Front:
Pennsykania Avenue, circaugo
District of Columbia Bicentennial
29
PennsykaniaAvenue, circago
1991
20066
DC
WASH
Back:
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
First Day of Issue: September 7, 1991
First Issue Location: Washington, D.C.
After the Revolutionary War, Congress decided that the federal
government needed a permanent home. Secretary of the
Treasury Alexander Hamilton suggested that the capital be
built on federal land, and in 1791 President George Washing-
ton selected territory along the Potomac River — ceded from
both Maryland and Virginia. In 1800 the federal government
took up residence in Washington City, in the newly-estab-
lished District of Columbia. The city — initially governed by
Congress and later by Congressionally-appointed commis-
sioners — underwent massive changes during the next one
hundred years. The British set fire to the city in 1814, burning
both the Capitol and President's Residence. Enormous growth
following the Civil War and both World Wars expanded the
city's population base, and local clamors for equal political
participation were finally heard in 1964 — when District
residents cast their first Presidential election ballots. The stamp
and design on this Maximum Card celebrate the Bicentennial
of the District of Columbia and salute its proud history.
No. 91-69
©1991 The Maximum Card Collection
A division of Unicover Corporation • Cheyenne, WY 82008-0007
® Original painting for the Maximum Card by David K. Stone