Wrights to Be Honored on US Postage Stamp
The U.S. Postal Service will issue a 37-cent First
Flight commemorative postage stamp to mark the 100th anniversary of
the first controlled, powered, sustained flight in a
heavier-than-air flying machine. The design was shown, for
the first time publicly, during opening ceremonies at the
AEA Convention and Trade Show in Orlando, FL, on Thursday. The
unveiling was a keynote at the Thursday morning General Session
where the Orlando Postmaster assisted AEA President Paula Derks
(seen below, right) in showing it to an enthusiastic audience of
aviation professionals.
The official first day of issue ceremony for the First Flight
stamp will take place in two cities on May 22. The stamp will be
issued at 10:30 a.m. ET at both the United States Air Force Museum
in Dayton, Ohio, and the Wright Brothers National Memorial Park in
Kill Devil Hills, N.C.
The First Flight stamp will be available for sale at post
offices in Dayton and Kill Devil Hills on the day of issuance and
at post offices nationwide starting the following day. "Just as the
Postal Service touches the lives of every American in every city
and in all walks of life, our stamp program continues to honor and
pay tribute to the meaningful events in our history that have
touched all of our lives," said Ralph Moden, Postal Service Senior
Vice President, Government Relations.
"With the issuance of the First Flight stamp, we
honor a moment in history that has taken us all beyond the horizon
of our wildest dreams," he added. "Showcasing aircraft ranging from
a reproduction Wright 1909 Military Flyer to the latest in Air
Force technology, the U.S. Air Force Museum offers an appropriate
stage for issuing the First Flight stamp," said Major General
(Ret.) Charles Metcalf, Director of the U.S. Air Force Museum. "The
museum is proud to join with the U.S. Postal Service, the
'Inventing Flight' organization and the city of Dayton for this
historic event."
Inventing Flight: Dayton 2003 was founded in 1989 to promote
aviation, the Wright Brothers and especially Dayton, Ohio's role in
the birth and future of aviation. Inventing Flight has partnered
with some of the greatest names, faces and locations in aviation
and aerospace to bring a truly special series of personalities,
events and programs to Dayton in 2003. Inventing Flight: The
Centennial Celebration will consist of three weeks of action-packed
adventure, leading audiences through a world of discovery based on
the powerful example provided by the achievement of manned, powered
flight.
"Given that Kitty Hawk Postmaster Bill Tate served such an
important role in convincing the Wright brothers to come to the
Outer Banks a century ago, this year's First Flight stamp is a
fitting tribute to the U.S. Postal Service's role in the first
flight and a perfect addition to the First Flight Centennial," said
Lawrence A. Belli, Superintendent, Outer Banks Group, National Park
Service.

Eighty-five million self-adhesive First Flight stamps will be
printed and made available in a souvenir sheet of 10 stamps of one
design. The stamp illustration by McRay Magleby of Provo, Utah,
depicts Orville Wright at the controls of the 1903 Wright flyer.
Text at the bottom of the design reads: "First Flight * Wright
Brothers * 1903." The front of the souvenir sheet features a detail
of a photograph of Orville and Wilbur Wright taken in Pau, France,
in 1909.
In
addition to the souvenir sheet of 10 stamps, the following
philatelic products will be available at Postal Stores and by
toll-free phone order at 1 800 STAMP-24: Cancellation Keepsake
including a First Day Cover and pane of the First Flight stamps
($5.20); First Day Cover ($0.75); Commemorative Panel ($8.75); and
Matted Print Keepsake ($27.95).