Official state symbol Connecticut Coat Of Arms Adopted 1931

Connecticut State Coat of Arms

Official Coat of Arms of the State of Connecticut, showing three grapevines with clusters of grapes on a white shield, with the motto Qui transtulit sustinet on a scroll below

Connecticut State Coat of Arms

Official Coat Of Arms of Connecticut

View original
Artsiom Dusau Reviewed by Artsiom Dusau
Overview

Connecticut State Coat of Arms

The Connecticut coat of arms carries a design that dates to the seventeenth century, when Connecticut was still an English colony. Three grapevines stand on a white shield, paired with the Latin motto Qui transtulit sustinet, meaning He who transplanted still sustains, a phrase Connecticut has carried for nearly four centuries. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state coats of arms.
Adopted
1931
Status
Official state coat of arms

What Is the Connecticut Coat of Arms?

The Connecticut coat of arms is the central design of the state seal and appears on official state documents, government buildings, and publications. It is one of the simplest heraldic designs of any American state: a plain white shield bearing three identical grapevines, each with leaves and clusters of grapes, with no crest or supporters.

A scroll beneath the shield carries the Latin motto Qui transtulit sustinet. The design has no complex arrangement of quarters or figures. Its clarity comes from its directness: three vines, a white field, and a four-word phrase that has identified Connecticut since the colonial era.

History and Origin of the Connecticut Coat of Arms

The grapevine design traces to the founding of Connecticut Colony in the 1630s. Puritan settlers from Massachusetts founded Windsor in 1633, Wethersfield in 1634, and Hartford in 1636, when the Reverend Thomas Hooker led a group from Newtown, Massachusetts, to the Connecticut River valley. These three towns became the original core of Connecticut Colony.

In 1639, representatives from Hartford, Windsor, and Wethersfield adopted the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut, which historians often identify as one of the first written constitutions in America. The three-town union that produced the Fundamental Orders is reflected in the three grapevines on the coat of arms.

In 1662, King Charles II granted Connecticut Colony a royal charter, one of the most liberal colonial charters in British North America. Connecticut colonists were so protective of this charter that, according to tradition, they hid it inside a hollow oak tree when the royal governor tried to seize it in 1687. That tree became known as the Charter Oak.

When Connecticut ratified the United States Constitution on January 9, 1788, becoming the fifth state, it carried its colonial coat of arms into statehood. The grapevine design and motto, which had represented the colony for over a century, became the emblem of the new state.

Meaning

Meaning of the Connecticut Coat of Arms

The Connecticut coat of arms shows three grapevines on a white shield, one vine for each of the three towns that formed Connecticut Colony in the 1630s. The motto beneath the shield, Qui transtulit sustinet, is Latin for He who transplanted still sustains. Together the vines and the motto describe the Puritan settlers who left England for a new land, and the belief that God had moved them there and would keep them there.

Symbols on the Connecticut Coat of Arms

The Connecticut coat of arms uses a small number of elements, each chosen to describe the colony's founding and the faith of its settlers.

Three Grapevines
Symbol 01

Three Grapevines

Three grapevines, each bearing clusters of grapes, stand in a row on the white shield. The vines represent the three original towns of Connecticut Colony: Hartford, Windsor, and Wethersfield. These three communities adopted the Fundamental Orders of 1639 together, and their union became the foundation of the state.

The choice of grapevines connects to the motto's imagery of transplanting. A vine taken from its original soil and replanted in new ground must take root and grow in an unfamiliar place, which is exactly what the Puritan settlers were doing. The image works both as an agricultural symbol and as a description of the colonial experience.

White Shield
Symbol 02

White Shield

The field of the shield is white, known in heraldry as argent. The white background gives the three vines maximum clarity against the field. The absence of additional color or decoration beyond the vines reflects the simplicity that the Puritan settlers valued.

Qui Transtulit Sustinet
Symbol 03

Qui Transtulit Sustinet

The motto Qui transtulit sustinet runs on a scroll beneath the shield. It is Latin for He who transplanted still sustains. The subject of the sentence is God: God transplanted the Puritan settlers from England to Connecticut, and God continues to sustain them in their new home.

The phrase echoes Psalm 80:8, in which God is described as moving a vine from Egypt and planting it in a new land. That scriptural image is the same one shown by the grapevines on the shield. The motto and the visual design reinforce the same idea from two directions.

Meaning of the Connecticut Coat of Arms

The coat of arms works on two levels. On a practical level, the three vines stand for the three towns that built Connecticut Colony. On a religious level, the vines and the motto together describe the Puritan settlers as a people transplanted by God from England to the New World, trusting that God would sustain them in an unfamiliar place.

The motto ties the coat of arms to a specific belief: that the colonists' migration was a divine act, not simply an economic or political decision. This belief was central to Puritan identity in the 1630s, and Connecticut placed it at the center of its official symbol.

The simplicity of the design is part of its meaning. Three vines and four Latin words contain everything the founders wanted to say about who Connecticut was and where it came from. No other element was needed.

Connecticut Coat of Arms Facts

Previous Versions of the Connecticut Coat of Arms

The three-grapevine design has been Connecticut's symbol since the colonial era, with the same core elements, three vines, a white field, and the motto Qui transtulit sustinet, carried forward from the colony into the state. Minor refinements to the rendering of the vines and the lettering of the motto have occurred over time, but no official action has changed the fundamental design.

You Might Also Like