About
Iowa
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Capital City: Des Moines
Economy: Agriculture-related manufacturing, agriculture
and tourism.
Population: 2,862,447
Time Zone: 6 hours behind Greenwich Mean Time (-6 GMT).
Daylight Saving Time is observed from the last Sunday in April to the
last Sunday in October
Governor: Tom Vilsack, D (to Jan. 2007)
Lieut.
Governor: Sally Pederson, D (to Jan. 2007)
Senators: Chuck Grassley, R (to Jan. 2005); Tom Harkin, D (to Jan. 2009)
Secy.
of State: Chet Culver, D (to Jan. 2007)
Treasurer: Michael L. Fitzgerald, D (to Jan. 2007)
Atty. General: Tom Miller, D (to Jan. 2007)
Organized as territory: June 12, 1838
Entered Union (rank): Dec. 28, 1846
(29)
Present constitution adopted: 1857
Motto: Our liberties we prize and our rights we will maintain
State
Symbols:
flower wild rose (1897)
bird eastern goldfinch
(1933)
colors red, white, and blue (in state flag)
song “Song of Iowa”
Nickname: Hawkeye State
Origin of name: Probably from an Indian
word meaning “this is the place” or “the Beautiful Land”
10 largest cities (2000): Des Moines, 198,682; Cedar
Rapids, 120,758; Davenport, 98,359; Sioux City, 85,013; Waterloo, 68,747;
Iowa City, 62,220; Council Bluffs, 58,268; Dubuque, 57,686; Ames, 50,731;
West Des Moines, 46,403
Land area: 55,869 sq mi.
(144,701 sq km)
Geographic center: In Story Co.,
5 mi. NE of Ames
Number of counties: 99
Largest
county by population and area: Polk, 379,029 (2001); Kossuth,
973 sq mi.
State forests: 8 (40,706 ac.)
State
parks: 83 (53,000 ac.)
Residents: Iowan
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The first Europeans to visit
the area were the French explorers Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet
in 1673. The U.S. obtained control of the area in 1803 as part of the
Louisiana Purchase, and during the first half of the 19th century, there
was heavy fighting between white settlers and Indians. Lands were taken
from the Indians after the Black Hawk War in 1832 and again in 1836
and 1837.
When Iowa became a state in 1846, its capital was
Iowa City; the more centrally located Des Moines became the new capital
in 1857. At that time, the state's present boundaries were also drawn.
Although Iowa produces a tenth of the nation's food
supply, the value of Iowa's manufactured products is twice that of its
agriculture. Major industries are food and associated products, non-electrical
machinery, electrical equipment, printing and publishing, and fabricated
products.
Iowa stands in a class by itself as an agricultural
state. Its farms sell over $10 billion worth of crops and livestock
annually. Iowa leads the nation in all corn, soybean, and hog marketings,
and comes in third in total livestock sales. Iowa's forests produce
hardwood lumber, particularly walnut, and its mineral products include
cement, limestone, sand, gravel, gypsum, and coal.
Tourist attractions include the Herbert Hoover
birthplace and library near West Branch; the Amana Colonies; Fort Dodge
Historical Museum, Fort, and Stockade; the Iowa State Fair at Des Moines
in August; and the Effigy Mounds National Monument, a prehistoric Indian
burial site at Marquette.
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