Button
George Washington's inauguration as president of the United States inspired the manufacture of commemorative clothing buttons with patriotic designs. On this button, the central device of Washington's initials surrounded by the salute "Long Live the President" is enclosed within a chain of thirteen links representing the states. The "linked states" design was first used to represent American unity on currency issued by the Continental Congress in 1776. The combination of Washington's cipher and the chain of states visually testifies to the importance of a strong executive for the nation's government.
See also the "linked states" design of "A Display of the United States of America," SC-4.
Published ReferencesJames C. Rees, Treasures from Mount Vernon: George Washington Revealed (Mount Vernon, Virginia: Mount Vernon Ladies Association, 1999), 112.
J. Harold Cobb, George Washington Inaugural Buttons and Medalets ed. Kirk Mitchell and Elmer A. Piercy (Private printing, 2005), 18. http://moscow2.pld.com/kirk/CobbGW/index.html (general reference)
Russell Rulau and George Fuld, Medallic Portraits of Washington (Iola, Wisconsin: Krause Publications, Inc., 1999), 245. (general reference)
Edmund B. Sullivan, American Political Badges and Medalets (Lawrence, Massachusetts: Quarterman Publications, Inc., 1981), 1. (general reference)
Alphaeus Albert, Washington Historical Buttons (Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1949), 42. (general reference)
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