Official state symbol Arizona Coat Of Arms Adopted 1912

Arizona State Coat of Arms

Official Coat of Arms of the State of Arizona, adopted 1912, showing a miner and rancher in the foreground, irrigated fields and a reservoir in the middle, and mountain peaks with a rising sun

Arizona State Coat of Arms

Official Coat Of Arms of Arizona

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Artsiom Dusau Reviewed by Artsiom Dusau
Overview

Arizona State Coat of Arms

The Arizona coat of arms shows a copper miner, a cattle rancher, irrigated fields fed by a reservoir, and a sunrise over mountain peaks, all under the motto Ditat Deus, Latin for 'God enriches.' The design was adopted on February 14, 1912, the day Arizona became the 48th and last of the contiguous states to enter the Union. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state coats of arms.
Adopted
1912
Status
Official state coat of arms

What Is the Arizona Coat of Arms?

The coat of arms appears on official state documents, government buildings, and public seals across Arizona. It shares the same design as the state seal, which was drafted at the Arizona Constitutional Convention in 1910 and adopted at statehood.

The design shows a miner with a pick and shovel on the right, a rancher with cattle on the left, and a desert valley with a reservoir and irrigated fields behind them. Mountain peaks and a rising sun fill the background. The motto Ditat Deus runs along the bottom.

The design does not use a divided shield, supporting animals, or decorative crest. It is a picture of the land and the people working it.

History and Origin of the Arizona Coat of Arms

Arizona had been a U.S. territory since 1863, but Congress delayed statehood for decades. When Arizona's Constitutional Convention finally met in Phoenix in 1910, delegates designed the full set of state symbols: constitution, motto, and emblem, two years before admission was approved by Congress.

The motto Ditat Deus had already been in use since 1864, when Arizona was still a territory. The convention carried it forward unchanged into the new state's coat of arms. By statehood, that motto had been part of Arizona's identity for 48 years.

The three industries in the design reflected exactly what was happening in Arizona at that moment. Copper mines in the south and east were producing more copper than anywhere else in the country. Cattle ranching had spread across the high desert after the railroads arrived in the 1880s. And Roosevelt Dam, the largest stone dam in the world at the time, had just been completed in 1911, turning the Salt River Valley into farmland.

The design was made official on February 14, 1912, when Arizona was admitted as the 48th and last of the contiguous states.

Meaning

Meaning of the Arizona Coat of Arms

The Arizona coat of arms answers one question: what is Arizona? The answer is three industries. A copper miner stands in the foreground with a pick and shovel. A cattle rancher stands beside him with his herd. Behind them, a reservoir feeds irrigated farmland in a desert valley, and mountain peaks rise against a sunrise sky. The motto Ditat Deus, Latin for 'God enriches,' runs along the bottom. Every element was chosen at Arizona's Constitutional Convention in 1910 and made official on February 14, 1912, the day Arizona became the 48th state.

Symbols on the Arizona Coat of Arms

The Arizona coat of arms organizes its imagery in three layers: workers in the foreground, farmland and water in the middle, and mountains with a rising sun at the back. Every element represents something real that was happening in Arizona in 1912.

Copper Miner
Symbol 01

Copper Miner

A miner holding a pick and shovel stands in the right foreground. He represents Arizona's copper mining industry, which by 1912 made Arizona the top copper-producing territory in the United States. Mines at Bisbee, Globe, Jerome, and Clifton were already among the most productive in the world when the design was made.

The designers did not put a gold prospector or a general miner on the emblem. They put an industrial copper miner, the kind who worked deep-shaft operations with large crews. That choice was deliberate: copper was Arizona's biggest industry, and the emblem says so directly.

Rancher and Cattle
Symbol 02

Rancher and Cattle

A rancher stands to the left with cattle behind him. Cattle ranching spread across Arizona's high desert grasslands in the late 1800s, after the railroads arrived and conflict with Apache communities ended. By 1912, ranching was one of Arizona's main industries, feeding markets across the country.

Placing the rancher alongside the miner in the foreground gives both industries equal standing. Neither is behind the other. The coat of arms treats copper and cattle as equals.

Reservoir and Irrigated Fields
Symbol 03

Reservoir and Irrigated Fields

Behind the two figures, irrigated farmland and a reservoir fill the middle of the design. Arizona is a desert. Without a reliable water supply, farming at scale was impossible. Roosevelt Dam, completed in 1911, was the largest stone dam in the world and held back the Salt River to turn the valley below into productive farmland.

The reservoir in the coat of arms was included deliberately. It had just been built. The designers were saying: water engineering is what makes Arizona possible, and it belongs on the official emblem of this state.

Mountain Peaks and Rising Sun
Symbol 04

Mountain Peaks and Rising Sun

Mountain peaks rise in the background with the sun appearing above them. The mountains represent Arizona's copper country in the south and east, where the ranges around Bisbee, Globe, and Jerome hold most of the state's mineral wealth.

The rising sun carries specific meaning for Arizona. Arizona was the last of the 48 contiguous states to enter the Union. A sun rising over new mountains on the day of statehood is not just decoration: it marks a real beginning, the final chapter of continental expansion.

Ditat Deus
Symbol 05

Ditat Deus

The motto Ditat Deus runs along the bottom of the design. It is Latin for 'God enriches.' It is the oldest motto in the American Southwest, used since 1864, when Arizona was still a territory, 48 years before statehood.

The phrase makes a specific claim about Arizona's wealth. The copper was in the mountains before the miners arrived. The grass grew in the desert before the ranchers came. The Salt River ran before anyone built a dam. Ditat Deus says that Arizona's richness comes from what the land was given, not only from what people did to it.

Meaning of the Arizona Coat of Arms

The coat of arms was designed to answer one question: what is Arizona? The answer is three industries. A miner, a rancher, and irrigated farmland tell you everything that built the state in 1912. No historical figures, no mythological symbols, no reference to politics. Just work and land.

The rising sun over the mountains adds something the workers alone cannot say. Arizona was last. Every other contiguous territory had already become a state. When Arizona entered the Union on February 14, 1912, the sun rising in its coat of arms carried real weight: this was a beginning, at the end of a long wait.

The motto Ditat Deus ties it together. The copper, the cattle, the river water: none of it was created by the people on the emblem. They found it, used it, and built a state from it. The coat of arms is an acknowledgment of that, and a statement that Arizona intended to keep doing it.

Arizona Coat of Arms Facts

Previous Versions of the Arizona Coat of Arms

Arizona's current coat of arms grew out of territorial seal designs rather than from an older state coat of arms. Wikimedia Commons preserves two useful territorial predecessors that show how Arizona's official emblem changed before statehood.

The 1912 state design kept the territorial motto Ditat Deus but replaced the deer-and-cactus territorial imagery with the miner, rancher, reservoir, and mountain sunrise scene adopted at the Constitutional Convention.

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