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  1. Live Free or Die, a 2004 album by Vancouver punk group D.O.A. Bill Morrissey wrote a song titled "Live Free or Die" about the irony of a prisoner serving time in New Hampshire's jails and hand-stamping license plates with the state motto.

  2. Nov 11, 2021 · Vivre libre ou mourir (“Live Free or Die”) was a popular motto of the French Revolution, perhaps inspired by this passage in Louis-Sebastian Mercier’s 1771 French novel, The Year2440: “Choose then, man! Be happy or miserable; if yet it be in thy power to choose: fear tyranny, detest slavery, arm thyself, live free, or die!”

  3. Jun 9, 2021 · Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible. Forever Wild (Full ...

  4. Sep 10, 2021 · The New Hampshire State Motto is unique and very unforgettable and one that NH residents take great pride in. General John Stark introduced live Free or Die in 1809. It became the official New Hampshire state motto after the introduction of the anniversary reunion.

  5. Nov 2, 2017 · And when the U.S. Supreme Court takes up a controversial free speech case next month, the Maynards' decades-old legal battle over the state’s ubiquitous “Live Free or Die” will be back in...

  6. May 30, 2024 · Live Free or Die. The phrase is seen on our license plates, and you've definitely heard someone say it to justify a behavior, habit, or freedom of speech. But where did this saying come from?

  7. Sep 27, 2019 · The New Hampshire House vote to adopt “Live Free or Die” was lopsided: 179 to 85. The Senate adopted the same motto unanimously the same day.

  8. "Live Free or Die" is the official motto of the U.S. state of New Hampshire, adopted by the state in 1945. The phrase comes from a toast written by General John Stark on July 31, 1809. Stark was New Hampshire's most famous soldier of the American Revolutionary War.

  9. In 1969, when New Hampshire officials decided to put the state’s motto – “live free or die” – on its license plates, many citizens viewed the act as an endorsement of the deeply unpopular war being waged in Vietnam and protested by covering up or altering the motto.

  10. New Hampshires official state motto “Live Free or Die” was adopted in 1945 as the second World War was coming to an end. “Live Free Or Die,” is a quote from a toast by General John Stark who is New Hampshire’s most distinguished hero of the Revolutionary War.

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