Arizona Kid

Jan Brewer, Arizona Secretary of State, Kids' Page

The Copper Star in the state flag.
 
Arizona
Secretary of State
Home Page


Arizona Links
- Official Arizona Home Page
- Capitol Tour
- Arizona Bill (PDF)
- Arizona Cities
- Arizona Counties
- Governor's Office on Highway Safety

 


United States (Federal)
Government Links

- White House Kids' Page
- U.S.  Presidents
- Ben Franklin's Guide to U.S. Government

 

 




leftcornercopper.GIF (49 bytes)

rightcornercopper.GIF (49 bytes)
Arizona State Symbols - State Mammal

Statehood Day This is the day Arizona became a state.
February 14, 1912

State Mammal
ringtail.gif (10840 bytes)

The ringtail is the state mammal, it is not really a cat but is related to the raccoon and coatimundi. The ringtail is also known as the ringtail cat, miner's cat, and cacomistle. It was named the state mammal in 1986.
Next page

 

Back to the SOS Kids' Home Page


What is a symbol?

Many states have symbols.

A symbol can be a thing or object that stands for something.

Symbols can paint a picture in your mind about a state.

If you use your imagination, you can see Arizona's symbols in the desert or in the mountains.

Each symbol was picked to show that Arizona is different from other states.

Disclaimer

                        © 2003, Arizona Secretary of State's Office, All rights reserved 

corner.GIF (634 bytes)

Design by S. Cancelosi, Special Projects