Official state symbol Oklahoma Coat Of Arms Adopted 1907

Oklahoma State Coat of Arms

Official Coat of Arms of the State of Oklahoma showing a five-pointed star with the seals of the Five Civilized Tribes and a central handshake between a Native American warrior and a frontiersman

Oklahoma State Coat of Arms

Official Coat Of Arms of Oklahoma

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Legal Reference: Oklahoma Statutes Title 25, § 91
Artsiom Dusau Reviewed by Artsiom Dusau
Overview

Oklahoma State Coat of Arms

The Oklahoma coat of arms centers on a five-pointed star where each point holds the seal of one of the Five Civilized Tribes: Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole. At the star's center, a Native American warrior and a frontiersman shake hands, the central image of a design adopted when Oklahoma became the 46th state on November 16, 1907. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state coats of arms.
Adopted
1907
Status
Official state coat of arms
Legislation
Oklahoma Statutes Title 25, § 91

What Is the Oklahoma Coat of Arms?

Oklahoma's coat of arms is the same design as the Great Seal of Oklahoma, defined in Oklahoma Statutes Title 25, § 91. The central image is a large five-pointed star. Each of its five points contains the official seal of one of the Five Civilized Tribes, and the star's center shows a handshake between a Native American warrior and a frontiersman.

Forty-six small stars ring the outer border of the design. The state motto, Labor Omnia Vincit, appears on the seal's outer ring. Unlike most state coats of arms, Oklahoma's does not use a divided heraldic shield. The five-pointed star is the structural core, and the five tribal seals inside it make the design unlike any other in the United States.

History and Origin of the Oklahoma Coat of Arms

Oklahoma's coat of arms was adopted on November 16, 1907, the same day President Theodore Roosevelt signed the proclamation admitting Oklahoma to the Union as the 46th state. The design was prepared by the constitutional convention that met in Guthrie in 1906 and 1907. The convention's task was unusual: it had to create a state emblem that represented two distinct territories with two very different populations.

The eastern half of the new state had been Indian Territory, governed for decades by the Five Civilized Tribes after the federal government forced their removal from the southeastern United States in the 1830s. The western half, Oklahoma Territory, had been opened to non-Native settlement in the Land Run of April 22, 1889. The two territories operated under separate administrations for nearly two decades before Congress directed their merger under the Enabling Act of 1906.

The constitutional convention's answer to the design problem was the five-pointed star. Each point could hold one tribal seal, placing all five nations visually within the new state's emblem on equal terms. The handshake at the center made the merger's intent explicit. The 46 border stars fixed the moment: this was the 46th state, admitted in 1907.

The design has not changed since adoption. No legislature has altered the composition, the tribal seals, the handshake, or the border count.

Meaning

Meaning of the Oklahoma Coat of Arms

The Oklahoma coat of arms is built around a single structural argument: two peoples and two territories became one state. A five-pointed star holds the seal of each of the Five Civilized Tribes in its points, and a Native American warrior and a frontiersman shake hands at its center. Forty-six stars around the border fix the design to a specific moment: the day Oklahoma entered the Union as the 46th state on November 16, 1907.

Symbols on the Oklahoma Coat of Arms

Oklahoma's coat of arms packs its history into a small number of precisely chosen images. Each element refers to a specific political or geographic fact about how the state came to exist.

Five-Pointed Star
Symbol 01

Five-Pointed Star

The large five-pointed star at the center of Oklahoma's coat of arms is structural, not decorative. Each of its five points holds the seal of one of the Five Civilized Tribes, so the star's geometry determines how many tribal seals appear. Five points for five nations is the underlying logic of the design.

The star shape also evokes the national tradition of the American flag. Using the same form associated with the United States placed the tribal nations within the American framework, reflecting the political reality of 1907: each tribe had already signed treaties with the federal government and operated under federal oversight.

Seals of the Five Civilized Tribes
Symbol 02

Seals of the Five Civilized Tribes

Each point of the central star contains the official seal of one of the Five Civilized Tribes: the Cherokee Nation, the Choctaw Nation, the Chickasaw Nation, the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, and the Seminole Nation. These five nations had governed the eastern half of Oklahoma as Indian Territory since their forced removal from the southeastern United States in the 1830s.

Placing each tribal seal inside a point of the state's central star acknowledged the tribes' prior presence and self-governance on the land that became Oklahoma. The Five Civilized Tribes had built their own schools, courts, and governments in Indian Territory before any state existed. Their seals appear as co-founders of Oklahoma.

Native American Warrior and Frontiersman
Symbol 03

Native American Warrior and Frontiersman

At the core of the five-pointed star, a Native American warrior in traditional dress and a frontiersman in settler clothing extend their right hands to each other. The handshake is the design's most direct statement: Oklahoma was formed from the meeting of two distinct cultures on the same land.

The image references the specific political merger that created Oklahoma: the joining of Indian Territory and Oklahoma Territory in 1907. No other U.S. state coat of arms or seal uses a handshake as its central image.

46 Border Stars
Symbol 04

46 Border Stars

Forty-six small stars ring the outer border of the coat of arms. They represent the number of states in the Union at the moment Oklahoma was admitted on November 16, 1907. Utah had joined in 1896 as the 45th state; Oklahoma followed as the 46th.

The count also marks how long the wait was. The Land Run of April 22, 1889 had opened Oklahoma Territory to settlement eighteen years before statehood arrived. Seven other states were admitted in that interval, raising the count from 38 to 45 before Oklahoma joined.

Labor Omnia Vincit
Symbol 05

Labor Omnia Vincit

The motto Labor Omnia Vincit is Latin for Labor conquers all things. It is Oklahoma's state motto and appears on the outer ring of the coat of arms. The phrase comes from Virgil's Georgics, Book I, a poem celebrating agricultural work.

The motto fit a state defined by farming and ranching. Both the settler communities of Oklahoma Territory and the tribal communities of Indian Territory depended on agriculture, so the phrase applied to both populations without controversy.

Meaning of the Oklahoma Coat of Arms

The Oklahoma coat of arms solves a design problem that no other state faced. It had to represent two territories, five sovereign tribal nations, and a settler population that had only arrived eighteen years before statehood. The five-pointed star solved the first problem by giving each tribal nation a dedicated point. The handshake solved the second by placing both cultures at the exact center.

The 46 border stars do what most border decorations do not: they carry a specific count. Each star is a state, and the count stops at 46 because that is where Oklahoma entered. The design is dated by its own geometry.

The motto at the outer edge, Labor Omnia Vincit, connects both populations through the one thing they shared: the work of building farms and communities on the southern plains. It is a modest claim for an emblem that carries an unusually complicated history.

Oklahoma Coat of Arms Facts

Previous Versions of the Oklahoma Coat of Arms

Oklahoma's coat of arms has retained its original composition since adoption on November 16, 1907. The five-pointed star, the five tribal seals, the central handshake, the 46 border stars, and the motto have not changed. No redesign of the elements has been authorized by the legislature.

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