Politics Although there is
no official reptile of the United States, some of the state reptiles have had previous appearances in American politics. In particular, the timber rattlesnake (West Virginia) has had close association with American independence. A United States flag with a timber rattlesnake predates the stars and stripes flag. In 1775,
Christopher Gadsden developed an emblem with a coiled rattlesnake with the words "Don't tread on me" on a yellow background. Versions of the
Gadsden flag were used by the Continental Navy's first commodore, early
marines, and
minutemen and regular
army units in Virginia, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts. The timber rattlesnake is also famous for appearing on the
First Navy Jack, a red and white striped flag. However, although traditionally believed to have been used by the
Continental Navy, recent scholarship asserts that the snake on that jack was a late 19th-century invention. Nevertheless, in 1975, the
U.S. Navy brought back the traditional (snake-showing) jack for the service's bicentennial. After 1980, the oldest commissioned vessel in the U.S. Navy was designated to use the traditional jack. Since 2002, in response to the
9/11 terrorist attacks, the U.S. Navy has all its ships using the First Navy Jack. West Virginia named the timber rattlesnake as its state reptile in 2008. In contrast to the positive symbology of the rattlesnake, some political use has been for criticism. The snapping turtle (New York) was the central feature of a famous American
political cartoon. Published in 1808 in
Federalist protest of the
Jeffersonian Embargo Act of 1807, the cartoon showed a snapping turtle, jaws locked fiercely to the rear of an American trader, who was attempting to carry a barrel of goods onto a British ship. The trader was seen whimsically uttering the words "Oh! this cursed Ograbme" (the backwards spelling of "embargo"). Also, during the
Great Depression, the
gopher tortoise (Georgia, Florida's official tortoise) was known as the "Hoover chicken" (a sarcastic reference to President
Herbert Hoover) because it was eaten by poor people out of work.
Athletics Three states chose reptiles that were already prominently associated with a major university in the state: • Florida honored the American alligator in 1987, but the
Gators have titled the
University of Florida's teams since 1911. In that year, a printer made a spur-of-the-moment decision to print an alligator emblem on a shipment of the schools football pennants; the mascot stuck, perhaps because the team captain's nickname was Gator. • Maryland honored the diamondback terrapin in 1994, but the mascot of Maryland's
main state university in College Park has been the
Terrapins or "Terps" since 1932. In that year, the football coach, who had encountered the animal as a boy near the
Chesapeake Bay, proposed it as a mascot to oppose the Wildcats, Tigers, and such of enemy teams. • Texas honored the Texas horned lizard in 1993, but private
Texas Christian University has had the associated mascot the
Horned Frog since 1896. According to legend, the football team identified with the lizards found on the practice field as the athletes and reptiles were similarly scrappy. The college founder's son,
Addison Clark Jr., a faculty member and the initiator of the football team, had been fascinated by the creatures. By 1897, the lizard appeared as a logo on the front of the school yearbook, which Clark had also started and was managing. ==Biology==