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Source of E PLURIBUS UNUM

Title page of the Gentlemen's Magazine (detail)

The Latin motto "E Pluribus Unum" appeared on the title page of the annual volume of the Gentleman's Magazine or Monthly Intelligencer – next to a drawing of a hand holding a bouquet of flowers.

The Gentleman's Magazine had been published monthly in London since 1731 and was well known to literate Americans in the 1770s. The annual volume with "E Pluribus Unum" at the bottom of its title page brought together the magazine's twelve editions from that year. It provided readers with lots of useful information.

Title page of the Gentlemen's Magazine (detail)

Contents of the Gentlemen's Magazine (title page)

America was originally likened to a bouquet of different flowers,
where unity and individuality coexisted –
not a "melting pot" that blended everyone together.

E Pluribus Unum Out of Many, One Melting pot

See symbols of unity on Colonial Currency
that inspired and reflected the motto E Pluribus Unum.

Back to E Pluribus Unum.

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