List of people on the postage stamps of the United States

This article lists people who have been featured on United States postage stamps, listed by their name, the year they were first featured on a stamp, and a short description of their notability. Since the United States Post Office (now United States Postal Service or USPS) issued its first stamp in 1847, over 4,000 stamps have been issued and over 800 people featured. People have been featured on multiple stamps in one issue, or over time, such as various Presidents of the United States. Through the years, a person has had to be deceased before their face appeared on a stamp,[1] though the USPS will document that a stamp has commemorated people, living or deceased, without including their actual face on the stamp – such as the image of a yellow submarine from the 1969 eponymous album cover shown on the 1999 stamp[2] commemorating four people (three then-still alive) who collectively formed The Beatles.[3]

For the purpose of this list, "featured" may mean:

  1. The likeness of a person,
  2. The name of a person, or
  3. People who have neither their likeness nor name on a stamp, but are documented by the United States Postal Service as being the subject of a stamp (see Reference).

A

[edit]
John Quincy Adams on a 1938 stamp
Louisa May Alcott on a 1940 stamp
Dante Alighieri on a 1965 stamp

B

[edit]
Clara Barton on a 1948 stamp
Montgomery Blair on a 1963 stamp
Elizabeth Blackwell on a 1974 stamp

C

[edit]
Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac on a 1951 stamp
George Washington Carver on a 1948 stamp
Winston Churchill on a 1965 stamp
Henry Clay, 1902 stamp
Nicolaus Copernicus on a 1973 stamp

D

[edit]
John Dewey on a 1968 stamp
Walt Disney on a 1968 stamp
Frederick Douglass on a 1967 stamp
Paul Laurence Dunbar on a 1975 stamp

E

[edit]
Amelia Earhart on a 1963 stamp
Leif Ericson on a 1968 stamp

F

[edit]
Millard Fillmore on a 1938 stamp
Henry Ford on a 1968 stamp
Benjamin Franklin on the first US stamp, 1847
Robert Fulton on a 1965 stamp

G

[edit]
Albert Gallatin on a 1967 stamp
Amadeo P. Giannini on a 1973 stamp
Robert H. Goddard on a 1964 stamp
Samuel Gompers on a 1950 stamp
David Wark Griffith on a 1975 stamp

H

[edit]
Dag Hammarskjöld on a 1962 stamp
William Christopher Handy on a 1969 stamp
Benjamin Harrison on a 1902 stamp
Herbert Hoover, on a 1965 stamp
Cordell Hull on a 1964 stamp

I

[edit]
Washington Irving on a 1940 stamp

J

[edit]
Andrew Jackson on a 1967 stamp
Chief Joseph on a 1968 stamp

K

[edit]
Kamehameha I of Hawaii on a 1937 stamp

L

[edit]
Fiorello La Guardia on a 1972 stamp
Sidney Lanier on a 1972 stamp
Juliette Gordon Low on a 1948 stamp
Sybil Ludington on a 1975 stamp

M

[edit]
Clara Maass, on a 1976 stamp
Ramon Magsaysay, on a 1957 stamp
George Catlett Marshall on a 1967 stamp
Edgar Lee Masters on a 1970 stamp
Ephraim McDowell, on a 1959 stamp
Brien McMahon on a 1962 stamp
Grandma Moses on a 1969 stamp

N

[edit]
James Naismith on a 1961 stamp
Ethelbert Nevin on a 1940 stamp

O

[edit]
Adolph S. Ochs on a 1976 stamp
Eugene O’Neill on a 1967 stamp

P

[edit]
Thomas Paine on a 1969 stamp
Pocahontas on a 1907 stamp
Salem Poor on a 1975 stamp
Kazimierz Pułaski on a 1931 stamp
Ernest Taylor Pyle on a 1971 stamp

Q

[edit]

R

[edit]
Ernst Reuter on a 1958 stamp
Eleanor Roosevelt on a 1963 stamp
Franklin D. Roosevelt on a 1945 stamp
Theodore Roosevelt on a 1922 stamp

S

[edit]
Haym Salomon on a 1975 stamp
William Shakespeare on a 1938 stamp
William Tecumseh Sherman on an 1893 stamp
John Sloan on a 1971 stamp
Edwin M. Stanton on an 1871 stamp
Adlai Stevenson on a 1965 stamp
Lucy Stone on a 1968 stamp

T

[edit]
Robert A. Taft on a 1960 stamp
Henry Ossawa Tanner on a 1973 stamp
Henry David Thoreau on a 1967 stamp

V

[edit]

W

[edit]
Booker T. Washington on a 1940 stamp
George Washington on an 1847 stamp
Martha Washington on a 1923 stamp
Daniel Webster on an 1890 stamp
Walt Whitman on a 1940 stamp
Frank Lloyd Wright, 1966

X

[edit]

Y

[edit]
Sun Yat-sen on a 1961 stamp

Z

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  • United States Postal Service (2008). The Postal Service Guide to U.S. Stamps (35th ed.). Washington, D.C.: HarperResource. ISBN 978-0-06-166263-8.
  • Kloetzell, James E., ed. (2005). 2006 Scott Standard Postage Stamp Catalogue. Vol. 1. Sidney, Ohio: Scott Publishing Company. pp. 1–160. ISBN 0-89487-351-2.
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  2. ^ Mitchell, Calvin (2014-03-27). "U.S. Postage and the Beatles: The 1999 Stamp, the 2003 Proofs and Future Expectations". National Postal Museum. Archived from the original on 2022-02-01. Retrieved 2024-06-12.
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  6. ^ a b "'Vintage Black Cinema' Movie Poster Stamps Highlight African- American Cultural Experience" (PDF). United States Postal Service. 15 July 2008. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
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  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "2004 United States Stamp Schedule". Virtual Stamp Club. Compiled by Jay Bigalke. July 1, 2007. Retrieved August 26, 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  10. ^ "First Moon Landing, 1969" 29¢ United States postage stamp Archived 2012-08-23 at the Wayback Machine, based on a photograph of Aldrin captured by Neil Armstrong on July 20, 1969 (July 21, UTC).
  11. ^ "1969 First Moon Landing" 54¢ 'forever' United States postage stamp, reproducing Neil Armstrong's famed July 20, 1969 (July 21, UTC) photograph of Aldrin on the Moon, with Armstrong reflected in the center Aldrin's visor. Aldrin's name tag is legible on the life support system in front of his chest.
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  16. ^ "First Man on the Moon" 10₵ United States Air Mail stamp Archived 2012-08-23 at the Wayback Machine does not identify Armstrong by name but simply as the "first man on the Moon", depicting him as he made his "one small step".
  17. ^ "1969 First Moon Landing" 54¢ 'forever' United States postage stamp, reproducing Neil Armstrong's famed July 20, 1969 (July 21, UTC) photograph of Aldrin on the Moon, with Armstrong himself reflected in the center Aldrin's visor. Armstrong is not named on the stamp, though Aldrin's name tag is legible.
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  84. ^ "Harvey Milk". USPSStamps.com. United States Postal Service. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
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  88. ^ "Completion of First Transcontinental Railroad" 3₵ United States postage stamp depicts Leland Stanford driving the "golden spike" at Promontory Point, Utah. Ogden is not identified by name on the stamp, but is depicted on the left side, as then-president of the Union Pacific Railroad as Stanford prepares to swing the sledgehammer and photographer A.J. Russell prepares to capture the image for posterity.
  89. ^ Institution, Smithsonian. "8c General John Pershing single". Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2023-10-26.
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  92. ^ U.S. Postal Service Provides First-Day Date and Locations for 2018 First Quarter Stamp Issuances, US Postal Service news release, December 19, 2017
  93. ^ Russell was the photographer who memorialized the driving of the "golden spike" connecting the Union Pacific and Central Pacific Railroads in 1869. "Completion of First Transcontinental Railroad" 3₵ United States postage stamp depicts A.J. Russell photographing Leland Stanford driving the "golden spike" at Promontory Point, Utah. Russell is toward the right side of the stamp.
  94. ^ "Honoring Four of Harlem's Historic Voices - Newsroom - About.usps.com". about.usps.com. Retrieved 2021-02-25.
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  96. ^ "Completion of First Transcontinental Railroad" 3₵ United States postage stamp depicts Stanford driving the "golden spike" at Promontory Point, Utah. Stanford is not identified by name in the stamp, but is depicted holding a sledgehammer in front of a train as photographer A.J. Russell to the right prepares to capture the image for posterity.
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  104. ^ USPS (January 28, 2021). "Black Heritage Stamp, Honoring Legendary Playwright August Wilson". usps.com. Retrieved November 22, 2021.
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