PRESIDENT JAMES E. "JIMMY" CARTER - COMMEMORATIVE ENVELOPE SIGNED - HFSID 48118
Price: $950.00
JIMMY CARTER. Commemorative Envelope signed: "Jimmy
Carter", 6¼x3½. Commemorative envelope honoring the return of the hostages
held in Iran, 15-cent Seasons Greetings stamp affixed, postmarked New York,
NY, January 30, 1981. Captioned at lower margin: "January 30, 1981 -
Mayor Ed Koch pressed the State Department to designate New York City as the
'official host city' for the hostages. At week's end, 20 former hostages
joined Barry Rosen, the only native New Yorker among them, for a ticker-tape
parade down lower Broadway. An estimated 1 million showered them with
confetti and computer tape print-outs. This week more parades and then a month's
leave to vacation with their families." James Earl "Jimmy" Carter, the 39th
U.S. President (1977-1981), faced the greatest crisis of his presidency when the
U.S. Embassy in Tehran, Iran was stormed by Iranian students on November 4, 1979
and over 90 people were taken hostage. Although some captives, including
women and children, non-Americans and Blacks, were released, 52 diplomats
would be held for 444 days. On November 12, 1979, Carter imposed economic
sanctions and diplomatic pressure on Iran, ending oil imports, expelling
Iranians in the U.S. who had ties to the new regime and freezing some $8 billion
in Iranian assets in America. The situation escalated when the exiled Shah of
Iran was allowed into the country for surgery. Although the Shah died on July
27, 1980 and Iran was invaded by Iraq on September 22, 1980, Carter was
unable to negotiate an end to the crisis and two rescue attempts failed. The
hostage crisis became an issue in the 1980 presidential election, and likely
cost Carter a second term. Carter had hoped to bring the hostages home
during his presidency (he even carried a telephone with him on his way to
Reagan's inauguration), but it was his successor, 40th U.S. President Ronald
Reagan, who would announce during his inaugural address that the hostages had
been released (in return for the lifting of trade sanctions and the release
of the country's frozen U.S. assets). Carter, as an emissary for the Reagan
administration, flew to Frankfurt to meet the hostages, who had been flown to
West Germany after their release. The Americans were then flown to
Washington, D.C. for their first welcoming ceremony, which was followed by the
ticker-tape reception depicted on this envelope. Slightly creased. Fine
condition. Framed in the Gallery of History style:
20x15¼.
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