Front:
25-
SHINGTON
NOV
19
1989
20th Universal Postal Congress
20066
US.MAIL
TICESBUR B
PILOT'S CERTIFICATE.
Chus tall
DC
Back:
CLASSIC MAIL TRANSPORTATION
First Day of Issue: November 19, 1989
First Issue Location: Washington, D.C.
Beginning in 1813, Congress gave the go-ahead for the
Postal Service to use steamboats for carrying mail. By
1847, five domestic steamboat lines commanded by
expert pilots operated under contract with the U.S. Postal
Service. Furthermore, as the American oceangoing
steamship industry grew in importance and girdled the
globe, the Postal Service soon had four steamships run-
ning from New York City to Germany and France. On the
cachet for this Maximum Card, an old timer fondly
remembers tales of the days of steamboats like the
Vicksburg, and riverboat pilots like Mark Twain, pictured
in the lower right-hand corner. It was a romantic age on
a grand scale, but even as the steamboat era hit its peak,
Civil War broke out in the United States. Steamships were
pulled from the Atlantic, and the government subsidies
that supported domestic steamboat companies were not
renewed. This proved a fatal blow for America's domestic
steamboats. After the war, the postal administration
switched to trains to carry the mail.
No. 89-36
©1989 The Maximum Card Collection
A Division of Unicover Corporation • Cheyenne, WY 82008-0007
Original painting by Chris Calle