Clair Aubrey Houston

Clair Aubrey Houston (also known as Charles Aubrey Houston; also spelled Huston) was an accomplished and chief postage stamp designer at the United States Bureau of Engraving and Printing early in the 20th century. He was the great-grandson of Michael Leib (1759–1822), an American physician and politician.[1] Houston worked at the BEP for more than 21 years and was the designer of numerous United States postage issues. Entire series of stamp issues were designed by Houston, including the Washington-Franklins and the Regular Issues of 1922. [2] Huston often used paintings and sculptures of famous American artists like Gilbert Stuart as models for his stamp designs. [3] One of the postage issues Huston is most noted for is the Curtis Jenny airmail stamp of 1918, whose image became famous when the biplane was printed upside down. [4]

Huston is also noted for designing the Warren G. Harding memorial issue of 1923, which he designed in one day using a modified version of the Fourth Bureau Issue frame and a copperplate etching of the late Harding. The prompt and speedy production of the Harding memorial issue was the result of overwhelming public pressure and the stamp was issued only three months after the late President Harding's passing, a record for U.S. postal history that has never since been broken. [5]

Huston designed the Washington-Franklin Issues, a series of definitive stamps bearing the profiles of George Washington and Benjamin Franklin. These issues remained in print longer than any other series of stamps to date. Houston was also the principal designer of the US Regular Issues of 1922-1931 [2] [3]

Dozens of United States postage stamp designs are credited to Huston. Besides designing the world-famous Curtis Jenny airmail stamp, Huston is credited for designing the Founding of Jamestown issues, the Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant regular issues of the 1920s, the Huguenot Walloon commemorative issues of 1924, The Pilgrim Tercentenary of 1920 and the American Indian regular issue of 1923, the Washington-Franklin Issues and The 1932 Washington Bicentennial Issue are among his more famous designs.

Houston's stamp designs

See also

References

  1. ^ http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~kipke/sotr/membs_h.htm Society of the Sons of the Revolution, Washington DC]
  2. ^ a b Smithsonian National Postal Museum
  3. ^ a b Scotts Specialized Catalogue of United States Stamps
  4. ^ Robert A. Siegel Auction Galleries, Inc.
  5. ^ Warren Harding: Smithsonian National Postal Museum