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The Mace is a symbol of the
authority of the South Carolina House of Representatives. The scepter-like
object rests in a rack at the front of the Speaker's podium whenever the House
is in session and is sometimes carried in processions. The Mace has been used by
South Carolina legislative bodies, with some interruptions, since it was made
for the Commons House of Assembly in 1756. It was crafted in London by Magdalen
Feline (d.1796). She was a master goldsmith who specialized in large pieces,
such as bowls and candlesticks, and had her establishment in Covent Garden. Four
other Feline maces are preserved in England.
South Carolina's Mace is approximately forty-eight inches long, weighs almost
eleven pounds, and is fashioned of silver burnished with gold. It is topped by a
symbolic royal crown. Around the cylindrical mace-head below the crown are four
circular decorative panels: the pictures from the colonial great seal of King
George II (with the king receiving a curtsy from a lady personifying the
province, and the royal coat of arms) and allegories of commerce and
agriculture. After the Revolutionary War, the Mace became the property of the
House of Representatives.
Since the Middle Ages ceremonial maces as emblems of authority have been
carried before high government, university, and church officials. The ceremonial
mace is descended from medieval weapons of war and from kingly scepters. South
Carolina's is the oldest mace in continuous use by any American state
legislature.
Heisser, David C. R. "Scepters of Academe: College and University
Maces of the Palmetto State." Carologue 10 (Winter 1994): 11-13,
24.
---. South Carolina's Mace and its Heritage. Edited by Sandra K.
McKinney. Columbia, S.C.: South Carolina House of Representatives, 1991.
Salley, Alexander S., Jr. The Mace of the House of Representatives of
the State of South Carolina. Columbia, S.C.: State Company, 1917.
David C. R. Heisser
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