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Minnesota State Seal

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Minnesota state seal, 2024

The Minnesota state seal design chosen by a State Emblems Redesign Commission in December of 2023.

The original Great Seal of Minnesota was created by men who tied their fortunes to the progress (as they defined it) and settlement of the state, often at the expense of Native Americans. Starting in the late 1960s, critics of the seal argued that its imagery reflected an anti-Native American bias. In 2023, a State Emblems Redesign Commission chose a new design for the seal intended to better represent twenty-first-century Minnesota.

Whether pressed into wax, printed, or embossed onto paper, seals represent the legal authority of government bodies. The creation of Minnesota Territory in 1849, therefore, spurred a need for a seal to endorse the new territorial government’s documents. In the absence of an official seal, Territorial Governor Alexander Ramsey first used one of his own design—a sunburst surrounded by the motto, “Liberty, Law, Religion, and Education.” The Territorial Council approved a second version depicting a Native family offering a ceremonial pipe to a white visitor, symbolizing “the eternal friendship” between settlers and Native Americans. Fur trader and politician Henry M. Sibley commissioned four alternatives from Colonel John J. Abert, an Army engineer and draftsman.

Sibley solicited a watercolor painting of one of Abert’s options from the artist Seth Eastman. In it, a farmer pushes a plow while looking back at a Native American man on horseback, who rides away, lance in hand, towards a rising sun. A rifle and powderhorn rest against a nearby tree stump. The Falls of St. Anthony (Owamniyomni) cascade over a cliff in the background.

Ramsey liked Eastman’s painting but suggested replacing the tree stump and implements of “improvement” with a “teepee” to emphasize “Indian life.” Instead, Sibley added an ax and the motto, “Quo sursum velo videre.” Although somewhat garbled grammatically, the motto essentially meant, “I wish to see what is beyond.” This seal design became official in 1849. The following year, poet Mary Henderson Eastman, Seth Eastman’s wife, penned a poem called “The Seal of Minnesota” that spelled out the seal’s implied celebration of Manifest Destiny.

The territorial seal met official needs until Minnesota joined the Union in 1858. The state constitution awarded the right to create a new seal to the newly formed legislature. Both houses approved a design by late June. Sibley, by then the state’s governor, instead continued to use a modified version of the territorial seal. He flipped the tableau; the plowman now faced east, and the Native American horseman rode into the setting sun. Sibley also swapped the Latin motto for a French one: “L’Etoile du Nord,” meaning, “Star of the North.” Sibley’s unauthorized preemption of the legislature’s mandate raised some eyebrows, but his version received legislative approval in 1861.

By the 1960s, the Civil Rights Movement and American Indian Movement spurred a critical reevaluation of the seal. Concluding that it placed Native Americans in “a derogatory light” and illustrated “a dark part of our history,” the Minnesota Department of Human Rights called for its replacement in 1968. Such criticism led the Minnesota Secretary of State to promote a variation that replaced the Native American horseman with a mounted pioneer carrying a rifle.

Artistic variations, along with ongoing calls to replace the state seal by the Minnesota Intertribal Council and others, led to legislation affirming the seal’s design in the 1980s. State Senator Patricia Kronebusch introduced a bill formalizing the seal’s appearance. The description adhered closely to the original but contained new language intended to counter accusations that the seal was anti-Native American. The bill, which passed into law, decreed that the Native horseback rider faced “due south” instead of west, and specified that he “represents the great Indian heritage of Minnesota.” Claiming that critics had simply misinterpreted the designers’ original intention to celebrate co-existence, State Representative Timothy Sherman of Winona declared, “The whole matter was cleared up with one sentence.”

But was it? Starting in 1983, critics again called for reconsideration of Minnesota’s state seal and the flag that bore its image. In 2022, state senator and Lakota descendant Mary Kunesh and others asked for a new design that better represented the resilience and contributions of Native Americans in Minnesota. Others, including former Secretary of State Mary Kiffmeyer, argued for honoring tradition. In 2023, the state legislature established a thirteen-member State Emblems Redesign Commission and charged it with coming up with new designs for the state flag and seal by January 1, 2024, to go into effect on May 11, 2024. After reviewing nearly four hundred public submissions, the commission chose a new version featuring a red-eyed loon (Minnesota's state bird), wild rice, and a white five-pointed star. Above them are the Dakota words “Mni Sóta Makoce”: land of the sky-tinted water, or land where the waters reflect the skies.

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Becker, William M. “The Origin of the Minnesota State Flag: A Theory.” Minnesota History 53, no. 1 (Spring 1992): 2–8.
https://collections.mnhs.org/MNHistoryMagazine/articles/53/v53i01p002-008.pdf

Brown, Robert M. “The Great Seal of the State of Minnesota.” Minnesota History 33, no. 3 (Autumn 1952): 126–129. https://collections.mnhs.org/MNHistoryMagazine/articles/33/v33i03p126-129.pdf

Case, Martin. The Relentless Business of Treaties: How Indigenous Land Became US Property. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2018.

Folwell, William W. A History of Minnesota. Vols. 1 and 2. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1921.

Gille, Frank H. Encyclopedia of Minnesota. Vol. 1. Third ed. St. Clair Shores, MI: Somerset Publishers, 2000.

Horrigan, Brian. “Tales of the Territory: Minnesota 1849–1858 Final Script.” Minnesota Historical Society. Internal exhibit script draft, 2019.

Hutchins, Alandra. “State Seal.” CommonWealth blog, August 1, 2000.
https://commonwealthmagazine.org/uncategorized/state-seal

Manning, Bruce D. “A Short History of the Minnesota State Seal.” Unpublished research paper, October 2021.

Minnesotans for a Better Flag. “The Great Seals of Minnesota.”
https://newmnflag.org/about/minnesotaseals

Minnesota State Emblems Redesign Commission. “The New Official Flag and Great Seal.” Final report, January 1, 2024.
https://21588026.fs1.hubspotusercontent-na1.net/hubfs/21588026/State%20Emblems%20Redesign%20Commission/2023_SERC_Final_Report.pdf

Office of the Minnesota Secretary of State, Steve Simon. “State Seal.”
https://www.sos.state.mn.us/about-minnesota/state-symbols/state-seal

Alexander Ramsey and family personal records and governor’s papers, 1829–1965
Manuscripts Collection, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul
Description: Correspondence, diaries, real estate records, scrapbooks, school records and other materials documenting the career and family of Ramsey, a member of the US House (1844–1847) and Senate (1863–1875); Minnesota territorial (1849–1853) and state (1860–1863) governor; mayor of St. Paul, Minnesota (1855–1857); secretary of war (1879–1881); and chairman of the Utah Registration and Election Board (1882–1886).
http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/m0203.pdf

Henry H. Sibley papers, 1815–1932
Manuscripts Collection, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul
Description: See particularly Colonel Abert’s four pencil sketches of alternate designs of the Minnesota Territorial seal.
http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/00595.xml

Hess, Jeffrey A. “Minnesota Almanac.” Roots: Minnesota Almanac 13, no.1 (Fall 1984): 21–23.
https://www.leg.mn.gov/webcontent/leg/symbols/sealarticle.pdf

“The Territorial and State Seals of Minnesota.” Minnesota Territorial Pioneers.
https://www.mnterritorialpioneers.org/the-great-seal-of-mn

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Photograph of Minnesota's first state flag
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Minnesota state flag, ca. 1898
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Variation of the Great Seal of Minnesota
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Color version of the Minnesota state seal, 1983
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Color version of the Minnesota state seal, 2018
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Alternate color version of the Minnesota state seal
Minnesota State Seal on display
Minnesota State Seal on display

Turning Point

In 1858, Governor Henry H. Sibley preempts the Minnesota legislature's choice of a state seal by using his own version. His unauthorized move raises eyebrows, but the legislature ultimately approves Sibley's choice three years later.

Chronology

1849

The US Congress creates Minnesota Territory. Henry Sibley proposes a territorial seal based on a watercolor sketch by Seth Eastman.

1857

Delegates to the Minnesota state constitutional convention offer competing designs for an official state seal.

1858

Minnesota is admitted to the Union on May 11. Both houses of the state legislature select a design by Robert O. Sweeney. Instead of following the legislature’s recommendation, Governor Henry Sibley begins using a modified territorial seal.

1860

The Minnesota Attorney General determines that Sibley’s seal has become the official seal of Minnesota through usage.

1861

The legislature adopts Sibley’s design as the official seal of Minnesota.

1881

Following a fire at the Minnesota State Capitol, the die for the original seal is found in the street by Peter Bergsma. Bergsma takes the seal with him when he emigrates to England.

1893

Minneapolis resident Amelia Hyde Center designs a state flag that incorporates the Great Seal of Minnesota.

1901

Bergsma returns the original die to St. Paul resident William J. Dyer, who returns it to Minnesota.

1968

The Minnesota Board of Human Rights passes a resolution calling for the replacement of the Great Seal of Minnesota.

ca. 1970

An alternative version of the Minnesota seal, replacing the Native American horseman with a rifle-carrying pioneer, appears in courtrooms and on some official documents.

1983

The Minnesota State Legislature passes a law that slightly modifies the design and codifies the symbolism of the Minnesota seal.

2023

A State Emblems Redesign Commission chooses a new seal design featuring a loon, wild rice, a star, and the Dakota words “Mni Sóta Makoce” (land of the sky-tinted water, or land where the waters reflect the skies).