The Canadian Postal Museum is the only museum in Canada dedicated to preserving the heritage of Canadian postal communication and objects representative of international postal heritage. The collection covers ancient and modern history, science and technology, philately, fine art, architecture, folk art and the decorative arts. The Canadian Postal Museum is proud to be one of the five largest postal museums in the world, ranking second worldwide for number of visitors. Since 2000 the Canadian Postal Museum has been a member of the prestigious Club de Monte-Carlo de l'élite de la philatélie, whose members include 17 postal museums and world-renowned collectors from 24 countries.
Submission - 2000 |
The first image submitted to the Postmaster General for the January
1929 issue depicted two fishing boats, rather than the Bluenose.
The accompanying maquette shows how the artist's design evolved. The
border created for the proposal was kept, but the main image was replaced
by a montage of two photographs by W.R. MacAskill to produce the famous
Bluenose
stamp, released January 8, 1929. The fishing boat image
had been used before on the back of the two-dollar bill of the Dominion
of Canada, which bore the portrait of King Edward VII. |
Created: February 2, 2004. Last update: February 10, 2004 © Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation |