She visited veterans hospitals, Jay Leno and schoolchildren around the state. She survived being hit by a car in Wisconsin that left part of a wing amputated and unable to fly.
Still Harriet, one of the state's most recognizable ambassadors, lived to the ripe old age of 35. She was put down this week, officials at the National Eagle Center in southeastern Minnesota announced Thursday.
Harriet, who had called the Wabasha center home since 2000, had not been eating in recent days, an indication that she was near the end of her life, the center revealed. Without the medications provided through her food, she was in increasing pain.
"There were simply no more interventions that could extend and improve Harriet's quality of life," the center's announcement read.
Harriet was taken Wednesday to the Raptor Center at the University of Minnesota, where she was euthanized.
"We believe the kindest thing to do was to keep her from a painful end and let her die peacefully in expert care," said Rolf Thompson, the facility's executive director. "When [the Raptor Center] told us there is nothing more we can do, we knew that the time had come to let her go."
Harriet was a regular visitor to Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals, and her image lives on, thanks to her likeness being on the state's Support Our Troops license plate.
"Now, every time I see one of those license plates, I get a little tear in my eye," said MaryBeth Garrigan, the center's former director and the eagle's trainer upon her arrival.