Kansas State Coat of Arms
Kansas State Coat of Arms
Official Coat Of Arms of Kansas
Kansas State Coat of Arms
- Adopted
- 1861
- Status
- Official state coat of arms
What Is the Kansas Coat of Arms?
The Kansas coat of arms is the heraldic image at the center of the state seal: a landscape shield under 34 stars, with the motto Ad Astra per Aspera above. It shows the same frontier panorama that appears inside the Great Seal of Kansas.
The design was approved at the Wyandotte Constitutional Convention in July 1859 and became official with Kansas statehood on January 29, 1861. Thirty-four stars arch above the landscape, identifying Kansas as the 34th state in the Union.
History and Origin of the Kansas Coat of Arms
The Kansas coat of arms originated at the Wyandotte Constitutional Convention, which met in July 1859 to draft the state constitution. Delegates approved the shield design and the motto as part of the founding documents. The design has not changed since statehood.
John J. Ingalls, a Massachusetts-born lawyer who had moved to Kansas and later served as a United States Senator, proposed the motto Ad Astra per Aspera at the convention. The phrase, Latin for 'To the Stars Through Difficulties,' was a direct acknowledgment of the violent territorial period known as Bleeding Kansas, during which pro-slavery and anti-slavery factions fought for control of the territory throughout the 1850s.
Kansas became the 34th state on January 29, 1861, when President James Buchanan signed the statehood bill. The coat of arms became the official emblem of the new state at that moment. Kansas was the last state admitted before the Civil War; within months the war began, and the 34 stars on the coat of arms recorded a Union already fracturing.
Before statehood, Kansas Territory used a separate territorial seal, also featuring a pioneer and Ceres as supporters, with the motto Populi Voce Nata — 'Born of the popular will.' The Wyandotte Convention replaced both the shield design and the motto when it drafted the state design in 1859.
Meaning of the Kansas Coat of Arms
The Kansas coat of arms presents the state at its founding moment: a frontier landscape under 34 stars with a rising sun, plowing farmer, river steamboat, westward wagon train, and distant bison hunt. Every element points to 1861 — the year Kansas entered the Union as the 34th state — and to the agricultural future its founders expected. The motto above, Ad Astra per Aspera, does not hide what came before: the decade of violent conflict over slavery in Kansas Territory known as Bleeding Kansas.
Symbols on the Kansas Coat of Arms
The Kansas coat of arms organizes a frontier panorama on the shield, with stars and the state motto completing the design. Each element was chosen to represent Kansas at the moment of statehood in 1861.
The Frontier Shield
The shield shows a panoramic landscape of Kansas in 1861. In the foreground, a farmer plows with two horses and a log cabin stands behind him. In the middle distance, a steamboat moves along the Kansas River. On the right, a wagon train heads westward. In the far upper distance, two Native Americans on horseback pursue a bison herd.
Thirty-four stars arch above the scene. Kansas was the 34th state admitted to the Union on January 29, 1861. A rising sun appears on the eastern horizon, placing the entire landscape at the start of a new day — and, by implication, at the beginning of Kansas's history as a state.
Rising Sun
A sun rises on the eastern horizon above the frontier landscape. The rising sun places the scene at dawn and represents the beginning of Kansas's history as a state.
In the statehood context of 1861, the sunrise also suggested hope after the violence of Bleeding Kansas. The design points forward rather than backward.
Farmer and Plow
In the foreground, a farmer plows with a team of horses beside a log cabin. This is the clearest statement in the design that Kansas expected agriculture to define its future.
The farmer represented free-labor settlement on the plains. In the political context of the late 1850s, that image mattered because Kansas had just emerged from the conflict over whether it would enter the Union as a free or slave state.
Steamboat, Wagon Train, and Bison Hunt
The middle and far distance combine three scenes into one frontier panorama: a steamboat on the Kansas River, a wagon train moving west, and a bison hunt on the plains. Together they show commerce, migration, and the older Indigenous and wildlife world the founders believed was receding.
This layered landscape makes the Kansas coat of arms one of the most narrative state emblems in the country. It does not isolate one symbol at a time; it shows several histories happening in the same frame.
34 Stars
Thirty-four stars arch above the shield, identifying Kansas as the 34th state admitted to the Union on January 29, 1861. The stars act as a timestamp for the exact moment of statehood.
Kansas was the last state admitted before the Civil War. The 34 stars therefore record a Union that was already beginning to fracture.
Ad Astra per Aspera
The motto Ad Astra per Aspera appears below the shield. It is Latin for 'To the Stars Through Difficulties.' John J. Ingalls proposed it at the Wyandotte Constitutional Convention in 1859. The 'difficulties' referred directly to the Bleeding Kansas period — the violent conflict over slavery in Kansas Territory that preceded statehood.
Ad Astra per Aspera is also Kansas's official state motto, adopted as part of the same founding documents that established the coat of arms in 1861.
Meaning of the Kansas Coat of Arms
The Kansas coat of arms was designed in 1859 to describe what the founders expected Kansas to become: an agricultural state built by free settlers on the Great Plains. The landscape on the shield shows farming, commerce, and westward movement as the three pillars of that future.
The design is not abstract heraldry. It is a frontier scene arranged as a political statement. A farmer breaking prairie sod stands in the foreground, trade moves by river behind him, and migration pushes westward across the plains.
The 34 stars anchor the design to a specific historical moment: Kansas entering the Union on January 29, 1861, as the newest state. The coat of arms captures Kansas at its beginning, before the Civil War that followed statehood by only four months.
Kansas Coat of Arms Facts
Previous Versions of the Kansas Coat of Arms
The Kansas state design has remained visually stable since statehood in 1861, but historical illustrated printings vary in engraving style, lettering, and the exact treatment of the landscape. The best-known nineteenth-century rendering is the 1876 illustrated coat of arms published by Henry Mitchell.
The modern official state emblem is more commonly reproduced through the state seal, which preserves the same frontier panorama, the 34 stars, and the motto Ad Astra per Aspera.
Illustrated Historical Print
A nineteenth-century illustrated rendering published by Henry Mitchell in 1876. It preserves the established Kansas statehood design while showing the engraving and coloring style common in printed state-arm collections of the period.
Current Standard
The modern official state emblem as preserved in contemporary seal artwork. It keeps the same frontier panorama, the 34 stars, and the motto Ad Astra per Aspera that Kansas adopted at statehood.
Quick Answers
What does the Kansas coat of arms show?
When was the Kansas coat of arms adopted?
What does Ad Astra per Aspera mean?
What do the 34 stars on the Kansas coat of arms mean?
Is the Kansas coat of arms different from the state seal?
Sources
- Seal of Kansas — Wikipedia
- Kansas Historical Society
- Netstate — Kansas State Seal
- Kansas Statutes Annotated § 75-202
- Wikimedia Commons — Kansas state coat of arms (illustrated, 1876)
Kansas State Symbols
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