Official state symbol Wyoming Coat Of Arms Adopted 1893

Wyoming State Coat of Arms

Official Coat of Arms of the State of Wyoming, adopted 1893, showing a central female figure holding an Equal Rights banner, flanked by a rancher and a miner, with an eagle above

Wyoming State Coat of Arms

Official Coat Of Arms of Wyoming

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Artsiom Dusau Reviewed by Artsiom Dusau
Overview

Wyoming State Coat of Arms

The Wyoming coat of arms centers on a woman holding a banner that reads Equal Rights, marking Wyoming as the first territory in the United States to grant women the right to vote, in 1869. A rancher and a miner stand on either side, and an eagle appears above. The design was adopted in 1893, three years after Wyoming became the forty-fourth state. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state coats of arms.
Adopted
1893
Status
Official state coat of arms

What Is the Wyoming Coat of Arms?

The Wyoming coat of arms shows a central female figure standing between two pillars. She holds a banner reading Equal Rights. A rancher stands to her left and a miner to her right. Oil lamps burn at the top of each pillar. Above her, an eagle spreads its wings over a shield. The dates 1869 and 1890 appear on the two pillars.

The coat of arms appears on the Wyoming state seal and on official documents throughout the state. Wyoming's motto, Equal Rights, comes directly from the banner held by the central figure.

History and Origin of the Wyoming Coat of Arms

Wyoming Territory was organized in 1869, and on December 10 of that year it passed a law granting women the right to vote. It was the first territory or state in the United States to do so. Women in Wyoming could also serve on juries, another first. These decisions shaped Wyoming's identity from the start.

When Wyoming applied for statehood, some members of Congress objected to the women's suffrage provision and pushed to remove it as a condition of admission. The Wyoming Legislature refused. The reply sent to Congress became famous: Wyoming would remain out of the Union one hundred years rather than come in without its women. Congress admitted Wyoming on July 10, 1890, as the forty-fourth state, with women's suffrage intact.

The Wyoming Legislature adopted the coat of arms in 1893, three years after statehood. The design built the story of equal rights directly into the state's official emblem. The woman at the center, the dates on the pillars, and the motto all point to the same history.

Meaning

Meaning of the Wyoming Coat of Arms

The Wyoming coat of arms places a woman at the center holding a banner that reads Equal Rights. She is flanked by a rancher and a miner, the two men who built the state's economy. An eagle stands above with wings spread. The dates 1869 and 1890 on the two pillars record the two moments that defined Wyoming: the year the territory gave women the vote, and the year it entered the Union.

Symbols on the Wyoming Coat of Arms

The Wyoming coat of arms organizes its symbols around a central female figure. Every element connects to Wyoming's economy, history, or identity as the Equality State.

The Female Figure and Equal Rights Banner
Symbol 01

The Female Figure and Equal Rights Banner

A woman stands at the center of the coat of arms, holding a banner or scroll that reads Equal Rights. She represents Wyoming's historic commitment to women's rights and the state's identity as the Equality State. Wyoming gave women the vote in 1869, more than fifty years before the Nineteenth Amendment extended suffrage nationwide in 1920.

Placing a female figure at the center of a state coat of arms was unusual in 1893. The choice was deliberate: it made women's equality the defining image of the state's official emblem.

The Eagle and Shield
Symbol 02

The Eagle and Shield

An eagle with wings spread sits above the central figure, standing on a shield. The bald eagle is the national symbol of the United States, and its presence on Wyoming's coat of arms connects the state to the Union it fought to enter with its rights intact.

The Rancher and the Miner
Symbol 03

The Rancher and the Miner

A rancher stands to the left of the central figure and a miner stands to the right. The two men represent the economic foundation of Wyoming at statehood: cattle ranching across the open plains and the mining of coal and other minerals in the mountain regions.

By placing the rancher and the miner on either side of the woman at the center, the design frames Wyoming's economy with Wyoming's identity. The workers who built the state surround the principle it stood for.

The Two Pillars and Dates
Symbol 04

The Two Pillars and Dates

Two pillars flank the scene, each with an oil lamp burning at the top. The date 1869 appears on one pillar and the date 1890 appears on the other. The year 1869 marks when Wyoming Territory was organized and women's suffrage was granted. The year 1890 marks when Wyoming entered the Union as a state.

The two dates together form a timeline. The lamp above each pillar suggests light and knowledge, a common symbol in official emblems of the nineteenth century.

Equal Rights
Symbol 05

Equal Rights

Equal Rights is both the banner held by the central female figure and the official state motto of Wyoming. No other state motto makes a direct statement about civil rights in these terms.

The motto reflects the 1869 suffrage law and Wyoming's refusal to abandon it when seeking statehood. It has appeared on Wyoming's official seal and coat of arms since 1893.

Meaning of the Wyoming Coat of Arms

Wyoming's coat of arms is one of the most historically specific in the United States. It does not use generic symbols of strength or abundance. It puts a specific historical argument at its center: that this state gave women equal rights decades before the rest of the country, and that it was willing to stay out of the Union to keep that right.

The rancher and the miner on either side show what the state was economically. The woman in the middle shows what it believed politically. Together they present Wyoming not just as a place to live and work, but as a state with a defined position on who deserves to participate in its government.

The dates 1869 and 1890 bookend the argument. From the first year of the territory to the first year of statehood, Wyoming maintained the same position. The coat of arms records that continuity.

Wyoming Coat of Arms Facts

Previous Versions of the Wyoming Coat of Arms

Wyoming Territory used a territorial seal before statehood in 1890, but the emblem now associated with the state's coat of arms took shape only after admission to the Union.

The earliest widely circulated image I could verify is an 1891 published rendering preserved on Wikimedia Commons. Later official seal renderings kept the same woman, supporters, eagle, lamps, and date pillars even as the drawing was standardized.

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