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Since
Christmas
is approaching,
I cobbled together
a quick little tour of
US postage stamps
that feature a
Christmas
theme
.
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This
is the first
United States
Christmas stamp,
issued in
1962
:

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Some
wondered
if the postal service
had crossed the line
between church
and state
.
In
1963
the USPS
issued a stamp
with a Christmas tree
in front of the White House
:

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This also
received criticism
for mixing politics
with religion
.
The USPS took
the next year off, but
came back in 1965 with
a design featuring the
angel Gabriel
:
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Lucille Gloria Chabot
Gabriel Weather Vane
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Since
then, the
US Postal Service
has continued to issue
annual Christmas stamps
with “Traditional” and
“Contemporary”
themes
.
Our
interest is in
biblical artwork,
so this is a collection
of the stamps
classified
as
Traditional
.
It seems fitting that
the USPS chose Gabriel
as their first traditional stamp
design, because he was the
angel that announced the
birth of Jesus into
the world
.
Most of the traditional
Christmas stamps since
then have focused
on the nativity
.
Here is the
complete collection
:

Hans Memling
Madonna and Child with Angels

Hans Memling
Madonna and Child with Angels

Jan Van Eyck
The Annunciation

Lorenzo Lotto
The Nativity

Giorgione
Adoration of the Shepherds

Master of the St. Lucy Legend
Mary, Queen of Heaven

Raphael
Small Cowper Madonna

Perussis Altarpiece

Ghirlandaio
Madonna and Child

John Singleton Copley
The Nativity

Andrea della Robbia
Madonna and Child with Cherubim

Gerard David
The Rest on the Flight into Egypt


Botticelli
Virgin and Child with an Angel

Tiepolo
Madonna and Child

Raphael
Niccolini-Cowper Madonna

Fra Filippo Lippi
Madonna and Child

Luca della Robbia
Genoa Madonna

Perugino
Madonna and Child

Moroni
Madonna and Child

Botticelli
Madonna and Child

Carracci
Madonna and Child

Antonello da Mesina
Madonna and Child

Antoniazzo Romano
Madonna and Child

Follower of Bellini
Madonna and Child

Giovanni Battista
Madonna and Child

Elisabetta Sirani
Virgin and Child

Giotto
Madonna and Child

Paolo de Matteis
Holy Family

Sano di Pietro
Madonna and Child
with Saint Jerome,
Saint Bernardino,
and Angels

Florentine Madonna and Child

Bartolomao Vivarini
Madonna and Child

Lorenzo Costa

Jan Gossaert
Virgin and Child

Lorenzo Monaco
Madonna and Child

Ignacio Chacon
Madonna and Child

Bernardino Luini
The Madonna of the Carnation

Botticelli
Virgin and Child with
the Young John the Baptist

Giovanni Battista Salvi da Sassoferrato
Madonna col bambino ed angeli

Melozzo da Forli
Angel & Lute

Raphael
Madonna of the Candelabra

Holy Family

Jan Gossaert
Virgin and Child in a Landscape

The Magi

Follower of Lippi and Pesello
Madonna and Child

Nativity

Francesco Bachlacca
Madonna and Child

Cuzco
Our Lady of Guapalo

the Master of Scandicci Lamentation
Virgin and Child

Giovanni Battista Salvi da Sassoferrato
Madonna and Child
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The
National
Smithsonian
Postal Museum’s
online exhibit displays
original artwork with
descriptions and
historical info
:
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The
icon for
this article is
a detail from the
watercolor painting
that was used to make the
the first “traditional”
Christmas Stamp
:

Gabriel Weather Vane (Technique)
It
looks
like an old
and corroded
weather vane,
but it’s really a
watercolor
painting
!!!

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FROM HISTORY.COM
https://www.history.com/news/11-most-controversial-stamps-in-u-s-history
No kind of stamp seems to have been as consistently controversial as the ones issued to mark Christmas. That includes the first U.S. Christmas stamp, issued in 1962. Featuring a pair of white candles and a wreath with a red bow, it was attacked for crossing the line between church and state as well as for slighting other faiths. Some Christians objected to it, too, saying the government had no business intruding into their religion. Time magazine even faulted it on aesthetic grounds, calling it “calculated blah.” The post office fared no better in 1963 with a design involving a lit-up Christmas tree in front of the White House. Though perhaps an improvement artistically, it was lambasted for injecting politics into Christmas.