The
President's next artistic endeavor came in 1936. When presented with a
model for a special stamp honoring women’s-suffrage advocate Susan B. Anthony,
President Roosevelt judged that it was too plain. Instead, he sketched
this design with a dark oval frame encircling the profile bust on a piece
of handy lined paper. On this he scrawled "Drawn by -7/9/36 - FDR."
| A heavier
oval frame was called for on this design.
Gift
of James A. Farley
|
|
National
Parks
Postmaster General
James A. Farley frequently took stamp models, replicas of proposed stamps,
to Cabinet meetings and passed them to the President when there was a lapse
in conversation. FDR was not shy about expressing his personal thoughts
concerning proposed designs. He
added his comments to several proposals for the National Parks series of
stamps. On the 1-cent Yosemite model he advised: "This is best but try
a flatter arch above Yosemite" at the bottom of the stamp. Similarly, when
shown the 7-cent Acadia Park model he wrote: "OK. But put the tiny ship
on the horizon FDR." |