List of Arkansas state symbols
The following is a list of the symbols of the U.S. state of Arkansas.
State symbols
The following state symbols are officially recognized by state law.
- State Anthem: Arkansas by Eva Ware Barnett, Adopted: 1987
- State Historical Song: The Arkansas Traveler by Sanford Faulkner, Adopted: 1987
- State Motto: Regnat Populus (The People Rule), Adopted: 1907
- State Songs: Arkansas (You Run Deep In Me) by Wayland Holyfield and Oh, Arkansas by Terry Rose and Gary Klass, Adopted: 1987
Type | Symbol | Year | Image |
---|---|---|---|
American Folk Dance | Square Dance |
1991 | |
Beverage | Milk |
1985 | |
Bird | Mockingbrid Mimus polyglottos |
1929 | |
Butterfly | Diana Fritillary Butterfly Speyeria diana |
2007 | |
Floral Emblem | Apple blossom Pyrus malus |
1901 | |
Fruit & Vegetable | South Arkansas Vine Ripe Pink Tomato Solanum lycopersicum |
1987 | |
Gem | Diamond |
1967 | |
Grain | Rice Oryza sp. |
2007 | |
Grape | Cynthiana grape Vitis aestivalis |
2009 | |
Historic Cooking Vessel | Dutch Oven |
2001 | |
Insects | Honey Bee Apis mellifera |
1973 | |
Mammal | White-tailed Deer Odocoileus virginianus |
1993 | |
Mineral | Quartz |
1967 | |
Musical Instrument | Fiddle |
1985 | |
Nut | Pecan Carya illinoinensis |
2009 | |
Rock | Bauxite |
1967 | |
Soil | Stuttgart |
1997 | |
Tree | Pine Tree Pinus taeda |
1939 | |
Other
-
State quarter for Arkansas
Extra Info
The designation of a variety of tomato as both the state fruit and the state vegetable is correct. Standing on both sides of the long-running controversy, the law recognizes that the tomato is botanically a fruit, but is a vegetable in culinary use; thus it is officially both in Arkansas.
Though two other songs are designated as "state songs" (plus a "state historical song" which was the state song from 1949 to 1963), by state law the Secretary of State must respond to any requests for "the state song" with the music of the state anthem, Arkansas; it was the state song before 1949 and from 1963 to 1987, when it became state anthem and the other songs gained their present status. This is strictly to preserve the status of Arkansas; all four songs are either copyrighted by the state itself or in the public domain.
See also
- List of Arkansas-related topics
- Lists of United States state insignia
- State of Arkansas
References
External links
|