Official state symbol North Dakota Coat Of Arms Adopted 1889

North Dakota State Coat of Arms

Official Coat of Arms of the State of North Dakota, adopted 1889, showing a prairie tree surrounded by wheat bundles, a plow, an anvil and sledge, and an Indian rider pursuing a buffalo toward the setting sun, with 42 stars above

North Dakota State Coat of Arms

Official Coat Of Arms of North Dakota

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Artsiom Dusau Reviewed by Artsiom Dusau
Overview

North Dakota State Coat of Arms

The North Dakota coat of arms was adopted in 1889 at the Bismarck constitutional convention and centers on a single prairie tree surrounded by wheat bundles, farming tools, and an Indian rider chasing a buffalo toward the setting sun. Above the scene arc 42 stars, representing the number of states expected in the Union when the design was made. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state coats of arms.
Adopted
1889
Status
Official state coat of arms

What Is the North Dakota Coat of Arms?

Unlike most state coats of arms, North Dakota's does not use a traditional heraldic shield with supporters and a crest. Instead, the design is a scenic vignette: a landscape of the Northern Plains with specific objects placed around a central tree. The scene is set inside a circular frame, and the state motto runs along the inner border of the state seal version.

The coat of arms and the state seal share the same design. The state seal adds the text GREAT SEAL, STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, OCTOBER 1ST, and 1889 in a circular legend around the outside. The coat of arms appears without that legend when the heraldic image is used alone.

History and Origin of the North Dakota Coat of Arms

North Dakota's constitutional convention met in Bismarck in the summer of 1889 and adopted the coat of arms before President Benjamin Harrison proclaimed statehood. The design needed to be ready quickly: North Dakota and South Dakota were both completing their constitutions at the same time, racing to join the Union alongside Montana and Washington in the same year.

On November 2, 1889, Harrison signed the statehood proclamations for North Dakota and South Dakota on the same day. He deliberately shuffled the two documents before signing so that neither he nor anyone else in the room would know which state was admitted first. North Dakota is listed as the 39th state and South Dakota as the 40th by alphabetical convention, but the actual order of admission was never recorded.

The seal itself records October 1st, 1889, the date North Dakota voters approved the state constitution. The four states admitted in 1889 brought the total to 42, which is why 42 stars arch above the scene: the designers anticipated the full group of incoming states.

The motto was a deliberate political choice. Dakota Territory had used Webster's words since 1863, but with the word order scrambled. The 1889 constitutional convention restored Webster's exact phrasing. Many of the delegates were Union veterans who had settled the Northern Plains after the Civil War, and Webster's defense of federal union was not abstract to them.

Meaning

Meaning of the North Dakota Coat of Arms

The North Dakota coat of arms was designed in 1889 to capture two defining facts about the new state: the agricultural identity built by wheat farmers on the Northern Plains, and the founders' commitment to the American union after the Civil War. A lone prairie tree stands at the center of a scene that spans farming, trade, and frontier life against the open sky of the Great Plains. The setting sun and 42 stars mark the horizon and the future. The motto Liberty and Union, Now and Forever, One and Inseparable, drawn from Daniel Webster's 1830 Senate speech, placed North Dakota firmly on the side of permanent union from the moment of its founding.

Symbols on the North Dakota Coat of Arms

The North Dakota coat of arms builds its design from a prairie landscape with seven distinct elements: a tree, wheat, a plow, an anvil and sledge, a rider and buffalo scene, a setting sun, and 42 stars.

Prairie Tree and Wheat Bundles
Symbol 01

Prairie Tree and Wheat Bundles

A large tree stands at the center of the design. Three bundles of wheat are placed around its base. On the Northern Plains in 1889, a mature tree was a genuine landmark: the treeless expanse of the Great Plains meant that settlements were often identified by the rare groves or individual trees that marked water sources and shelter.

The wheat bundles at the tree's base represent the crop that defined early North Dakota. The Red River Valley in the eastern part of the state produced some of the highest wheat yields in the world during the 1880s. By 1889, wheat farming was the economic engine that had brought enough settlers to the territory to qualify for statehood.

Plow, Anvil, and Sledge
Symbol 02

Plow, Anvil, and Sledge

A plow appears on the left side of the central scene, representing the Homestead Act settlers who broke the Northern Plains sod beginning in the 1860s and accelerating through the 1880s. An anvil and sledge appear on the right side, representing the blacksmiths, mechanics, and tradespeople who kept the farming communities running.

The pairing of plow and anvil captures the two-part economy of the territorial period: the agricultural work that produced the grain and the mechanical labor that maintained the tools and supplied the settlements. Neither function worked without the other on the frontier.

Indian Rider Pursuing Buffalo
Symbol 03

Indian Rider Pursuing Buffalo

An Indian on horseback pursues a buffalo toward the setting sun in the background of the design. The official constitutional description includes this figure along with a bow crossed with three arrows. Together they acknowledge the Native and plains-hunting history of the region before and during American settlement.

At statehood in 1889, the territory was home to the Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Lakota, and Chippewa nations. The rider and buffalo scene is a generalized frontier-era image rather than a depiction of any specific tribe or event. It places the coat of arms in the Great Plains context that made North Dakota distinct from eastern states.

Setting Sun and Forty-Two Stars
Symbol 04

Setting Sun and Forty-Two Stars

The sun shown behind the central scene is a setting sun, not a sunrise. This detail is confirmed in the official constitutional description. A half circle of 42 stars arches above the tree.

The 42 stars represent the total number of states expected in the Union once all four western states were admitted in 1889: North Dakota (39th), South Dakota (40th), Montana (41st), and Washington (42nd). Because the order of admission was uncertain when the seal was designed, the stars count the full anticipated group rather than marking any single moment.

Liberty and Union, Now and Forever, One and Inseparable
Symbol 05

Liberty and Union, Now and Forever, One and Inseparable

The motto Liberty and Union, Now and Forever, One and Inseparable comes from the closing words of Daniel Webster's reply to Senator Robert Hayne of South Carolina on January 27, 1830. Webster was arguing that the United States was a permanent union, not a compact that individual states could leave at will. His speech is considered the most famous Senate address in American history.

At 13 words, it is the longest state motto in the United States. Dakota Territory had used Webster's words since 1863 but had scrambled the order. The 1889 convention restored the original phrasing, placing the emphasis as Webster intended: Liberty and Union, now and forever, ONE and inseparable.

Meaning of the North Dakota Coat of Arms

The prairie tree at the center of the design is not a generic symbol of growth. On the Great Plains in 1889, a tree meant water, shelter, and settlement. Placing one at the center of the state's coat of arms was a specific claim: that North Dakota was being transformed from open grassland into a place where people could put down roots.

The rider and buffalo in the background do not romanticize the frontier. They mark a before: the plains-hunting life that existed before American settlement arrived. The plow and anvil in the foreground mark the after. The design holds both without erasing either, because in 1889 neither was entirely in the past.

The Webster motto closes the argument. North Dakota's founders were men who had watched the Civil War test whether federal union was permanent. By putting Webster's exact words on the coat of arms, they stated their answer. The motto does not claim that North Dakota would always be prosperous or powerful; it claims only that it would always be part of the Union.

North Dakota Coat of Arms Facts

Previous Versions of the North Dakota Coat of Arms

The North Dakota coat of arms has retained its core composition since 1889. The tree, wheat bundles, plow, anvil and sledge, rider and buffalo, setting sun, 42 stars, and Webster motto all remained part of the design.

What changed over time was mostly rendering style. Historical printed seals show heavier black linework and simpler engraving, while modern official versions standardize the prairie scene in cleaner color and proportion.

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