The Spellman Museum was founded in the early 1960s to house and share the collection of Cardinal Francis Spellman, Archbishop of New York (1939-1967) and a world-renowned philatelist. Cardinal Spellman was introduced to the world of stamps by seminarian Lawrence Killian prior to World War I, while they were at the
Pontifical North American College in Rome, Italy. Cardinal Spellman used stamps as souvenirs, having them signed to commemorate events in the church and in the world. During his years in Europe, he shipped stamps he had collected to Sister Fidelma Conway, CSJ, a colleague at Regis College, for safe keeping. Sister Fidelma acted as caretaker for his collection, which grew larger than could be housed in the space allocated by Regis. On March 14, 1962, ground was broken on campus for the museum. In the late 1950s, the
National Philatelic Museum in Philadelphia, aligned with Temple University, was dissolved. Most of its equipment, literature, and philatelic holdings were transferred to the newly incorporated Cardinal Spellman Philatelic Museum, which officially opened on May 4, 1963. The museum now contains over two million items, ranging from postage stamps, to postal history, to artifacts of communications through the mails. Major holdings include Cardinal Spellman's personal collection and those from the former National Philatelic Museum, and collections or portions of collections donated or loaned by notables including Presidents
Franklin D. Roosevelt and
Dwight D. Eisenhower, musician
Jascha Heifetz, and U.S. Army General
Matthew Ridgway. The museum updated its name to
Spellman Museum of Stamps and Postal History in the 1990s. It operates as an independent not for profit, 501(c)(3), self-supporting educational institution and is chartered by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. ==The Spellman philosophy==