Reckoning With Our Racial Past
Created by Cheryl R. Ganz, National Postal Museum. Spanish translations by Juliet Vargas.
Political leaders purposefully use print culture to promote political agendas, solidify authority, and fire patriotic emotions. The stamps issued by Mexico after its 1910-1920 revolution offer a compelling example. Among the postage stamps issued for this purpose, Mexico's airmail stamps played a significant role.
Airmail Etiquette, MexicoSmithsonian's National Postal Museum
Contents
- Introduction
- Nature and Technology
- Nature and Technology: Coat of Arms
- Nature and Technology: Railroads
- Nature and Technology: Landscapes
- Nature and Technology: Amelia Earhart's Flight
- Ancient to Contempory Culture
- Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Archeology
- Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Architecture
- Ancient to Contemporary Culture: National Anthem
- Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Fine Arts
- 1968 Olympic Games
- 1968 Olympic Games: Original Art
- 1968 Olympic Games: First Day Cover
- 1968 Olympic Games: Souvenir Sheet
- For Further Reading
- Credits
50c Mexico airmail stamp (1922-04-02)Smithsonian's National Postal Museum
Introduction
Have you ever wondered why a particular image appears on stamps affixed to your mail? Postage stamps, money, posters, and other government documents all feature thoughtfully selected images. People see those images repeatedly throughout the day, and the images inspire pride by shaping the ways people understand national identity and ideology. Political leaders recognize this. They purposefully use print culture to promote political agendas, solidify authority, and fire patriotic emotions. This is particularly evident as revolutionary regimes strive to unite disparate population groups and to win the recognition of foreign nations. The stamps issued by Mexico after its 1910-1920 revolution offer a compelling example.
Though the Mexican Revolution toppled Porfirio Díaz (1830-1915) and produced a constitution, it neither created a national identity nor engendered a unifying ideology. Disparities of belief among population groups and institutions, especially the historically powerful Catholic Church, sparked continued conflict well beyond 1920.
Revolutionary presidents and subsequent regimes used postage stamps to declare the state’s power, to undermine factionalism by emphasizing shared heritage, and to advertise the nation’s technical and athletic competitiveness to citizens and the world. Among the postage stamps issued for this purpose, airmail stamps played a significant role.
Throughout the twentieth century, Mexico issued over six hundred air mail stamps. This virtual exhibit features examples of airmail stamps and mail organized in three categories: Nature and Technology, Ancient to Contemporary Culture, and the 1968 Olympic Games.
Mexican airmail cover (1928-10-01)Smithsonian's National Postal Museum
Nature and Technology
Mexican airmail stamps carried a progressive national image worldwide. In 1922 Mexico’s first airmail stamps depicted a symbolic eagle soaring through a majestic landscape. Later stamps illustrated transportation and feats of engineering, emphasizing industrial progress, but always in harmony with the countryside.
Eagle Airmail stamps, 1927-28
Mexico’s first airmail stamp design, used here on an envelope flown from Querétaro to Nuevo Laredo, then freighted across the border to connect with a U.S. contract airmail flight, October 1, 1928.
Nature and Technology: Coat of Arms
Coat of Arms, 1931
Overprinted stamp to revalue the airmail rate. Border lines, in the colors of the Mexican flag, signify that the envelope traveled by airmail.
Nature and Technology: Coat of Arms
Coat of Arms, 1929-1934
The Coat of Arms airmail stamps have eleven denominations in various colors from two printings. Some, like this example, are perforated, and others are rouletted.
Nature and Technology: Railroads
Map and Railroad Tracks, 1961
This stamp was issued for the opening of the Copper Canyon railroad (officially known as the Chihuahua al Pacifico), which linked Chihuahua to Los Mochis on the Pacific Ocean. The outline map of Mexico superimposed over railroad tracks suggests that the railroad united the country, border to border.
Nature and Technology: Railroads
Trains Crossing Isthmus of Tehuantepec, 1950
35c President Aleman and bridge autographed block of four stamps (1950)Smithsonian's National Postal Museum
Nature and Technology: Railroads
Block of four Southeastern Railroad Bridge stamps, autographed by President of Mexico Miguel Aleman (1946-1952), 1950
Nature and Technology: Landscapes
Pyramids of the Sun and Moon, Teotihuacán, 1934
Nature and Technology: Landscapes
Paricutín Volcano and Church, 1956
This volcano grew out of a Mexican cornfield between 1943 and 1952.
Nature and Technology: Landscapes
Airplane and Volcanoes Popocatepetl and Iztaccihuatl, 1934.
20c Eagle Man stamp with Specimen Earhart overprint (1935-04-16)Smithsonian's National Postal Museum
Nature and Technology: Amelia Earhart's Flight
Amelia Earhart Overprint, 1935
“Muestra” (specimen) overprint for Amelia Earhart’s goodwill flight to and from Mexico City. This is one of 480 specimen examples.
Nature and Technology: Amelia Earhart's Flight
Eagle Man with Amelia Earhart Overprint, 1935
This stamp is one of the rarities of Mexican airmail. About one hundred of the three hundred overprinted stamps issued were used on the mail carried by Earhart to New York City (some in blocks of four).
Nature and Technology: Amelia Earhart's Flight
Mexico City to New York City Airmail, 1935
Amelia Earhart flew from Los Angeles to Mexico City in 1935, bringing international attention to Mexico. She then flew solo non-stop from Mexico City to Newark, New Jersey (destination New York City), the first ever to do so. Thirty-five pieces of mail were flown.
80c Mayan Warriors, Dresden Codex stamp (1971-04-24)Smithsonian's National Postal Museum
Ancient to Contemporary Culture
After the Mexican Revolution, leaders faced a huge challenge: they must teach groups of people who identified themselves as part of a village to begin identifying themselves as part of a nation. Those groups often jealously protected their own linguistic dialects, systems of exchange, customs, and cultural traditions, and they often resisted the intrusion of others.
A national monetary system, a national anthem and flag, a unified system of time, weights and measures, public schools taught in a common language . . . all helped Mexico’s leaders bind many groups into one. Emphasizing shared heritage rather than differences also helped unite sometimes hostile groups.
Images printed on postage stamps subtly but relentlessly reshaped the way people thought about themselves. They carried powerful messages of shared history to dispersed, frequently illiterate communities, reminding them of their shared Mayan and Aztec cultural heritage and collective artistic, musical, and architectural traditions.
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Archeology
Aztec Calendar Stone, 1934
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Archeology
Allegory of Flight and Pyramid of the Sun, 1934-1935
5c Ornaments and Mask, Archeological Era airmail stamp (1956)Smithsonian's National Postal Museum
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Archeology
Ornaments and Mask, Archeological Era, 1956
Issued on the centenary of Mexico’s first postage stamps
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Archeology
Aztec Bird Man, 1934-35
Mexican Censored airmail cover (1944-07-24)Smithsonian's National Postal Museum
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Archeology
Aztec Eagle Man and Symbols of Air Service, 1944
Censored mail flown via Lisbon to the Red Cross in Geneva, Switzerland, for a World War II internee
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Architecture
Chichen Itza, Yucatan, 1938
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Architecture
International Architects’ Convention, 1963
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Architecture
400th Anniversary of Guadalajara, 1942
1P Palace of Fine Arts in Mexico City airmail stamp (1933-10-01)Smithsonian's National Postal Museum
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Architecture
Palace of Fine Arts in Mexico City, 1933
25c Centennial of Mexico’s National Anthem airmail stamp (1954-09-15)Smithsonian's National Postal Museum
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: National Anthem
Centennial of Mexico’s National Anthem, 1954
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Fine Arts
David Alfaro Siqueiros (1896-1974), 1974
Self-portrait of the activist and painter
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Fine Arts
Dr. Atl, 1975
Self-portrait of Dr. Atl (Gerardo Murillo, 1875-1964), painter and historian of popular art forms
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Fine Arts
Mariano Matamoros (1770-1814), 1971
Portrait of the priest and revolutionary by Diego Rivera
Ancient to Contemporary Culture: Fine Arts
Man in Flames (Detail of a Mural) by José Clemente Orozco, 1971
$2 Olympic Volleyball airmail stamp (1968-03-21)Smithsonian's National Postal Museum
1968 Olympic Games
The export of Mexican nationalism via airmail peaked with stamps portraying the 1968 Olympics, the first Olympic Games held in Latin America. In addition to other stamps and souvenir sheets, Mexico issued airmail stamps celebrating the competitions. Artist Lance Wyman of the United States designed the issues.
Under the direction of architect Pedro Ramirez Vázquez, Chair of the Organizing Committee, an interdisciplinary and multicultural team formulated an Olympic design program. Wyman joined the team as director for graphic design after winning an international competition. Melding elements from ancient Mayan hieroglyphics with 1960s op-art and kinetics, the team created motifs that expressed Mexico’s pride as host of the games while promoting the games at home and internationally. They used the bold, fiesta colors associated with Mexican folk culture as a backdrop for the official logo and the many streamlined images and text that appeared on stamps, posters, souvenirs, and official printed material.
Olympic Volleyball, 1968
1968 Olympic Games: Original Art
Olympic Volleyball, original art, 1968
1968 Olympic Games: Original Art
Olympic Volleyball, original art, 1968
$5 Olympic Equestrian airmail stamp (1968-03-21)Smithsonian's National Postal Museum
1968 Olympic Games
Olympic Equestrian, 1968
1968 Olympic Games: Original Art
Olympic Equestrian, original art, 1968
1968 Olympic Games: Original Art
Olympic Equestrian, original art, 1968
1968 Olympic Games: First Day Cover
Olympic Volleyball and Equestrian First Day of Issue, 1968
9p Olympic Volleyball and Equestrian souvenir sheet of two stamps (1968-03-21)Smithsonian's National Postal Museum
1968 Olympic Games: Souvenir Sheet
Olympic Volleyball and Equestrian, 1968
Souvenir sheet sold to raise funds for the Olympic GamesVoleibol y Equitación Olímpicos, 1968
Airmail Etiquette, MexicoSmithsonian's National Postal Museum
For Further Reading
Child, Jack. Miniature Messages: The Semiotics and Politics of Latin American Postage Stamps (Durham: Duke University Press, 2008).
Pulver, Dale. Introduction to the Stamps of Mexico (Sidney, Ohio: Linn’s Stamp News, 1992).
Riosa, Marino and Robert J. Wilcsek, “Mexico First Flight Covers, 1917-1939,” American Air Mail Catalogue, A Priced Catalogue and Reference Listing of the Airposts of the World, Sixth Edition, Volume One (Mineola, NY: American Air Mail Society, 1998).
Wyman, Lance. “Olympic Games 1968 Mexico City,” http://olympic-museum.de/design/lancewyman/wyman.htm, January 2009.
Thanks to:
Juliet Vargas, for translations into Spanish
Kathryn Burke
John Johnson, Jr.
Rosanne Johnson
Greg Nelson
Terry Sheahan
Omar Rodriguez
This online exhibit is an expanded version of the “Mexico Via Airmail” section of the exhibition Mexican Treasures of the Smithsonian:
http://latino.si.edu/Mexican Treasures/
Visit the National Postal Museum's Website