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3c Moina Michael single

Postal Museum

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Object Details

Printer

Bureau of Engraving and Printing

Description

This Moina Michael Issue stamp features a portrait of Moina Michael and a poppy plant. Moina Michael, a professor at the University of Georgia, was inspired by John McCrae’s “In Flanders Field” poem about the First World War; she raised money for disabled veterans by selling silk poppies in remembrance of war veterans.
United States; Georgia; First World War; military; war; veteran; poppy
Veterans' advocate Moina Belle Michael was born in Georgia, 1869. She grew up with a strong sense of the importance of military service to one's country or one's cause, her father having fought with the Confederate States Army in some of the most important campaigns of the Civil War.
A highly respected teacher, she read Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae's poem, In Flanders' Fields, memorializing the fallen men on this Belgian battlefield. In response, she wrote her own poem, We Shall Keep the Faith.
Oh! You who sleep in Flanders' fields,
Sleep sweet - to rise anew,
We caught the torch you threw,
And holding high we kept
The faith with those who died.
We cherish too, the poppy red
That grows on fields where valour led.
It seems to signal to the skies
That blood of heroes never dies,
But lends a lustre to the red
Of the flower that blooms above the dead
In Flanders' fields.
And now the torch and poppy red
Wear in honour of our dead.
Fear not that ye have died for naught
We've learned the lesson that ye taught
In Flanders' fields.
Through her tireless efforts, the red poppy became a symbol of remembrance in the United States and Europe for veterans, not only of the First World War, but of all military conflicts. Moina Belle Michael died in 1944.

Date

November 9, 1948

Object number

1980.2493.4065

Type

Postage Stamps

Medium

paper; ink (rose pink); adhesive / engraving

Place

United States of America

See more items in

National Postal Museum Collection

Data Source

National Postal Museum

Depicts

Moina Michael Issue, American, 1870 - 1944

Topic

Humanitarian Causes
Women's Heritage
Education & Teaching
U.S. Stamps

Metadata Usage

Usage conditions apply

Link to Original Record

http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/hm802e13b04-9e55-48d1-952a-acd84324f805

Record ID

npm_1980.2493.4065

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Leading Figures of World War I

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