South Carolina State Seal
After the Declaration of Independence, a design for the arms of an official
great seal, prepared by William Henry Drayton, a member of the Privy Council,
was accepted, together with a design for the reverse, said to have been designed
by Arthur Middleton.
Both designs were turned over to an engraver in Charles Town and engraved as a
great seal, which was used by Pres. Rutledge for the first time on May 22, 1777.
The Seal was made in form of a circle, four inches in diameter, and four-tenths
of an inch thick.
Both the arms and reverse symbolize the battle fought on June 28, 1776, between the unnamed, and unfinished fort at Sullivan's Island (now Fort Moultrie), and the British Fleet.
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Courtesy of State of South Carolina
Image by Art Explosion 600,000.

