Official state symbol Vermont State Bird Adopted 1941

Vermont State Bird: Hermit Thrush

Catharus guttatus

Vermont adopted the Hermit Thrush in 1941. The key story is that the state chose a migratory bird anyway, treating its song and statewide summer presence as more important than winter residency.

Hermit Thrush - Vermont State Bird

Hermit Thrush

Official State Bird of Vermont

View original
Legal Reference: 1 V.S.A. Sec. 497
Overview
Vermont's official state bird is the Hermit Thrush, adopted on June 1, 1941 under 1 V.S.A. Sec. 497. The bird does not stay in Vermont year-round — it arrives in spring, breeds across the state, and leaves before winter. That was the actual problem in the legislature: some lawmakers argued that a migratory bird could not honestly represent the state. The Hermit Thrush won anyway. Supporters said its song and its presence across all fourteen counties were the stronger argument. Vermont ended up choosing the bird of its forest season rather than the bird that stays.
Current law
1 V.S.A. Sec. 497
Main objection
Leaves for winter
Answer
Song and summer range
Symbol type
Forest-season bird
Symbolic Meaning
Vermont's bird page makes the most sense as an argument about seasonal identity. The state did not choose a year-round resident. It chose the Hermit Thrush in 1941 even though the bird leaves for winter, because supporters treated its song and its summer presence across Vermont as more important than permanent residency. That gives the symbol a distinctive Vermont logic: the bird stands for the state's warm-season woods rather than for uninterrupted year-round presence.
Section

Why Did Vermont Choose a Bird That Leaves for Winter?

The short answer: residency was not the only test. Vermont state-manual summaries record that some legislators pushed back on the Hermit Thrush specifically because it migrates — the argument being that a bird that leaves every fall cannot honestly stand for the state. A resident bird like a blue jay or crow never faced that objection.

The thrush cleared the bar because its supporters reframed the question. The bird was found in all fourteen Vermont counties during the warm season, and it had been associated with the state's wooded hills long enough that calling it foreign felt wrong. The legislature accepted that seasonal belonging was sufficient.

Vermont's choice is unusual among state birds for exactly that reason. Most states chose permanent residents. Vermont acknowledged the migration and chose anyway.

Section

What Made the Hermit Thrush the Right Bird?

The thrush's song was the concrete argument. Vermont Fish and Wildlife sources describe it as one of the most distinctive in the Northeast — a clear, flute-like spiral that carries through forest. Earlier state-manual summaries say that call helped the bird's supporters make the case: this was not just any migratory species, but one people recognized by sound across the state's woods.

Distribution was the second argument. The thrush was present across all fourteen Vermont counties in summer, not concentrated in one region. Supporters could point to both: a voice Vermonters knew, and a range that covered the whole state. Together those two facts were enough to answer the residency objection without claiming the bird meant anything beyond what it actually was.

Hermit Thrush Songs and Calls

A quick field-listening break before the next section.

Audio licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Test your knowledge

A short quiz while the key details are still top of mind.
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Question 1

Can You Match All 50 State Birds?

Seven states share the Cardinal. Five share the Mockingbird. Can you spot the odd one out?

The State Birds Quiz mixes standard image questions with 'odd one out' rounds — showing a shared bird like the Cardinal or Meadowlark and asking which state in the group doesn't actually have it. Plus a few questions about the stories behind the most unusual choices.

Take the State Birds Quiz

Quick Answers

What is Vermont's state bird?
Vermont's state bird is the Hermit Thrush.
When did Vermont adopt the Hermit Thrush?
Vermont adopted the Hermit Thrush on June 1, 1941.
Why is Vermont's state bird unusual?
It is unusual because the Hermit Thrush is migratory. Vermont chose a bird that leaves for winter instead of insisting on a year-round resident.
Why did some lawmakers hesitate over the Hermit Thrush?
Later Vermont state-manual summaries say some legislators questioned whether a migratory bird could be a true Vermonter.
Why did the Hermit Thrush win anyway?
Supporters argued that its song and its broad summer presence across all fourteen Vermont counties mattered more than winter residency.
What does the Hermit Thrush mean for Vermont?
For Vermont, the Hermit Thrush means more than one small forest bird. It represents the state's wooded warm season and the choice to treat seasonal belonging as enough for a public symbol.

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