Don't Tread on Me

American revolutionary slogan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Don't Tread on Me, usually stylized fully in uppercase letters without an apostrophe (DONT TREAD ON ME), is a political slogan dating to the American Revolution.

Gadsden flag
First Navy Jack
South Carolina Navy ensign
Culpeper Minutemen flag
The reverse side of Alabama's 1861 state flag with the Latin phrase "noli me tangere", which translates to "touch me not"

Origins

It is an alternative English translation to the Latin phrase Noli me tangere. Historically, Revolutionary-Era Americans used it in reference to the Gadsden flag—with its derivation "don't tread on me"[1]—and other representations dating to the American Revolutionary War.[2]

Uses

United States military mottoes

In the United States military, the phrase is the motto of the US Army's oldest infantry regiment, the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard), located at Fort Myer, Virginia. "Don't tread on me" is also used in the First Navy Jack of United States Navy. It is also the motto of the US Army's 4th Infantry Regiment, located in Hohenfels, Germany. The Royal Air Force adopted this motto for the No. 103 (Bomber) Squadron.

Flags

Music

Sports

Other uses

References

See also

Further reading

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