Did You Know? North Carolina

Great Seal & Motto

Great Seal of North Carolina. Image credit: General Assembly of North Carolina.The Great Seal of the State of North Carolina is kept in the Governor’s Office and is used to make impressions upon official papers.

The state’s motto, Esse Quam Videri, may be translated, “To be rather than to seem.”

See how the Great Seal of North Carolina has changed over time.

Visit http://www.ncga.state.nc.us/ncgainfo/educational/StateSeal.html for a printable version of the Great Seal and Motto.

State Name & Nicknames

Tar Heel Banner. Image credit: N.C. Museum of History.In 1629 King Charles I of England “erected into a province” all the land from Albemarle Sound on the north to the St. John’s River on the south, which he directed should be called Carolana. The name derives from the word Carolus, the Latin form of Charles. His son, Charles II, changed the name to Carolina when he granted the territory to the Lords Proprietors in 1663.

When Carolina was divided in 1712, the southern part was called South Carolina and the northern part, or older settlement, North Carolina. From this came the nickname “the Old North State.” Principal products during the early history of North Carolina were tar, pitch, and turpentine, collectively known as naval stores, of which the colony was the leading producer. Tar was so important to the economy that it eventually gave rise to the nicknames “Tar Heels” and “Tar Heel State,” but it was not until after the Civil War that the terms came into widespread use. Today, the latter nickname is more often used more.

State Emblems

What

Emblem

Year Adopted

Berries

Strawberry and Blueberry

2001

Beverage

Milk

1987

Bird

Cardinal

1943

Boat

Shad

1987

Carnivorous Plant

Venus Flytrap

2005

Colors

Red and Blue

1945

Community Theater

Thalian Association

2007

Dances

Clogging and the Shag

2005

Dog

Plott Hound

1989

Fish

Channel Bass

1971

Flower

Dogwood

1941

Freshwater Trout

Southern Appalachian Brook Trout

2005

Fruit

Scuppernong Grape

2001

Insect

Honey Bee

1973

Language

English

1987

Mammal

Gray Squirrel

1969

Military Academy

Oak Ridge Military Academy

1991

Reptile

Eastern Box Turtle

1979

Rock

Granite

1979

Shell

Scotch Bonnet

1965

Stone

Emerald

1973

Tartan

Carolina Tartan

1991

Tree

Pine

1963

Vegetable

Sweet Potato

1995

Wildflower

Carolina Lily

2003

For more information about official state symbols, go to http://statelibrary.dcr.state.nc.us/NC/symbols/symbols.htm.

Tar Heel Toast

Here’s to the land of the long leaf pine,
The summer land where the sun doth shine,
Where the weak grow strong and the strong grow great,
Here’s to “Down Home,” the Old North State!

Extant Lighthouses

Lighthouse

Date

Location

Bald Head

1817/1818

Bald Head (Smith) Island

Bodie Island

1872

Bodie Island/Oregon Inlet

Cape Hatteras

1870

Lower Hatteras Island

Cape Lookout   
1859
Cape Lookout/Beaufort Inlet
Currituck Beach
1875
Corolla
Oak Island  
1958
Near Caswell Beach
Ocracoke
1823
Lower Ocracoke Island

* Extant = still in existence; not destroyed or lost

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Content created by the Research Branch, Office of Archives and History, North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources. Revised January 2009 by the North Carolina Museum of History. North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources, Treasure N.C. Culture North Carolina Museum of History