Johnny Appleseed’s real name is John Chapman. That happens to also be my name. So when I spotted this stamp, I knew it was time to learn more about him. Below is what I found. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.
This stamp came out in an opportune time as the reputation of Johnny Appleseed was on the upswing in the sixties and seventies. The idea of an itinerant man planting trees and communing with the animals and the indians appealed directly to the youth movement of the era.
Todays stamp is issue A739, a five cent stamp issued by the United States on September 24th, 1966, Johnny’s 192nd birthday. It was a single stamp issue. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents mint or used.
Johnny Appleseed was born in 1774 in Massachusetts. His mother died when he was two and his father quickly remarried and soon Johnny had many half brothers and sisters. When he was 18 he left home taking with him his 11 year old half brother. He first went to Pittsburgh and became itinerant throughout the midwest. His business, and yes it was a business, was to come to a town, buy a small patch of land in the near country, fence it off and plant nurseries. When the plantings were established, he would find a neighbor willing to tend the trees in return for a share of the profits. He would then visit his nurseries annually. This was not a coat and tie type of job and many thought Appleseed a hobo. He played into this by wearing a tin bowl on his head that he would remove to eat out of. He also tended to hire children to be helpers.
Johnny was a deeply religious man and was always recruiting for his obscure Christian denomination, the New Church. This was and is a tiny denomination founded in the 18th century by Swede Emanuel Swedenborg. Swedenborg believed he had received a revelation from God that the Christian church would be replaced by a “new church” that would worship Jesus Christ and him alone as God. This was in the lead up to Jesus returning to Earth. Johnny would bring New Church pamphlets with him in addition to the seeds for which he was more famous.
Johnny Appleseed lived to age 70 and died in a cabin next to one of his nurseries in Fort Wayne Indiana. At the time of his death he owned more than 1200 acres spread out around the midwest. As he never married his estate was left to his one full sister. During his life everyone assumed him poor and the government entered litigation seeking back taxes for all the lands. His sister ended up losing most of the wealth in litigation expenses relating to the estate. Interestingly the variety of apple trees he was planting produced apple not fit for eating but only for use in cider, an alcoholic drink
Well my drink is empty. Not really the story I was expecting, but it should be remembered that even heroes are foremost human. Come again soon when there will be another story to be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2021.