early part of 1901. The first time, she became mildly ill and recovered. Other times, she didn’t fall sick, leading those conducting the study to hope her first experience had immunized her. However, in mid-August of 1901, she endured her next infected bite and grew extremely ill quickly. She never recovered. Ten days after the fateful bug bite, she died at age 25. After this, human experimentation was discontinued, and on what would’ve been her 100th birthday, Clara was featured on her own postage stamp.


This stamp was issued on what would
have been Clara Maass's 100th
birthday


 

The last lady of the postage stamp that we’ll look at for today is none other than Harriet Tubman, who was featured twice—once in 1978 and again in 1995. Born into slavery, she was originally named Araminta Ross in 1822. In 1849, she escaped her slave owner via the Underground Railroad and made it safely from Maryland to Philadelphia. However, she was not content, knowing that her family and friends were still enslaved. She quickly returned to Maryland and spirited family members safely away to the North. All told, she returned thirteen times and saved seventy people from enslavement, as well as served the Union Army as a scout and spy during the Civil War and later fought for women’s suffrage. Quite an inspiring woman!


The 1978 stamp commemorates
Harriet Tubman's work to free
slaves via the Underground
Railroad.

This 1995 stamp honors Tubman's 
Civil War service.


 

That’s it for now, but we’ll continue our look at these honorees next month. Until then…

 

It’s Your Turn: Which of the women who were honored with their own stamp do you find the most memorable, and why?

 

Jennifer Uhlarik discovered western novels at twelve when she swiped the only “horse” book from her brother’s bookshelf. Across the next decade, she devoured westerns and fell in love with the genre. While attaining a B.A. in writing from the University of Tampa, she began penning her own story of the Old West. She has finaled in and won numerous writing competitions and appeared on various best-seller lists. Besides writing, she’s been a business owner, a schoolteacher, a marketing director, a historical researcher, a publisher, and a full-time homemaker. She lives near Tampa, Florida, with her husband and fur children.

 


Available Now:

Love and Order: A Three-Part Old West

Romantic Mystery

 

Wanted: 

Family, Love, and Justice


One Old West Mystery Solved Throughout Three Short Romantic Stories


Separated as children when they were adopted out to different families from an orphan train, the Braddock siblings have each grown up and taken on various jobs within law enforcement and criminal justice.

 

Youngest child, Callie, has pushed past her insecurities to pursue a career as a Pinkerton agent. Middle child, Andi, has spent years studying law under her adoptive father’s tutelage. And the eldest and only son, Rion, is a rough-and-tumble bounty hunter. 

 

When the hunt for a serial killer with a long history of murders reunites the brother and sisters in Cambria Springs, Colorado, they find themselves not only in a fight for justice, but also a fight to keep their newly reunited family intact. How will they navigate these challenges when further complicated by unexpected romances?

 


 


Thursday, December 14, 2023

Happy Birthday to Eight Eminent Women


 


Happy 481st Birthday to Mary, Queen of Scots

Queen of Scotland (1542-1567)


Born: December 8, 1542

Birthplace: Linlithgow Palace, Linlithgow, Scotland

Died: February 8, 1587 (44 years old)

 

Queen Elizabeth I of England, the daughter of King Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, imprisoned Mary, Henry’s great-niece, and eventually had her beheaded for treason. 

 







“In the end is my beginning.”

 

Happy 193rd Birthday to Emily Dickinson

Reclusive American poet

 

Born: December 10, 1830

Birthplace: Amherst, Massachusetts, United States

Died: May 15, 1886 (55 years old)

 

Miss Dickinson, known for dressing in white, wrote approximately 1800 poems that “were mostly without titles and had short lines, slant rhyme, and unconventional punctuation” (TFP#94). 


Most of her work was published after her death.

 







Happy 208th Birthday to Ada Lovelace, Countess of Lovelace

Mathematician and “Earliest Computer Programmer” (Lovelace)


Birthdate: December 10, 1815

Birthplace: London

Died: November 27, 1852 (36 years old)

Ada, the daughter of the poet Lord Byron (author of Don Juan), worked on Charles Babbage’s proposed “analytical engine,” a mechanical general-purpose computer proposed by Charles Babbage. Many believe “she published the first algorithm after realizing that the algorithm could be carried out by a machine like the Analytical Engine” (TFP#66).

 





"I am much pleased to find how very well I stand work and 

how my powers of attention and continued effort increase." 

 

Happy 205th Birthday to Mary Todd Lincoln

First Lady of the United States (1861 - 1865); President Abraham Lincoln’s wife

 

Born: December 13, 1818

Birthplace: Lexington, Kentucky, United States

Died: July 16, 1882 (63 years old)

 

Mrs. Lincoln’s intelligence and dedication to her husband are often overshadowed by her reputation as a frivolous spendthrift. After the assassination, she suffered from severe depression, financial problems, and legal disputes. 

 







“My evil genius Procrastination has whispered me 

to tarry ‘til a more convenient season.”

 

Happy 121st Birthday to Frances Bavier

Actress best known for playing Aunt Bee on The Andy Griffith Show.

 

Born: December 14, 1902

Birthplace: Manhattan, New York City, New York

Died: December 6, 1989 (almost 87 years old)

 

Ms. Bavier's career began in the theater, but it was her portrayal of Aunt Bee that made her famous and beloved by generations of fans. She earned critical acclaim for the role and was nominated for two Emmy nominations for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series.

 





“…Aunt Bee is so much nicer than the real me.”

 


Happy 538th Birthday to Catherine of Aragon

Queen Consort of England (1509 - 1533)

 

Birthdate: December 16, 1485

Birthplace: Alcala de Henares, Spain

Died: January 7, 1536 (50 years old)

 

The daughter of Spain’s monarchs, Isabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon, and mother of Queen Mary I gained her fame as the first wife of the infamous King Henry VIII. She refused to give in to her husband’s demands for an annulment which had far-reaching religious implications. She “commissioned The Education of a Christian Woman, a controversial book promoting women’s right to education” (TFP#137).

 



“I choose what I believe and say nothing. 

For I am not as simple as I may seem.”

 

Happy 248th Birthday to Jane Austen

English author of Pride and PrejudiceSense and SensibilityPersuasion (my favorite), and other novels.

 

Birthdate: December 16, 1775

Birthplace: Steventon, Hampshire, England, United Kingdom

Died: July 18, 1817 (41 years old)

 

Miss Austen’s novels may be seen by some as lighthearted stories. On a deeper level, however, she is celebrated for her sharp wit, keen sense of irony, and insightful observations on human nature. Each novel has been adapted for film and television numerous times, and today she is recognized as a pioneer of the modern novel.

 




“The person, be it lady or gentleman, who has not pleasure in a good novel, 

must be intolerably stupid.”

 

Happy 107th Birthday to Betty Grable 

American actress known for Mother Wore Tights and How to Marry a Millionaire

 

Birthdate: December 18, 1916

Birthplace: St. Louis, Missouri, United States

Died: July 2, 1973 (56 years old)

 

The multi-talented Miss Grable could do it all! Actress, dancer, singer…and the pin-up girl with the famous million-dollar legs. She became a cultural icon during World War II as a symbol of hope and optimism for American soldiers who were fighting overseas. Her legacy lives on as a Hollywood legend.






“There are two reasons why I am successful in show business 

and I am standing on both of them.”

 

Your Turn ~ Today we're celebrating the birthdays of royalty, actresses, literary icons, and a science pioneer. Given the opportunity, which one of these notable women's parties would you most like to attend? Let me know in the comments!


My Latest Short Story!


"Christmas Comes to Springlight," a story about two feuding sisters, a tragical tragedy, a repentant thief, and a present from the past, appears in A Thrill in the Air.

The latest Mosaic Collection Christmas Anthology includes eight wonderful stories about reconciliation during the holidays.Available now on Amazon.

 

Johnnie writes award-winning stories in multiple genres. A fan of classic movies, stacks of books, and road trips, she shares a life of quiet adventure with Griff, her happy-go-lucky collie, and Rugby, her raccoon-treeing papillon. Visit her at johnnie-alexander.com.


Photos ~ each photo is in the public domain; modified with Canva.

Ada Lovelace ~ Portrait of Ada by British painter, Margaret Sarah Carpenter (1836), Government Art Collection. 


Betty Grable ~ Publicity photo of Betty Grable. “This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published in the United States between 1928 and 1977, inclusive, without a copyright notice” (GrablePhoto). Created circa 1950s. 


Catherine of Aragon ~ “This is the largest miniature of Henry VIII's first wife. Three other miniatures exist, but two are circular copies of this original; the third is believed to be a companion piece to a miniature of the king. A unique feature of this work is that it includes Katharine's hands. All of Horenbout's other miniatures focused on the head and shoulders. All of his portraits have plain blue backgrounds and are traced with a gold line. Later artists such as Nicholas Hilliard inherited this style and continued it into the 17th century” (CatherinePhoto).


Emily Dickinson ~ Daguerreotype taken at Mount Holyoke, December 1846 or early 1847; the only authenticated portrait of Dickinson after early childhood. It is presently located in Amherst College Archives & Special Collections. 


Frances Bavier ~ CBS-photographer-Gabor Rona; eBay item photo. Created: 31 May 1964. 


Jane Austen ~ “From a watercolour by James Andrews of Maidenhead based on an unfinished work by Cassandra Austen. Engraving by William Home Lizars. A Memoir of Jane Austen by her nephew J. E. Austen-Leigh, Vicar of Bray, Berks. London: Richard Bentley, New Burlington Street, Publisher in Ordinary to her Majesty, 1870….Portrait of Jane Austen, from the memoir by J. E. Austen-Leigh (1798-1874). All other portraits of Austen are generally based on this, which is itself based on a sketch by Cassandra Austen” (AustenPhoto).


Mary, Queen of Scots ~ Mary in captivity, by Nicholas Hilliard, c. 1578.


Mary Todd Lincoln ~ Brady-Handy Photograph Collection (Library of Congress). 


Sources ~ all websites accessed on December 5, 2023.

Lovelace ~ https://www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/ada-lovelace-6234.php

 

The following three entries are from this website:

https://www.thefamouspeople.com/famous-people-born-in-december.php

 

TFP#66 ~ Ada Lovelace is the 66th entry.

TFP#94 ~ Emily Dickinson is the 94th entry.

TFP#137 ~ Catherine of Aragon is the 137th entry.