Official state symbol Wisconsin Coat Of Arms Adopted 1851

Wisconsin State Coat of Arms

Official Coat of Arms of the State of Wisconsin, featuring a quartered shield with a badger crest, supported by a sailor and a miner, with a cornucopia and lead ingots at the base

Wisconsin State Coat of Arms

Official Coat Of Arms of Wisconsin

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Artsiom Dusau Reviewed by Artsiom Dusau
Overview

Wisconsin State Coat of Arms

The Wisconsin coat of arms shows a quartered shield with four symbols of the state's main industries: a plow for farming, a pick and shovel for mining, an arm and hammer for manufacturing, and an anchor for Great Lakes navigation. A badger sits above the shield as the crest, giving Wisconsin its nickname the Badger State. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state coats of arms.
Adopted
1851
Status
Official state coat of arms

What Is the Wisconsin Coat of Arms?

The Wisconsin coat of arms centers on a shield divided into four quarters, each showing a different tool of industry. A sailor stands to the left of the shield and a miner stands to the right. Above the shield, a badger faces forward as the crest. At the base, a cornucopia sits on the left and a pyramid of lead ingots sits on the right. The motto Forward appears on a scroll below.

The coat of arms appears on the Wisconsin state seal and on the state flag, which displays the design on a dark blue field with the word Wisconsin and the year 1848 added above and below.

History and Origin of the Wisconsin Coat of Arms

Wisconsin became the thirtieth state on May 29, 1848. The state needed an official seal, and the Wisconsin Legislature described the design in its statutes. The coat of arms that was codified in 1851 drew on the territorial seal that had been used before statehood, incorporating its main imagery into the official design.

The four quarters of the shield were chosen to represent Wisconsin's economy as it was understood at statehood: farms in the river valleys, lead mines in the southwest, industrial workshops, and the commerce that moved across Lake Michigan and Lake Superior. The badger had already become associated with Wisconsin before statehood, connected to the state's lead miners who were sometimes called badgers because they dug into hillsides to shelter during winter.

The motto Forward was adopted as part of the design. It reflected the outlook of a young state at the edge of the frontier. The 1981 Wisconsin Legislature updated the state flag to add the word Wisconsin and the year 1848 to make the flag more identifiable, but the coat of arms itself was not changed.

Meaning

Meaning of the Wisconsin Coat of Arms

The Wisconsin coat of arms divides the shield into four sections, each one naming a different industry that built the state: farming, mining, manufacturing, and Great Lakes navigation. A sailor and a miner stand on either side as supporters, representing the workers behind those industries. The badger on top names who Wisconsin's people are, and the word Forward, the state motto, says where they intend to go.

Symbols on the Wisconsin Coat of Arms

The Wisconsin coat of arms organizes its symbols on three levels: the shield at the center, the supporters on each side, and the elements above and below.

The Quartered Shield
Symbol 01

The Quartered Shield

The shield is divided into four sections. The upper left shows a plow, representing Wisconsin's agricultural economy. The upper right shows a pick and shovel, representing mining. The lower left shows an arm holding a hammer, representing manufacturing and industrial labor. The lower right shows an anchor, representing navigation and trade on the Great Lakes.

Each quarter names a different sector of Wisconsin's economy as it stood at statehood in 1848. Together they present the state as a place built by four kinds of work.

The Badger
Symbol 02

The Badger

A badger sits above the shield as the crest of the coat of arms. The badger became Wisconsin's symbol before statehood. Lead miners in the southwestern part of the state, who dug into hillsides to shelter through winter rather than building permanent homes, were nicknamed badgers. The nickname spread to all Wisconsin residents.

The badger is also Wisconsin's official state animal. Its presence on the crest of the coat of arms is why Wisconsin is called the Badger State.

The Sailor and the Miner
Symbol 03

The Sailor and the Miner

A sailor stands on the left side of the shield and a miner stands on the right. The two figures represent the workers behind Wisconsin's Great Lakes trade and its mining industry. Together with the quartered shield, they reinforce that the coat of arms is a portrait of the people who built the state through physical labor.

Cornucopia and Lead Ingots
Symbol 04

Cornucopia and Lead Ingots

At the base of the coat of arms, a cornucopia appears on the left and a pyramid of thirteen lead ingots appears on the right. The cornucopia represents agricultural abundance. The lead ingots represent the lead mining industry that was central to Wisconsin's early economy, especially in the southwestern counties around Galena and Mineral Point.

The thirteen ingots in the pyramid are understood to represent the original thirteen states of the Union.

Forward
Symbol 05

Forward

The word Forward appears on a scroll or ribbon below the shield. It is the official motto of Wisconsin. The motto was chosen at statehood to express the ambitions of a new state on the western frontier.

Forward remains one of the shortest state mottos in the United States, and Wisconsin has used it continuously since 1851.

Meaning of the Wisconsin Coat of Arms

The four quarters of the shield are not decorative. Each one names something Wisconsin's economy actually depended on in 1848: the plow for the grain farms of the river valleys, the pick and shovel for the lead mines of the southwest, the arm and hammer for the ironworks and workshops, the anchor for the shipping lanes of Lake Michigan. The design is an economic map of the state.

The badger above the shield adds a human story. The nickname came from real people digging into real hillsides. Placing the badger on top of the economic map says the people of Wisconsin came before the industries they built.

The motto Forward at the bottom closes the design with a direction rather than a description. The coat of arms looks backward to name what the state was; the motto looks forward to say what it intends to become.

Wisconsin Coat of Arms Facts

Previous Versions of the Wisconsin Coat of Arms

Before statehood, Wisconsin Territory used a territorial seal that included some of the same imagery later formalized in the state coat of arms. The territorial seal is not the same design as the official state coat of arms adopted after 1848.

The state coat of arms has been in continuous use since it was codified in the Wisconsin statutes in 1851. The design has been refined and standardized over time, but the core elements have not changed.

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