
US #5978
2025 Crow Hop
- Part of Powwows: Celebrating Native American Culture set
- Honors Native American culture and heritage
- Features original paintings by Native American artist
Stamp Category: Commemorative
Value: 73¢, First ... more
US #5978
2025 Crow Hop
- Part of Powwows: Celebrating Native American Culture set
- Honors Native American culture and heritage
- Features original paintings by Native American artist
Stamp Category: Commemorative
Value: 73¢, First Class mail rate, Forever
First Day of Issue: April 25, 2025
First Day City: Albuquerque, New Mexico
Quantity Issued: 4,500,000
Printed by: Banknote Corporation of America
Printing Method: Offset, Flexographic
Format: Panes of 20 stamps
Perforations: Die Cut
Why the stamp was issued: This stamp is part of a set of four issued to honor the gatherings of Native Americans known as Powwows.
About the stamp design: The images on the Powwow stamps are from original paintings by Cochiti Pueblo artist Mateo Romero. He took photographs of dancers during the performance of traditional dances, then painted over the photos to create his abstract paintings. The colors and shapes of the background accent the dancers’ movements and highlight the traditional dress of each dancer.
Four designs feature the following dances: Women’s Traditional Dance, Crow Hop Dance, Men’s Hoop Dance, and Women’s Fancy Shawl Dance
First Day City: The First Day of Issue ceremony took place at the annual Gathering of Nations Pow Wow in Albuquerque, New Mexico, the largest powwow with over 100,000 people attending
About the Powwows set: The rhythm echoes across the arena, calling dancers to the floor. Their regalia gleams – beaded yokes, flowing fringe, feathered bustles – each piece carrying stories of tradition, family, and resilience. The powwow is more than a celebration, it is a living expression of Native identity, a powerful link between past and present.
Powwows have been held for generations, bringing together tribes from across North America. Once outlawed under US government policies that sought to suppress Indigenous culture, these gatherings endured, evolving into vibrant expressions of survival and pride. Today, powwows remain central to native communities, uniting people in dance, song, and ceremony.
This set honors four distinct powwow styles. The Crow Hop is rooted in the traditions of the Crow people. The Women’s Traditional Dance embodies strength and grace. The Women’s Fancy Shawl Dance, often called the “butterfly dance,” symbolizes renewal. Last, the Men’s Hoop Dance is a breathtaking display of agility and storytelling that reflects the cycles of life.
With each beat of the drum and every step in the arena, powwow dancers keep their traditions alive, ensuring that the spirit of their ancestors will never fade. These stamps celebrate the Native American culture and its unbreakable connection to the past.
History this stamp represents: The drum begins—steady, insistent. Then comes the double beat, driving the dancers forward in short, powerful steps. Feet lift and land in rhythm, mimicking the sharp, deliberate movements of the prairie chicken. This is the Crow Hop, a dance rooted in the traditions of the Crow people, a reflection of the land and the creatures that inhabit it.
The Crow Hop has always been a dance of strength and precision, inspired by the strutting and stomping displays of prairie chickens during their elaborate mating rituals. For the Crow people, this dance was, and remains, an echo of nature woven into the powwow arena.
Like many powwow dances, the Crow Hop has evolved over time. The rise of Fancy Dance brought changes, adapting the Crow Hop into a faster-paced, high-energy performance. Yet, for those who know its true origins, the essence of the dance remains unchanged.
Cochiti Pueblo artist Mateo Romero captures that spirit in the Powwow stamps issued in 2025 by the US Postal Service. His artwork reflects the power, precision, and endurance of a dance that has stood the test of time, honoring both its history and its place in the present.