Official state symbol Idaho Coat Of Arms Adopted 1891

Idaho State Coat of Arms

Official Coat of Arms of the State of Idaho, adopted 1891, showing a woman figure on the left and a miner on the right flanking a shield, with an elk head above and sheaves of grain below

Idaho State Coat of Arms

Official Coat Of Arms of Idaho

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Artsiom Dusau Reviewed by Artsiom Dusau
Overview

Idaho State Coat of Arms

The Idaho coat of arms was designed by Emma Edwards Green, an art teacher who won a state competition in 1891 and became the only woman in U.S. history to design a state seal. The design shows a woman representing liberty and equality standing opposite a miner, with a shield displaying Idaho's forests, rivers, and mountains between them. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state coats of arms.
Adopted
1891
Status
Official state coat of arms

What Is the Idaho Coat of Arms?

The coat of arms appears on the Idaho state seal, used on official documents, government correspondence, and public buildings throughout the state. Idaho adopted the design on March 14, 1891 — less than a year after achieving statehood on July 3, 1890.

The design was revised once, in 1957, when the Idaho Legislature commissioned Paul B. Evans and the Caxton Printers to update the artwork while preserving the original composition. The 1891 arrangement of figures, shield, and motto has remained unchanged since adoption.

History and Origin of the Idaho Coat of Arms

When Idaho became a state in 1890, the new Legislature needed an official seal. The state held a design competition. Emma Edwards Green, an art teacher who had recently moved to Boise, entered and won. Governor Norman B. Willey awarded her a $100 honorarium, and the Legislature formally adopted her design on March 14, 1891.

Emma Edwards Green was the daughter of John Cummins Edwards, a former Governor of Missouri. She had studied art in New York before settling in Boise. Her design for the Idaho seal made her the only woman in U.S. history to design a state seal — a distinction that has not changed in over 130 years.

In 1957, the Idaho Legislature's 34th session authorized a revision of the seal. Paul B. Evans and the Caxton Printers updated the artwork to improve the rendering, but the composition — the two figures, the shield, the elk head, and the motto — remained exactly as Green had drawn it in 1891.

Before statehood, Idaho had used two territorial seals. The first was organized in 1863 when Idaho Territory was formed. A second design was presented by Governor Caleb Lyon to the Idaho Territorial Legislature on January 11, 1866, and used until statehood in 1890.

Meaning

Meaning of the Idaho Coat of Arms

The Idaho coat of arms places a woman and a miner side by side at the same height — a deliberate statement of equality designed decades before women could vote. The woman represents justice, liberty, and equality. The miner represents the industry that shaped early Idaho. The shield between them shows the Snake River, a pine tree, a farmer plowing, and the mountains, covering the resources the state was built on.

Symbols on the Idaho Coat of Arms

The Idaho coat of arms is built around a central shield flanked by two figures, with an elk head above and agricultural symbols below. Each element represents a specific aspect of Idaho's economy, landscape, or civic values.

The Woman Figure
Symbol 01

The Woman Figure

A woman dressed in white stands on the left side of the shield. She holds a set of scales in one hand, representing justice, and a spear topped with a liberty cap in the other, representing freedom. The syringa — Idaho's state flower — grows at her feet. Wheat grows to the height of her shoulder.

According to the designer's own account, the woman represents justice, liberty, and equality. Emma Edwards Green placed her at exactly the same height as the miner on the right — a deliberate choice to show equality between women and men at a time when women did not yet have the right to vote.

The Miner
Symbol 02

The Miner

A miner stands on the right side of the shield, holding a pick and shovel and standing beside a ledge of rock. He represents the mining industry, which was Idaho's primary economic activity at the time of statehood in 1890.

Idaho's silver and lead mines made it one of the leading mining states in the country in the late nineteenth century. The miner's tools are the visual record of that era.

The Shield
Symbol 03

The Shield

The shield shows the Snake River — described in official sources as Idaho's 'stream of great majesty' — running through a landscape of mountains. A pine tree appears on the shield, representing Idaho's vast timber resources. A farmer plowing a field appears in the lower portion, representing agriculture.

The combination of river, forest, mountain, and farmland on a single shield reflects the geographic range of Idaho at statehood: a state with extractive industries in the mountains and growing agricultural settlements in the valleys.

The Elk Head
Symbol 04

The Elk Head

An elk head rises above the shield. According to official sources, the elk represents Idaho's commitment to wildlife protection — specifically, Idaho had enacted laws protecting elk and moose at the time the seal was designed.

Sheaf of Grain and Cornucopias
Symbol 05

Sheaf of Grain and Cornucopias

Below the shield sit a sheaf of grain and two cornucopias (horns of plenty) filled with fruit and vegetables. These represent Idaho's agricultural and horticultural resources. The cornucopias were a standard heraldic shorthand for agricultural abundance and appear here to show the fertility of Idaho's farmland.

Esto Perpetua
Symbol 06

Esto Perpetua

The motto Esto Perpetua appears on a banner on the coat of arms. It is Latin for 'Let it be perpetual.' The motto expresses a hope for the permanence of the state and its institutions.

A five-pointed star appears above the shield alongside the motto. According to official sources, the star signifies Idaho as a new light in the constellation of states — a new state joining the Union.

Meaning of the Idaho Coat of Arms

The two figures at the center of the design tell a specific story about Idaho in 1891. Mining dominated the economy. Emma Edwards Green chose to pair the miner not with another male figure of industry but with a woman — placed at the same height, carrying symbols of law and freedom.

The equality of the two figures was intentional. Green designed the seal before the Nineteenth Amendment (1920) gave women the right to vote. The matching height was her way of inscribing equality into official Idaho imagery while the law had not yet caught up.

The shield connects that civic statement to the physical state: the Snake River, the pine forests, the mountains, the farmland. The elk above and the grain below frame the design with the wildlife and crops Idaho was working to protect and build.

Idaho Coat of Arms Facts

Previous Versions of the Idaho Coat of Arms

Idaho used two territorial seals before statehood. The first was created in 1863 when Idaho Territory was officially organized. A second design was presented by Governor Caleb Lyon to the Idaho Territorial Legislature on January 11, 1866, and used until statehood.

In 1876, cartographer Henry Mitchell included an Idaho territorial coat of arms in his publication State Arms of the Union, based on the 1866 territorial seal. None of these territorial designs had the same legal standing as the official state seal adopted in 1891.

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