September 26, 1863: The First West Virginia Legislature Adopts State Motto and Great Seal

On September 26, 1863, the first West Virginia Legislature adopted our state motto and great seal. Both were the brainchild of Joseph H. Diss Debar of Doddridge County. For the state motto, Debar suggested a Latin phrase, “Montani Semper Liberi,” which translates as “Mountaineers are always free.” This phrase had been long used by Swiss immigrants, like Debar, to express their independent spirit.  

The state seal, which remains unchanged to this day, was also Debar’s concept. He wanted to symbolize our state’s principal pursuits and resources in 1863, including agriculture, timbering, mining, and blacksmithing. The seal also features two crossed rifles resting on a cap of liberty, indicating that freedom and liberty were won, and will be maintained, by the force of arms.

The lesser-known reverse of the seal, which is also the governor’s official seal, displays a wooded mountain with a representation of the Preston County Tray Run Viaduct, a train, and a factory, fronted by a river with boats, a derrick, a shed, and a meadow with sheep and cattle grazing. The reverse includes another Latin phrase, which means ‘‘Freedom and Loyalty.’’

March 6, 1820: Great Seal Designer Joseph H. Diss Debar Born in France

  Joseph H. Diss Debar was born in France on March 6, 1820. He immigrated to the United States at age 22. On his voyage across the Atlantic, he happened to meet and become friends with author Charles Dickens.

Diss Debar eventually wound up in Parkersburg as a land agent. For 29 years, he lived in either Parkersburg or the Doddridge County community of St. Clara, which he founded for German-Swiss immigrants. During this time, he sketched numerous people and scenes, providing some of our best images of life on the western Virginia frontier.

In 1863, he was commissioned to design the Great Seal of West Virginia. To symbolize the state’s economic potential, he drew a farmer and a miner standing beside a rock with the state’s founding date. His state seal remains one of the most iconic and recognizable images from West Virginia history. Then, for seven years, as commissioner of immigration, he recruited immigrant workers and landowners to the state.

Diss Debar died in Philadelphia in 1905 at age 84. Today, many of his historic drawings are in the collections of the West Virginia State Archives.

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