On December 8, 2021, the U.S. Postal Service finally delivered a long-overdue tribute, announcing that Edmonia Lewis would join the 2022 USPS stamp series. Lewis was a 19th-century sculptor whose life reads like a testimony of talent pushing through every barrier placed in its path. Born in 1844 to a Caribbean father and an Indigenous mother, she carved her way into history at a time when opportunities for women of color in the arts were nearly nonexistent. She refused the limits placed on her, mastering neoclassical sculpture and building a career that stretched from Boston to Rome. Her works stood out not just for their technical skill but for their storytelling. Lewis centered themes of identity, freedom, and faith at a time when the country was still divided by the aftermath of the Civil War. Her sculptures of abolitionist icons and spiritual narratives carried a boldness rarely afforded to someone of her background, yet she created with clarity, intention, and a vision that still resonates more than a century later. The USPS stamp wasn’t just an honor… it was a reminder. Acknowledgment of a woman who shaped the art world long before the world was willing to recognize her. A nod to someone who carved her legacy from marble when society tried to carve her out of the record. Today, her work lives on in museums, archives, and now in the hands of anyone placing that stamp on a letter. It’s a piece of history made visible again. #LataraSpeaksTruth #BlackHistory #EdmoniaLewis #NewsBreakCommunity