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15 Inch 9th NCR1 300x225 Featured Product of the Day: 9th Naval Construction RegimentNinth Naval Construction Regiment’s core mission is to provide and maintain a trained, ready and immediately available organized reserve force capable of satisfying the mobilization requirements set forth by higher authority.

Upon mobilization, the Ninth NCR’s mission involves rapid and effective construction support and ground defense operations to the Navy, Marines Corps, and other forces as directed.

Public works functions as directed and continuance of an operational readiness condition that will permit the Ninth NCR and its attached battalions to be organizationally redeployed within a minimal time as may be directed by higher authority.

Source: (www.globalsecurity.org)

Hand carved and hand painted mahogany wood plaque. Perfect as a wall plaque or podium plaque. Fantastic additions to any memorabilia collection. Recessed hook enables the plaque to hang flush against any wall. 

 

 

seal of the president of the united states l 1 2 298x300 Understanding the Great Seal of the United StatesFirst used publicly in 1782, The Great Seal of the United States is used to authenticate documents issued by the United States federal government. It is now regarded as symbol of the national coat of arms. You can find the Great Seal on documents such as United States passports, military insignia, embassy placards, and various flags.

History

Before it conceded on July 4, 1776, the Continental Congress of the newly sovereign United States passed a resolution:

Resolved, that Dr. Franklin, Mr. J. Adams and Mr. Jefferson, be a committee, to bring in a device for a seal for the United States of America.”

Thus, three out of the five men who had drafted the Declaration of Independence were joined together in further service to their motherland. An emblem and national coat of arms was needed by the revolutionaries to present a visible evidence of a free nation and free citizens with high hopes for the future. The crafting of the Great Seal was far more difficult than expected. It took 6 years, two additional committees, and the combined efforts of 14 men before the Great Seal of the United States paid on June 20, 1782.

Meaning of the Seal

State.gov describes the seal as:

“Symbolically, the seal reflects the beliefs and values that the Founding Fathers attached to the new nation and wished to pass on to their descendants. The report which Thompson submitted to the Congress explained the obverse this way: The red and white stripes of the shield “represent the several states…supporting a [blue] Chief which unites the whole and represents Congress.” The colors are adopted from the American flag: “whote signifies purity and innocence, Red, hardiness & valour, and Blue, the colour of the Chief, signifies vigilance, perseverance & justice.” The shield, or escutcheon, is “born on the breast of an American Eagle without any other supporters to denote that the United States of America ought to rely on their own Virtue.”

The number 13, denoting the 13 original States, is represented in the bundle of arrows, the stripes of the shield, and the stars of the constellation. The olive branch and the arrows “denote the power of peace & war.” The constellation of stars symbolizes a new nation taking its place among other sovereign states. The motto E Pluribus Unum, emblazoned across the scroll and clenched in the eagle’s beak, expresses the union of the 13 States. Recent scholarship has pointed out the probable source of this motto: Gentlemen’s Magazine, published in London from 1732 to 1922, was widely read by the educated in the American Colonies. Its title page carried that same motto, and it is quite possible that it influenced the creators of the seal.  The reverse, sometimes referred to as the spiritual side of the seal, contains the 13-step pyramid with the year 1776 in Roman numerals on thebase. At the summit of the pyramid is the Eye of Providence in a triangle surrounded by a Glory (rays of light) and above it appears the motto Annuit Coeptis. Along the lower circumference of the design appear the words Novus Ordo Seclorum, heralding the beginning of the new American era in 1776…”

 

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dept of army l 1 1 300x296 Decoding the Army Seal

Background

Before the Army Seal is worn to identify and symbolize the U.S. Department of the Army, it was originally used to authenticate documents during the American Revolution and was not made available for public display. First used in 1778, it remained unaltered until 1974, when the War Office banner was changed with “Department of the Army”.

Description

The Institute of Heraldry described the seal as:

In the center is a Roman cuirass below a vertical unsheathed sword, point up, the pommel resting on the neck opening of the cuirass and a Phrygian cap supported on the sword point, all between on the right an esponton and on the left a musket with fixed bayonet crossed in saltire behind the cuirass and passing under the sword guard.  To the right of the cuirass and esponton is a flag of unidentified designs with cords and tassels, on a flagstaff with spearhead, above a cannon barrel, the muzzle end slanting upward behind the cuirass, in front of the drum, with two drumsticks and the fly end of the flag draped over the drumhead; below, but partly in front of the cannon barrel, is a pile of three cannon balls. To the left of the cuirass and musket is a national color of the Revolutionary War period, with cords and tassels, on a flagstaff with spearhead, similarly arranged above a mortar on a carriage, the mortar facing inward and in front of the lower portion of the color and obscuring the lower part of it; below the mortar are two bomb shells placed side by side.  Centered above the Phrygian cap is a rattlesnake holding in its mouth a scroll inscribed “This We’ll Defend.”  Centered below the cuirass are the Roman numerals         “MDCCLXXVIII.”

Symbolism

The Roman cuirass, placed at the center of the seal symbolizes strength and defense. Army implements, on the other hand, are represented by the sword, esponton, musket, bayonet, cannon, cannon balls, mortar, and mortar bombs.

Current use

Today, the seal is recognized as an embodiment of the U.S. Army’s ideals of loyalty, vigilance, perseverance, truth, courage, zeal, fortitude, remembrance determination, constancy, achievement, dignity, and honor.

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