:''This article is about the state motto. For other uses, see
Live Free or Die (disambiguation).''
"'Live Free or Die'" is the official motto of
New Hampshire, adopted by the
General Court in 1945. It is probably the best-known of all
state mottos, partly because it speaks to an aggressive
independence inherent in the
American dream, and partly because of its contrast to the mild sentiments usually found in such mottos.
The phrase comes from a toast written by General
John Stark on
July 31,
1809. Poor health forced Stark, New Hampshire's most famous soldier of the
American Revolutionary War, to decline an invitation to an anniversary reunion of the
Battle of Bennington and to send his toast by letter:
:''Live free or die: Death is not the worst of evils.''
The motto was enacted at the same time as the
state emblem, on which it appears.
Legal battle
In 1971, the General Court, the state legislature of New Hampshire, mandated that the phrase appear on all non-commercial
license plates, replacing "Scenic." In 1977, the
U.S. Supreme Court ruled in the case of ''Wooley v. Maynard'', 430 U.S. 705, that New Hampshire could not prosecute motorists who chose to hide part or all of the motto.
That ruling came about because George Maynard, a
Jehovah's Witness, cut off "or die" from his plate. He found the phrase offensive because according to his faith, Jehovah's Kingdom offers everlasting life and it would be contrary to that belief to die for the state (i.e., an earthly government). He was convicted of breaking a state law against altering license plates. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6–3 in his favor, saying the law required people to "use their private property as a 'mobile billboard' for the State's ideological message," and that the state's interest did not outweigh free speech principles. ''"We conclude that the State of New Hampshire may not require appellees to display the state motto upon their vehicle license plates; and, accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the District Court."''
[1]
Similar mottos

''Live Free or Die'', as seen in Edinburgh, Scotland.
A possible source of such mottoes is
Patrick Henry's famed
March 23,
1775 speech to the
House of Burgesses (the legislative body of the
Virginia colony), which contained the following phrase: ''Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and
slavery? Forbid it, Almighty
God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, '
give me liberty or give me death!'''
A medal struck at
Matthew Boulton's
Soho Mint, as tokens of exchange for the Paris firm of Monneron Freres, 1791-92, has on its obverse the motto ''Vivre libres ou mourir'' (''Live free or die'' in French).
National mottos
★ "''Ελευθερια η Θανατος''" (''
Eleutheria i thanatos'' — "
Liberty or
Death") is the national motto of
Greece and comes from the motto of the
Greek War of Independence (
1821–
1830).
★ "''Слобода или смрт''" - "Sloboda ili Smrt" - "Freedom or Death" is the national motto of the
Republic of Macedonia and is derived from the
Macedonian uprising.
★ "''Libertad o Muerte''" - "Liberty or Death" is the national motto of
Uruguay
Other uses
Unix
''Live Free or Die'' is popular among
Unix users, a group which also cherishes its independence. The popularity dates to the 1980s, when
Armando Stettner of
Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) had a set of Unix license plates printed up and given away at a
Usenix conference. They were modeled on the license plates in New Hampshire, where DEC's Unix Engineering Group (UEG) was headquartered. Stettner lived in New Hampshire at the time and owned a Toyota Celica Supra with the vanity license plate UNIX.
When DEC came out with their own Unix version,
Ultrix, they followed Stettner's lead and printed up a legion of Ultrix plates that were distributed at trade shows.
In popular culture
★ ''Live Free or Die'' is the title of a 1990 novel by New Hampshire writer
Ernest Hebert.
★ In the early 2000s,
Avengers comics had a storyline called "Live Kree or Die". It featured the alien race called the
Kree.
★ On the animated TV series
Futurama, the motto of the "Neutral planet" is "Live Free or Don't".
★ "Live Free or Die" is the name of Vancouver punk group D.O.A.'s 2004 album.
★ "
Live Free or Die" is the title of the sixth episode of the sixth season of the TV show ''
The Sopranos''. It concerns a character who hides from mobsters in New Hampshire and who at one point stares in sadness at the motto on the license plate.
★ ''
Live Free or Die Hard'' is the fourth ''
Die Hard'' movie, released on
June 27,
2007. The movie prints were shipped to cinemas under the name "New Hampshire".
External links
★
State law creating motto
★
The History of the UNIX License Plate according to
The Open Group
★ The motto is one of the
101 Reasons cited by the
Free State Project for their choice of New Hampshire as the targeted "Free State"
★
Boston Globe article about the use of the motto in popular culture