Official state symbol Arkansas Coat Of Arms Adopted 1836

Arkansas State Coat of Arms

Official Coat of Arms of the State of Arkansas, adopted 1836, showing the Goddess of Liberty at the center flanked by the Sword of Justice and Angel of Mercy, with an eagle below and the motto Regnat Populus

Arkansas State Coat of Arms

Official Coat Of Arms of Arkansas

View original
Artsiom Dusau Reviewed by Artsiom Dusau
Overview

Arkansas State Coat of Arms

The Arkansas coat of arms shows the Goddess of Liberty at the center, flanked by the Sword of Justice and the Angel of Mercy, above an eagle and the motto Regnat Populus, Latin for 'The People Rule.' The design was drafted around 1820 by Samuel Calhoun Roane for the first territorial assembly and became the official state coat of arms when Arkansas was admitted to the Union on June 15, 1836, as the 25th state. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state coats of arms.
Adopted
1836
Status
Official state coat of arms

What Is the Arkansas Coat of Arms?

The coat of arms appears on official state documents, government buildings, and public correspondence across Arkansas. It is the same design as the state seal, created for the Arkansas Territory around 1820 and carried forward into statehood in 1836 without change.

The design centers on the Goddess of Liberty, a tall figure holding a pole topped with a Phrygian cap, a pointed hat that was a symbol of freedom in the ancient world and a popular emblem of democracy in the 1800s. On one side stands the Sword of Justice. On the other stands the Angel of Mercy. An eagle fills the base. A shield representing commerce and farming sits in the middle of the composition.

Arkansas is the only U.S. state with the exact motto Regnat Populus. The same motto has been on the emblem for more than 200 years.

History and Origin of the Arkansas Coat of Arms

Congress formed Arkansas Territory on July 4, 1819, splitting it from Missouri Territory. The first territorial assembly met almost immediately and needed an official seal. Samuel Calhoun Roane, the recording clerk of that assembly, designed one: a composition built around the Goddess of Liberty, the Sword of Justice, the Angel of Mercy, an eagle, and a central shield. It became the emblem of Arkansas from its very first days as a political entity.

When Arkansas was admitted to the Union on June 15, 1836, as the 25th state, the state constitution directed that Arkansas would keep using the territorial seal until the legislature chose a new one. No new seal was ever chosen. The frontier territory's emblem became the official coat of arms of the state, unchanged.

The design carried one mistake for nearly a century. The original Latin motto was written as Regnant Populi, plural forms of both the verb and the noun, when the correct singular form is Regnat Populus. The error entered the design when Roane drafted it and nobody caught it at statehood in 1836, during the Civil War in 1861, or through Reconstruction. It took 88 years. On May 24, 1907, Acting Governor Xenophon O. Pindall signed a bill that corrected the Latin and made the motto legally accurate for the first time.

The corrected motto has remained unchanged since 1907. Arkansas Code § 1-4-107 defines the current official design.

Meaning

Meaning of the Arkansas Coat of Arms

The Arkansas coat of arms makes a single political argument: the people are in charge. The Goddess of Liberty stands at the center holding a liberty pole topped with a Phrygian cap. The Sword of Justice flanks her on one side, the Angel of Mercy on the other. An eagle grounds the design in American identity at the base. The motto Regnat Populus, the only one of its kind among all U.S. states, says exactly what the figures show: The People Rule.

Symbols on the Arkansas Coat of Arms

Every figure on the Arkansas coat of arms was chosen to make the same point from a different direction: this is a self-governing republic, and the people hold the authority. Liberty, justice, mercy, national belonging, commerce, and farming all appear together in one composition.

Goddess of Liberty
Symbol 01

Goddess of Liberty

The Goddess of Liberty stands at the center of the design. She holds a liberty pole topped with a Phrygian cap, a pointed hat that slaves were given when freed in ancient Rome, and a symbol of political freedom during the American and French revolutions. Placing this figure at the very center of the coat of arms says that liberty is the core value of the state.

In 1820, that was a deliberate political statement. Arkansas was frontier territory, and the settlers who crossed the Mississippi to build it were asserting that they were free people, not subjects of any king or any distant establishment. The Goddess of Liberty was the clearest visual way to say that.

Sword of Justice
Symbol 02

Sword of Justice

The Sword of Justice stands on one side of the Goddess of Liberty. It represents the ability of government to enforce its laws. A government that cannot back up its rules is not a functioning government. The sword says that Arkansas's laws have real force behind them.

But the sword stands next to the Angel of Mercy, not alone. That pairing was intentional. The designers were saying that force without compassion is tyranny. You need both.

Angel of Mercy
Symbol 03

Angel of Mercy

The Angel of Mercy stands on the other side of the Goddess of Liberty, directly across from the Sword of Justice. Where the sword represents enforcement, the angel represents the obligation of government to treat people with compassion, not just with rules.

Together, the sword and the angel create a balance. Neither is dominant. That balance was a deliberate design choice in 1820: good government is not just about power, it is also about how that power is used.

Bald Eagle
Symbol 04

Bald Eagle

A bald eagle stands at the base of the coat of arms. The eagle is the national symbol of the United States, and its presence ties Arkansas to the American republic. This mattered in 1820 for a specific reason: Arkansas was carved from the Louisiana Purchase, land that had belonged to France until 1803. It had no British colonial history and no connection to the original thirteen colonies.

Putting the national eagle at the base of the emblem was a way of rooting Arkansas firmly in the American Union, even though it was a brand-new frontier territory with no colonial past.

Central Shield
Symbol 05

Central Shield

A shield sits at the center of the composition, showing scenes of river commerce and farming. In 1820, the Arkansas and Mississippi rivers were how everything moved: goods, people, and news all traveled by water. The commercial imagery on the shield reflects that reality.

The farming scenes represent the agricultural economy of early Arkansas, built on small family farms and larger plantation operations. The shield anchors the design in what Arkansas actually was in 1820, alongside the political ideas carried by the figures around it.

Regnat Populus
Symbol 06

Regnat Populus

The motto Regnat Populus runs along the bottom of the design. It is Latin for 'The People Rule.' Arkansas is the only U.S. state with this exact phrase as its motto. It states the core idea behind the whole design: political authority belongs to ordinary people, not to kings, nobles, or religious leaders.

For 88 years, the motto was printed with a grammar mistake: Regnant Populi instead of Regnat Populus. The plural forms made it mean something closer to 'some peoples rule' than 'the people rule.' Nobody corrected it until Acting Governor Xenophon O. Pindall signed a bill fixing the Latin on May 24, 1907. The motto has been accurate ever since.

Meaning of the Arkansas Coat of Arms

The Arkansas coat of arms was designed at the very beginning of the territory's existence, in 1820, by the first person who needed to create an official seal. Samuel Calhoun Roane built it around the idea that had brought settlers to the frontier in the first place: the right to govern themselves. Every figure on the coat of arms supports that idea.

The Goddess of Liberty says freedom is the center of everything. The Sword of Justice and the Angel of Mercy say that government must enforce its authority, but never without compassion. The eagle says Arkansas is part of the American republic. The shield says the economy is what makes that republic real day to day: rivers, trade, and farming.

The motto brings it all together in three words: Regnat Populus. The People Rule. No other state chose this phrase. Arkansas chose it first, in 1820, before it was even a state.

Arkansas Coat of Arms Facts

Previous Versions of the Arkansas Coat of Arms

The design has kept the same composition since around 1820: the Goddess of Liberty, the Sword of Justice, the Angel of Mercy, the eagle, the shield, and the motto. The only significant change in its entire history was the 1907 correction of the motto's Latin grammar, which changed the stated meaning without changing anything visible in the design.

The territorial version from around 1820 used the incorrect motto Regnant Populi. That version served as both the territorial seal and the state seal from 1836 until 1907. The corrected version, with Regnat Populus, has been in use since May 24, 1907, as defined in Arkansas Code § 1-4-107.

You Might Also Like