# 4276 - 2008 42c Flags of Our Nation, American Samoa
Flags of Our Nation
American Samoa
Issue Date: June 14, 2008
City: Washington, DC
For its first 50 years as an American territory, the only official flag that was flown in American Samoa was the United States Flag. In the 1950s, the Office of the Governor requested that citizens find ideas for a flag design. After the designs were reviewed, the flag was selected with help from the Institute of Heraldry of the U.S. Army.
The eagle on the American Samoa Flag represents the territory’s relationship with the United States. The eagle, a symbol of power, protection, and friendship with the U.S., is seen clutching two items that are significant to the Samoan culture. In one talon it holds the uatogi, a war club symbolic of power. In the other talon it carries the fue, a ritual stick that symbolizes the wisdom of the councils.
The American Samoa Flag stamp is part of the 2008 Flags of Our Nation Series.
American Samoa Ceded To The U.S.
American Samoa’s earliest inhabitants arrived at the islands west of Samoa as early as 1500 BC. Samoa’s Manu’a Islands have one of the oldest recorded histories in Polynesia.
By the time of World War II, American Samoa was an important military base and staging point for the Navy’s offensive strategies in the Pacific. During the war, Samoan men age 14 and older were trained in combat and also served as medical personnel, code personnel, and ship mechanics. When the war was over, the US Department of the Interior created Organic Act 4500 in an attempt to incorporate American Samoa. Samoan chiefs, led by Tuiasosopo Mariota, argued against it and the act was defeated in the US Congress.
Flags of Our Nation
American Samoa
Issue Date: June 14, 2008
City: Washington, DC
For its first 50 years as an American territory, the only official flag that was flown in American Samoa was the United States Flag. In the 1950s, the Office of the Governor requested that citizens find ideas for a flag design. After the designs were reviewed, the flag was selected with help from the Institute of Heraldry of the U.S. Army.
The eagle on the American Samoa Flag represents the territory’s relationship with the United States. The eagle, a symbol of power, protection, and friendship with the U.S., is seen clutching two items that are significant to the Samoan culture. In one talon it holds the uatogi, a war club symbolic of power. In the other talon it carries the fue, a ritual stick that symbolizes the wisdom of the councils.
The American Samoa Flag stamp is part of the 2008 Flags of Our Nation Series.
American Samoa Ceded To The U.S.
American Samoa’s earliest inhabitants arrived at the islands west of Samoa as early as 1500 BC. Samoa’s Manu’a Islands have one of the oldest recorded histories in Polynesia.
By the time of World War II, American Samoa was an important military base and staging point for the Navy’s offensive strategies in the Pacific. During the war, Samoan men age 14 and older were trained in combat and also served as medical personnel, code personnel, and ship mechanics. When the war was over, the US Department of the Interior created Organic Act 4500 in an attempt to incorporate American Samoa. Samoan chiefs, led by Tuiasosopo Mariota, argued against it and the act was defeated in the US Congress.