Chen Tien-hua (1875-1905) was a native of Hsin-hua, Hunan Province. He was honest, patriotic, and skilled in writing. While he studied in Japan, Russian troops were invading northeast China. China was on the verge of being sliced apart by the imposing Powers. To arouse his fellow countrymen's patriotism, he wrote dozens of letters with the blood of his cut fingers, eloquently expressing his worries and ideas about the future of China. When revolutionaries, Huang Hsin and Sung Chiao-jen, set up the revolutionary organization〝Hua Hsin Hui〞 to revolt in Hunan Province, he came back to join it. The plan failed, but he escaped to Japan again. In 1905, at the age of thirty-one, he wrote a farewell to show his anger at Japanese restrictions on foreign students. On November 12, 1905, he committed suicide by jumping into the sea. Chen was a passionate revolutionary writer; On Revolution in China, Meng Hui Tou, and Ching Shih Chung were his works. The design of the stamp was recommended by the Party History Committee, Central Committee of the Kuomintang.