Official state motto Oregon Latin Adopted 1987

Oregon State Motto: Alis Volat Propriis

Alis Volat Propriis

Alis Volat Propriis

Alis Volat Propriis

The motto appears on the state seal of Oregon

Legal Reference: ORS 186.040 (Chapter 848, 1987)
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Motto
Alis Volat Propriis
Language
Latin
Translation
She Flies With Her Own Wings
On territorial seal
1854
Official state motto
1987
Overview

Oregon State Motto

Oregon's state motto is Alis Volat Propriis, a Latin phrase meaning She Flies With Her Own Wings. It is the official motto under Oregon Revised Statutes 186.040, adopted by the 1987 Legislature.

Oregon's motto is one of the few in the United States written in English first and then translated into Latin — the reverse of how most Latin state mottos began. Judge Jesse Quinn Thornton composed the English phrase in 1854, and a Latin rendering was placed on the Oregon Territorial Seal that year.

Translation of "Alis Volat Propriis"

The three Latin words each carry a specific meaning. Alis is the ablative plural of ala, meaning wings. Volat means she flies — the subject is implied in the verb ending. Propriis comes from proprius, meaning one's own. Together: She flies with her own wings.

The "she" refers to Oregon itself. Countries, states, and territories were traditionally treated as feminine in Latin and in English writing of the era, so the motto speaks of Oregon as an entity flying on its own power.

Oregon State Motto Meaning

Alis Volat Propriis
She Flies With Her Own Wings
Latin

The phrase describes self-reliance — flying by your own means, without depending on others for lift. For early Oregon, this was not an abstract idea. The territory developed largely without federal support, built by settlers who had crossed the Oregon Trail at their own risk and expense.

Thornton chose the phrase with that history in mind. He had traveled the Oregon Trail himself in 1846 and had personally lobbied Congress in Washington, D.C., to give Oregon official territorial status. He had watched the region grow through its own effort before it had any formal recognition from the federal government.

History of Oregon's State Motto

The Great Seal of Oregon showing a covered wagon, elk, mountains, ships, and the words The Union
The Great Seal of Oregon still reads "The Union." The official motto "Alis Volat Propriis" was restored by statute in 1987, but the seal was not changed.

Jesse Quinn Thornton (1810–1888) was a judge who arrived in Oregon in 1846 after traveling the Oregon Trail. He served as a Supreme Judge of the Provisional Government of Oregon and worked to establish the territory through Congress. In 1854, he wrote the English phrase She Flies With Her Own Wings for Oregon Territory.

On January 18, 1854, the Oregon Territorial Legislature adopted the Latin translation, Alis Volat Propriis, as the motto of Oregon Territory and placed it on the territorial seal.

When Oregon became a state in 1859, the new state seal carried the words The Union — not the territorial motto. In 1957, the Oregon Legislative Assembly formally codified The Union as the official state motto in ORS 186.040.

In 1987, the legislature reversed that decision. Chapter 848, enacted July 20, 1987, amended ORS 186.040 and restored Alis Volat Propriis as the official motto. One unusual result: the Great Seal of Oregon still displays The Union and has not been updated to match the statutory motto.

Oregon State Motto Facts

  • "Alis Volat Propriis" means "She Flies With Her Own Wings" in Latin.
  • Oregon's motto was written in English first by Judge Jesse Quinn Thornton in 1854, then translated into Latin — the reverse of most Latin state mottos.
  • The Latin motto appeared on the Oregon Territorial Seal on January 18, 1854.
  • "The Union" replaced it as the official motto in 1957 when Oregon codified its state symbols.
  • The 1987 Legislature restored "Alis Volat Propriis" as the official motto through Chapter 848, enacted July 20, 1987.
  • The Great Seal of Oregon still displays "The Union" and has not been changed since 1859.

Can You Match All 50 State Mottos?

Latin, French, Spanish, Hawaiian — see how many you recognize.

Some questions show the original motto — Latin, Italian, Chinook — and ask which state it belongs to. Others give you the English translation and ask you to work backward. Both directions are harder than they look.

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Quick Answers

What is Oregon's state motto?
Oregon's state motto is "Alis Volat Propriis," a Latin phrase meaning "She Flies With Her Own Wings." It is the official motto under ORS 186.040, restored by the legislature in 1987.
What does "Alis Volat Propriis" mean?
It means "She Flies With Her Own Wings." Alis means wings, volat means she flies, and propriis means her own. The phrase describes self-reliance — moving forward on your own power, without outside support.
What is the English translation of "Alis Volat Propriis"?
The English translation is "She Flies With Her Own Wings." The "she" refers to Oregon itself. The phrase was actually written in English first by Judge Jesse Quinn Thornton in 1854, then translated into Latin for the territorial seal.
When did Oregon adopt its state motto?
Oregon adopted "Alis Volat Propriis" as the official state motto in 1987. The phrase first appeared on the Oregon Territorial Seal in 1854. It was replaced by "The Union" in 1957 and then restored in 1987.
Why does the Oregon state seal say "The Union" instead of the official motto?
The Great Seal of Oregon has displayed "The Union" since statehood in 1859 and has never been updated. When the legislature restored "Alis Volat Propriis" as the official motto in 1987, the seal design was not changed. The motto exists in statute, but the seal still shows the older phrase.

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