SALT LAKE CITY, Utah - March 18, 2011 - Utah has become the first U.S. state to name an official firearm, placing an automatic pistol on a list of designated symbols, right along with the honeybee and the cutthroat trout.
Utah Governor Gary Herbert signed the bill into law this week, designating the Browning model M1911 automatic pistol as the official state firearm.
The gun, which turns 100 years old this year, is manufactured in Ogden, Utah.
"It does capture a portion of Utah's history," said Utah State Representative Carl Wimmer (R), who sponsored the bill. "Even bigger than that, it captures a portion of American history."
The late John M. Browning, who founded the company that makes the gun, was born in Ogden, Utah, in 1855 and lived until 1926. He designed the automatic pistol for the U.S. Army, which was bogged down in sporadic battles with guerrilla fighters in the Philippines and needed a quick-firing weapon.
The Army adopted the pistol for use in March 1911, which is how it got the name Model 1911. It was first combat tested by the U.S. military in Mexico in 1916, in the pursuit of bandit-turned-revolutionary Francisco "Pancho" Villa.
Wimmer said Utah residents should be proud of the fact the Browning firearm has been used around the world.
"The governor signed it into law and Utah became the first state in the nation to have an official state firearm. Arizona will have their governor sign theirs into law later this week," said Wimmer.
Arizona lawmakers are partial to the Colt revolver, which they have proposed naming a state symbol, to honor their western heritage.