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Iowa is the 29th state of the United States, having joined
the union on December 28, 1846. The U.S. Post Office abbreviation
for the state is IA.
The official (long) name of the state: "State of Iowa."
The state is named for the Native American Iowa people.
Contents [showhide]
1 History
1.1 Marquette and Joliet find Iowa lush and green
1.2 The Indians
1.3 Iowa's first white settlers
1.4 Transportation: railroad fever
1.5 The Civil War
1.6 The political arena
1.7 Iowa: home for immigrants
1.8 Vast changes
1.9 Strong traditions
2 Law and government
3 Geography
4 Economy
5 Demographics
6 Important cities and towns
7 Education
7.1 State universities
7.2 Independent colleges and universities
7.3 Community colleges
7.4 Professional business and technical colleges and universities
8 Professional sports teams
9 U.S. senators from Iowa
10 Iowa caucus
11 External links
[edit]
History
Adapted from "History of Iowa" by Dorothy Schwieder,
professor of history, Iowa State University
[edit]
Marquette and Joliet find Iowa lush and green
In the summer of 1673, French explorers Louis Joliet and Father
Jacques Marquette traveled down the Mississippi River past
the land that was to become the state of Iowa. The two explorers,
along with their five crewmen, stepped ashore near where the
Iowa river flowed into the Mississippi. It is believed that
the 1673 voyage marked the first time that white people visited
the region of Iowa. After surveying the surrounding area,
the Frenchmen recorded in their journals that Iowa appeared
lush, green, and fertile. For the next 300 years, thousands
of white settlers would agree with these early visitors: Iowa
was indeed lush and green; moreover, its soil was highly productive.
In fact, much of the history of the Hawkeye State is inseparably
intertwined with its agricultural productivity. Iowa stands
today as one of the leading agricultural states in the nation,
a fact foreshadowed by the observation of the early French
explorers.
[edit]
The Indians
Before 1673, however, the region had long been home to many
Native Americans. Approximately 17 different Indian tribes
had resided here at various times including the Ioway, Sauk,
Mesquaki, Sioux, Potawatomi, Oto, and Missouri. The Potawatomi,
Oto, and Missouri Indians had sold their land to the federal
government by 1830 while the Sauk and Mesquaki remained in
the Iowa region until 1845. The Santee Band of the Sioux was
the last to negotiate a treaty with the federal government
in 1851.
The Sauk and Mesquaki constituted the largest and most powerful
tribes in the Upper Mississippi Valley. They had earlier moved
from the Michigan region into Wisconsin and by the 1730s,
they had relocated in western Illinois. There they established
their villages along the Rock and Mississippi Rivers. They
lived in their main villages only for a few months each year.
At other times, they traveled throughout western Illinois
and eastern Iowa hunting, fishing, and gathering food and
materials with which to make domestic articles. Every spring,
the two tribes traveled northward into Minnesota where they
tapped maple trees and made syrup.
In 1829, the federal government informed the two tribes that
they must leave their villages in western Illinois and move
across the Mississippi River into the Iowa region. The federal
government claimed ownership of the Illinois land as a result
of the Treaty of 1804. The move was made but not without violence.
Chief Black hawk, a highly-respected Sauk leader, protested
the move and in 1832 returned to reclaim the Illinois village
of Saukenauk. For the next three months, the Illinois militia
pursued Black Hawk and his band of approximately 400 Indians
northward along the eastern side of the Mississippi River.
The Indians surrendered at the Bad Axe River in Wisconsin,
their numbers having dwindled to about 200. This encounter
is known as the Black Hawk War. As punishment for their resistance,
the federal government required the Sauk and Mesquaki to relinquish
some of their land in eastern Iowa. This land, known as the
Black Hawk Purchase, constituted a strip 50 miles wide lying
along the Mississippi River, stretching from the Missouri
border to approximately Fayette and Clayton Counties in Northeastern
Iowa.
Today, Iowa is still home to one Indian group, the Mesquaki,
who reside on the Mesquaki Settlement in Tama County. After
most Sauk and Mesquaki members had been removed from the state,
some Mesquaki tribal members, along with a few Sauk, returned
to hunt and fish in eastern Iowa. The Indians then approached
Governor James Grimes with the request that they be allowed
to purchase back some of their original land. They collected
$735 for their first land purchase and eventually they bought
back approximately 3,200 acres (13 km²).
[edit]
Iowa's first white settlers
The first official white settlement in Iowa began in June
1833, in the Black Hawk Purchase. Most of Iowa's first white
settlers came from Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Indiana,
Kentucky, and Virginia. The great majority of newcomers came
in family units. Most families had resided in at least one
additional state between the time they left their state of
birth and the time they arrived in Iowa. Sometimes families
had relocated three or four times before they reached Iowa.
At the same time, not all settlers remained here; many soon
moved on to the Dakotas or other areas in the Great Plains.
Iowa's earliest white settlers soon discovered an environment
different from that which they had known back East. Most northeastern
and southeastern states were heavily timbered; settlers there
had material for building homes, outbuildings, and fences.
Moreover, wood also provided ample fuel. Once past the extreme
eastern portion of Iowa, settlers quickly discovered that
the state was primarily a prairie or tall grass region. Trees
grew abundantly in the extreme eastern and southeastern portions,
and along rivers and streams, but elsewhere timber was limited.
In most portions of eastern and central Iowa, settlers could
find sufficient timber for construction of log cabins, but
substitute materials had to be found for fuel and fencing.
For fuel, they turned to dried prairie hay, corn cobs, and
dried animal droppings. In southern Iowa, early settlers found
coal outcroppings along rivers and streams. People moving
into northwest Iowa, an area also devoid of trees, constructed
sod houses. Some of the early sod house residents wrote in
glowing terms about their new quarters, insisting that "soddies"
were not only cheap to build but were warm in the winter and
cool in the summer. Settlers experimented endlessly with substitute
fencing materials. Some residents built stone fences; some
constructed dirt ridges; others dug ditches. The most successful
fencing material was the osage orange hedge until the 1870s
when the invention of barbed wire provided farmers with satisfactory
fencing material.
[edit]
Transportation: railroad fever
As thousands of settlers poured into Iowa in the mid-1800s,
all shared a common concern for the development of adequate
transportation. The earliest settlers shipped their agricultural
goods down the Mississippi River to New Orleans, but by the
1850s, Iowans had caught the nation's railroad fever. The
nation's first railroad had been built near Baltimore in 1831,
and by 1860, Chicago was served by almost a dozen lines. Iowans,
like other Midwesterners, were anxious to start railroad building
in their state.
In the early 1850s, city officials in the river communities
of Dubuque, Clinton, Davenport, and Burlington began to organize
local railroad companies. City officials knew that railroads
building west from Chicago would soon reach the Mississippi
River opposite the four Iowa cities. With the 1850s, railroad
planning took place which eventually resulted in the development
of the Illinois Central, the Chicago and North Western, reaching
Council Bluffs in 1867. Council Bluffs had been designated
as the eastern terminus for the Union Pacific, the railroad
that would eventually extend across the western half of the
nation and along with the Central Pacific, provide the nation's
first transcontinental railroad. A short time later a fifth
railroad, the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul, and Pacific, also
completed its line across the state.
The completion of five railroads across Iowa brought major
economic changes. Of primary importance, Iowans could travel
every month of the year. During the latter ninetieth and early
twentieth centuries, even small Iowa towns had six passenger
trains a day. Steamboats and stagecoaches had previously provided
transportation, but both were highly dependent on the weather,
and steam boats could not travel at all once the rivers had
frozen over. Railroads also provided year-round transportation
for Iowa's farmers. With Chicago's pre-eminence as a railroad
center, the corn, wheat, beef, and pork raised by Iowa's farmers
could be shipped through Chicago, across the nation to eastern
seaports, and from there, anywhere in the world.
Railroads also brought major changes in Iowa's industrial
sector. Before 1870, Iowa contained some manufacturing firms
in the eastern portion of the state, particularly all made
possible by year-around railroad transportation. Many of the
new industries were related to agriculture. In Cedar Rapids,
John and Robert Stuart, along with their cousin, George Douglas,
started an oats processing plant. In time, this firm took
the name Quaker Oats. Meat packing plants also appeared in
the 1870s in different parts of the state: Sinclair Meat Packing
opened in Cedar Rapids and John Morrell and Company set up
operations in Ottumwa.
[edit]
The Civil War
By 1860, Iowa had achieved statehood (December 28, 1846,the
29th state), and the state continued to attract many settlers,
both native and foreign-born. Only the extreme northwestern
part of the state remained a frontier area. But after almost
30 years of peaceful development, Iowans found their lives
greatly altered with the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861.
While Iowans had no battles fought on their soil, the state
paid dearly through the contributions of its fighting men.
Iowa males responded enthusiastically to the call for Union
volunteers and more than 75,000 Iowa men served with distinction
in campaigns fought in the East and in the South. Of that
number, 13,001 died in the war, many of disease rather than
from battle wounds. Some men died in the Confederate prison
camps, particularly Andersonville, Georgia. A total of 8,500
Iowa men were wounded.
[edit]
The political arena
The Civil War era brought considerable change to Iowa and
perhaps one of the most visible changes came in the political
arena. During the 1840's, most Iowans voted Democratic although
the state also contained some Whigs. Iowa's first two United
States Senators were Democrats as were most state officials.
During the 1850s, however, the state's Democratic Party developed
serious internal problems as well as being unsuccessful in
getting the national Democratic Party to respond to their
needs. Iowans soon turned to the newly emerging Republican
Party; the political career of James Grimes illustrates this
change. In 1854, Iowans elected Grimes governor on the Whig
ticket. Two years later, Iowans elected Grimes governor on
the Republican ticket. Grimes would later serve as a Republican
United States Senator from Iowa. Republicans took over state
politics in the 1850s and quickly instigated several changes.
They moved the state capital from Iowa City to Des Moines,
they established the University of Iowa and they wrote a new
state constitution. From the late 1850s until well into the
twentieth century, Iowans remained strongly Republican. Iowans
sent many highly capable Republicans to Washington, particularly
William Boyd Allison of Dubuque, Jonathan P. Dolliver of Ft.
Dodge, and Albert Baird Cummins of Des Moines. These men served
their state and their nation with distinction.
Another political issue facing Iowans in the 1860s was the
issue of women's suffrage. From the 1860s on, Iowa contained
a large number of women, and some men, who strongly supported
the measure and who worked endlessly for its adoption. In
keeping with the general reform mood of the latter 1860s and
1870s, the issue first received serious consideration when
both houses of the General Assembly passed a women's suffrage
amendment in 1870. Two years later, however, when the legislature
had to consider the amendment again before it could be submitted
to the general electorate, interest had waned, opposition
had developed, and the amendment was defeated. Finally, in
1920, after both houses of the United States Congress passed
the measure and it had been approved by the proper number
of states, woman's suffrage became a reality for American
women everywhere.
[edit]
Iowa: home for immigrants
While Iowans were debating the issues of women's suffrage
in the post Civil War period, the state itself was attracting
many more people. Following the Civil War, Iowa's population
continued to grow dramatically, from 674,913 people in 1860
to 1,194,020 in 1870. Moreover, the ethnic composition of
Iowa's population also changed substantially. Before the Civil
War, Iowa had attracted some foreign-born settlers, but the
number remained small. After the Civil War, the number of
immigrants increased. In 1869, the state encouraged immigration
by printing a 96-page booklet entitled Iowa: The Home of Immigrants.
The publication gave physical, social, educational, and political
descriptions of Iowa. The legislature instructed that the
booklet be published in English, German, Dutch, Swedish, and
Danish.
Iowans were not alone in their efforts to attract more northern
and western Europeans. Throughout the nation, Americans regarded
these new comers as "good stock" and welcomed them
enthusiastically. Most immigrants from these countries came
in family units. Germans constituted the largest group, settling
in every county within the state. The great majority became
farmers, but many also became craftsmen and shopkeepers. Moreover,
many German-Americans edited newspapers, taught school, and
headed banking establishments. In Iowa, Germans exhibited
the greatest diversity in occupations, religion, and geographical
settlement.
Iowa also attracted many other people from Europe, including
Swedes, Norwegians, Danes, Dutch, and many emigrants from
the British Isles. After 1900, people also emigrated from
southern and eastern Europe. In many instances, immigrant
groups were identified with particular occupations. The Scandinavians,
including Norwegians, who settled in Winneshiek and Story
Counties; Swedes, who settled in Boone County; and Danes,
who settled in southwestern Iowa; were largely associated
with farming. Many Swedes also became coal miners. The Hollanders
made two major settlements in Iowa, the first in Marion County,
and the second in northwest Iowa.
Proportionately far more southern and eastern immigrants,
particularly Italians and Croatians, went into coal mining
than did western and northern Europeans. Italian emigration
differed from earlier emigration in that it tended to be male
dominated. Typically, the Italian male emigrated with financial
support of family or friends. Once in Iowa, he worked in the
mines to pay back his sponsors; then he began to save to bring
his wife and family from Italy. For two generations, Italian
males worked in coal mines scattered throughout central and
southern Iowa. Beginning around 1925, however, the Iowa coal
industry began to decline. By the mid-1950s only a few underground
mines remained in the state.
The majority of blacks who migrated to Iowa during the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries also worked as coal
miners. Before the Civil War, Iowa had only a small black
population, but in the 1880s that number increased considerably.
Unfortunately, many of the early blacks were hired as strike
breakers by Iowa coal operators. In later decades, however,
coal companies hired blacks as regular miners
[edit]
Vast changes
In 1917, the United States entered World War I and farmers
as well as all Iowans experienced a wartime economy. For farmers,
the change was significant. Since the beginning of the war
in 1914, Iowa farmers had experienced economic prosperity.
Along with farmers everywhere, they were urged to be patriotic
by increasing their production. Farmers purchased more land
and raised more corn, beef, and pork for the war effort. It
seemed that no one could lose as farmers expanded their operations,
made more money, and at the same time, helped the Allied war
effort.
After the war, however, Iowa farmers soon saw wartime farm
subsidies eliminated. Beginning in 1920, many farmers had
difficulty making the payment for debts they had incurred
during the war. The 1920s were a time of hardship for Iowa's
farm families and for many families, these hardships carried
over into the 1930s.
As economic difficulties worsened, Iowa farmers sought to
find local solutions. Faced with extremely low farm prices,
including corn at 10 cents a bushel and pork at three cents
a pound, some Iowa farmers joined the Farm Holiday Association.
This group, which had its greatest strength in the area around
Sioux City, tried to withhold farm products from markets.
They believed this practice would force up farm prices. The
Farm Holiday Association had only limited success as many
farmers did not cooperate and the withholding itself did little
to raise prices. Farmers experienced little relief until 1933
when the federal government, as part of Franklin Roosevelt's
New Deal, created a federal farm program.
In 1933, native Iowan Henry A. Wallace went to Washington
as secretary of agriculture and served as principle architect
for the new farm program. Wallace, former editor of the Midwest's
leading farm journal, Wallace's Farmer, believed that prosperity
would return to the agricultural sector only if agricultural
production was curtailed. Further, he believed that farmers
would be monetarily compensated for withholding agricultural
land from production. These two principles were incorporated
into the Agricultural Adjustment Act passed in 1933. Iowa
farmers experienced some recovery as a result of the legislation
but like all Iowans, they did not experience total recovery
until the 1940s.
Since World War II, Iowans have continued to undergo considerable
economic, political, and social change. In the political area,
Iowan experienced a major change in the 1960s when liquor
by the drink came into effect. During both the nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries, Iowans had strongly supported
prohibition, but in 1933 with the repeal of national prohibition,
Iowans established a state liquor commission. This group was
charged with control and regulation of Iowa's liquor sales.
From 1933 until the early 1960s, Iowans could purchase packaged
liquor only. In the 1970s, Iowans witnessed a reapportionment
of the General Assembly, achieved only after a long struggle
for an equitably-apportioned state legislature. Another major
political change was in regard to voting. By the mid-1950s,
Iowa had developed a fairly competitive two-party structure,
ending almost 100 years of Republican domination within the
state.
In the economic sector, Iowa also has undergone considerable
change. Beginning with the first farm-related industries developed
in the 1870s, Iowa has experienced a gradual increase in the
number of business and manufacturing operations. The period
since World War II has witnessed a particular increase in
manufacturing operations. While agriculture continues to be
the state's dominant industry, Iowans also produce a wide
variety of products including refrigerators, washing machines,
fountain pens, farm implements, and food products that are
shipped around the world.
[edit]
Strong traditions
At the same time, some traditions remain unchanged. Iowans
are still widely known for their strong educational systems,
both in secondary as well as in higher education. Today, Iowa
State University and the University of Iowa continue to be
recognized nationally and internationally as outstanding educational
institutions. Iowa remains a state composed mostly of farms
and small towns, with a limited number of larger cities. Moreover,
Iowa is still a place where most people live stable, comfortable
lives, where family relationships are strong and where the
quality of life is high. In many peoples' minds, Iowa is "middle
America." Throughout the years, Iowans have profited
from their environment and the result is a progressive people
and a bountiful land.
[edit]
Law and government
The state capital is Des Moines. The current Governor is Tom
Vilsack (Democrat) and the two U.S. Senators are Chuck Grassley
(Republican) and Tom Harkin (Democrat). The five U.S. Congressmen
are Jim Leach (Republican), Jim Nussle (Republican), Steve
King (Republican), Tom Latham (Republican), and Leonard Boswell
(Democrat).
See also: List of Governors of Iowa
Iowa[edit]
Geography
See: List of Iowa counties
Iowa is bordered by Minnesota on the north, Nebraska and
South Dakota on the west, Missouri on the south, and Wisconsin
and Illinois on the east.
The Mississippi River forms the eastern boundary of the state.
The boundary along the west is formed by the Missouri River
south of Sioux City and by the Big Sioux River north of Sioux
City. The topography of the state is gently rolling plains.
Loess hills lie along the western border of the state. Some
of these are several hundred feed thick. There are few natural
lakes in the state, most notably Spirit Lake, Lake Okoboji
and West Lake Okoboji in northwest Iowa.
The point of lowest elevation is Keokuk in southeast Iowa.
The point of highest elevation is Hawkeye Point, located in
a feedlot north of Sibley in northwest Iowa. Considering the
size of the state, there is very little elevation difference.
See: List of Iowa rivers
National parks, etc.
Effigy Mounds National Monument
Herbert Hoover National Historical Site
[edit]
Economy
Bales of hay on a farm near Ames, Iowa.The state's total gross
state product for 1999 was $85 billion placing Iowa 30th in
the nation. Its per capita income for 2000 was $26,723. Iowa's
main agricultural outputs are hogs, corn, soybeans, oats,
cattle and dairy products. Its industrial outputs are food
processing, machinery, electric equipment, chemical products,
publishing and primary metals.
State income
Major industries/products: agriculture, insurance, manufacturing.
state taxes
[edit]
Demographics
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, as of 2003, Iowa's population
was estimated at 2,944,062 people.
The racial makeup of the state is:
92.6% White Non-Hispanic
2.1% Black
2.8% Hispanic
1.3% Asian
0.3% American Indian
1.1% are mixed race
The 5 largest ancestry groups in Iowa are German (35.7%),
Irish (13.5%), English (9.5%), American (6.6%), Norwegian
(5.7%).
The 5 largest religious denominations in Iowa are Roman Catholic
(24%), Lutheran (17%), Methodist (14%), Baptist (5%), "Christian"
(5%). 14% of the population is nonreligious.
6.4% of Iowa's population were reported as under 5, 25.1%
under 18, and 14.9% were 65 or older. Females made up approximately
50.9% of the population.
[edit]
Important cities and towns
Population > 100,000 (urbanized area)
Des Moines, state capital
Davenport, home of Saint Ambrose University
Cedar Rapids
Waterloo
Sioux City
Population > 10,000 (urbanized area)
Iowa City, home of University of Iowa
Dubuque
Ames, home of Iowa State University
Clinton
Carroll
Burlington
Mason City
Marshalltown
Fort Dodge
Ottumwa
Muscatine
Newton
Keokuk
Indianola
Boone
Oskaloosa
Fort Madison
Spirit Lake
Spencer
Storm Lake
Other Cities
Bettendorf (Davenport suburb among the Quad Cities)
Cedar Falls, home of the [1] (http://www.uni.edu) University
of Northern Iowa
Council Bluffs
Fayette, home of Upper Iowa University
Maharishi Vedic City, Iowa
[edit]
Education
Iowa has a strong emphasis on education, which is shown in
standardized testing scores. In 2003, Iowa had the second
highest average SAT scores by state, and tied for second highest
average ACT (examination) scores in states where more than
20% of graduates were tested. The national office of ACT is
in Iowa City, and the ITBS and ITED testing programs used
in many states are provided by the University of Iowa.
[edit]
State universities
Iowa State University
University of Iowa
University of Northern Iowa
[edit]
Independent colleges and universities
Briar Cliff University
Buena Vista University
Central College
Clarke College
Coe College
Cornell College
Divine Word College
Dordt College
Drake University
Emmaus Bible College
Faith Baptist Bible College
Graceland University
Grand View College
Grinnell College
Iowa Wesleyan College
Loras College
Luther College
Maharishi University of Management
Morningside College
Mount Mercy College
Northwestern College
Simpson College
Saint Ambrose University
The Franciscan University
University of Dubuque
Upper Iowa University
Vennard College
Waldorf College
Wartburg College
William Penn University
[edit]
Community colleges
Clinton Community College
Des Moines Area Community College
Ellsworth Community College
Hawkeye Community College
Indian Hills Community College
Iowa Central Community College
Iowa Lakes Community College
Iowa Western Community College
Kirkwood Community College
Marshalltown Community College
Muscatine Community College
North Iowa Area Community College
Northeast Iowa Community College
Northwest Iowa Community College
Scott Community College
Southeastern Community College
Southwestern Community College
Western Iowa Community College
[edit]
Professional business and technical colleges and universities
American Institute of Business
Allen College of Nursing
Hamilton College
Kaplan College
Mercy College of Health Sciences
Palmer College of Chiropractic
St. Luke's College of Nursing and Health Sciences
University of Osteopathic Medicine and Health Sciences
Vatterott College
The Hawkeye State
State motto: "Our liberties we prize and our rights we
will maintain"
State Bird: Eastern Goldfinch
State Flower: Wild Rose
State Rock: Geode
State Song: "The Song of Iowa"
State Tree: Oak
Honorary Ship: USS Iowa
[edit]
Professional sports teams
The Minor League baseball teams are:
Iowa Cubs
Cedar Rapids Kernels
Burlington Bees
Chariton A's (collegiate summer)
Clinton LumberKings
Swing of the Quad Cities
Waterloo Bucks (collegiate summer)
The Minor League hockey teams are:
Iowa Stars
Cedar Rapids RoughRiders
Waterloo Black Hawks
Des Moines Buccaneers
Sioux City Musketeers
The Minor League soccer teams are:
Des Moines Menace
[edit]
U.S. senators from Iowa
List of United States Senators who have represented Iowa:
(Seat 1):
Chuck Grassley, Republican, 1981–present
John Culver, Democrat, 1975–1981
Harold E. Hughes, Democrat, 1969–1975
Bourke B. Hickenlooper, Democrat, 1945–1969
Guy M. Gillette, Democrat, 1936–1945
Richard Louis Murphy, Democrat, 1933–1936
Smith W. Brookhart, Republican, 1927–1933
David W. Stewart, Republican, 1926–1927
Albert B. Cummins, Republican, 1908–1926
William B. Allison, Republican, 1873–1908
James Harlan, Republican, 1867–1873
Samuel J. Kirkwood, Republican, 1865–1867
James Harlan, Free Soil and Republican, 1855–1865
Augustus C. Dodge, Democrat, 1848–1855
(Seat 2):
Tom Harkin, Democrat, 1985–present
Roger Jepsen, Republican, 1979–1985
Dick Clark, Democrat, 1973–1979
Jack R. Miller, Republican, 1961–1973
Thomas E. Martin, Republican, 1955–1961
Guy M. Gillette, Republican, 1949–1955
George A. Wilson, Republican, 1943–1949
Clyde L. Herring, Republican, 1937–1943
L.J. Dickinson, Republican, 1931–1937
Daniel F. Steck, Democrat, 1926–1931
Smith W. Brookhart, Republican, 1922–1926
Charles A. Rawson, Democrat, 1922–1922
William S. Kenyon, Republican, 1911–1922
Lafayette Young, Democrat, 1910–1911
Jonathan P. Dolliver, Republican, 1900–1910
John H. Gear, Republican, 1895–1900
James F. Wilson, Republican, 1883–1895
James W. McDill, Republican, 1881–1883
Samuel J. Kirkwood, Republican, 1877–1881
George G. Wright, Republican, 1871–1877
James B. Howell, Republican, 1870–1871
James W. Grimes, Republican, 1859–1869
George W. Jones, Democrat, 1848–1859
[edit]
Iowa caucus
The state gets considerable attention every four years because
of its presidential caucus, a gathering of voters which, along
with the New Hampshire primary a week later, has become the
starting gun for choosing the two major-party candidates for
U.S. president. The caucus, held in January of the election
year, involves people gathering in homes or public places
and choosing their candidate, rather than casting secret ballots,
as in done in a primary or election.
[edit]
External links
http://www.iowa.gov
Iowa News. (http://www.HavenWorks.com/iowacentric)
US Census Bureau (http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/19000.html)
State of Iowa
Regions
Iowa Great Lakes | Quad Cities
Largest Cities
Ames | Ankeny | Bettendorf | Burlington | Cedar Falls | Cedar
Rapids | Clinton | Council Bluffs | Davenport | Des Moines
| Dubuque | Fort Dodge | Iowa City | Marion | Marshalltown
| Mason City | Muscatine | Ottumwa | Sioux City | Waterloo
Counties
Adair -
Adams - Allamakee - Appanoose - Audubon - Benton - Black Hawk
- Boone - Bremer - Buchanan - Buena Vista - Butler - Calhoun
- Carroll - Cass - Cedar - Cerro Gordo - Cherokee - Chickasaw
- Clarke - Clay - Clayton - Clinton - Crawford - Dallas -
Davis - Decatur - Delaware - Des Moines - Dickinson - Dubuque
- Emmet - Fayette - Floyd - Franklin - Fremont - Greene -
Grundy - Guthrie - Hamilton - Hancock - Hardin - Harrison
- Henry - Howard - Humboldt - Ida - Iowa - Jackson - Jasper
- Jefferson - Johnson - Jones - Keokuk - Kossuth - Lee - Linn
- Louisa - Lucas - Lyon - Madison - Mahaska - Marion - Marshall
- Mills - Mitchell - Monona - Monroe - Montgomery - Muscatine
- O'Brien - Osceola - Page - Palo Alto - Plymouth - Pocahontas
- Polk - Pottawattamie - Poweshiek - Ringgold - Sac - Scott
- Shelby - Sioux - Story - Tama - Taylor - Union - Van Buren
- Wapello - Warren - Washington - Wayne - Webster - Winnebago
- Winneshiek - Woodbury - Worth - Wright
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Wikipedia
article "Iowa".
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