Great Smoky Mountains Stamps
Regular price
$23.99
Sale price
$23.99
Regular price
Great Smoky Mountains Stamps
Regular price
$23.99
Sale price
$23.99
Regular price
Product description
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Mists rising like the smoke of innumerable campfires and chimneys give these mountains their name: The Great Smoky MountainsThey are home to the most visited national park in America, extensive national forests, and a vast array of native plants andanimals.
The artist created the ilustration for the Great Smoky Mountains Priority Mlail Express@ stamp, beginning with a pencil drawingscanning the sketch, and finishing the art digitally. The stamp art captures an iconic mountain scene located near Newfound Gapetween Gatlinburq, Tennessee, and Cherokee. North Carolina. In the forearound, a red-tailed hawk flies over the landscape.
Humans have inhabited these mountains for thousands of years. ln the late 18th century when the first European settlers arivedthe and belonged to the Cherokee Nation. They called the mountains Shaconage. the place of blue smoke. after the haze thatgives a bluish mistiness to the vistas of the range's ridges and peaks. European settlers hunted, grew food, and raised livestockclearing the forest to create fields and pastures. They used the native timber to build homes bars, outbuildings. and fences.
The rapid decimation of the great primeval forests due to logging in the first decades of the 20th century led to the creation of thenational park in 1934. Unlike national parks in the West, all of the land in the East was privately owned and had to be bought bit bybit with money raised by the states of North Carolina and Tennessee and matching donations from a variety of private sources.including school children, working-class individuals, and businesspeople. No federal money was originally used to buy land.America's most visited nationa park, with more than 12 milion visitors each year, the Great Smoky Mountains National Park is awilderness of more than 800 square miles managed by the National Park Service (NPS), it adjoins more than one milion acres otands protected by the U.S. Forest Service. t is one of the few national parks that does not charge admission, The Park Servicemaintains several historic districts and sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
An important part of the Park Service mission is to celebrate and preserve the rich southern Appalachian culture that thrived in themountains before the national park. A number of the structures left behind when the states purchased lands-farmhouses. barns.mils, schools. churches. and others-have been preserved or restored. Museums, farm exhibits, crafts demonstrations, and manyfestivals and events offer a glimpse of daily life of the early Appalachian settlers.
Located about 50 miles from the city of Asheville, the Qualla Boundary Reservation is home to the Eastern Band of Cherokeeindians. Open to the public, the reservation has a museum, festivals, and the legendary outdoor drama Unto These Hils, the storvof the Cherokee people.
Part of the Appalachian Mountains and one of the oldest mountain ranges in the world, the Smokies contain some of the larqestareas of wilderness in the eastern U.S. They are an important sanctuary for an amazing diversity of flora and fauna, with more thal20.000 species documented i the park alone. The American black bear is the symbol of the Smokies. which contains the largestprotected bear habitat in the East.
The Great Smoky Mountains National Park was named a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1983, and in 1988, the park, along witrother areas of Southern Appalachia, were designated as an international biosphere reserve. Equally rich in history, folkways, anoculture, the Great Smoky Mountains are an American treasure.
Art director Greg Breeding designed the stamps with original art by Dan CosaroveMade in the USA
SKUs featured on this page: 129204
The artist created the ilustration for the Great Smoky Mountains Priority Mlail Express@ stamp, beginning with a pencil drawingscanning the sketch, and finishing the art digitally. The stamp art captures an iconic mountain scene located near Newfound Gapetween Gatlinburq, Tennessee, and Cherokee. North Carolina. In the forearound, a red-tailed hawk flies over the landscape.
Humans have inhabited these mountains for thousands of years. ln the late 18th century when the first European settlers arivedthe and belonged to the Cherokee Nation. They called the mountains Shaconage. the place of blue smoke. after the haze thatgives a bluish mistiness to the vistas of the range's ridges and peaks. European settlers hunted, grew food, and raised livestockclearing the forest to create fields and pastures. They used the native timber to build homes bars, outbuildings. and fences.
The rapid decimation of the great primeval forests due to logging in the first decades of the 20th century led to the creation of thenational park in 1934. Unlike national parks in the West, all of the land in the East was privately owned and had to be bought bit bybit with money raised by the states of North Carolina and Tennessee and matching donations from a variety of private sources.including school children, working-class individuals, and businesspeople. No federal money was originally used to buy land.America's most visited nationa park, with more than 12 milion visitors each year, the Great Smoky Mountains National Park is awilderness of more than 800 square miles managed by the National Park Service (NPS), it adjoins more than one milion acres otands protected by the U.S. Forest Service. t is one of the few national parks that does not charge admission, The Park Servicemaintains several historic districts and sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
An important part of the Park Service mission is to celebrate and preserve the rich southern Appalachian culture that thrived in themountains before the national park. A number of the structures left behind when the states purchased lands-farmhouses. barns.mils, schools. churches. and others-have been preserved or restored. Museums, farm exhibits, crafts demonstrations, and manyfestivals and events offer a glimpse of daily life of the early Appalachian settlers.
Located about 50 miles from the city of Asheville, the Qualla Boundary Reservation is home to the Eastern Band of Cherokeeindians. Open to the public, the reservation has a museum, festivals, and the legendary outdoor drama Unto These Hils, the storvof the Cherokee people.
Part of the Appalachian Mountains and one of the oldest mountain ranges in the world, the Smokies contain some of the larqestareas of wilderness in the eastern U.S. They are an important sanctuary for an amazing diversity of flora and fauna, with more thal20.000 species documented i the park alone. The American black bear is the symbol of the Smokies. which contains the largestprotected bear habitat in the East.
The Great Smoky Mountains National Park was named a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1983, and in 1988, the park, along witrother areas of Southern Appalachia, were designated as an international biosphere reserve. Equally rich in history, folkways, anoculture, the Great Smoky Mountains are an American treasure.
Art director Greg Breeding designed the stamps with original art by Dan CosaroveMade in the USA
SKUs featured on this page: 129204
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