Official state symbol Indiana Coat Of Arms Adopted 1816

Indiana State Coat of Arms

Official Coat of Arms of the State of Indiana, showing a woodsman felling a sycamore tree while a buffalo leaps over a log against a background of hills and a rising sun

Indiana State Coat of Arms

Official Coat Of Arms of Indiana

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Overview

Indiana State Coat of Arms

The Indiana coat of arms shows a woodsman felling a sycamore tree while a buffalo jumps a log and disappears into the distance — a scene first proposed on November 22, 1816, weeks before Indiana became a state. The design captures frontier Indiana in a single image: the settlers arriving, the wilderness retreating. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state coats of arms.
Adopted
1816
Status
Official state coat of arms

What Is the Indiana Coat of Arms?

The coat of arms appears on the Indiana state seal, used on official documents, government buildings, and state correspondence. The outer ring reads 'Seal of the State of Indiana' with the date 1816. Tulip poplar leaves and diamond shapes decorate the border — the tulip poplar is Indiana's state tree.

The design is one of the oldest state seal concepts in the country, tracing its visual idea to the Indiana Territory period before statehood. The Indiana General Assembly formally standardized the legal description of the seal in 1963, making the dimensions, details, and arrangement official under Indiana Code.

History and Origin of the Indiana Coat of Arms

Versions of the pioneer-and-buffalo scene appeared on official Indiana papers as early as 1801, during the Indiana Territory period. The territory was governed by William Henry Harrison, who would later become the ninth President of the United States. The image of a settler clearing land while a bison retreats was already in use before Indiana pursued statehood.

On November 22, 1816, state representative Davis Floyd formally proposed the seal design to the first Indiana Legislature. His description was direct: 'A forest and a woodman felling a tree, a buffalo leaving the forest and fleeing through the plain to a distant forest, and sun in the west.' Indiana became a state on December 11, 1816, and the seal was adopted alongside it.

The design was used for nearly 150 years without a legally precise description. In 1963, Representative Taylor I. Morris introduced legislation to standardize the seal under Indiana law. The General Assembly passed the bill, establishing the exact proportions and details that are now codified in Indiana Code IC 1-2-4-1.

The 1963 statute described the sun as 'setting.' Historians and researchers noted in 2004 that the original 1816 description said 'sun in the west' but that the intent was likely a rising sun, symbolizing Indiana's future rather than its end. Proposals to correct the statute were introduced in 2004 and 2005 but were not enacted. The text still reads 'setting sun' today.

Meaning

Meaning of the Indiana Coat of Arms

The Indiana coat of arms tells a story in a single image. A woodsman swings an ax at a sycamore tree while a buffalo jumps a fallen log and retreats toward the forest. The sun sits on the horizon behind them. When state representative Davis Floyd proposed this scene in November 1816, it captured exactly what Indiana was at that moment: a place where the frontier was ending and settlement was beginning.

Symbols on the Indiana Coat of Arms

The Indiana coat of arms shows a frontier scene with five main elements: a woodsman, a sycamore tree, a buffalo, a sun, and a background of hills and forest. Together they form one of the most narrative state seals in the country.

The Woodsman
Symbol 01

The Woodsman

A woodsman stands in the foreground holding an ax, mid-swing against a sycamore tree. The tree shows the marks of his work. He faces left, toward the open plain where the buffalo is fleeing.

The woodsman represents the pioneers and early settlers who cleared land and built farms across Indiana. He is the human presence in a design that is otherwise all wilderness and sky.

The Buffalo
Symbol 02

The Buffalo

A buffalo — specifically a bison — leaps over a fallen log in the middle ground, moving away from the woodsman toward a distant tree line. Davis Floyd's original 1816 description called it 'a buffalo leaving the forest and fleeing through the plain to a distant forest.'

The buffalo moving away from the settler is a direct visual statement: the frontier wildlife is retreating as settlement advances. The bison does not stand its ground; it runs. The design makes no attempt to hide what westward expansion meant for the animals that lived there.

The Sycamore Trees
Symbol 03

The Sycamore Trees

Two sycamore trees are visible in the design — one being felled by the woodsman, one standing near it. Sycamores were among the largest and most recognizable trees of the Indiana frontier landscape. Their presence is specific: this is not a generic forest, but an Indiana forest.

The Sun
Symbol 04

The Sun

The sun appears on the horizon in the background, its rays spreading above the hills. The 1963 statute that standardized the seal describes it as a 'setting sun.' Historians have since argued that the original designers in 1816 almost certainly meant a rising sun — a symbol of Indiana's future as a new state — not a setting one.

Davis Floyd's original description placed the sun 'in the west,' which could indicate either setting or simply a western position. The discrepancy has never been formally resolved in Indiana law.

The Hills and Background
Symbol 05

The Hills and Background

Three hills rise in the background behind the main figures. A tree line marks the edge of the distant forest toward which the buffalo is retreating. The landscape is open in the middle — the plain across which the buffalo runs — with forest on either side.

Meaning of the Indiana Coat of Arms

The Indiana coat of arms does not use symbols arranged decoratively. It shows an event happening in real time. The woodsman is mid-swing. The buffalo is mid-jump. The sun is mid-rise. This is a scene, not a collection of emblems.

What the scene shows is a moment of replacement. The buffalo, which populated the Indiana landscape before European settlement, is leaving. The woodsman, who represents the settlers arriving from the east, is converting forest to farmland. The sun marks the moment as a beginning — the start of Indiana as a settled state.

The choice to show both the settler and the fleeing animal in the same frame is unusual for a state seal. Indiana's design does not erase the wildlife; it shows it leaving. That specificity makes the coat of arms one of the most historically honest images in American state heraldry.

Indiana Coat of Arms Facts

Previous Versions of the Indiana Coat of Arms

The pioneer-and-buffalo scene is one of the most consistent state seal designs in the country — the core imagery has not changed since 1816. What changed over time was the precision of the rendering and the legal description.

During the Indiana Territory period (1800–1816), unofficial versions of the seal appeared on territorial documents. These early versions used the same general scene but varied in their specific details. No single standardized version existed until the 1963 legislation.

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