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United States heraldry

Heraldry in the United States was first established by European settlers who brought with them the heraldic customs of their respective countries of origin. As the use of coats of arms may be seen as a custom of royalty and nobility, it had been debated whether the use of arms is reconcilable with American republican traditions. Families from English, Scottish, Irish, Welsh, German, and other European nations with a heraldic tradition have retained their familial coat of arms in the United States. Several founding fathers also employed personal arms and a great number of Americans continue to do so.

The coat of arms as it appears on the Great Seal of the United States, agency emblems, passports and embassies.
The escutcheon also appears by itself on (for example) the seal of the United States Coast Guard.

Usage of arms

Most states do not employ coats of arms, choosing to use seals as their official emblems, but the United States has a coat of arms. The U.S. Constitution prohibits federal and state governments from conferring titles of nobility (see Title of Nobility Clause) and there are few noble coats of arms in the country. Private persons, however, including several past presidents, have employed coats of arms either granted to them, or which they inherited. Since there is no official regulation on arms, except for the official seals, badges, insignia, decorations and medals of the country and the states, many private individuals have assumed arms, in addition to those who inherited them, or had them granted by or registered in another country. There was one anomalous exception to this lack of regulation: the coat of arms of the Swiss Confederation was specifically protected from unauthorized use within the U.S., under penalty of a fine and/or imprisonment for up to six months.[1] This prohibition was repealed by the "Clean Up the Code Act of 2019"[2]

U.S. Army Institute of Heraldry

 
 
 
Three examples of work by the Institute: the Seal of the President of the United States; the coat of arms of the USS Winston S. Churchill; Mobile County (Alabama) Public School JROTC Distinctive Unit Insignia

Heraldic and other military symbols have been used by the military forces as well as other organizational elements of the government since the beginning of the Revolution. However, until 1919, there was no coordinated, overall military symbolism program. In that year, within the War Department General Staff, an office was delegated the responsibility for the coordination and approval of coats of arms and insignia of certain Army organizations. In 1924, formal staff responsibility for specific military designs was delegated to The Quartermaster General. As the needs for symbolism by the military services and the national government expanded, the scope of the services furnished by The Quartermaster General’s Office evolved into a sizable heraldic program. The acceleration of activities brought about by World War II, the expansion of the Army, and subsequent increase of interest in symbolism, contributed to the growth of the program. In 1949, the Munitions Board, acting for the Army, Navy and Air Force, directed the Army to provide heraldic services to all military departments. The program was expanded further as a result of the enactment of Public Law 85-263, approved September 1957, 71 Stat. 589, which delineates the authority of the Secretary of the Army to furnish heraldic services to the military departments and other branches of the federal government.

The Institute of Heraldry was established in 1960 at Cameron Station in Alexandria, Virginia. Within the Institute, functions formerly performed within the Office of The Quartermaster General and several field activities were consolidated. Upon reorganization of the Army in 1962, responsibility for the Heraldic Program was assigned to The Adjutant General’s Office. In 1987, with the realignment of certain Army Staff agency functions, the Institute was transferred to the United States Army Human Resources Command. In April 1994, The Institute of Heraldry was relocated from Cameron Station to Fort Belvoir, Virginia. As a result of a realignment in October 2004, responsibility for the Heraldic Program was assigned to The Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Army, Resources and Programs Agency.

The U.S. Army Institute of Heraldry consists of a staff of twenty civilians. The mission of the Institute is to furnish heraldic services to the Armed Forces and other United States government organizations, including the Executive Office of the President. The activities of the Institute encompass research, design, development, standardization, quality control, and other services relating to official symbolic items—seals, decorations, medals, insignia, badges, flags, and other items awarded to or authorized for official wear or display by government personnel and agencies. Limited research and information services concerning official symbolic items are also provided to the general public.[3]

State heraldry

Eighteen states have officially adopted a coat of arms. The former independent Republic of Texas and Kingdom of Hawaii each had a separate national coat of arms, which are no longer used.

Puerto Rico has a coat of arms as well, originally granted by the Spanish Crown in 1512, which also influenced the design of that territory's seal.

The flags of Maryland and the District of Columbia are heraldic banners of the historical coats of arms of specific individuals.

Private heraldry

There are several private organizations working to advance heraldic traditions in the United States such as the American College of Heraldry and Arms and Assume Arms. These organizations keep registers of arms and give advice on designing coats of arms.

For a fee, the English College of Arms will devise arms for persons of English or Welsh descent, as the Scottish Court of the Lord Lyon will for persons of Scottish descent. The Chief Herald of Ireland has granted arms to Americans of Irish descent. Some American recipients of foreign orders of knighthood in which arms are expected to be borne have received arms from the relevant foreign authorities.

Timeline

16th century

  • The English settlement of Ralegh, in Virginia, applies for a grant of civic arms from the College of Arms in 1586 – it is uncertain if the grant was made.[4]

17th century

 
Arms of Lord Baltimore, and later those of Maryland.
  • The Virginia Company of London was chartered and granted official arms in 1606 for the purpose of establishing the colony of Virginia at Jamestown – the company's arms became Virginia's government coat of arms for the duration of the colonial period
  • The Dutch New Netherland Company establishes the New Netherland (Nieuw Nederland) settlement in 1614 – it assumes official arms in 1630.
  • Lord Baltimore assigns his personal arms to the Maryland colony in 1634, which remain in use to this day.
  • Harvard College in Massachusetts assumes arms in 1643.
  • Rhode Island assumes official arms in 1661.
  • New York (city) assumes civic arms in 1686.
  • The first English grant of arms to an American colonist: Francis Nicholson, of Maryland, in 1694.[4]
  • The College of William and Mary in Virginia, as the sole royal foundation in the American colonies, is granted arms in 1694.[4]

18th century

  • Queen Anne establishes a Carolina Herald, and a local aristocracy of landgraves and cassiques, for the Carolina colony in 1705 – Lawrence Crump (at the College of Arms) is Carolina Herald but does not appear to have granted any arms.[4]
  • Connecticut assumes official arms in 1711.
  • St. Augustine, Florida petitions Philip V, King of Spain, to grant the city a coat of arms in 1715. Although granted, there is no record the city received its arms until 1991.[5]
  • The first Scottish grant of arms to an American colonist: Rhode Island governor Samuel Cranston, in 1724.
  • Yale College in Connecticut assumes arms in 1736.
  • Princeton University in New Jersey assumes arms in 1746.
  • The thirteen British colonies declare independence, as the United States of America, in 1776 – at least 35 of the signatories of the Declaration of Independence, including John Hancock and Benjamin Franklin, are armigerous.[6]
  • Five states assume official arms during or shortly after the War of Independence: New Jersey and Pennsylvania in 1776, Delaware and New York in 1777, and Massachusetts in 1780.
  • The United States Congress assumes official arms in 1782.[6]
  • President George Washington states in 1788 that heraldry is not "unfriendly to the purest spirit of republicanism".[6]
  • The United States Department of the Treasury assumes official arms c. 1789.[7]
  • President Thomas Jefferson bears a coat of arms.[6]

19th century

 
Arms of Wisconsin, assumed c. 1848.

20th century

 
Roosevelt coat of arms
 
Coat of arms granted to John F. Kennedy by the Chief Herald of Ireland in 1961.
  • President Theodore Roosevelt bears ancestral Dutch arms – they are also borne by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.[6]
  • Publications include William A. Crozier's Crozier's General Armory in 1904 and John Matthews' A Complete American Armory in 1905.
  • Los Angeles assumes civic arms in 1905.
  • San Diego assumes civic arms in 1914. [8]
  • The U.S. Army establishes a heraldry office and a system of unit coats of arms in 1919.
  • An early example of an English grant of honorary arms to a US citizen descended from a pre-1783 colonist: Alain C. White, in 1920.[4]
  • The 51st Artillery Regiment is the first army unit to adopt a coat of arms, in 1922.
  • President Calvin Coolidge has a coat of arms.[6]
  • Publications include Charles K. Bolton's Bolton's American Armory in 1927; the first volume of the New England Historic Genealogical Society's A Roll of Arms in 1928; and Eugene Spofford's Armorial Families of America in 1939.
  • Rhode Island has civic arms devised for all its towns in the 1920s.[6]
  • Alabama assumes state arms in 1939.
  • The Federal Bureau of Investigation assumes arms in 1940.
  • The US Army Air Force establishes a system of unit emblems and coats of arms in 1945 – when it becomes the US Air Force in 1947, President Truman assigns it official arms.
  • Columbia University in New York assumes arms in 1949.
  • President Truman assigns official arms to the Central Intelligence Agency in 1950.
  • Film star Douglas Fairbanks Junior obtains an English grant of arms in 1951.
  • President Dwight D. Eisenhower assumes arms in 1955.[6]
  • North Dakota assumes state arms in 1957.
  • The Army's heraldry section is reorganised as The Institute of Heraldry in 1960.
  • The Irish government presents President John F. Kennedy with a coat of arms 1961.[6]
  • A private American College of Heraldry & Arms is established in 1966 – it closes in 1970.
  • The ACH&A devises arms for Presidents Lyndon B. Johnson in 1968, and Richard M. Nixon in 1970.[6]
  • A new, private, American College of Heraldry is established in 1972.
  • John Brooke-Little, Richmond Herald, presents a coat of arms to Hampden-Sydney College on October 19, 1976.[9]
  • Virginia assumes state arms devised by the English College of Arms in 1976.
  • President Ronald W. Reagan bears assumed arms, registered in Spain and Switzerland in 1980.[6]
  • The College of Arms Foundation is established in 1984, to make donations to the College of Arms in England.
  • The Mescalero Apache Tribe obtains a devisal of arms from the English College of Arms in 1986.[4]
  • The Irish government presents President Bill Clinton with a coat of arms in 1995.[6]

21st century

See also

References

  1. ^ US Code Title 18, Part I, Chapter 33, § 708. Retrieved on May 24, 2010.
  2. ^ "Text - H.R.133 - 116th Congress (2019-2020): Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021." Congress.gov, Library of Congress, 27 December 2020, https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-congress/house-bill/133/text/enr.
  3. ^ The US Army Institute Of Heraldry Home Page April 11, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on November 2, 2006.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Woodcock, T. & Robinson, J.M. (1988). The Oxford Guide to Heraldry
  5. ^ "A "New" Coat of Arms for St. Augustine, Florida".
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "American Heraldry Society". Americanheraldry.org. Retrieved 2017-10-17.
  7. ^ "heraldica.com". heraldica.com. 2012-10-01. Retrieved 2017-10-17.
  8. ^ "Official City of San Diego Seal | Office of the City Clerk | City of San Diego Official Website".
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2011-03-01.

External links

  • United States heraldry on Heraldica.org
  • American Heraldry Society
  • United States Heraldic Registry
  • The American College of Heraldry
  • AssumeArms.com
  • Heraldry in America - American Ancestors

united, states, heraldry, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, this, article, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, sc. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this article Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources United States heraldry news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Armorial of the United States Heraldry in the United States was first established by European settlers who brought with them the heraldic customs of their respective countries of origin As the use of coats of arms may be seen as a custom of royalty and nobility it had been debated whether the use of arms is reconcilable with American republican traditions Families from English Scottish Irish Welsh German and other European nations with a heraldic tradition have retained their familial coat of arms in the United States Several founding fathers also employed personal arms and a great number of Americans continue to do so The coat of arms as it appears on the Great Seal of the United States agency emblems passports and embassies The escutcheon also appears by itself on for example the seal of the United States Coast Guard Contents 1 Usage of arms 2 U S Army Institute of Heraldry 3 State heraldry 4 Private heraldry 5 Timeline 5 1 16th century 5 2 17th century 5 3 18th century 5 4 19th century 5 5 20th century 5 6 21st century 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksUsage of arms EditMost states do not employ coats of arms choosing to use seals as their official emblems but the United States has a coat of arms The U S Constitution prohibits federal and state governments from conferring titles of nobility see Title of Nobility Clause and there are few noble coats of arms in the country Private persons however including several past presidents have employed coats of arms either granted to them or which they inherited Since there is no official regulation on arms except for the official seals badges insignia decorations and medals of the country and the states many private individuals have assumed arms in addition to those who inherited them or had them granted by or registered in another country There was one anomalous exception to this lack of regulation the coat of arms of the Swiss Confederation was specifically protected from unauthorized use within the U S under penalty of a fine and or imprisonment for up to six months 1 This prohibition was repealed by the Clean Up the Code Act of 2019 2 U S Army Institute of Heraldry EditMain article United States Army Institute of Heraldry Three examples of work by the Institute the Seal of the President of the United States the coat of arms of the USS Winston S Churchill Mobile County Alabama Public School JROTC Distinctive Unit Insignia Heraldic and other military symbols have been used by the military forces as well as other organizational elements of the government since the beginning of the Revolution However until 1919 there was no coordinated overall military symbolism program In that year within the War Department General Staff an office was delegated the responsibility for the coordination and approval of coats of arms and insignia of certain Army organizations In 1924 formal staff responsibility for specific military designs was delegated to The Quartermaster General As the needs for symbolism by the military services and the national government expanded the scope of the services furnished by The Quartermaster General s Office evolved into a sizable heraldic program The acceleration of activities brought about by World War II the expansion of the Army and subsequent increase of interest in symbolism contributed to the growth of the program In 1949 the Munitions Board acting for the Army Navy and Air Force directed the Army to provide heraldic services to all military departments The program was expanded further as a result of the enactment of Public Law 85 263 approved September 1957 71 Stat 589 which delineates the authority of the Secretary of the Army to furnish heraldic services to the military departments and other branches of the federal government The Institute of Heraldry was established in 1960 at Cameron Station in Alexandria Virginia Within the Institute functions formerly performed within the Office of The Quartermaster General and several field activities were consolidated Upon reorganization of the Army in 1962 responsibility for the Heraldic Program was assigned to The Adjutant General s Office In 1987 with the realignment of certain Army Staff agency functions the Institute was transferred to the United States Army Human Resources Command In April 1994 The Institute of Heraldry was relocated from Cameron Station to Fort Belvoir Virginia As a result of a realignment in October 2004 responsibility for the Heraldic Program was assigned to The Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Army Resources and Programs Agency Arms of George Washington The U S Army Institute of Heraldry consists of a staff of twenty civilians The mission of the Institute is to furnish heraldic services to the Armed Forces and other United States government organizations including the Executive Office of the President The activities of the Institute encompass research design development standardization quality control and other services relating to official symbolic items seals decorations medals insignia badges flags and other items awarded to or authorized for official wear or display by government personnel and agencies Limited research and information services concerning official symbolic items are also provided to the general public 3 State heraldry EditSee also Coats of arms of the U S states Eighteen states have officially adopted a coat of arms The former independent Republic of Texas and Kingdom of Hawaii each had a separate national coat of arms which are no longer used Puerto Rico has a coat of arms as well originally granted by the Spanish Crown in 1512 which also influenced the design of that territory s seal The flags of Maryland and the District of Columbia are heraldic banners of the historical coats of arms of specific individuals Private heraldry EditThere are several private organizations working to advance heraldic traditions in the United States such as the American College of Heraldry and Arms and Assume Arms These organizations keep registers of arms and give advice on designing coats of arms For a fee the English College of Arms will devise arms for persons of English or Welsh descent as the Scottish Court of the Lord Lyon will for persons of Scottish descent The Chief Herald of Ireland has granted arms to Americans of Irish descent Some American recipients of foreign orders of knighthood in which arms are expected to be borne have received arms from the relevant foreign authorities Timeline Edit16th century Edit The English settlement of Ralegh in Virginia applies for a grant of civic arms from the College of Arms in 1586 it is uncertain if the grant was made 4 17th century Edit Arms of Lord Baltimore and later those of Maryland The Virginia Company of London was chartered and granted official arms in 1606 for the purpose of establishing the colony of Virginia at Jamestown the company s arms became Virginia s government coat of arms for the duration of the colonial period The Dutch New Netherland Company establishes the New Netherland Nieuw Nederland settlement in 1614 it assumes official arms in 1630 Lord Baltimore assigns his personal arms to the Maryland colony in 1634 which remain in use to this day Harvard College in Massachusetts assumes arms in 1643 Rhode Island assumes official arms in 1661 New York city assumes civic arms in 1686 The first English grant of arms to an American colonist Francis Nicholson of Maryland in 1694 4 The College of William and Mary in Virginia as the sole royal foundation in the American colonies is granted arms in 1694 4 18th century Edit Arms of Benjamin Franklin Queen Anne establishes a Carolina Herald and a local aristocracy of landgraves and cassiques for the Carolina colony in 1705 Lawrence Crump at the College of Arms is Carolina Herald but does not appear to have granted any arms 4 Connecticut assumes official arms in 1711 St Augustine Florida petitions Philip V King of Spain to grant the city a coat of arms in 1715 Although granted there is no record the city received its arms until 1991 5 The first Scottish grant of arms to an American colonist Rhode Island governor Samuel Cranston in 1724 Yale College in Connecticut assumes arms in 1736 Princeton University in New Jersey assumes arms in 1746 The thirteen British colonies declare independence as the United States of America in 1776 at least 35 of the signatories of the Declaration of Independence including John Hancock and Benjamin Franklin are armigerous 6 Five states assume official arms during or shortly after the War of Independence New Jersey and Pennsylvania in 1776 Delaware and New York in 1777 and Massachusetts in 1780 The United States Congress assumes official arms in 1782 6 President George Washington states in 1788 that heraldry is not unfriendly to the purest spirit of republicanism 6 The United States Department of the Treasury assumes official arms c 1789 7 President Thomas Jefferson bears a coat of arms 6 19th century Edit Arms of Wisconsin assumed c 1848 President John Adams bears a coat of arms 6 Maine assumes state arms in 1820 Vermont in 1821 Missouri in 1822 and Michigan in 1836 The Mexican province of Texas which has a large American settler population becomes a republic in 1836 it later assumes official arms depicting a Lone Star Wisconsin assumes state arms c 1848 The Committee on Heraldry of the New England Historic Genealogical Society is established in 1864 Philadelphia assumes civic arms in 1874 Colorado assumes state arms in 1877 President James A Garfield bears arms 6 President Chester A Arthur bears arms 6 Publications include Edgar de V Vermont s America Heraldica in 1886 and Eugene Zieber s Heraldry in America in 1895 Idaho assumes state arms in 1891 The U S annexes the Pacific island state of Hawaii in 1898 it retains its existing official arms dating from c1845 The U S takes over the former Spanish colony of Puerto Rico in 1898 it already has official arms dating from 1511 The Army assigns arms to the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1898 20th century Edit Roosevelt coat of arms Columbia University coat of arms Coat of arms granted to John F Kennedy by the Chief Herald of Ireland in 1961 President Theodore Roosevelt bears ancestral Dutch arms they are also borne by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt 6 Publications include William A Crozier s Crozier s General Armory in 1904 and John Matthews A Complete American Armory in 1905 Los Angeles assumes civic arms in 1905 San Diego assumes civic arms in 1914 8 The U S Army establishes a heraldry office and a system of unit coats of arms in 1919 An early example of an English grant of honorary arms to a US citizen descended from a pre 1783 colonist Alain C White in 1920 4 The 51st Artillery Regiment is the first army unit to adopt a coat of arms in 1922 President Calvin Coolidge has a coat of arms 6 Publications include Charles K Bolton s Bolton s American Armory in 1927 the first volume of the New England Historic Genealogical Society s A Roll of Arms in 1928 and Eugene Spofford s Armorial Families of America in 1939 Rhode Island has civic arms devised for all its towns in the 1920s 6 Alabama assumes state arms in 1939 The Federal Bureau of Investigation assumes arms in 1940 The US Army Air Force establishes a system of unit emblems and coats of arms in 1945 when it becomes the US Air Force in 1947 President Truman assigns it official arms Columbia University in New York assumes arms in 1949 President Truman assigns official arms to the Central Intelligence Agency in 1950 Film star Douglas Fairbanks Junior obtains an English grant of arms in 1951 President Dwight D Eisenhower assumes arms in 1955 6 North Dakota assumes state arms in 1957 The Army s heraldry section is reorganised as The Institute of Heraldry in 1960 The Irish government presents President John F Kennedy with a coat of arms 1961 6 A private American College of Heraldry amp Arms is established in 1966 it closes in 1970 The ACH amp A devises arms for Presidents Lyndon B Johnson in 1968 and Richard M Nixon in 1970 6 A new private American College of Heraldry is established in 1972 John Brooke Little Richmond Herald presents a coat of arms to Hampden Sydney College on October 19 1976 9 Virginia assumes state arms devised by the English College of Arms in 1976 President Ronald W Reagan bears assumed arms registered in Spain and Switzerland in 1980 6 The College of Arms Foundation is established in 1984 to make donations to the College of Arms in England The Mescalero Apache Tribe obtains a devisal of arms from the English College of Arms in 1986 4 The Irish government presents President Bill Clinton with a coat of arms in 1995 6 21st century Edit The Society of Scottish Armigers is founded in 2001 it obtains a grant of arms from the Lord Lyon in 2004 U S Secretary of State Colin Powell receives a grant of arms from the Lord Lyon in 2004 The American Heraldry Society is founded in 2003 it launches a journal The American Herald in 2006 The Lord Lyon grants corporate arms to Donald Trump via Trump International Golf Links Scotland in 2011 Donald Trump becomes president of the United States in 2016 A coat of arms is devised by the College of Arms for Meghan Markle following her marriage to Prince Harry in 2018 The design reflects her birthplace of California See also EditList of personal coats of arms of presidents of the United States List of personal coats of arms of vice presidents of the United States Division insignia of the United States Army Brigade insignia of the United States Army Armorial of the United States Army Naval heraldryReferences Edit US Code Title 18 Part I Chapter 33 708 Retrieved on May 24 2010 Text H R 133 116th Congress 2019 2020 Consolidated Appropriations Act 2021 Congress gov Library of Congress 27 December 2020 https www congress gov bill 116th congress house bill 133 text enr The US Army Institute Of Heraldry Home Page Archived April 11 2006 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on November 2 2006 a b c d e f Woodcock T amp Robinson J M 1988 The Oxford Guide to Heraldry A New Coat of Arms for St Augustine Florida a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o American Heraldry Society Americanheraldry org Retrieved 2017 10 17 heraldica com heraldica com 2012 10 01 Retrieved 2017 10 17 Official City of San Diego Seal Office of the City Clerk City of San Diego Official Website H SC Coat of Arms Archived from the original on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2011 03 01 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Heraldry of the United States Department of Defense United States heraldry on Heraldica org US Army Institute of Heraldry insignia list American Heraldry Society United States Heraldic Registry The American College of Heraldry AssumeArms com Heraldry in America American Ancestors Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States heraldry amp oldid 1131379157, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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