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Civil War Descendants of Nathaniel Gist

Posted By on May 3, 2013

Christopher Gist, an immigrant from England around 1682, settled in the Baltimore area of Maryland in 1691.  His marriage to Edith Cromwell had connected him to one of the prominent lines of English descent, that of Oliver Cromwell, the Lord Protector.  The son of this marriage, Richard Gist (1684-1741), was the father of western explorer and surveyor Christopher Gist (1706-1759).  Christopher’s journal, kept while working with George Washington in the Ohio River area in the 1750s provides much insight to the early history of that region as well as the activities of the French in the period of the French and Indian War.  Christopher Gist married Sarah Howard of Maryland and with her had three sons.  The first son, Richard Gist (1729-1780) was killed in the Battle of Kings Mountain during the American Revolution.  The second son, Nathaniel Gist (1733-1796) is the subject of this post.  A third son, Thomas Gist, settled in Kentucky some time after the American Revolution and became a militia training officer.

One of the earliest and most persistent legends about Nathaniel Gist (1733-1796) is that he was the father of famed Cherokee linguist Sequoyah (1767-1843).  Sequoyah was the “inventor” of a syllabary or alphabet, which made it possible to read and write in the Cherokee language.  It is not the purpose of this post to examine this legend further, but it would make an interesting story, if true, and give another line of descent of Nathaniel Gist not previously explored through the Civil War period.  Sequoyah did have many children with several different wives as polygamy was common among the Cherokee.

Sequoyah (1767-1843)

The following excerpt from Chronicles of Oklahoma gives us some some clues as to the known Civil War era descendants of Nathaniel Gist (1733-1796):

After the close of the Revolution, 1783, [Nathaniel Gist] married Judith Cary Bell, a grandniece of Archibald Cary, mover of the Bill of Rights in the Virginia House of Burgesses. The daughters of the couple married distinguished men.  Sarah Howard Gist married Jesse Bledsoe, a United States senator from Kentucky, characterized by Henry Clay as the most formidable man he ever met at the bar in Kentucky; Anne Cary Gist married Dr. Joseph Boswell; Eliza Gist married Francis Preston Blair, and they were parents of Montgomery Blair, a member of Lincoln’s cabinet, and Francis Preston Blair, Jr., who was a United States senator from Missouri and a brigadier-general in the Civil War; and Maria C. Gist married Benjamin Gratz, a wealthy citizen of Lexington.

Sarah Howard Gist (1785-1849)

The first mentioned daughter, Sarah Howard Gist (1785-1849) married Jesse Bledsoe (1776-1836), an ante-bellum U.S. Senator from Kentucky and a judge.  They had a daughter, Judith Ann Bledsoe (1803-1827) who married Judge Mason Brown (1799-1867).  Their son was Benjamin Gratz Brown (1826-1885).

Benjamin Gratz Brown (1826-1885) – Great-Grandson of Nathaniel Gist (1733-1796)

 

Benjamin Gratz Brown (1826-1885) was a Civil War-era politician.  He was a colonel of a U.S. Reserves regiment in the first part of the Civil War, a regiment that was formed mostly of St. Louis area German-Americans who became later a strong part of his constituency when he sought political office.  B. Gratz Brown served as Senator from Missouri, Governor of Missouri, and later was selected as the Vice Presidential candidate for the Democratic Party in 1872 running with Horace Greeley, the newspaper editor.  Greeley and Brown lost the popular vote and then Greeley died before the electoral vote was counted.  When the electoral votes were counted, those votes that were to go to Greeley-Brown were divided up among many candidates, with Brown getting eighteen (18) electoral votes for president.  Ulysses Grant won the election and became the eighteenth President of the United States.

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Judith Cary Gist (1788-1839)

Judith Cary Gist (1788-1839), sometimes referred to as Anne Cary Gist, married Dr. Joseph Boswell (1783-1833).  Their daughter was Anna Maria Boswell (1809-1893) who married Orville Shelby (1803-1835).   Shelby had previously married the heiress Elizabeth Caroline Winchester (1802-1827) who died after giving birth to a son, Isaac, and leaving all her wealth to Orville Shelby.  To the marriage of Orville Shelby and Anna Marie Boswell, a son Joseph Orville “Jo” Shelby (1830-1897) was born.

Joseph Orville “Jo” Shelby (1830-1897) – Great-Grandson of Nathaniel Gist (1733-1796)

Jo Shelby became a famous Confederate Cavalry General in the Civil War.  He was a rope manufacturer with his cousin Howard Gratz in the pre-Civil War years and was one of the largest slaveholders in Missouri, slaves providing the labor on his hemp farm.  In June 1865, Shelby refused to give up and escaped into Mexico, sinking his battle flag in the Rio Grande rather than surrendering it to the Union forces.  In 1867 he returned to Missouri and after eventual reconciliation, he was appointed U.S. Marshal in 1893, a position he held until his death.

 

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Elizabeth Violet Gist (1795-1877)

Elizabeth Violet Gist (1795-1877), known as “Eliza,” married Francis Preston Blair Sr. (1791-1876).   They were the parents of Montgomery Blair (1813-1883) and Francis Preston Blair Jr. (1821-1875).

Montgomery Blair (1813-1883) – Grandson of Nathaniel Gist (1733-1796)

Montgomery Blair was a politician and lawyer from Maryland and despite his family’s slaveholder background, he became an active abolitionist.  He was a loyal Unionist and a member of Abraham Lincoln‘s cabinet during the Civil War, serving as the nation’s Postmaster General until 1864.  After the Civil War, he became disenchanted with the Republicans over their radical reconstruction policies and joined the Democratic Party.  He supported his brother Frank Blair who ran for Vice President on the Democratic ticket in the election of 1868.  Montgomery Blair married Mary Woodbury (1821-1875).  Their great-grandchild was Hollywood actor Montgomery Clift.

Francis Preston Blair Jr. (1821-1875) – Grandson of Nathaniel Gist (1733-1796)

Francis Preston “Frank” Blair Jr. (1821-1875) was a politician and Union general during the Civil War.  He was a U.S. Senator from Missouri and in 1868, became the Democratic Party’s Vice Presidential nominee running with Horatio Seymour.    In November 1862, he became a Major General and commanded troops at Vicksburg and followed Gen. William T. Sherman as a corps commander with in campaigns in Georgia and South Carolina.  After the war he, like his brother, became disenchanted with the radical Republicans and left the party.   Later he became crippled with paralysis and in his last days he lost his Senate seat.  Missouri has honored him with at the U.S. Capitol with a statue in Statuary Hall.

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Maria Cecil Gist (1797-1841)

The final daughter of Nathaniel Gist is Maria Cecil Gist (1797-1841).  She married Benjamin Cattell Gratz (1792-1884).  Benjamin was the younger brother of Simon Gratz (1773-1839) who has previously been mentioned as the founder of Gratz, Dauphin County, Pennsylvania.  Simon’s son, Theodore Gratz (1811-1863), was the first mayor of Gratz, Pennsylvania, and his son John Gratz died of disease during the Civil War.  John Gratz has been the subject of several prior posts on this blog.  See:  Corp. John C. Gratz – Fever Victim.   Corp. John C. Gratz – 10th Pennsylvania InfantryCorp. John C. Gratz – 96th Pennsylvania Infantry.   Corp. John C. Gratz – A Mother’s Application for a Pension.  Benjamin C. Gratz was the great-uncle of John Gratz, but there is little evidence that the families knew of each others’ activities.

Benjamin C. Gratz and Maria Cecil [Gist] Gratz had these children: Benjamin Gratz (1821-1830); Michael Bernard Gratz (1822-1889); Henry Howard Gratz (1824-1913); Hyman Cecil Gratz (1826-1966); Cary Gist Gratz (1829-1861); and an infant Gratz (1831-1831).

After the death of Maria Cecil [Gist] Gratz in 1841, Benjamin C. Gratz married his niece in about 1842; she was the daughter of his sister-in-law Judith Cary [Gist] Boswell.  The daughter was Anna Maria [Boswell] Shelby, the widow of Orville Shelby.  Into the Benjamin C. Gratz home came Anna Maria [Boswell] Shelby Gratz and her son Jo ShelbyBenjamin C. Gratz provided support for his grand nephew Jo Shelby and treated him fully as a son.  Jo Shelby was about 12 at the time and about a year and a half younger than Benjamin’s son Cary Gratz.  While most sources report that Jo Shelby and Cary Gratz were step-brothers, they actually were first cousins, once removed.  Jo Shelby was the great-grandchild of Nathaniel Gist and Cary Gratz was the grandchild of Nathaniel Gist.

There are many stories of the Gratz household where Jo Shelby and Cary Gratz “grew up” together as step-brothers.  Likewise, there are stories of Frank Blair coming into the household as a tutor to Jo Shelby in 1842 and 1843.  Frank Blair had been kicked out of Yale University for “carousing” and later left Princeton after he shot a man in a barroom brawl.  Blair’s father had sent him to live in the Gratz home to “calm down” and the hospitable Benjamin Gratz accepted his nephew in his extended family.  Whether Blair calmed down is in question and he may have passed on his rebellious temperament to Shelby.  What is not in question is that Jo Shelby and Frank Blair ended up as generals on opposite sides of the Civil War – both passionate in their belief that their side was right.

When Cary Gratz was killed at Wilson’s Creek in 1861, Jo Shelby was there fighting on the opposite side.   Neither knew the other was in the battle.  See:  Gratz Family Civil War Stories.

From the New York Times obituary for Cary Gratz:

Capt. CARY GRATZ, who has been for about five years a citizen of St. Louis, is youngest son of BEN. GRATZ, of Lexington, Ky., one of the oldest and most honored citizens of that State, and intimately connected for a quarter of a century with the banking institutions of Kentucky. The family is a branch of the Philadelphia family of the same name. Capt. GARY GRATZ was first cousin of HON. F.P. BLAIR, and from the first outbreak of the war has been in the public service; and in his last battle he died with great gallantry. His father has hundreds of friends in this City and in Philadelphia who will be pained by his misfortune.

Also in the Gratz household was Henry Howard Gratz (1824-1913).  “Howard” was more than five years Jo Shelby‘s senior, but ended up being the closest to Jo Shelby in the years after they both left the Benjamin Gratz household.  Commercial hemp was a major cash crop in Kentucky in the pre-Civil War period.  Jo and Howard joined forces and built a hemp business in western Missouri and by 1855 they owned the Waverly Steam Rope Company which included twenty slaves.  They also owned 700 acres of farmland with all the luxurious trappings including a palace-like mansion named Mount Rucker.  The bachelor Shelby was known as a “dandy” who wore fashionable clothes and was considered equally admired by men and women.  As fate would have it, Jo Shelby ended up defending his lifestyle by siding with the South in the struggle that lay ahead.

Thus the descendants of Nathaniel Gist were contributors to the Civil War effort and era on both sides.  Two U.S. Vice Presidential candidates, two generals, two U.S. Senators and a governor of Missouri; politicians, lawyers and judges, entrepreneurs, slave owners, abolitionists and a U.S. Marshal; and a Postmaster General and member of Lincoln’s cabinet.  They all knew each other.  The four Gist daughters married well and produced some of the notable figures of mid to late nineteenth century America.

Two mysteries still remain – whether Nathaniel Gist was the father of the Cherokee Sequoyah, and the genealogical connections to the Cromwell family.  Those mysteries will be left to other researchers.  The connection to the Gratz family of Philadelphia was described in this post, and thus the link with Gratz, Pennsylvania.

Information for this post was obtained from Wikipedia and from General Jo Shelby’s March by Anthony Arthur (published by Random House, 2010) in addition to other sources previously cited.  Other information was from the files of the Gratz Historical Society.  Portraits are from Wikipedia and are in the public domain because their copyright has expired.

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This post first appeared on this blog on 29 April 2011.

April 2013 Posts

Posted By on May 2, 2013

A listing of the April 2013 posts on The Civil War Blog with direct links:

Reconsider This: Gangs of New York

Touring the Petersburg National Battlefield – Site of Taylor Farm

Touring the Petersburg National Battlefield – The Crater (Part 1)

Touring the Petersburg National Battlefield – The Crater (Part 2)

March 2013 Posts

To the Boys of ’61

Antique Maps of Gettysburg

Fort Couch: Lemoyne, PA

A Civil War Masonic Story, Most Likely Fiction

Old Soldiers Homes – Preliminary Listing of Veterans

Petersburg National Battlefield – Monument to the 48th Pennsylvania Infantry at the Crater

Jesse Newlin of Tremont and English as a Second Language During the Civil War

Christian Shoop – 208th Pennsylvania Infantry

A Comprehensive History of the Town of Gratz Pennsylvania

Victorian Home: the Parlor (Part 3)

Military Map of Philadelphia, 1861-1865

Funerals Conducted by Rev. O. E. Pflueger, 1889-1902

Another Civil War Masonic Story

Abraham Lincoln on Stamps – The Sesquicentennial Issues of 1959

Was Confederate Vice President Alexander H. Stephens from Pennsylvania?

William Irving, First Defender

Leonard P. Craig – Foreman, Philadelphia and Reading Railroad

Did the Masons of Roman Eagle Lodge “Fix” a Court Martial?

Clarification and Additions to Buffington Family in the Civil War – South Carolina Cousins

Was Uncle John Keiper a Civil War Veteran?

Coleman’s Church in Lykens Township

Civil War Burials in Coleman’s Church Cemetery

The Battle of Gettysburg in German

Commemorative Postage Stamps for the Civil War Centennial, 1861-1865 to 1961-1965

Events of the World: April 1863

 

 

Abraham Lincoln on Stamps – From the Sesquicentennial to the Bicentennial of His Birth

Posted By on May 1, 2013

The last post discussing the commemorative stamps of the United States that honored Abraham Lincoln featured the 1959 stamp set issued in recognition of the Sesquicentennial of his birth.  See: Abraham Lincoln on Stamps – The Sesquicentennial Issues of 1959.

In 1960, a special stamp was issued to meet the international air mail postage rate for a letter to Asia and other distant points.  The First Day Ceremonies were on 10 June 1960, at San Francisco, California, where 211,235 First Day Covers were canceled.  A portrait of Abraham Lincoln was surrounded by the words he spoke at Gettysburg. “Of the people, by the people, for the people.”   The stamp was part of a set of three, with the 10 cent stamp portraying the Liberty Bell (“Let Freedom Ring”) and the 15 cent stamp portraying the Statue of Liberty (“Liberty for All”).

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Also in 1960 and continuing into 1961, the “American Credo” set of six stamps was issued.  The series began in January with a quotation from George Washington‘s Farewell Address which was followed by stamps with quotes from Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and Francis Scott Key.  The fifth stamp in the set recognized Abraham Lincoln with the quote, “Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves.”

The Lincoln Credo stamp was issued 19 November 1960, at New York, New York  where 467,780 First day Covers were canceled.  The sixth and final stamp in the Credo series was issued in January 1961 and recognized Patrick Henry‘s “Give me liberty or give me death.”  Among the common design elements of the American Credo Issue were the frame and the facsimile signature.

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The fifth stamp in the Civil War Centennial Series, issued on 9 April 1865, at Appamattox, Virginia, showed Abraham Lincoln in silhouette with the words from his Second Inaugural Address, “With Malice Toward None….”  Leonard Fellman designed the Appomattox stamp and 653,121 First Day Covers were canceled.

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Though not featuring a portrait of Abraham Lincoln or any of his words, the Centennial of the Emancipation Proclamation, issued 16 August 1963, is nevertheless considered a Lincoln stamp.  Designed by Georg Olden.  At Chicago, 494,886 First Day Covers were canceled.  The stamp design, a broken chain, avoided the controversial, patronizing features of the 75th Anniversary stamp for the 13th Amendment – issued in 1940 at the World’s Fair.

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More than 20 years passed before Lincoln was again recognized on a commemorative stamp.  In 1984, in recognition of the 50th Anniversary of the National Archives, Michael David Brown designed a stamp with the likeness of Lincoln (in a stovepipe hat) and the outline of the face of George Washington.  It was issued at Washington, D.C. on 16 April 1984, where 414,415 covers were canceled.

The 11 October 1984 stamp with Abraham Lincoln reading to son Tad, was designed by Bradbury Thompson and was based on a daguerreotype from Anthony Berger.  At Washington, D.C., 437,559 First Day Covers were canceled.

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Then in 1986, at a major international philatelic event in Chicago, Illinois, a set of four souvenir sheets was sold to honor all 35 deceased presidents.  Nine stamps were on each souvenir sheet, the presidents were presented in the order in which they served, and the White House completed the count of 36 (9 x 4).  Lincoln, as the 16th President, was on the second souvenir sheet (shown below, bottom left).

LincolnAbraham-stamp-001a

Issued 22 May 1986 at AMERIPEX ’86, International Philatelic Exhibition, Chicago, Illinois.  The sheets were designed by Jerry Dadds.

First Day Cancellation was applied to 9,009,599 covers with one or more of the 4 miniature sheets or individual stamps from the sheets.  No individual records were kept that give any indication as to how many cancels were applied to the individual Lincoln stamp or to the sheet number 2 with the Lincoln stamp.

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LincolnAbraham-WorldStampExpo89-001

World Stamp Expo was held in Washington, D.C. in 1989.  A souvenir sheet was issued 17 November 1989,  It was designed by Richard Sheaff.  281,725 First Day Cancellations applied to souvenir sheet or to individual stamp from souvenir sheet.  The 90 cent stamp was of the same design as one of the first Lincoln stamps (see:  Early Postage Stamps Honoring Abraham Lincoln).

In New York, prior to World Stamp Expo, the post office issued a 25 cent stamp to publicize the event.  It was also designed by Richard Sheaff and featured the same 90 cent Lincoln replica stamp – although in this case, the postage value was only 25 cents – the rate for a letter of up to one ounce. First Day of Issue: 16 March 1989.  296,310 First Day Cancellations were applied to this stamp.

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The final Lincoln stamp to be mentioned (and pictured) in this blog post is from the Civil War sheetlet of 20 different designs issued in 1995.

The Civil War sheetlet was designed by Mark Hess.   There were 20 different designs (4 rows of 5 stamps), and Abraham Lincoln is stamp number 5 in row number 2.  The sheetlet was released on 29 June 1995 at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. There were 1,950,134 First day Cancels applied to the full sheetlet of 20 or to individual or combinations from the sheetlet.  There is no way to tell how many First Day Cancels were applied only to the Lincoln stamp, since the post office didn’t keep those records.  A future blog post will discuss this sheetlet of 20 designs.

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There are other United States postage stamps that have pictured Abraham Lincoln or could be included in a “Lincoln on Stamps” collection.   There is one in particular (issued prior to 2009) that has not been included in this series of posts – a commemorative stamp that, although not specifically mentioned, a feature of the stamp design was pictured in a prior post.  Can anyone identify the missing stamp?  Readers are also invited to identify other Lincoln stamps (issued prior to 2009) that could also be included.

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Information on issue dates is from the Scott Specialized Catalog of U.S. Stamps and Covers, 2005.  Basic information on stamp issues from Abraham Lincoln on Postage Stamps, the catalog for a special exhibit prepared for a county historical society in Pennsylvania in 2000.

For other blog posts about United States Postage Stamps and the Civil War see:

Early Postage Stamps Honoring Abraham Lincoln

Postage Stamps Honoring Abraham Lincoln – Bureau of Engraving and Printing to 1909

Abraham Lincoln on Stamps – Regular Issues of the 1920s to the Early 1950s

Former Presidents Who Were Alive During the Civil War

Abraham Lincoln on Stamps – Regular Issues of the 1950s through the 1960s

Abraham Lincoln on Stamps – Commemorative Issues, 1909-1958

Abraham Lincoln on Stamps – The Sesquicentennial Issues of 195

Commemorative Postage Stamps for the Civil War Centennial, 1861-1865 to 1961-1965

Events of the World: April 1863

Posted By on April 30, 2013

April 1863

 

bullockpressApril 14. William Bullock patents the continuous roll printing press, which drastically sped up the printing process. The press could print up to 12,000 sheets an hour; later improvements raised the speed to up to 30,000 sheets an hour.  Richard March Hoe had invented the rotary press in the 1840s, but Bullock’s press was an improvement over Hoe’s design. Bullock’s press allowed for continuous large rolls of paper to be automatically fed through the rollers, eliminating the laborious hand-feeding system of earlier presses. The press was self-adjusting, printed on both sides, folded the paper, and a sharp serrated knife that rarely needed sharpening cut sheets with rapid precision. In a bizarre accident, Bullock was killed by his own invention. On April 3, 1867, he was making adjustments to one of his new presses that was being installed for the Philadelphia Public Ledger newspaper. Bullock tried to kick a driving belt onto a pulley. His leg was crushed when it became caught in the machine. After a few days, he developed gangrene. On April 12, 1867, Bullock died during an operation to amputate the leg. He is buried in Union Dale Cemetery on Pittsburgh’s North Side.

 

April 14. The Treaty of Huế was signed on April 14, 1863 between representatives of Vietnam and the French Empire. Based on the terms of the accord, three Vietnamese ports were opened (Tourane, Balat and Quảng Yên). Moreover, freedom of missionary activity was permitted and Vietnam’s foreign affairs were under Frenchimperial protection. Saigon, seized by the French in 1862, was declared the capital of French Indochina. Overall, the treaty confirmed the tenets of the First Treaty of Saigon.

 

April 21.  Bahá’u’lláh, founder of the Bahá’í Faith, enters gardens of Rivden, near Baghdad.  It was during this time that Bahá’u’lláh declared to a small group of his companions his perceived mission and station as a Messenger of God. Bahá’ís regard this period with great significance and celebrate the twelve days that Bahá’u’lláh spent in this Garden as the festival of Ridván. He referred to the period of messianic secrecy between when he claimed to have seen the Maiden of Heaven in the Síyáh-Chál and his declaration as the ayyam-i butun (“Days of Concealment”). Bahá’u’lláh stated that this period was a “set time of concealment”. The declaration in the Garden of Ridván was the beginning of a new phase in the Bábí community which led to the emergence of the Bahá’í Faith as a distinctive movement separate from Bábísm. The Bahá’í Faith (pron.: /bəˈhaɪ/) is a monotheistic religion emphasizing the spiritual unity of all humankind. Three core principles establish a basis for Bahá’í teachings and doctrine: the unity of God, that there is only one God who is the source of all creation; the unity of religion, that all major religions have the same spiritual source and come from the same God; and the unity of humankind, that all humans have been created equal, and that diversity of race and culture are seen as worthy of appreciation and acceptance.According to the Bahá’í teachings the human purpose is to learn to know and love God through such methods as prayer, reflection, and being of service to humankind.

CameroneApril 30. Battle of Camaron in Mexico  between the French Foreign Legion and the Mexican army, is regarded by the Legion as a defining moment the Foreign Legion’s history. A small infantry patrol led by Captain Jean Danjou, Lt Maudet and Lt Vilain, numbering 62 soldiers and three officers was attacked and besieged by a force that may have eventually reached 3,000 Mexican infantry and cavalry, and was forced to make a defensive stand at the nearby Hacienda Camarón, in Camarón de Tejeda, Veracruz, Mexico. The conduct of the Legion, who refused to surrender, led to a certain mystique—and the battle of Camarón became synonymous with bravery and a fight-to-the-death attitude.

Commemorative Postage Stamps for the Civil War Centennial, 1861-1865 to 1961-1965

Posted By on April 29, 2013

During the Centennial of the Civil War, which took place during the years 1961 to 1965, the United States Post Office issued a set of five stamps, one in each year, to commemorate five significant events of the war years.

The first stamp issued was on 12 April 1861 in recognition of the firing on Fort Sumter.  The First Day event took place at Charleston, South Carolina, where 602,599 cancels were applied.  The Fort Sumter stamp was the subject of an earlier post on this blog:  Fort Sumter – The War Begins.

The designer of the Fort Sumter stamp, which was printed in light green, was Charles R. Chickering.

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The second stamp, printed in black on peach blossom paper, depicted a rifleman at the Battle of Shiloh, and was issued on the anniversary of the battle, 7 April 1862, at Shiloh, Tennessee.  On that day, the Post Office applied 526,062 First Day Cancels.  The stamp was designed by Joel Sickles.

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On the anniversary of the first day of the Battle of Gettysburg, 1 July 1963, a stamp designed by Roy Gjertson, was issued at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, and featured Blue and Gray soldiers clashing.  There were 600,205 First Day Cancels applied on 1 July.  Many collectors also presented covers to be cancelled at Gettysburg on the 2nd and 3rd days of the battle – but these are considered to be “Event Covers”, not First Day Covers.

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The Battle of the Wilderness was the subject of the fourth Civil War Centennial stamp that was issued.  It was designed by B. Harold Christenson, and had its first day of issue at Fredericksburg, Virginia, 5 May 1864, the first day of the battle.  Like the Gettysburg stamp issue, the Wilderness stamp can also be found on covers for the next two days (the battle took place from the 5 May through the 7 May 1864).   Officially, 450,904 cancels were applied at Fredericksburg.  Some collectors traveled to Fredericksburg to obtain the stamps on the first day (which was the only place they were sold on 5 May 1864) and then took them to other post offices for cancel – at places that had a significance to the battle.

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The final stamp in the set was issued to commemorate the surrender at Appomattox Court House on 9 April 1865.  The stamp was designed by Leonard Fellman, and depicts Abraham Lincoln with head bowed and the words of his Second Inaugural, “with malice toward none….”  Exactly 653,121 First Day Cancels were applied at Appomattox, Virginia.

This fifth stamp also gave collectors an opportunity to obtain a First Day Cover with all five stamps in the set – but the collectors had to provide the stamps and the cover and present it for cancellation at Appomattox where only the Appomattox cancel was available.  There is no way of knowing how many covers were canceled at Appomattox with all five stamps since the Post Office didn’t keep those records – but they are surely more “scarce” than the individual stamps.

These five stamps were also used by collectors who placed them on various event covers.  During the Civil War Centennial, the Post Office accommodated collectors who wanted to get a “event centennial” cancel.  Thus, the five stamps (and many others as well) can be found on covers commemorating an event on just about every day of the war.

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Information on issue dates is from the Scott Specialized Catalog of U.S. Stamps and Covers, 2005.  Basic information on stamp issues from Abraham Lincoln on Postage Stamps, the catalog for a special exhibit prepared for a county historical society in Pennsylvania in 2000.

For other blog posts about United States Postage Stamps and the Civil War see:

Early Postage Stamps Honoring Abraham Lincoln

Postage Stamps Honoring Abraham Lincoln – Bureau of Engraving and Printing to 1909

Abraham Lincoln on Stamps – Regular Issues of the 1920s to the Early 1950s

Former Presidents Who Were Alive During the Civil War

Abraham Lincoln on Stamps – Regular Issues of the 1950s through the 1960s

Abraham Lincoln on Stamps – Commemorative Issues, 1909-1958

Abraham Lincoln on Stamps – The Sesquicentennial Issues of 1959