Official state symbol Nebraska Coat Of Arms Adopted 1867

Nebraska State Coat of Arms

Official Coat of Arms of the State of Nebraska showing a shield with a blacksmith at an anvil, a steamboat on the Missouri River, a locomotive, the Rocky Mountains, and wheat sheaves

Nebraska State Coat of Arms

Official Coat Of Arms of Nebraska

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Overview

Nebraska State Coat of Arms

The Nebraska coat of arms packs the settlement era onto a single shield: a blacksmith at an anvil, a steamboat on the Missouri River, a locomotive, wheat sheaves, and the Rocky Mountains. The design was first adopted in 1867 when Nebraska became the 37th state on March 1 of that year. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state coats of arms.
Adopted
1867
Status
Official state coat of arms

What Is the Nebraska Coat of Arms?

The coat of arms is the shield device from Nebraska's great seal. The shield arranges several scenes from the settlement era side by side: a craftsman at work, a river with a steamboat, a locomotive, farmland, and mountains behind a rising sun. The images cover the major industries and geography of early Nebraska in a single frame.

Below the shield, the state motto Equality Before the Law appears on a scroll. The coat of arms appears on official state documents and in government buildings. It is a separate element from the circular great seal, which surrounds the shield design with a text border.

History and Origin of the Nebraska Coat of Arms

The Nebraska Territory was created on May 30, 1854, by the Kansas-Nebraska Act. The territory operated under its own seal for thirteen years before Congress admitted Nebraska to the Union. Nebraska became the 37th state on March 1, 1867.

The first Nebraska state legislature adopted the state seal, which includes the coat of arms design, in 1867. The designers chose symbols that reflected Nebraska's economy and landscape at the time of statehood: skilled labor, river and rail transportation, farming, and the western mountain horizon.

The design has remained essentially unchanged since 1867. Nebraska's coat of arms is one of the more densely illustrated state arms in the country, placing multiple distinct scenes on a single shield.

Meaning

Meaning of the Nebraska Coat of Arms

The Nebraska coat of arms places the tools and transportation of the settlement era on a single shield. The blacksmith at the anvil stands for the labor that built the state. The steamboat on the Missouri River and the locomotive represent the two forms of transportation that carried settlers into Nebraska Territory and goods out of it. The wheat sheaves show the farming economy that followed the early settlement years. The Rocky Mountains in the background locate the design in the landscape of the American West. The motto Equality Before the Law closes the design with the legal principle that shaped the post-Civil War era.

Symbols on the Nebraska Coat of Arms

The Nebraska coat of arms arranges several distinct scenes across the shield. Each element refers to Nebraska's geography or economy at the time of statehood in 1867.

The Blacksmith
Symbol 01

The Blacksmith

In the foreground of the shield, a blacksmith stands at an anvil with a hammer raised. The blacksmith is the most prominent figure on the coat of arms. According to state sources, the figure represents the mechanical arts and the role of skilled labor in building Nebraska.

The Steamboat on the Missouri River
Symbol 02

The Steamboat on the Missouri River

A steamboat moves along the Missouri River in the middle ground of the shield. The Missouri River forms Nebraska's entire eastern border and was the primary route for early settlers and trade goods heading into the territory. Before the railroads arrived, steamboats were the main way of moving people and cargo along the Missouri.

The Locomotive
Symbol 03

The Locomotive

A locomotive appears on the shield alongside the steamboat. The Union Pacific Railroad broke ground in Omaha on December 2, 1863, four years before Nebraska achieved statehood. Omaha was the eastern terminus of the transcontinental railroad, which was completed in 1869.

Wheat Sheaves
Symbol 04

Wheat Sheaves

Sheaves of wheat appear on the shield. Farming became Nebraska's dominant industry in the decades following statehood. The wheat sheaves show the agricultural foundation that made permanent settlement across the state possible.

The Rocky Mountains
Symbol 05

The Rocky Mountains

Mountains appear in the background of the shield with the sun rising behind them. Nebraska's western edge meets the foothills of the Rocky Mountains. The mountains on the coat of arms place the state within the broader landscape of the American West.

Equality Before the Law
Symbol 06

Equality Before the Law

The motto Equality Before the Law appears below the shield on a scroll. Nebraska adopted the phrase as its official state motto at statehood in 1867. The motto reflects the legal principles emphasized during the post-Civil War period when Nebraska was admitted to the Union.

Meaning of the Nebraska Coat of Arms

The Nebraska coat of arms places the tools and transportation of the settlement era on one shield. The blacksmith at the anvil stands for the labor that built the state. The steamboat on the Missouri River and the locomotive represent the two forms of transportation that carried settlers into Nebraska Territory and goods out of it.

The wheat sheaves show the farming economy that followed the early settlement years. The Rocky Mountains in the background locate the design in the landscape of the American West. The motto Equality Before the Law adds the legal principle that shaped the post-Civil War era into which Nebraska was born.

Nebraska Coat of Arms Facts

Previous Versions of the Nebraska Coat of Arms

The Nebraska Territory operated from 1854 to 1867 with its own territorial seal. When Nebraska achieved statehood in 1867, the first legislature adopted the current coat of arms design. No separate officially adopted territorial coat of arms image has been identified that predates the 1867 state design.

A useful historical rendering does survive in an 1891 published state illustration. It shows the same blacksmith, transport, wheat, and mountain scene in nineteenth-century print form rather than as a modern digital vector.

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