English was nevertheless the language of the hated Colonialists, against whom the American people successfully revolted. It wouldn't have been unthinkable that the fledgling United States decided to grant itself another language after its founding. Naturally, anything is possible; the fact is that a vote for an official language never took place on neither a federal nor a state level.
However, like all legends, this one has a core of truth to it: on January 9, 1794, a group of German immigrants from Virginia submitted a petition to the House of Representatives demanding that laws be translated into German. This would help immigrants who hadn't yet learned English to become acclimated faster in their new homeland, however the petition was voted down in the House of Representatives 42 to 41. The German-born, bilingual Speaker of the House, Frederick Augustus Conrad Muehlenberg, who himself abstained from the vote, declared afterwards "the faster the Germans become Americans, the better it will be."