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  1. Motto. Anthem. Bird. World Heritage Sites. United States portal. v. t. e. National symbols of the United States are the symbols used to represent the United States of America .

    • Overview
    • Origin of the Great Seal

    Great Seal of the United States, official seal of the United States of America. The design of the obverse is the coat of arms of the United States—an official emblem, mark of identification, and symbol of the authority of the government. On the reverse is an unfinished pyramid topped with an eye enclosed in a triangle. Above this are the words Annuit Cœptis (“He Has Favored Our Undertaking”). Carved at the base of the pyramid is MDCCLXXVI (1776) in reference to the Declaration of Independence, and below that is the motto Novus Ordo Seclorum (“A New Order of the Ages”).

    The seal has a limited use which is strictly guarded by law. Title 18 of the United States Code (as amended in January 1971) prohibits the display of the seal

    in, or in connection with, any advertisement, poster, circular, book, pamphlet, or other publication, public meeting, play, motion picture, telecast, or other production, or on any building, monument, or stationery, for the purpose of conveying, or in a manner reasonably calculated to convey, a false impression of sponsorship or approval by the Government of the United States or by any department, agency, or instrumentality thereof.

    As the functions of the federal government expanded over the years, the extent of its use was curtailed from time to time by acts of Congress or executive order. For instance, where originally the seal was affixed to all civil (not military or naval) commissions signed by the president, now persons appointed by the president to serve under most of the cabinet officers other than the secretary of state are commissioned under the seals of the respective departments.

    Currently the seal is affixed to instruments of ratification of treaties; proclamations of treaties; full powers; exequaturs; presidential warrants for the extradition of fugitives from the justice of the United States; and commissions of cabinet officers, ambassadors, foreign service officers, and all other civil officers appointed by the president whose commissions are not required by law to issue under another seal. It is affixed also to the envelope enclosing a ceremonial communication from the president to the head of a foreign state or government. To commissions that issue under the seal, the secretary of state is required by law to cause it to be affixed after the president has signed. For “any other instrument or act” the secretary formerly required a special warrant from the president directing him to do so. An executive order of April 18, 1952, however, dispensed with the warrant for documents within the abovementioned categories. An executive order of May 23, 1967, exempted all presidential proclamations except those of treaties and other international agreements from passing under the seal. Except for the commissions of a few civil officers, the Great Seal is now used only in connection with international affairs.

    Legally the seal has two names, "Seal of the United States" and "Great Seal." Both appear in acts of Congress and in a decision of the U.S. Supreme Court, and both are in general use. In the resolution of June 20, 1782, creating it, the term used is “great seal.” During the early years of the Department of State that designation served to distinguish it from the seal of the department, then called the “seal of office” or “privy seal.” The act of 1789, however, declared the seal of 1782 to be the “seal of the United States”; in documents to which it is affixed there is long-standing precedent for the same wording; and several publications of the Department of State have been so titled.

    By the 18th century it was typical for rulers of nations to authenticate important state documents by affixing a seal as a symbol of the governing power. Accordingly, when the United States came into existence, the Continental Congress acted to provide a seal for the new nation. Declaring independence on July 4, 1776, Congress that evening named Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson a committee “to bring in a device for a seal for the United States of America.”

    The committee consulted with Philadelphia artist Pierre Eugène du Simitière. Choosing a design of his, with slight changes, for the obverse, and one by Franklin for the reverse, it reported to Congress on August 20, 1776. That body tabled the report and deferred further action. However, certain elements carried over into the seal that was adopted: the shield, the motto E pluribus unum (seemingly contributed by Franklin), the “Eye of Providence in a radiant Triangle,” and the date “MDCCLXXVI.”

    On March 25, 1780, Congress referred the report to a new committee, consisting of James Lovell of Massachusetts, John Morin Scott of New York, and William Churchill Houston of New Jersey. Meanwhile, on June 14, 1777, Congress had adopted the Stars and Stripes as the national flag. The new committee, aided by the versatile Francis Hopkinson, reported its design on May 10 or 11, 1780. On May 17 Congress considered the report and ordered it recommitted. Although it suffered the fate of the earlier proposal, certain of its elements also carried over into the final seal: the colours red, white, and blue on the shield; the olive branch; and the crest of a “radiant constellation of 13 Stars.”

    In the spring of 1782 Congress appointed as a third committee Arthur Middleton and John Rutledge of South Carolina and Elias Boudinot of New Jersey. This committee sought help from William Barton, a young Philadelphian accomplished in heraldry and drawing. Barton prepared two complicated designs, the second of which the committee reported to Congress on May 9, 1782. In this design the “eagle displayed” appeared on the obverse, and the pyramid on the reverse, with the latter approaching its final form. Still unsatisfied, however, Congress on June 13 referred this and the previous reports to Charles Thomson, secretary of Congress.

    With the reports of the three committees before him, Thomson now prepared his own design. Adopting the eagle from Barton’s design as the central figure, he specified that it be an “American Eagle” and “on the Wing & rising” instead of “displayed.” On the eagle’s breast he placed the shield, and on the shield he rearranged in the form of chevrons the white and red stripes that the second committee had made diagonal and that Barton had made horizontal. In the eagle’s right talon he placed an olive branch, from the design of the second committee, and in the left talon a bundle of arrows. For the crest he took the constellation of 13 stars from the design of the second committee. From the report of the first committee he adopted the motto E Pluribus Urum, placing it on a scroll in the eagle’s beak. For the reverse he accepted Barton’s design, substituting, however, new mottoes, reintroducing the date “MDCCLXXVI,” and replacing the “Eye, surrounded with a Glory” with "an Eye in a triangle surrounded with a glory," from the first committee’s report. Thomson handed Barton a written description of this design together with a rough sketch of the obverse.

    On June 19, 1782, Barton rewrote Thomson’s description of the obverse in the precise language of heraldry. He made a major change in the shield, substituting for Thomson’s chevrons 13 vertical stripes alternately white and red below a blue chief. He restored the “displayed” posture of the eagle and specified that the arrows should number 13.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. 19 de mar. de 2018 · March 19, 2018. The Great Seal of the United States is a unique symbol of our country and national identity. Only one authorized Great Seal is in official use and is operated by the U.S. Department of State. The Great Seal is impressed upon official documents such as treaties and commissions.

  3. Similar to other nations, the United States needed an official symbol of sovereignty to formalize and seal (or sign) international treaties and transactions. It took six years, three committees, and the contributions of fourteen men before the Congress finally accepted a design (which included elements proposed by each of the three ...

    Die
    Impression
    1782
    The first die was made of brass, and ...
    1825
    Starting with the ratification of the ...
    1841
    Over time, the original seal became worn ...
    1877
    The United States Centennial in 1876 had ...
    • 1782
  4. The Great Seal of the United States is the official emblem and heraldic device of the United States of America. It was adopted by the Continental Congress on June 20, 1782, to represent the nation and to demonstrate to other nations of the world the ideas and values of its Founders and people.

  5. History. The current design of the U.S. flag is its 27th; the design of the flag has been modified officially 26 times since 1777. The 48-star flag was in effect for 47 years until the 49-star version became official on July 4, 1959. The 50-star flag was ordered by then president Eisenhower on August 21, 1959, and was adopted in July 1960.

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