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Every state flower and the hidden meaning behind it (2026)

Poppies, magnolias, roses, and the one state that picked a pine cone.

Every US state has an official flower, and most of the choices trace back to the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Organizers asked each state to bring a floral emblem for a "National Garland of Flowers." Some states made snap picks by legislative vote; others held children's referendums that stuck for a century. A few oddities followed. Nevada picked a shrub. Maine picked a pine cone. Hawaii picked a hibiscus so rare it is now endangered. Here is the full list, plus the history behind the strangest choices.

Complete list of all 50 state flowers

StateFlowerAdopted
AlabamaCamellia1959 (previously goldenrod)
AlaskaForget-me-not1917
ArizonaSaguaro cactus blossom1931
ArkansasApple blossom1901
CaliforniaCalifornia poppy1903
ColoradoRocky Mountain columbine1899
ConnecticutMountain laurel1907
DelawarePeach blossom1895
FloridaOrange blossom1909
GeorgiaCherokee rose1916
HawaiiYellow hibiscus (pua aloalo)1988
IdahoSyringa (mock orange)1931
IllinoisViolet1908
IndianaPeony1957
IowaWild prairie rose1897
KansasSunflower1903
KentuckyGoldenrod1926
LouisianaMagnolia1900
MaineWhite pine cone and tassel1895
MarylandBlack-eyed Susan1918
MassachusettsMayflower (trailing arbutus)1918
MichiganApple blossom1897
MinnesotaPink and white lady's slipper1902
MississippiMagnolia1952
MissouriHawthorn1923
MontanaBitterroot1895
NebraskaGoldenrod1895
NevadaSagebrush1917
New HampshirePurple lilac1919
New JerseyViolet1971
New MexicoYucca flower1927
New YorkRose1955
North CarolinaFlowering dogwood1941
North DakotaWild prairie rose1907
OhioScarlet carnation1904
OklahomaMistletoe (1893) + Oklahoma rose (2004)1893 / 2004
OregonOregon grape1899
PennsylvaniaMountain laurel1933
Rhode IslandViolet1968
South CarolinaYellow jessamine1924
South DakotaAmerican pasqueflower1903
TennesseeIris (state cultivated), passion flower (state wildflower)1933 / 1919
TexasBluebonnet1901
UtahSego lily1911
VermontRed clover1894
VirginiaAmerican dogwood1918
WashingtonCoast rhododendron1892
West VirginiaRhododendron1903
WisconsinWood violet1949
WyomingIndian paintbrush1917

The origin story: the 1893 Chicago fair

Nearly half of these picks trace to a single event. The 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago asked each state to nominate a floral emblem for display. The garland it produced was a smash hit, and many states rushed to make their pick official in the years that followed. Washington moved first (1892), then Delaware, Montana and Nebraska (1895). By 1903, sixteen states had adopted an official flower. The last of the 50 was Alaska's forget-me-not (formal 1949 after becoming a state, though it was the territorial emblem from 1917).

The overlaps: flowers shared by multiple states

Not every state picked something unique. Nine states use a flower shared with at least one other:

The rose is also the official floral emblem of the entire United States, signed into law by President Reagan on October 7, 1986.

The outliers: pine cones, cacti and sagebrush

Not every "state flower" is a flower in the botanical sense.

Flowers with a story behind the name

Match the flower to the state

Statedoku turns state flowers into a puzzle constraint. Play the State Symbols quiz to test yourself.

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Frequently asked questions

Is the rose the US national flower?

Yes. President Ronald Reagan signed Public Law 99-449 on October 7, 1986, making the rose the national floral emblem of the United States.

Which state flower is endangered?

Hawaii's yellow hibiscus (Hibiscus brackenridgei) is federally listed as endangered. Massachusetts's mayflower is on the state protected list, too.

Do any states have a "state wildflower" separate from their state flower?

Yes. Tennessee has both an iris (cultivated) and a passion flower (wildflower). Texas designated the prickly pear as its state plant in 1995 in addition to the bluebonnet. Alaska keeps forget-me-not as the state flower but recognizes the wild geranium in trail signage.

Which state has the oldest official flower law?

Washington. The coast rhododendron was picked by popular vote of Washington women in 1892 (before women's suffrage in that state) and made official.

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