Wednesday, April 13, 2022

USPS Korean War Memorial

USPS on 27 July 2003 issued stamp commemorating the Korean War Veterans Memorial on the 50th anniversary of the Korean War. Cancellation postmark originated from Washington, D.C. Banknote Corporation of America printed 86,800,000 copies of this lithographed black/blue/red/grey stamp featuring the Korean Veterans Memorial. Its serpentine die-cut has 11.5 x 11.75 perforations.

The Korean War Veterans Memorial was officially dedicated on 27 Jul 1995, the 42nd anniversary of the armistice that ended the Korean War.

Plans for the memorial wall date back to the 1980s. Congress officially approved it on 20 April 1986, with the project managed by the Korean War Veterans Memorial Advisory Board and the American Battle Monuments Commission.

The board then held a design competition and President George H.W. Bush oversaw the groundbreaking on 14 June 1993. The construction took about two years.

The memorial consists of several different parts. The main feature is the 164-foot-long Mural Wall in the shape of a triangle. The wall was sandblasted with over 2,500 photographs of troops serving on land, sea, and in the air.

Within this triangle are 19 stainless steel statues that range in height from 7 foot 3 inches to 7 foot six inches. These figures represent each of the branches of the armed forces – 14 from the Army, three from the Marines, one from the Navy and one from the Air Force. They each wear full combat gear and appear to be walking through bushes representing Korea’s terrain.

North of these statues is the United Nations Wall, which lists the 22 member nations that provided troops or medical support during the war. At the top of the triangle wall is a pool of remembrance surrounded by linden trees and benches. Here there are inscriptions of the number of troops killed, wounded, missing in action, and held as prisoners of war.

The memorial was officially dedicated on 27 July 1995, with U.S. President Bill Clinton and Korean President Kim Young Sam in attendance. Eight years later, the USPS issued a stamp honouring the memorial. The stamp features a photo of the statues on a snowy day, taken by a Marine. The stamp was later at the center of a federal court case!

The sculptor of the statues wanted compensation for the commercial use of his art, because he didn’t sign away his intellectual property rights. The USPS tried to argue that it was actually architecture, and that he alone didn’t design them, but he ultimately won the case.


Source: Mystic Stamps

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