Title IX Stamps, Sheet of 20
- Brand: USPS
- Product Code: Title IX Stamps, Sheet of 20
- Availability: In Stock
- $73.00
$24.88
- Ex Tax: $24.88
With these stamps, the U.S. Postal Service commemorates the 50th anniversary of the passage of Title IX, a civil rights law
prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sex from any educational program or activity receiving federal financial assistance. Title
IX was passed as a clause in the Education Amendments of 1972.
The artwork features four unique designs, each a dark blue silhouette of a woman's face in profile. The digital illustrations of the
four women represent female athletes, specifically a runner, a swimmer, a gymnast, and a soccer player. Yellow laurel branches,
symbolic of victory, rest in their hair and on the swimmer's cap. "Title IX" appears written across the women's cheeks, intended as
an empowering message about the inclusion of women and girls in all educational settings.
U.S. Representative Patsy T. Mink of Hawai'i was the principal author of a section of a House bill that became Title IX. The first
woman of color and the first Asian American woman elected to the House of Representatives, Mink was a tireless champion of
women's rights and the rights of people of color. Mink worked with Representative Edith Green and Senator Birch Bayh in 1971 to
write and sponsor legislation in both chambers of Congress addressing discrimination against women in education. After some
negotiation between the two chambers, the Education Amendments were passed and signed into law by President Richard M.
Nixon on June 23, 1972. Thirty years later, shortly after Mink's death, Title IX was renamed the Patsy T. Mink Equal Opportunity in
Education Act in tribute to her enormous contributions in furthering equity in education.
In the 50 years since its passage, Title IX has been applied widely at elementary, secondary, and post-secondary institutions. The
law covers a wide range of programs and resources. Additionally, Title IX prohibits sexual harassment, including sexual assault,
dating violence, domestic violence, and stalking occurring on school campuses or within school programs or activities.
Title IX has had the most visible impact on school athletics. The year before the law was enacted, around 300,000 girls participated
in high school sports, which accounted for less than 10 percent of all participants in high school athletics. Women's sports were all
but invisible on college and university campuses, receiving very little of the funding and none of the recognition of their male
counterparts. Title IX created pathways for enriching women's athletics programs, allowing for a wider range of competitive spods
offerings, more robust physical education regimens, and equal spaces to play.
Fifty years after its passage, Title IX continues to evolve. The ongoing need to address discrimination on the basis of sex in
educational programs and activities provides opportunities to better serve students, despite economic, cultural, geographic, and
other barriers. Title IX has impacted generations of young people in the United States, and the work to provide protections for even
more in the future continues.
Artist Melinda Beck designed the stamps. Demy Noyes served as art director.
The Title 'X stamps are being issued as Forever stamps. These Forever stamps will always be equal to the current First-Class
Maile one-ounce price.
Made in the USA.