Home Β· Learn Β· All 50 US State Nicknames (and What They Mean)
All 50 US State Nicknames (and What They Mean)
Every one of the 50 US states carries at least one nickname, and most carry several. Some are stamped on license plates and repeated on tourism billboards, others survive only in old songs and civic mottos. This guide walks through what each nickname means, where it came from, and which ones are officially recognized by state legislatures versus popularly adopted. The stories behind them reach back to the Gold Rush, the Revolutionary War, immigrant farming traditions, native wildlife, and in one case an unresolved linguistic mystery that has stumped historians for two centuries.
The complete list of all 50 nicknames
Below are the most widely used nicknames for each state, organized alphabetically. Where a state has multiple, the primary official nickname appears first.
| State | Nickname | Origin |
|---|---|---|
| Alabama | Yellowhammer State | Confederate cavalry uniform trim resembled the yellowhammer bird's plumage. |
| Alaska | The Last Frontier | Vast unsettled wilderness and the last state admitted before Hawaii in 1959. |
| Arizona | Grand Canyon State | Home to the 277-mile Grand Canyon carved by the Colorado River. |
| Arkansas | Natural State | Adopted in 1995 to promote outdoor tourism and the Ozark wilderness. |
| California | Golden State | The 1848-49 Gold Rush and golden summer hillsides. |
| Colorado | Centennial State | Admitted to the Union in 1876, the centennial year of American independence. |
| Connecticut | Constitution State | The Fundamental Orders of Connecticut, adopted in 1639, are considered by many the first written constitution. |
| Delaware | First State | First to ratify the US Constitution on December 7, 1787. |
| Florida | Sunshine State | Roughly 237 sunny days per year on average. |
| Georgia | Peach State | Peach production centered around Fort Valley since the 1870s. |
| Hawaii | Aloha State | Officially adopted in 1959, from the Hawaiian greeting meaning love and welcome. |
| Idaho | Gem State | Rich mineral deposits including star garnets, found in only one other place worldwide. |
| Illinois | Prairie State | Tallgrass prairie once covered roughly 60 percent of the state. |
| Indiana | Hoosier State | Origin disputed since the 1830s. Now the official demonym. |
| Iowa | Hawkeye State | Named after Sauk chief Black Hawk and popularized around 1838. |
| Kansas | Sunflower State | The wild sunflower became the state flower in 1903. |
| Kentucky | Bluegrass State | Kentucky bluegrass thrives on the limestone soil of the central region. |
| Louisiana | Pelican State | The brown pelican appears on the state flag and seal. |
| Maine | Pine Tree State | Eastern white pine forests once supplied masts to the Royal Navy. |
| Maryland | Old Line State | George Washington praised the Maryland Line troops for holding the line at the Battle of Long Island in 1776. |
| Massachusetts | Bay State | From the Massachusetts Bay Colony chartered in 1629. |
| Michigan | Great Lakes State | Bordered by four of the five Great Lakes, more than 3,000 miles of freshwater coastline. |
| Minnesota | Land of 10,000 Lakes | The DNR counts 11,842 lakes larger than 10 acres. |
| Mississippi | Magnolia State | The magnolia is both the state tree and state flower. |
| Missouri | Show Me State | Attributed to Congressman Willard Vandiver in 1899, expressing rural skepticism. |
| Montana | Treasure State | Silver and copper mining in Butte and gold in the western mountains. |
| Nebraska | Cornhusker State | Corn is the top crop, and the University of Nebraska sports teams share the name since 1900. |
| Nevada | Silver State | The 1859 Comstock Lode was the richest silver deposit in US history. |
| New Hampshire | Granite State | Granite quarries and mountain rock formations, including the former Old Man of the Mountain. |
| New Jersey | Garden State | Coined by Abraham Browning in 1876 for the state's productive truck farms supplying New York and Philadelphia. |
| New Mexico | Land of Enchantment | Adopted officially in 1999, from a 1935 book title by Lilian Whiting. |
| New York | Empire State | Attributed to George Washington in 1785, foreseeing New York as the seat of empire. |
| North Carolina | Tar Heel State | Pine tar was a major colonial export, and troops joked they had tar on their heels. |
| North Dakota | Peace Garden State | The International Peace Garden on the Canadian border, dedicated in 1932. |
| Ohio | Buckeye State | The Ohio buckeye tree, and William Henry Harrison's 1840 campaign symbol. |
| Oklahoma | Sooner State | Settlers who slipped into the 1889 land rush before the legal start time. |
| Oregon | Beaver State | Beaver pelts were the primary export during the fur trade era of the 1810s to 1840s. |
| Pennsylvania | Keystone State | Central position among the original 13 colonies, like the keystone in an arch. |
| Rhode Island | Ocean State | Roughly 400 miles of coastline in the smallest state, including Narragansett Bay. |
| South Carolina | Palmetto State | Palmetto logs at Fort Moultrie absorbed British cannonballs in June 1776. |
| South Dakota | Mount Rushmore State | The presidential monument carved into the Black Hills between 1927 and 1941. |
| Tennessee | Volunteer State | Tennessee volunteers under Andrew Jackson at the 1815 Battle of New Orleans. |
| Texas | Lone Star State | The single star on the flag, symbolizing the 1836 to 1845 Republic of Texas. |
| Utah | Beehive State | The beehive symbolizes industry in Mormon tradition, dating to Brigham Young. |
| Vermont | Green Mountain State | From French vert mont, the name given by explorer Samuel de Champlain in the 1600s. |
| Virginia | Old Dominion | Granted by King Charles II around 1663 in recognition of loyalty during the English Civil War. |
| Washington | Evergreen State | Coined by Seattle realtor C. T. Conover in 1890 for the year-round conifer forests. |
| West Virginia | Mountain State | The Appalachian Mountains cover the entire state, average elevation 1,500 feet. |
| Wisconsin | Badger State | 1820s lead miners who lived in hillside dugouts, nicknamed badgers. |
| Wyoming | Equality State | First territory to grant women the right to vote, in 1869. |
Nicknames that describe the landscape
The largest category of state nicknames points to a defining physical feature. Arizona names the Grand Canyon. West Virginia names its mountains. Minnesota counts its lakes. Rhode Island claims its coast. These names function like shorthand tourism slogans, and most were formalized in the mid-20th century when state legislatures wanted a marketable identity.
- Rockies and peaks: Colorado (Centennial), West Virginia (Mountain), New Hampshire (Granite), Vermont (Green Mountain).
- Water and coast: Michigan (Great Lakes), Minnesota (Land of 10,000 Lakes), Rhode Island (Ocean), Louisiana (Pelican).
- Forest and plain: Maine (Pine Tree), Washington (Evergreen), Illinois (Prairie), Kansas (Sunflower), Kentucky (Bluegrass).
- Iconic sights: Arizona (Grand Canyon), South Dakota (Mount Rushmore), North Dakota (Peace Garden).
Nicknames rooted in history
A second cluster of nicknames commemorates events, people, or political milestones. Delaware celebrates being first to ratify the Constitution in December 1787. Colorado marks the 1876 centennial. Wyoming honors its 1869 decision to enfranchise women, a full 50 years before the 19th Amendment. Connecticut points back to the 1639 Fundamental Orders. These historical nicknames tend to be the ones you actually learn about in school.
- Delaware, First State: Ratified December 7, 1787, ahead of Pennsylvania by five days.
- Wyoming, Equality State: Granted women suffrage as a territory in 1869 and refused to enter the Union in 1890 without it.
- Tennessee, Volunteer State: Roughly 3,500 Tennesseans volunteered in the War of 1812, and thousands more in the Mexican-American War of 1846.
- Maryland, Old Line State: The Maryland 400 rear-guarded the Continental Army retreat at Brooklyn in 1776.
- Virginia, Old Dominion: Named by Charles II around 1663, the earliest surviving colonial nickname still in use.
Nicknames tied to animals and plants
Wildlife and flora produced some of the most durable nicknames. Louisiana's pelican appears on the state flag adopted in 1912. Oregon's beaver reflects the fur trade era when John Jacob Astor's American Fur Company shipped pelts to China. Wisconsin's badger name comes from the lead miners of the 1820s who lived in hillside dugouts rather than from the animal itself. Utah's beehive is the oldest continuously used state emblem west of the Mississippi.
- Louisiana (brown pelican): The bird nearly went extinct in the state by 1963 from DDT poisoning, then returned after the 1970s pesticide ban.
- Ohio (buckeye tree): The Aesculus glabra, unique to the Ohio River Valley, was adopted as state tree in 1953.
- Oregon (beaver): Pelts drove the founding of the American Fur Company post at Astoria in 1811.
- Utah (honey bee): The beehive appears on the state flag, state seal, highway signs, and even patrol car doors.
Learn nicknames by playing
Statedoku uses state nicknames as puzzle clues. Solve daily and the Aloha State, Bluegrass State, and Cornhusker State stop being trivia and become second nature.
Play the Nicknames gameNicknames with disputed origins
A few nicknames have never been fully explained. Indiana's Hoosier is the most famous puzzle. Newspapers were already debating its origin in the 1830s. The leading theories are that it comes from Who's here?, an Anglo-Saxon dialect for hill dweller, a canal contractor named Samuel Hoosier who preferred Indiana workers, or the frontier expression that's a hoosier meaning a rough character. In 2017 the US Government Publishing Office officially adopted Hoosier as the demonym for Indiana residents, ending a 180-year debate about spelling but not about meaning.
Iowa's Hawkeye State has clearer roots but a stranger path. The name was popularized in 1838 by newspaper editor James Edwards, who wanted to honor Sauk war leader Black Hawk after his 1832 defeat and death. Edwards suggested the nickname jointly with judge David Rorer, and it spread through Iowa newspapers within a decade.
How to memorize all 50
The trick is grouping. Learn the six landscape nicknames first because they map to obvious features. Then learn the historical cluster, which links to dates you probably already know. Save the disputed and quirky nicknames like Hoosier, Sooner, and Tar Heel for last, because those you have to memorize as pure trivia. The Statedoku daily puzzle rotates nicknames as constraints, which forces you to recall the state from the nickname rather than just the reverse.
Frequently asked questions
Which state has the oldest nickname still in use?
Virginia, the Old Dominion, going back to about 1663. King Charles II granted the title to reward the colony for its loyalty during the English Civil War.
Which state officially has no nickname?
Every state has at least one popular nickname, but a few have no state-legislature designation. Georgia's Peach State, for example, is universally used but never formally enacted.
What is the Beehive State?
Utah. The beehive symbolizes industry in Latter-day Saints tradition and appears on the state seal, flag, and highway signage.
Which nickname appears on the most license plates?
Florida's Sunshine State, which has been printed on Florida plates continuously since 1949.