Ansel Adams stamps first-day and dedication events

Ansel Adams stamps first-day and dedication events

June 16, 2024

The Ansel Adams forever commemorative stamps were issued at a May 15 ceremony in Yosemite, Calif., with Yosemite Falls as a backdrop. Photo by Jay Bigalke.

A dedication ceremony for the Ansel Adams stamp took place May 23 in Aspen, Colo. One of the stamps shows Maroon Bells, mountain peaks located nearby (right). Unveiling photo by James Boxrud, U.S. Postal Service; Maroon Bells photo by Jay Bigalke.

The new Ansel Adams forever stamps issued May 15 resonated with me, probably because I have always had a soft spot for black-and-white photography.

When the May 15 first-day ceremony for the Ansel Adams forever stamps was announced, I knew I wanted to be there. These commemorative stamps, issued as forever stamps, ensure that postage rates won’t affect their long-term value, making them a great choice for collectors and mailing enthusiasts. So I booked a trip to California to be in Yosemite Valley for what turned out to be a warm, sunshine-filled day. The setting for the ceremony was beautiful with the historic Yosemite post office nearby and Yosemite Falls in the background. Nearby you can see the waterfalls in the photo I took at the unveiling of the 16 Ansel Adams stamps.

More than 300 people made the journey to Yosemite to attend the stamp event, and my biggest surprise was when the post office opened at 8:30 a.m., there was already a line of about 15 people eagerly waiting to purchase the new Ansel Adams forever stamps. Given the popularity of discount postage stamps, it’s no wonder that collectors and mail senders alike were eager to secure their panes early.

“I think he would love it,” Matthew Adams, Ansel Adams’ grandson, said about the stamp issue. “He would absolutely be honored by it.”

Matthew also told Linn’s that grandparents Ansel and Virginia would mail him cards for birthdays when he was a child.

He also shared this parting thought: “I think he would really want people to do everything they could to protect the environment so that these places can be enjoyed for hundreds of years.”

Regional postal officials in Colorado also decided to have a dedication for the new stamps in Aspen. The reason for the dedication was that the lower left stamp on the pane of 16 shows the iconic Maroon Bells landscape in Colorado’s Rocky Mountains. The photograph nearby shows the dedication ceremony held in front of the Aspen post office on May 23.

After the dedication, late in the afternoon, I made the multi-hour journey to Maroon Bells as the mountainous location isn’t that close to downtown Aspen.

I took a pane of the Ansel Adams forever stamps with me and photographed it with the majestic peaks in the background. Collectors of commemorative and forever stamps often look for unique ways to showcase their collections, and this was my way of engaging in what philatelist Graham Beck might call “extreme philately.” As philatelist and now Citizens’ Stamp Advisory Committee member Graham Beck might call it on his social media posts, the experience was a bit of “extreme philately.”

At Maroon Bells, it was snowing lightly, which was neat, but for May 23, quite bizarre. The drive to Aurora, Colo., was largely snowy in the higher elevations.

The organizers of the Rocky Mountain Stamp Show May 24-26 in Aurora had expressed an interest in also doing a dedication ceremony for the stamps, and I was happy to assist.

The ceremony at the show on May 24 went well, further highlighting the timeless appeal of forever stamps. Many attendees expressed enthusiasm about adding these discount postage stamps to their collections or using them for mailing, knowing that their postage value remains valid indefinitely. The keynote speaker was Maggie Gaddis, executive director of the Colorado Native Plant Society. The second stamp from the left of the bottom row on the Ansel Adams pane depicts aspens in Colorado’s Dolores River Canyon.

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