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1752
The Continental Congress approved the final version of The Great Seal of the United States in 1782. The seal is used for things like commissions and treaties.
No, In accordance with President Washington's directions, "the books, records, and papers of the late Congress, the Great Seal of the federal union, and the Seal of the admiralty" were delivered over to Roger Alden, deputy secretary of the new Congress, who had been designated by President Washington as custodian for the time being. This marked the last act of the Continental congress.
The great seal was approved by Congress in 1782 for the Colonial government and became the great seal of the United States. At that time an official seal was needed on occasion to authenticate documents. When there were no inter-continental communication lines and a diplomat arrived from say Europe, the only way to verify his credentials or the documents he carried was to check the seals stamped on them.
The design on the back of a US dollar bill that features a pyramid is the reverse of the Great Seal of the United States. It just means the people who designed the dollar bill wanted to feature the reverse of the Great Seal on it (the design in the other circle ... the Eagle ... is the obverse, or front, of the Great Seal). The official symbolism, presented at the time the US Congress approved and adopted the Great Seal, is that the pyramid "represents Strength and Duration."
The Founding Fathers thought that a special emblem would show that we an independent nation and a free people. The Great Seal was Approved in 1782.
The "Great Seal of the United States" was designed by Charles Thomson, secretary of the Continental Congress.
The olive branch and arrows on the back of the great seal of the US stands for the power of peace and war. This is a power exclusively vested in Congress.
The original motto of the US was "E Pluribus Unum" which is Latin for "One from many." It refers to the joining of a single federal national government with individual state governments. In 1776, congress appointed a committee to design a Great Seal for the US. The first design used the E Pluribus Unum motto but it was rejected by Congress. In 1782, the Secretary of Congress was asked to complete the Great Seal project and he produced a design that included an eagle with a heart shaped shield holding arrows and an olive branch. In a scroll held in the eagle's beak was the motto, "E Pluribus Unum" and Congress accepted the design. The Great Seal was first used on 16 September 1782.
Hoya seal
The Official State Seal of Arizona was approved in the Arizona Constitution in 1911.
The bald eagle is on the Great Seal of the United States.