★Project details
• Craft: hand-carved
• Treatment: manual polishing
• Material: Beechwood, Water-based paint
• Weight: 500g, 1200g, 2600g
• Size: 10", 14", 20"
• Accessories: hanging buckle
The bald eagle has been the national bird of the United States since 1782 when it was placed with outspread wings on the Great Seal of our country. It appears in many government institutions and on official documents, making it the most pictured bird in all of America. The eagle appears on the president’s flag, the mace of the House of Representatives, military insignia, and billions of one-dollar bills.
The bald eagle first appeared as an American symbol on a Massachusetts copper cent coined in 1776. Since then it has appeared on the reverse side of many U.S. coins, notably the silver dollar, half a dollar, and a quarter, as well as the gold coins which were
christened the eagle, half eagle, quarter eagle, and double eagle For six years, the members of Congress held a bitter dispute over what the national emblem should be. It wasn’t until 1789 that the bald eagle was finally chosen to represent the new nation.
Bald eagles, like other eagles worldwide, had been seen by many as symbols of strength, courage, freedom, and immortality for generations. And, unlike other eagles, the bald eagle was indigenous only to North