LIBERTY BELL 2008

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          Description

          First U.S. Forever Stamp Issued

          On April 12, 2007, the USPS issued its first Forever stamp, which featured a patriotic image of the Liberty Bell.

          The USPS has issued non-denominated postage in the past.  In 1975, they were unsure when and how much the postage might increase, so they issued that year’s Christmas stamps without denominations.  That saved them from having to print hundreds of millions of stamps with a new denomination.  The rate increase, from 10¢ to 13¢, occurred just after Christmas.

          As postal costs increased, the USPS began to increase their rates for the various classes of mail.  Before becoming effective however, these rate increases had to be submitted to the Postal Rate Commission (PRC) for approval.  Often, the PRC would take as much as a year conducting studies and compiling data before accepting or rejecting the changes.  If the rate increase was approved, the postal service then had to rush to design and produce the new stamps.

          In 1975, after the rate had changed from 10¢ to 13¢, the postal service printed a new non-denominated stamp so it would be ready and waiting for the next rate change.  The letter “A” was used to represent the unknown rate, so the stamps could meet customer demand until new definitives bearing the actual rate were printed.  When the rate increased in 1978 from 13¢ to 15¢, the first letter rate change stamps, #1735, 1736, and 1743, were put into use.

          For more than two decades, the USPS continued to produce these “alphabet” stamps, with the final H-rate stamps being issued in the early 2000s.  Other non-alphabet rate-change stamps would be issued during this period as well.

          Then in 2006, the USPS requested permission to create a new type of non-denominated stamp, similar to what the United Kingdom had done.  The UK had begun producing stamps with “1st” and “2nd” (as in classes of mail), rather than denominations.  These new “Forever” stamps, as they called them, would be valid for first-class postage.  Customers would be able to purchase Forever stamps at the current first-class postage rate and use them anytime in the future, regardless of rate increases.  If successful, it would prevent the need for rate-change stamps, making things easier for both the USPS and mailers.

          Product Specs:

          Issue: Forever Stamp

          Item Number: 679200

          Denomination & Type: Nondenominated First-Class Rate

          Format: Folded Vending Booklet of 20 (1 design)

          Series: N/A

          Issue Date & City: October 25, 2008, New York, NY 10199, Mega Stamp Show (No Ceremony)

          Designer: Carl T. Herrman, Carlsbad, CA

          Art Director: Carl T. Herrman, Carlsbad, CA

          Typographer: Carl T. Herrman, Carlsbad, CA

          Artist: Tom Engeman, Brunswick, MD

          Modeler: Donald Woo

          Manufacturing Process: Offset/Microprinting "FOREVER"