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The Smithsonian Institution's National
Postal Museum awarded their Philatelic
Achievement Award to George Brett and Barbara Mueller, long-time and prominently
active members of the BIA/USSS. Thomas Alexander also received the award at the
ceremony. The awards were presented May 22, 2004 at the Museum. George Brett
presented his acceptance remarks via videotape (his award was accepted by Roger
Brody) and Barbara Mueller attended in person. Their acceptance remarks follow.
Acceptance by George Brett
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The world of philately has been my world since I was a school boy in Iowa over
80 years ago, who literally pasted row after row of 2¢ reds in a cast off
booklet without benefit of hinges. Washington, D.C. was the scene of my
greatest contributions to the study of the production of our postage stamps. The
Bureau of Engraving and Printing was my favorite haunt. There I learned to
know generations of Directors, Engravers and Plate Printers. Yet I never dreamt
of such a facility as the National Postal Museum housed in this magnificent
building. I remember well the opening night in the summer of 1993 and I value the
years I spent on the Council of Philatelists. Yes, through the years I have
received many philatelic honors but all pale in the light of the Smithsonian
Philatelic Achievement Award. But I never lost sight of the role that postage
stamps have played in the conduct of the larger operation of the Postal
Service. In fact, back in the thirties, I had a job with the Railway Mail
Service. So I have personal experience with the role mails have played in the
development of our nation. After World War II service, with the Department of
the Navy, in the Canal Zone, I earned bachelor's and master's degrees from the
University of Chicago and joined the U.S. Geological Survey here in Washington
for the rest of my career, eventually being added to the Scroll of Honor of the
Survey.
I hope the Postal Service can continue to be the valued home-town representative
of the federal government to all the people and that the Museum continues in its
educational endeavors serving new generations of philatelic inquirers such as I
once was. As a new high school graduate I hitch-hiked to Washington to visit
the late great Hugh M. Southgate of the Bureau Issues Association, now the
United States Stamp Society which I joined in 1930 and in which I am now the oldest
living member.
Thank you, NPM, for this wonderful award.
Acceptance by Barbara Mueller
This award is especially meaningful because unlike the many others bestowed on
me in over half a century, it is from my country!
It shows that, in the regard of our Postal Service and the Smithsonian
Institution, philately is being accorded its proper role as a serious
intellectual pursuit while creating its own distinctive enchanted world. It is
an adventure where we are drawn into a universal fellowship with a universal
language of stamps and their usage.
This magnificent Museum, its library and research facilities with a capable
staff, helps us all appreciate the social and economic development of our
country through the searching lens of postal and philatelic studies. The Postal
Service is a vital 300-year-old institution that has been the backbone and
fabric of business and society as we know it...and few people appreciate that as
much as philatelists do.
May the Service and this Museum continue to assist collectors as they brighten
their worlds with the color and drama of their little bits of paper.
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