Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Indiana state vector

Indiana state vector. Download Free Indiana state flag and Indiana state seal vector .eps file, also .png image files. To commemorate the state′s 1916 centennial anniversary, the Indiana General Assembly issued a resolution to adopt a state flag. At the request of the General Assembly, a contest was sponsored by the Indiana Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution to design a flag to serve as the official state banner.



Indiana state vector


Indiana state flag vector


Indiana state flag vector Indiana state flag vector


 


As an incentive to increase the number of submissions, the contest offered the winner a one hundred dollar cash prize. More than two hundred submissions were received and examined by the Society before a winner was selected. The entry created by Paul Hadley of Mooresville, Indiana, was ultimately chosen as the winner of the contest and the cash prize. On May 31, 1917, the Indiana state flag was chosen as the state’s official banner. The General Assembly made only one change to Hadley’s original design, they added the word Indiana, in a crescent shape, over the top of the torch. The state banner was later renamed the state’s flag in a new statute passed in 1955 that also standardized the dimensions of the flag. Indiana state vector.


Indiana state seal vector


Indiana state seal vector Indiana state seal vector


 









The Seal of the State of Indiana is used by the Governor of Indiana to certify official documents. The seal has gone through several revisions since the region was a part of the Northwest Territory. It is likely the original seal, which is similar to the current one, was created by William Henry Harrison during his administration of the Indiana Territory. The current design of the seal was standardized by the Indiana General Assembly in 1963. The state seal is maintained by the Governor of Indiana. It is used to certify the authenticity of official state documents. The seal is placed on departmental reports, bills the Governor signs into law, and official communications from the Governor to other high-ranking office holders. The seal is also used on all commissions granted by the state as proof of the commission’s authority.


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