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Idaho’s State Seal

State Seals
Idaho State Seal

Idaho's 1st Territorial Seal, 1863 - From the Idaho Profile

Idaho's 1st Territorial Seal, 1863 - From the Idaho Profile

Idaho Territorial Seal -1866

Idaho's Territorial Seal - 1866 - From the Idaho Profile

There were two territorial seals designed before statehood was achieved for Idaho. The first seal may have been designed in 1863 by Silas D. Cochran, a clerk in the of?ce of the Secretary of State, but no one knows for sure today. The second seal was designed in 1866 by the acting Governor, Caleb Lyon. It was adopted and used until 1890, when the Idaho became a state.




Only Great Seal Designed by a Woman

Emma Sarah Etine Edwards painting for the Idaho State Seal

Emma Sarah Etine Edwards painting for the Idaho State Seal - from the Idaho Blue Book

Idaho became a state on July 3, 1890 and that same summer a talented young woman came to the state capitol at Boise to visit relatives. Emma Sarah Etine Edwards (later she married mining man James G. Green) was the daughter of John C. Edwards, a former Governor of Missouri (1844-48) who had emigrated to Stockton, California where he acquired large land holdings, a beautiful French Creole wife, Emma Catherine Richards, and became Mayor of Stockton, in about that order. Emma, eldest of a family of eight, was exceptionally well educated for a woman of that period and when she dropped into Boise, it was on her way home from a year spent at art school in New York. However, what was to be a very short visit turned into a lifelong stay, for she fell in love with the charming city and its people and opened art classes where the young pioneers of the community learned to paint. Shortly after her classes started, she was invited to enter a design for the Great Seal of the State of Idaho. Acting on Concurrent Resolution No. 1, adopted by the First Legislature of the newest state in the union, a committee was
appointed from that body and instructed to offer a prize of one hundred dollars for the best design submitted. Artists from all over the country entered the competition, but the unanimous winner was young Emma Edwards, who became the ?rst and only woman to design the Great Seal of a State. She
was handed the honorarium by Governor Norman B. Willey on March 5, 1891. The state ?ag also carries the seal centered on a deep blue background.

Emma Edwards Green had no children of her own, but assisted in rearing a nephew, Darell B. Edwards, a distinguished Oakland attorney. Ralph Edwards of “This is Your Life,” also a nephew, shows a valid artistic strain flourished in the Edwards family. Mrs. Green died in Boise January 6, 1942.
She was buried beside her husband in Oakland,
California.

Source: Idaho Profile, Idaho Blue Book

 

 



The Idaho State Seal


by Emma Edwards Green

Before designing the seal, I was careful to make a thorough study of the resources and future possibilities of the State. I invited the advice and counsel of every member of the

Idaho State Seal

Idaho State Seal as it is in current use (Painterly version) - Idaho Secretary of State

Legislature and other citizens quali?ed to help in creating a Seal of State that really represented Idaho at that time. Idaho had been admitted into the Union on July 3rd, 1890. The ?rst state Legislature met in Boise on December 8, 1890, and on March 14th, 1891, adopted my design for the Great Seal of the State of Idaho.

The question of Woman Suffrage was being agitated somewhat, and as leading men and politicians agreed that Idaho would eventually give women the right to vote, and as mining was the chief industry, and the mining man the largest ?nancial factor of the state at that time, I made the ?gure of the man the most prominent in the design, while that of the woman, signifying justice, as noted by the scales; liberty, as denoted by the liberty cap on the end of the spear, and equality with man as denoted by her position at his side, also signi?es freedom. The pick and shovel held by the miner, and the ledge of rock beside which he stands, as well as the pieces of ore scattered about his feet, all indicate the chief occupation of the State. The stamp mill in the distance, which you can see by using a magnifying glass, is also typical of the mining interest of Idaho. The shield between the man and woman is emblematic of the protection they unite in giving the state. The large ?r or pine tree in the foreground in the shield refers to Idaho’s immense timber interests. The husbandman plowing on the left side of the shield, together with the sheaf of grain beneath the shield, are emblematic of Idaho’s agricultural resources, while the cornucopias, or horns of plenty, refer to the horticultural. Idaho has a game law, which protects the elk and moose. The elk’s head, therefore, rises above the shield. The state ?ower, the wild Syringa or Mock Orange, grows at the woman’s feet, while the ripened wheat grows as high as her shoulder. The star signi?es a new light in the galaxy of states. . . . The river depicted in the shield is our mighty Snake or Shoshone River, a stream of great majesty.

In regard to the coloring of the emblems used in the making of the Great Seal of the State of Idaho, my principal desire was to use such colors as would typify pure Americanism and the history of the State. As Idaho was a virgin state, I robed my goddess in white and made the liberty cap on the end of the spear the same color. In representing the miner, I gave him the garb of the period suggested by such mining authorities as former United States Senator George Shoup, of Idaho, former Governor Norman B. Willey of Idaho, former Governor James H. Hawley of Idaho, and other mining men and early residents of the state who knew intimately the usual garb of the miner. Almost unanimously they said, “Do not put the miner in a red shirt.” “Make the shirt a grayish brown,” said Captain J.J. Wells, chairman of the Seal Committee. The “Light of the Mountains” is typi?ed by the rosy glow which precedes the sunrise. In 1957, the thirty-fourth session of the Idaho legislature authorized the updating and improvement of the Great Seal in order to more clearly de?ne Idaho’s main industries, mining, agriculture and forestry as well as highlight the state’s natural beauty. Paul B. Evans and the Caxton Printers, Ltd. were commissioned to revise the seal. This painting by Paul B. Evans of?cially replaced the original design by Emma Edwards Green and is designated as the “Of?cial Copy.” The of?cial Great Seal of the State of Idaho can be seen in the of?ce of the Secretary of State.

Source: Idaho Profile, Idaho Blue Book


Idaho Great Seal

Idaho Great Seal - Image courtesy of Wikipedia Commons

Idaho’s State Seal Today

Idaho’s state seal as you see it today, was redesigned in 1957. The state hired Paul B. Evans and the Caxton Printers, Ltd. to update the design to focus on the state’s agriculture, forestry, and mining. The image to the right is a vector-based version of the state seal; unlike the one shown above (The Idaho State Seal), which is used in official state documents and shows the original painterly style.

Citation styles

APA style
Idaho’s State Seal. (2010, May 14). In State Reports by ClassBrain. Retrieved 16:53, May 18, 2012, from http://www.statereports.us/2010/05/state-seal-idaho/
MLA style
Cynthia Kirkeby, “Idaho’s State Seal.” State Reports by ClassBrain. 14 May 2010, 01:17 UTC. . 18 May 2012 <http://www.statereports.us/2010/05/state-seal-idaho/>.
MHRA style
Cynthia Kirkeby, 'Idaho’s State Seal', State Reports by ClassBrain, 14 May 2010, 01:17 UTC, <http://www.statereports.us/2010/05/state-seal-idaho/> [accessed 18 May 2012]
The Chicago Manual of Style
Cynthia Kirkeby, “Idaho’s State Seal.” State Reports by ClassBrain, http://www.statereports.us/2010/05/state-seal-idaho/ [accessed May 18, 2012].
CBE/CSE style
Cynthia Kirkeby, Idaho’s State Seal [Internet]. State Reports by ClassBrain; 2010 May 14, 01:17 UTC [cited 2012 May 18]. Available from: http://www.statereports.us/2010/05/state-seal-idaho/.
Bluebook style
Idaho’s State Seal, http://www.statereports.us/2010/05/state-seal-idaho/ (last visited May. 18, 2012).
AMA style
Cynthia Kirkeby, Idaho’s State Seal. State Reports by ClassBrain. May 14, 2010, 01:17 UTC. Available at: http://www.statereports.us/2010/05/state-seal-idaho/. Accessed May 18, 2012.




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