Muhammad Ali enters postage history with new Forever Stamp

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Muhammad Ali enters postage history with new Forever Stamp

Muhammad Ali is now officially part of the mail. The U.S. Postal Service unveiled a commemorative Forever Stamp honoring the boxing legend and humanitarian, putting his image into circulation nationwide.

Twenty-two million stamps are being printed, each featuring Ali in his fighting prime. In the black-and-white photo from 1974, his gloves are raised, his eyes locked in. The stamps went on sale Thursday in Ali’s hometown of Louisville, Kentucky.

From the ring to the mailbox

Postal officials rolled out the stamp during a public unveiling that Ali’s family, friends, and civic leaders attended. The image is unmistakable: bold, focused, defiant. It reflects the Ali the world first met, long before Parkinson’s disease slowed him, and long before he became a global symbol of conscience.

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The first boxer to be featured on a U.S. stamp was Joe Louis, a.k.a. the “Brown Bomber,” in 1993.

Bob Costas, who hosted the event, called Louisville the city that shaped Ali, and one he reshaped in return.

The Postal Service also released a stamp sheet that includes a second image of Ali in a pinstripe suit, nodding to his life beyond boxing as an activist and humanitarian.

A legacy defined by compassion

Ali’s widow, Lonnie Ali, framed the moment as something deeper than sports or nostalgia.

“This stamp will travel millions of miles, it will pass through countless hands,” she said. “But it will quietly remind the world of a man who dared to believe that kindness could be powerful and that being in service to others could be heroic.”

She called the stamp a reminder of how Ali lived.

“Muhammad spent his life showing up and showing us that true greatness is not measured by who we knock down, but who we lift up,” she said.

That idea echoed throughout the ceremony. Speaker after speaker returned to the same theme: Ali’s courage did not end when the final bell rang.

A full-circle moment

Ali once joked that he belonged on a postage stamp because it was “the only way I’ll ever get licked.” Decades later, the line landed with new weight.


This story is featured in today’s Unbiased Updates. Watch the full episode here.


Born Cassius Clay Jr., Ali won Olympic gold in 1960, became a three-time heavyweight champion, and later earned honors including the United Nations Messenger of Peace award and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. He died in 2016 at age 74 after living with Parkinson’s disease for more than 30 years.

Stanley Weston/Getty Images
Stanley Weston/Getty Images

Now, nearly a decade later, Ali becomes the first Louisville native to appear on a U.S. postage stamp.

Former Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer summed it up simply.

“Mail will keep moving and stamps will keep changing,” he said. “But what Muhammad Ali shows us with his Forever Stamp is that courage has no expiration date.”

The post Muhammad Ali enters postage history with new Forever Stamp appeared first on Straight Arrow News.

Ella Rae Greene, Editor In Chief

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