Official state symbol Texas Coat Of Arms Adopted 1839

Texas State Coat of Arms

Official Coat of Arms of the State of Texas, showing a white five-pointed lone star on a blue field encircled by olive and live oak branches

Texas State Coat of Arms

Official Coat Of Arms of Texas

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Overview

Texas State Coat of Arms

The Texas coat of arms was adopted on January 25, 1839, by the Congress of the Republic of Texas, six years before Texas joined the United States. It shows a white five-pointed star on a blue field, encircled by an olive branch and a live oak branch. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state coats of arms.
Adopted
1839
Status
Official state coat of arms

What Is the Texas Coat of Arms?

The Texas coat of arms is one of the simplest state arms in the country: a single star, two branches, and a blue field. The 1839 legislation named only those three elements, with no supporters, no crest, and no motto scroll. That simplicity was deliberate. The Republic of Texas needed a design that was easy to reproduce and quick to identify.

The coat of arms appears on official state documents and government materials alongside the state seal. The seal is a more elaborate design that includes the text 'THE STATE OF TEXAS' and additional imagery. The coat of arms is the pure heraldic emblem.

History and Origin of the Texas Coat of Arms

Texas declared independence from Mexico in 1836 and immediately needed national symbols. President David G. Burnet approved the first provisional seal on December 10, 1836: a single star with the words 'Republic of Texas' around it. That design served for three years but was never formalized as a coat of arms.

In December 1838, Senator William H. Wharton introduced a bill to establish the republic's flag, seal, and coat of arms. The bill was referred to a committee chaired by Senator Oliver Jones. The committee issued its report on January 4, 1839, recommending a coat of arms described as 'a white star of five points on an azure ground encircled by olive and live oak branches.'

The Congress of the Republic adopted the design on January 25, 1839. No single designer is credited in the legislation. The olive and live oak branches echo the Mexican national seal, which also uses olive and oak wreaths, though the lone star at the center made the Texas design distinctly its own.

When Texas became a U.S. state in 1845, it kept the same coat of arms. By 1991, however, nearly twenty different versions of the design were in use across state agencies. Secretary of State John Hannah Jr. appointed the Texas State Seal Advisory Committee to create a single standard. Committee member Juan Vega drew the official black-and-white rendering, which the Secretary of State adopted in June 1992.

Meaning

Meaning of the Texas Coat of Arms

The Texas coat of arms places a lone white star at the center of a blue field, flanked by an olive branch and a live oak branch. The design was created when Texas was still an independent republic, and the two branches represent the twin goals of that republic: peace with neighboring nations and the strength to defend its borders. The same elements have remained unchanged for nearly two centuries, through the Republic, statehood, and the present day.

Symbols on the Texas Coat of Arms

The coat of arms has three elements: a lone star, an olive branch, and a live oak branch. Each was named in the 1839 legislation.

The Lone Star
Symbol 01

The Lone Star

A white five-pointed star sits at the center of a blue (azure) field. The star was already the dominant symbol of Texas independence before 1839, appearing on flags used during the revolution against Mexico. The 1839 legislation placed it at the heart of the new republic's official arms.

The lone star gave Texas its enduring nickname. By centering the coat of arms on a single star rather than a complex shield, the design made the connection to Texas independence immediate and unmistakable.

Olive Branch
Symbol 02

Olive Branch

An olive branch encircles one side of the star. Official state sources describe the olive branch as representing peace, specifically Texas's desire for peaceful relations with neighboring nations. The olive branch is a traditional European heraldic symbol for peace, used here alongside a plant native to Texas.

Live Oak Branch
Symbol 03

Live Oak Branch

A live oak branch encircles the opposite side of the star. According to official state sources, the live oak represents strength and defense. The live oak (Quercus fusiformis) is native to Texas, which gave the designers a local symbol to pair with the European olive tradition.

The committee that proposed the design in 1839 likely drew on the Mexican national seal, which also uses olive and oak branches. But where the Mexican seal uses European oak, the Texas design substituted the live oak found across the Texas landscape.

Meaning of the Texas Coat of Arms

The coat of arms was designed for a brand-new republic that had just won a war and was trying to secure its future. The two branches say what that republic wanted: peace on one side, strength to defend itself on the other. The lone star in the middle says who it was.

Unlike many state coats of arms, which use complex shields divided into quarters or crowded with figures, the Texas design is stripped down to three elements. That minimal design has not changed since 1839.

Texas Coat of Arms Facts

Previous Versions of the Texas Coat of Arms

Texas did not have a coat of arms before 1839. The earlier 1836 Burnet seal, a star with 'Republic of Texas' in a circle, was a provisional state seal, not a coat of arms, and it was replaced when the 1839 legislation created the full set of national symbols.

From 1839 to 1992, there was no single standardized drawing of the coat of arms, which led to many unofficial variations appearing on government documents. The 1992 rendering by Juan Vega became the first official graphic standard.

1839-1845
Historical
Republic of Texas Seal
1839-1845

Republic of Texas Seal

The official Republic of Texas seal adopted in 1839. It shows the lone star with the olive and live oak wreath under the wording "Republic of Texas." This was the republic-era seal form from which the state coat of arms and later state seal renderings were standardized.

1846
Historical
Statehood Era Rendering
1846

Statehood Era Rendering

A nineteenth-century printed statehood-era rendering showing the same lone star and wreath composition after annexation, with the wording changed to "State of Texas."

1992-present
Current
Official Standard (1992–present)
1992-present

Official Standard (1992–present)

The official standardized rendering adopted by Secretary of State John Hannah Jr. in June 1992. Drawn by committee member Juan Vega, it established the first single graphic standard for the coat of arms since the 1839 legislation.

Quick Answers

What does the Texas coat of arms show?
The Texas coat of arms shows a white five-pointed star on a blue (azure) field, encircled by an olive branch and a live oak branch. There is no motto, no crest, and no supporters. Those three elements have been part of the design since 1839.
What do the olive and live oak branches mean on the Texas coat of arms?
The olive branch represents peace, and the live oak branch represents strength and defense. Both meanings come from official Texas state sources. The olive branch follows a European heraldic tradition, while the live oak is native to Texas.
When was the Texas coat of arms adopted?
The Texas coat of arms was adopted on January 25, 1839, by the Congress of the Republic of Texas. At that point, Texas was still an independent nation. It did not join the United States until 1845.
Who designed the Texas coat of arms?
No individual designer is credited in the 1839 legislation. The design came out of a committee chaired by Senator Oliver Jones. The official standardized drawing used today was created by Juan Vega in 1992 for the Texas State Seal Advisory Committee.
What is the difference between the Texas coat of arms and the Texas state seal?
The coat of arms uses just three elements: the lone star, olive branch, and live oak branch. The state seal is more elaborate, surrounding those same elements with a ring of text that reads 'THE STATE OF TEXAS' and additional decorative detail. The coat of arms is the simpler heraldic emblem; the seal is used for official state documents.
Why does the Texas coat of arms have a lone star?
The lone star was already the central symbol of Texas independence before 1839, appearing on several flags used during the Texas Revolution against Mexico. The 1839 legislation put it at the center of the coat of arms to connect the new republic's official emblem directly to its independence movement.

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