Deseret was proposed as a name for the U.S. state of Utah. Brigham Young—governor of Utah Territory from 1850 to 1858 and President of the LDS Church from 1847 to 1877—favored the name as a symbol of industry. Young thought his followers should be productive and self-sufficient, a trait he had perceived in honeybees.
The LDS-organized territory petitioned for statehood as the State of Deseret in 1849-1850, but the petition was rejected by the U.S. Congress because of the vast size of the relatively unpopulated area that was controlled exclusively by the Church. Later attempts at statehood used the federally-recognized Utah Territory name instead, which was derived from the resident Ute Indians meaning "People of the Mountains".

Some vestiges of the name survive. For example, the state symbol of Utah is a beehive; this emblem is represented on both the state seal, state flag, and marker shields for state highways. The state nickname is the "Beehive State" and the honeybee is Utah's official state insect.
The state of Deseret is on a commemorative block located on the 220 foot landing of the Washington Monument; it reads "Holiness to the Lord. Deseret."