# B3 - 2003 Non-Denominated, 37c + 8cSurtax Semipoostal - Stop Family Violence
Stop Family Violence Semi-Postal
This stamp’s journey began in 1999 when a Denver social worker sent a letter to Colorado Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell. The social worker had a large caseload of battered women and abused children. He suggested that a semi-postal stamp could be issued to help raise funds for victims of domestic violence and to help prevent it in the future.
Campbell supported the idea, having been a cosponsor of the Violence Against Women Act of 1994. He suggested the stamp’s creation and as an amendment to the Appropriations Bill, it was signed into law as the Stamp Out Violence Act of 2001.
The design for the stamp is much different than what was originally planned. Initially, the stamp was to picture a young girl erasing an image of domestic violence. The girl that was to be the model for the stamp, six-year-old Monique Blias, made her own drawing of domestic violence during a break, and the art director decided that the powerful image should appear on the stamp instead.
Click here to read the president’s remarks at the First Day of Issue ceremony for this stamp, which also served as the proclamation of October 2003 as National Domestic Violence Awareness Month.
Stop Family Violence Semi-Postal
This stamp’s journey began in 1999 when a Denver social worker sent a letter to Colorado Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell. The social worker had a large caseload of battered women and abused children. He suggested that a semi-postal stamp could be issued to help raise funds for victims of domestic violence and to help prevent it in the future.
Campbell supported the idea, having been a cosponsor of the Violence Against Women Act of 1994. He suggested the stamp’s creation and as an amendment to the Appropriations Bill, it was signed into law as the Stamp Out Violence Act of 2001.
The design for the stamp is much different than what was originally planned. Initially, the stamp was to picture a young girl erasing an image of domestic violence. The girl that was to be the model for the stamp, six-year-old Monique Blias, made her own drawing of domestic violence during a break, and the art director decided that the powerful image should appear on the stamp instead.
Click here to read the president’s remarks at the First Day of Issue ceremony for this stamp, which also served as the proclamation of October 2003 as National Domestic Violence Awareness Month.