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Home » 10 official state symbols so bizarre that even locals do a double take

Surprising Facts & Lists

10 official state symbols so bizarre that even locals do a double take

Fahad Sharif
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Fahad Sharif
Fahad Sharif
ByFahad Sharif
Fahad Sharif is the founder and editorial lead of Newsdailys. A digital media professional with over a decade of experience in content publishing and audience growth,...
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Last updated: May 8, 2026
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Contents
The Ones That Make You Read TwiceThe Ones That Required Actual ScienceThe Ones That Make You Question the Process

Most people can name their state bird. A few can name the state flower. Almost nobody knows that their state has an official state microbe, a designated soil, or, in at least one case, an official state flavor of dirt. And yet, all of these are real, codified in law, debated in actual legislative chambers, and sitting quietly on official government websites right now.

Here’s the strange part: many of these designations weren’t accidents or jokes. They were lobbied for, often by schoolchildren whose class projects somehow made it all the way to a governor’s desk. Which sounds ridiculous until you realize it happens more often than you’d think.

The Ones That Make You Read Twice

Source: Pexels

New Mexico has an official state question. Not a symbol exactly, but an officially designated question, “Red or green?”, referring to chile peppers. It is enshrined in state law. Residents order food with it daily without realizing they’re participating in a civic institution.

Maryland designated jousting as its official state sport before any other state got around to picking a sport at all. Not lacrosse. Not sailing. Jousting, the medieval practice of two people charging at each other on horseback with lances. The choice dates back further than most people expect, and Maryland has never reversed it.

Texas has an official state cooking implement. One single kitchen tool, written into the books. The legislature debated it. People testified. A decision was made. And yet most Texans, asked to name their state’s official cooking implement, will stare blankly.

The Ones That Required Actual Science

Source: Pexels

Oregon has an official state microbe, a brewing yeast, which tracks for a state that treats craft beer like a municipal utility. But here’s the thing: Oregon is one of the only jurisdictions on the entire planet to give formal legal recognition to a single-celled organism. Scientists actually lobbied for it. Testified. Won. Still strange.

California has a state soil. So do most states, actually, but California’s has a name that sounds lifted from a Tolkien appendix rather than a USDA classification manual. Soil scientists pushed hard for the designation, and the legislature agreed. It now holds the same official status as the state bear and the state tree.

Pennsylvania has a state dog, the Great Dane, which isn’t unusual, but the breed chosen has almost no historical connection to the state whatsoever. It was picked by schoolchildren. The legislature went with it. The dog remains the official dog.

The Ones That Make You Question the Process

Source: Pexels

Wisconsin also has an official state microbe, and theirs is a bacterium critical to cheese production, which is at least thematically coherent. But the fact that two states now have official microbes suggests this category is expanding faster than most civics teachers have noticed.

Washington has an official state fossil that happens to be one of the more dramatic prehistoric creatures ever unearthed in North America. Schoolchildren campaigned for it. It passed. The fossil is now legally the state’s fossil in a way that feels simultaneously grand and absurd.

So, Illinois has a state snack food. Not because the snack food industry descended on Springfield with lobbyists, but almost certainly it was a roomful of fourth-graders who showed up with a posterboard. A snack food made the cut. It is now as legally official as the state seal. You could look it up.

And then there is Connecticut, which at various points has added designations so specific they read less like civic symbols and more like the result of someone with a very particular interest and a sympathetic state representative.

The real takeaway isn’t that these are dumb choices. Most have genuine stories behind them, local history, school civics projects, agricultural identity, and scientific advocacy. The takeaway is that official status in America is surprisingly accessible. Get a bill introduced, show up to the right committee, and your state might end up with an official microbe, an official soil, or an official snack that 99% of its residents have never heard of.

The question worth asking: if your state has a symbol you’ve never heard of, what does that say about what we actually pay attention to in civic life?

This article was created with AI assistance and reviewed by the author. The review included fact-checking, clarity edits, references, and sourcing of images.

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TAGGED:bizarre state lawsofficial state microbestate symbols you didn't knowstrange official state symbolsunusual US state designationsweird state symbols
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Fahad Sharif
ByFahad Sharif
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Fahad Sharif is the founder and editorial lead of Newsdailys. A digital media professional with over a decade of experience in content publishing and audience growth, he oversees editorial direction, content standards, and the site's coverage across lifestyle, culture, and general interest topics. He is a Meta Certified Community Manager and founder of Alecto Media. Based in Karachi, Pakistan, he works with a small team of writers and editors to deliver timely, accessible reporting.
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