The Sierra Club Seal
1892-1894:  The first Sierra Club seal was created in 1892. It depicts a giant  Sequoiadendron giganteum centered between the letters S and C. Below  this is the Latin phrase Altiora Peto, meaning "I seek high places."  Around and above the tree, motto, and letters was a circle with the  words "Seal of the Sierra Club. Two five-pointed stars separated these  words from "Incorporated 1892." This seal remained in use until 1894.

1894-1939:  After much dissatisfaction with this first logo, alternatives were  solicited in 1893. The Club adopted the second seal, designed by San  Francisco architect Willis Polk, in Spring 1894. A less diagrammatic  Sequoiadendron gigantea is in the foreground, with Yosemite's Half Dome  behind it, and larger mountains in the distance.

1940-1941:  The Polk logo remained in use until the February 1940 issue of the  Sierra Club Bulletin, when a much modified version appeared in the  masthead with a four-ring outline, new typeface and repositioned  lettering.

1941-1946:  In the February 1941 issue of the Sierra Club Bulletin, the rings  changed from four to three, but the Board minutes from June 15, 1941,  noted that "the old form of the seal [the Willis Polk version] … was  still to be considered as the official form of such seal."

1946-1993:  In December 1946, the seal changed again in the context of a redesign  of the Sierra Club Bulletin. The basic design elements remained the  same, but the words Sierra Club were in bold face, lines appeared in the  sky, and a single line surrounded the center.

1985:  A very stylized logo put in a brief appearance on Sierra Club  letterhead, having been designed under the direction of then Executive  Director Douglas Wheeler.

1986:  At its meeting in February 1986, the Board of Directors adopted a  Standing Rule that said: The official design of the Sierra Club seal  shall continue to be the attached version designed in 1941, depicting a  Sequoiadendron giganteum, Half Dome and other Sierra Nevada peaks, with  the words "Sierra Club" in bold serif type, and the date "MDCCCXCII" on a  banner, all surrounded by a solid elliptical border. Only this design,  or the earlier version of the same design created by Willis Polk about  1894, may be used as the Sierra Club logo. No modifications of this logo  or other designs shall be used in place of the above logo with specific  approval of the Board of Directors. (This resolution was incorrect  about the design date of the logo currently being used in the Bulletin,  and the 1941 should have read 1946.)

  1992: During the celebration of the Sierra Club's Centennial, a special  logo, encorporating elements of the Willis Polk design, was made  available.

1993-  1998: A new logo was designed in 1993, and it approved by the Board of  Directors at its meeting in February 1994, when it modified the relevant  Standing Rule to say: The official design of the Sierra Club seal shall  be the version designed in 1993 by Sharon Williams and Ellen Reilly,  depicting a Sequoiadendron giganteum, Half Dome with mountain peaks in  the background, with an elliptical border containing the words "Sierra  Club" at the top and "Founded 1892" at the bottom in ITC Garamond type.  An official reference copy of this design shall be maintained by the  Executive Director at the Principal Office of the Club. Only this  design, or the original version of the same design created by Willis  Polk about 1894, may be used as the Sierra Club logo. No modifications  of this logo or other designs shall be used in place of the above logo  without specific approval of the Board of Directors.

1998-present:  - At its July 1998 meeting, the Board adopted a new logo, modifying the  Standing Rule to read as follows: The official design of the Sierra  Club seal shall be the version designed in 1998 by John Bielenberg,  depicting a Sequoiadendron giganteum and Half Dome with a mountain peak  in the background, and with an elliptical border. The words "Sierra  Club" and "Founded 1892" are underneath in Trajan type. An official  reference copy of this design shall be maintained by the Executive  Director at the Principal Office of the Club. Only this design may be  used as the Sierra Club logo. No modifications of this logo or other  designs shall be used in place of the above logo without specific  approval of the Board of Directors or its designee.
 
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