Arizona Kid

Jan Brewer, Arizona Secretary of State, Kids' Page

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


Arizona
- Official Arizona Home Page

 


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 - The State Amphibian

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

State Amphibian
tree_frog.gif (11371 bytes)

Amphibian is an adult word for frogs, toads, and salamanders. This Arizona Treefrog is the state amphibian. It is small, usually 3/4 to 2 inches long, a little larger than the size of a quarter. Most are green but some can be gold colored. Can you see a dark stripe that starts at its nose and runs through the eye? The stripe ends just before the rear legs.
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