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Iowa


I·o·wa 1

I0225000 (ī′ə-wə)n. pl. Iowa or I·o·was 1. A member of a Native American people formerly inhabiting parts of Iowa and southwest Minnesota, with present-day populations in Nebraska, Kansas, and Oklahoma.2. The Siouan language of the Iowa.
[From French ayoés, ultimately from Dakota ayúxba.]
I′o·wa adj.

I·o·wa 2

I0225000 (ī′ə-wə) Abbr. IA or Ia. A state of the north-central United States. It was admitted as the 29th state in 1846. Part of the Louisiana Purchase of 1803, Iowa was organized as a separate territory in 1838. The Mound Builders lived in the area in prehistoric times. Des Moines is the capital and the largest city.
I′o·wan adj.

Iowa

(ˈaɪəʊə) n (Placename) a state of the N central US, in the Midwest: consists of rolling plains crossed by many rivers, with the Missouri forming the western border and the Mississippi the eastern. Capital: Des Moines. Pop: 2 944 062 (2003 est). Area: 144 887 sq km (55 941 sq miles). Abbreviation: Ia. or IA (with zip code)

I•o•wa

(ˈaɪ ə wə)

n. 1. a state in the central United States. 2,926,324; 56,290 sq. mi. (145,790 sq. km). Cap.: Des Moines. Abbr.: IA, Ia., Io. 2. a river flowing SE from N Iowa to the Mississippi River. 291 mi. (470 km) long. I′o•wan, adj., n.
Thesaurus
Noun1.Iowa - a member of the Siouan people formerly living in Iowa and Minnesota and MissouriIowa - a member of the Siouan people formerly living in Iowa and Minnesota and MissouriIowaySiouan, Sioux - a member of a group of North American Indian peoples who spoke a Siouan language and who ranged from Lake Michigan to the Rocky Mountains
2.Iowa - a state in midwestern United StatesHawkeye State, IACorn Belt - the midwestern states where corn is grown; Iowa and Illinois are excellent for raising corn and corn-fed livestockmiddle west, Midwest, midwestern United States - the north central region of the United States (sometimes called the heartland or the breadbasket of America)U.S.A., United States, United States of America, US, USA, America, the States, U.S. - North American republic containing 50 states - 48 conterminous states in North America plus Alaska in northwest North America and the Hawaiian Islands in the Pacific Ocean; achieved independence in 1776Davenport - a city in eastern Iowa on the Mississippi River across from Moline and Rock IslandCedar Rapids - a city in eastern IowaClinton - a town in east central Iowacapital of Iowa, Des Moines - the capital and largest city in IowaDubuque - a town in eastern Iowa on the Mississippi RiverMason City - a town in north central IowaOttumwa - a town in southeast IowaSioux City - a city in northeastern Iowa where the Big Sioux River joins the MissouriLittle Sioux River - a river that rises in southwestern Minnesota and flows southwestward to the Missouri River in western Iowa
3.Iowa - a dialect of the Chiwere language spoken by the IowaIowayChiwere - the Siouan language spoken by the Iowa and Oto and Missouri
Translations

Iowa


Iowa

(ī`əwə, –wā'), Native North Americans whose language belongs to the Siouan branch of the Hokan-Siouan linguistic stock (see Native American languagesNative American languages,
languages of the native peoples of the Western Hemisphere and their descendants. A number of the Native American languages that were spoken at the time of the European arrival in the New World in the late 15th cent.
..... Click the link for more information.
); also called the Ioway. They, with the Missouri, the Omaha, the Oto, and the Ponca, are thought to have once formed part of the Winnebago people in their primal home N of the Great Lakes. Iowa culture was that of the Eastern Woodlands area with some Plains area traits. In 1700 the Iowa, separated from the parent nation, lived in Minnesota. Their population in 1760 was some 1,100. In 1804, according to Lewis and Clark, the Iowa lived on the Platte River and there were some 800, smallpox having reduced the population. In 1824 they ceded all their lands in Missouri and in 1836 were assigned a reservation in NE Kansas. Some of them later moved to central Oklahoma, and in 1890 land was allotted to them in severalty. In 1990 there were some 1,500 Iowa in the United States.

Bibliography

See A. B. Skinner, Ethnology of the Ioway Indians (1926).


Iowa,

river, 329 mi (529 km) long, rising in the lakes of N Iowa and flowing SE to the Mississippi River, SE Iowa; Cedar River (300 mi/483 km long) is its chief tributary. A power dam crosses the gorge at Iowa Falls. The Iowa River has an extensive flood-control system; Coralville Dam and reservoir, N of Iowa City, is the largest unit.

Iowa

(ī`əwə), midwestern state in the N central United States. It is bounded by the Mississippi River, across which lie Wisconsin and Illinois (E); Missouri (S); Nebraska and South Dakota, from which it is separated by the Missouri and the Big Sioux rivers, respectively (W); and Minnesota (N).

Facts and Figures

Area, 56,290 sq mi (145,791 sq km). Pop. (2010) 3,046,355, a 4.1% increase since the 2000 census. Capital and largest city, Des Moines. Statehood, Dec. 28, 1846 (29th state). Highest pt., 1,670 ft (509 m), Osceola co.; lowest pt., Mississippi River, 480 ft (146 m). Nickname, Hawkeye State. Motto, Our Liberties We Prize and Our Rights We Will Maintain. State bird, Eastern goldfinch. State flower, wild rose. State tree, oak. Abbr., IA

Geography

Iowa is bordered on two sides by rivers; the Mississippi separates it on the east from Wisconsin and Illinois, and the Missouri and the Big Sioux separate it on the west from Nebraska and South Dakota. The state is bounded on the north by Minnesota and on the south by Missouri. Iowa is an area of rich, rolling plains, interrupted by many rivers. The terrain is low and gently sloping, except for the hills in the unglaciated area of NE Iowa, the steeply sloping bluffs on the banks of the Mississippi, and the moundlike bluffs on the banks of the Missouri. The rivers of the eastern two thirds of Iowa flow to the Mississippi; those of the west flow to the Missouri. The original woodlands, which included black walnut and hickory, were destroyed by lumbering and land clearing in the 19th cent., and present wooded sections are covered only with second or third growths of timber. Only 0.1% of Iowa, the lowest total in the 50 states, is owned by the federal government.

Historically typical of Iowa was the prairie. Covered a little more than a century ago with grass higher than the wheels of the pioneers' prairie schooners, or covered wagons, the prairies gave way to fields of corn and other grains. Wildflowers still brighten the roadsides, but few areas of the original grassland remain, and several prairie preserves have been established. The former habitat of wild turkeys, prairie chickens, and quail, Iowa abounds with migratory geese and ducks and the imported ring-necked pheasant and European partridge, all of which are hunted in the autumn.

Des MoinesDes Moines
, city (1990 pop. 193,187), state capital and seat of Polk co., S central Iowa, at the junction of the Des Moines and Raccoon rivers; inc. as Fort Des Moines in 1851, chartered as Des Moines in 1857.
..... Click the link for more information.
 is the capital and largest city. Other major cities are Cedar RapidsCedar Rapids,
city (1990 pop. 108,751), seat of Linn co., E central Iowa, on the Cedar River; inc. as a city 1856. The second largest city in Iowa, it is named for the surging rapids in the river.
..... Click the link for more information.
, DavenportDavenport,
city (1990 pop. 95,333), seat of Scott co., E central Iowa, on the Mississippi River; inc. 1836. Bridges connect it with the Illinois cities of Rock Island and Moline; the three communities and neighboring Bettendorf, Iowa, are known as the Quad Cities.
..... Click the link for more information.
, and Sioux CitySioux City,
city (1990 pop. 80,505), seat of Woodbury co., NW Iowa, at the junction of the Big Sioux and Floyd rivers with the Missouri; inc. 1857. It is a shipping, wholesale trade, and industrial center for an extensive agricultural and livestock area (including nearby states).
..... Click the link for more information.
.

Iowa's climate is continental—northwest winds drive the mercury down below 0&degF; (−18&degC;) in winter, and in the summer hot air masses bring oppressive heat; there are violent thunderstorms, hail, and occasional droughts. Floods have periodically inflicted great losses of life and property, necessitating control measures. In the devastating midwestern flood of 1993 all 99 counties of Iowa were declared disaster areas. Overall, the average annual rainfall in Iowa is 31 in. (78.7 cm), and, since most of this falls in summer, soil is often washed away. Iowans have had to fight erosion with modern plowing and planting practices, control of water flow, and reforestation. Still, Iowa has some of the most fertile agricultural land (about 70% of the state's area is cropland) in the world.

Economy

The deep, porous soil yields corn and other grains in tremendous quantities, and the corn-fed hogs and cattle are nationally known. In 1997, Iowa led the nation in the production of corn, soybeans, hogs, and pigs, and ranked in the top 10 in the raising of cattle. Other major crops are hay and oats. Iowa has in recent years taken in the second highest farm income of any state.

Agriculture also benefits the state's chief industry, food processing, and in Sioux City and Cedar Rapids many factories process farm products. Nonelectrical machinery, farm machinery, tires, appliances, electronic equipment, and chemicals are among the other manufactures. Cement is the most important mineral product; others are stone, sand, gravel, and gypsum. Mineral production is small, however. Communications, finance, and insurance industries are especially important in Des Moines.

Government and Higher Education

Iowa's constitution was adopted in 1857. The governor is elected for a term of four years. The general assembly, or legislature, has a senate with 50 members and a house of representatives with 100 members. Iowa is represented in the U.S. Congress by two senators and four representatives. The state has six electoral votes. Terry Branstad, a Republican, served as governor from 1983 through 1998, when Democrat Tom Vilsack was elected. Vilsack was reelected in 2002, and was succeeded by fellow Democrat Chet Culver, elected in 2006. Culver lost to Branstad in 2010. Branstad was reelected in 2014 but resigned in 2017 to become ambassador to China; Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds succeeded him and was elected governor in 2018.

Among the educational institutions in Iowa are Iowa State Univ. of Science and Technology, at Ames; the Univ. of Iowa, at Iowa City; Grinnell College, at Grinnell; Cornell College, at Mount Vernon; Drake Univ., at Des Moines; Univ. of Northern Iowa, at Cedar Falls; and the Univ. of Dubuque, Loras College, and Clarke College, at Dubuque.

History

European Incursions into Native Lands

In prehistoric times, the Mound BuildersMound Builders,
in North American archaeology, name given to those people who built mounds in a large area from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico and from the Mississippi River to the Appalachian Mts.
..... Click the link for more information.
, a farming people, lived in the Iowa area. When Europeans first came to explore the region in the 17th cent., various Native American groups, including the IowaIowa
, Native North Americans whose language belongs to the Siouan branch of the Hokan-Siouan linguistic stock (see Native American languages); also called the Ioway. They, with the Missouri, the Omaha, the Oto, and the Ponca, are thought to have once formed part of the
..... Click the link for more information.
, reputedly the source of the state's name, occupied the land. The Sac and FoxSac and Fox,
closely related Native Americans of the Algonquian branch of the Algonquian-Wakashan linguistic stock (see Native American languages). Sac and Fox culture was of the Eastern Woodlands area with some Plains-area traits (see under Natives, North American).
..... Click the link for more information.
 also ranged over the land, but it was the combative SiouxSioux
or Dakota,
confederation of Native North American tribes, the dominant group of the Hokan-Siouan linguistic stock, which is divided into several separate branches (see Native American languages).
..... Click the link for more information.
 who dominated the area. In 1673 the French explorers Father Jacques Marquette and Louis Jolliet traveled down the Mississippi River and touched upon the Iowa shores, as did Robert Cavelier, sieur de La Salle, in 1681–82. The areas surrounding the Des Moines and Mississippi rivers were profitable for fur traders, and a number of Iowa towns developed from trading posts.

Late in the 18th cent. a French Canadian, Julien DubuqueDubuque, Julien
, 1762–1810, pioneer settler of Iowa, b. Nicolet co., Que. Setting out at a young age for the West, Dubuque reached Prairie du Chien, in what is now Wisconsin, by 1785 and crossed to the Iowa side of the Mississippi, then in Spanish Louisiana.
..... Click the link for more information.
, leased land from Native Americans around the Dubuque area and opened lead mines there. After his death they refused to permit others to work the mines, and U.S. troops under Lt. Jefferson Davis protected Native American rights to the land as late as 1830. However, their hold was doomed after the United States acquired Iowa as part of the Louisiana PurchaseLouisiana Purchase,
1803, American acquisition from France of the formerly Spanish region of Louisiana. Reasons for the Purchase

The revelation in 1801 of the secret agreement of 1800, whereby Spain retroceded Louisiana to France, aroused uneasiness in the United
..... Click the link for more information.
 of 1803.

In 1832 the Black Hawk WarBlack Hawk War,
conflict between the Sac and Fox and the United States in 1832. After the War of 1812, whites settling the Illinois country exerted pressure on the Native Americans.
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 broke out as the Sac and Fox, led by their chief, Black Hawk, fought to regain their former lands in Illinois along the Mississippi River. They were defeated by U.S. troops and were forced to leave the Illinois lands and cede to the United States much of their land along the river on the Iowa side. Within two decades after the Black Hawk War, all Native American lands in the region had been ceded to the United States. Meanwhile, a great rush of frontiersmen came to settle the prairies and take the mines.

Territorial Status

Slavery was prohibited in Iowa under the Missouri Compromise of 1820, which excluded it from the lands of the Louisiana Purchase north of lat. 36°30'N. Included in the Missouri Territory prior to 1821, Iowa was subsequently part of Michigan Territory and Wisconsin Territory. By 1838, Iowa Territory was organized, with Burlington as the temporary capital. In the following year, Iowa City became the capital. The Iowans quickly built a rural civilization like that of New England, where many of them had lived. Later, immigrants from Europe, notably Germans, Czechs, Dutch, and Scandinavians, brought their agricultural skills and their own customs to enrich Iowa's rural life, and a group of German Pietists established the Amana Church SocietyAmana Church Society
, corporate name of a group of seven small villages in E central Iowa, clustered around the Iowa River NW of Iowa City; settled 1855 by members of the Ebenezer Society. The society originated in one of the Pietist religious groups of 17th-century Germany.
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, a successful attempt at communal social organization. A system of public schools was set up in 1839, and efforts made soon thereafter resulted in the establishment of a number of colleges and universities.

Statehood, Railroads, and Reform Movements

Iowa became a state in 1846, and Ansel Briggs was elected as the first governor. In 1857 the capital was moved from Iowa City to Des Moines. In that same year the state adopted its second constitution. Iowa prospered greatly with the beginning of railroad construction, and the rivalry between towns to get the lines was so fierce that the grant of big land tracts to railroad companies was curtailed by legislative act in 1857. Two years earlier the state's first railroad line was completed between Davenport and Muscatine along the eastern border. Before and during the Civil War, Iowans, generally owners of small, independent farms, were naturally sympathetic to the antislavery side, and many fought for the Union. The Underground Railroad, which helped many fugitive slaves escape to free states, was active in Iowa, and the abolitionist John Brown made his headquarters there for a time.

Iowa's farmers prospered after the Civil War, but during the hard times that afflicted the country in the 1870s they found themselves burdened with debts. Feeling oppressed by the currency system, corporations, and high railroad and grain-storage rates, many of Iowa's farmers supported, along with other farmers of the West, the Granger movementGranger movement,
American agrarian movement taking its name from the National Grange of the Patrons of Husbandry, an organization founded in 1867 by Oliver H. Kelley and six associates. Its local units were called granges and its members grangers.
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, the Greenback partyGreenback party,
in U.S. history, political organization formed in the years 1874–76 to promote currency expansion. The members were principally farmers of the West and the South; stricken by the Panic of 1873, they saw salvation in an inflated currency that would wipe out
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, and the Populist partyPopulist party,
in U.S. history, political party formed primarily to express the agrarian protest of the late 19th cent. In some states the party was known as the People's party.
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. The reform movements had some success in the state. Granger laws were enacted in 1874 and 1876 regulating railroad rates, but these laws were repealed in 1877 under pressure from the railroad companies. By the end of the 19th cent., times improved, and the agrarian movements declined. Farm units grew larger, and mechanization brought great increases in productivity.

Modern Iowa

Much of Iowa's society may still resemble that depicted in the paintings of Grant WoodWood, Grant,
1891–1942, American painter, b. Anamosa, Iowa, studied Art Institute of Chicago and in Paris. He experimented with an impressionist style in Paris, but in Munich in 1928 he was decisively influenced by German and Flemish primitive painters, Memling in
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, an Iowan, but the state's industrial economy as well as other elements of modernization have altered this image. While on a visit to the United States in 1959, Nikita S. Khrushchev, then premier of the Soviet Union, was invited to a farm in Iowa to observe part of the U.S. farm economy. The volatile nature of agricultural prices combined with a steady decline in manufacturing has made Iowa susceptible to economic recession. This was especially true in the 1980s, when Iowa was second in the United States in outmigration with a 4.7% decline in population.

Notable Iowans

Among Iowa's colorful native sons were Buffalo BillBuffalo Bill,
1846–1917, American plainsman, scout, and showman, b. near Davenport, Iowa. His real name was William Frederick Cody. His family moved (1854) to Kansas, and after the death of his father (1857) he set out to earn the family living, working for supply trains
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 Cody, labor leader John L. LewisLewis, John Llewellyn,
1880–1969, American labor leader, b. Lucas co., Iowa; son of a Welsh immigrant coal miner. He became a miner and after 1906 rose through the union ranks to become president (1920) of the United Mine Workers of America (UMW).
..... Click the link for more information.
, and baseball player–evangelist Billy SundaySunday, Billy
(William Ashley Sunday), 1863–1935, American evangelist, b. Ames, Iowa, in the era around World War I. A professional baseball player (1883–90), he later worked for the Young Men's Christian Association in Chicago (1891–95) and, during that time,
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. Other public figures associated with the state are James Wilson, U.S. secretary of agriculture for 16 years (1897–1913), and the noted members of the Wallace family—Henry Wallace, Henry Cantwell Wallace, and Henry Agard Wallace. Herbert C. Hoover and Harry L. Hopkins were born in Iowa. Herbert Hoover National Historic Site, which contains Hoover's birthplace, childhood home, and grave, and the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library are at West Branch.

Bibliography

See H. Hahn, Urban-Rural Conflict (1971); M. M. Rosenberg, Iowa on the Eve of the Civil War (1972); R. B. Talbot, Iowa in the World Economy (1985); O. J. Fargo, ed., Iowa Geography (1988), "History of Iowa" series; D. Schwieder et al., Iowa: Past to Present (1989).

Iowa State Information

Phone: (515) 281-5011
www.iowa.gov


Area (sq mi):: 56271.55 (land 55869.36; water 402.20) Population per square mile: 53.10
Population 2005: 2,966,334 State rank: 0 Population change: 2000-20005 1.40%; 1990-2000 5.40% Population 2000: 2,926,324 (White 92.60%; Black or African American 2.10%; Hispanic or Latino 2.80%; Asian 1.30%; Other 2.70%). Foreign born: 3.10%. Median age: 36.60
Income 2000: per capita $19,674; median household $39,469; Population below poverty level: 9.10% Personal per capita income (2000-2003): $26,554-$28,340
Unemployment (2004): 4.70% Unemployment change (from 2000): 1.90% Median travel time to work: 18.50 minutes Working outside county of residence: 21.80%

List of Iowa counties:

  • Adair County
  • Adams County
  • Allamakee County
  • Appanoose County
  • Audubon County
  • Benton County
  • Black Hawk County
  • Boone County
  • Bremer County
  • Buchanan County
  • Buena Vista County
  • Butler County
  • Calhoun County
  • Carroll County
  • Cass County
  • Cedar County
  • Cerro Gordo County
  • Cherokee County
  • Chickasaw County
  • Clarke County
  • Clay County
  • Clayton County
  • Clinton County
  • Crawford County
  • Dallas County
  • Davis County
  • Decatur County
  • Delaware County
  • Des Moines County
  • Dickinson County
  • Dubuque County
  • Emmet County
  • Fayette County
  • Floyd County
  • Franklin County
  • Fremont County
  • Greene County
  • Grundy County
  • Guthrie County
  • Hamilton County
  • Hancock County
  • Hardin County
  • Harrison County
  • Henry County
  • Howard County
  • Humboldt County
  • Ida County
  • Iowa County
  • Jackson County
  • Jasper County
  • Jefferson County
  • Johnson County
  • Jones County
  • Keokuk County
  • Kossuth County
  • Lee County
  • Linn County
  • Louisa County
  • Lucas County
  • Lyon County
  • Madison County
  • Mahaska County
  • Marion County
  • Marshall County
  • Mills County
  • Mitchell County
  • Monona County
  • Monroe County
  • Montgomery County
  • Muscatine County
  • O'Brien County
  • Osceola County
  • Page County
  • Palo Alto County
  • Plymouth County
  • Pocahontas County
  • Polk County
  • Pottawattamie County
  • Poweshiek County
  • Ringgold County
  • Sac County
  • Scott County
  • Shelby County
  • Sioux County
  • Story County
  • Tama County
  • Taylor County
  • Union County
  • Van Buren County
  • Wapello County
  • Warren County
  • Washington County
  • Wayne County
  • Webster County
  • Winnebago County
  • Winneshiek County
  • Woodbury County
  • Worth County
  • Wright County
  • Iowa Parks

    • US National Parks
      Effigy Mounds National Monument
      Herbert Hoover National Historic Site
    • State Parks
      Ambrose A. Call State Park
      Backbone State Park
      Badger Creek State Recreation Area
      Banner Lakes at Summerset State Park
      Beed's Lake State Park
      Bellevue State Park
      Big Creek State Park
      Black Hawk State Park
      Brushy Creek State Recreation Area
      Cedar Rock
      Clear Lake State Park
      Dolliver Memorial State Park
      Elinor Bedell State Park
      Elk Rock State Park
      Fairport State Recreation Area
      Fort Atkinson State Preserve
      Fort Defiance State Park
      Geode State Park
      George Wyth Memorial State Park
      Green Valley State Park
      Gull Point State Park
      Honey Creek State Park
      Lacey-Keosauqua State Park
      Lake Ahquabi State Park
      Lake Anita State Park
      Lake Darling State Park
      Lake Keomah State Park
      Lake Macbride State Park
      Lake Manawa State Park
      Lake of Three Fires State Park
      Lake Wapello State Park
      Ledges State Park
      Lewis & Clark State Park
      Maquoketa Caves State Park
      McIntosh Woods State Park
      Mines of Spain State Recreation Area
      Nine Eagles State Park
      Palisades-Kepler State Park
      Pikes Peak State Park
      Pilot Knob State Park
      Pine Lake State Park
      Pleasant Creek State Recreation Area
      Prairie Rose State Park
      Preparation Canyon State Park
      Red Haw State Park
      Rice Lake State Park
      Rock Creek State Park
      Shimek State Forest
      Springbrook State Park
      Stephens State Forest
      Stone State Park
      Twin Lakes State Park
      Union Grove State Park
      Viking Lake State Park
      Volga River State Recreation Area
      Walnut Woods State Park
      Wapsipinicon State Park
      Waubonsie State Park
      Wildcat Den State Park
      Wilson Island State Recreation Area
      Yellow River State Forest
    • Parks and Conservation-Related Organizations - US
      Soil & Water Conservation Society (SWCS)
    • National Wildlife Refuges
      DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge
      Driftless Area National Wildlife Refuge
      Neal Smith National Wildlife Refuge
      Port Louisa National Wildlife Refuge
      Union Slough National Wildlife Refuge
    • National Scenic Byways
      Great River Road - Iowa
      Loess Hills Scenic Byway
    • National Heritage Areas
      Silos & Smokestacks National Heritage Area

    Iowa

     

    a state in the midwestern USA between the Mississippi and Missouri rivers. Area, 145,800 km. Population, 2,750,000 in 1969, of which 53 percent is urban. Capital, Des Moines.

    Iowa is one of the states in the so-called corn belt. It is second, after California, in the USA in the value of its farm production. Iowa is flat (mean altitude, 400–500 meters). The soil is fertile, chernozem or chernozem-like. The climate is warm, temperately continental. Precipitation, 700–1,000 millimeters a year.

    Approximately 70 percent of the state’s territory is arable land, 11–12 percent, meadows and pastures, and approximately seven percent, forests. More than 90 percent of the harvest area is for fodder crops—that is, corn (approximately 50 percent), oats (25 percent), grasses (15–16 percent); the soy bean crops are usually the first or second largest in the USA. The major goal of animal husbandry is meat: 7.2 million head of horned cattle and 12.5 million hogs were fattened on farms in 1966. Poultry raising, with the production of eggs and meat chickens, is also important. Stock-raising provides approximately 80 percent of agricultural commodity output.

    Small farms are being ruined: there were 215,000 farms in 1930 and 155,000 farms in 1964. Powerful capitalistic enterprises, which make up approximately one-third of all farms, provide two-thirds of Iowa’s agricultural commodity output. In 1969, 220,000 people—that is, 25 percent of the people not in agriculture—worked in manufacturing. The most developed industries are meat, dairy, and flour; agricultural machinery is built in Iowa. There are defense industries in cities along the Mississippi River—for instance, Dubuque and Davenport.

    V. P. KOVALEVSKII

    Iowa

    Twenty-ninth state; admitted on December 28, 1846

    State capital: Des Moines

    Nicknames: The Hawkeye State; The Corn State

    State motto: Our Liberties We Prize, and Our Rights We Will Maintain
    State bird: Eastern goldfinch (Carduelis tristis)
    State flower: Wild rose (Rosa pratincola)
    State song: “The Song of Iowa”
    State stone: Geode
    State tree: Oak (Quercus)

    More about state symbols at:

    www.legis.state.ia.us/Pubinfo/StateSymbols/ www.iowa.gov/state/main/facts.html

    More about the state at:

    www.iowahistory.org/index.html

    SOURCES:

    AmerBkDays-2000, p. 859 AnnivHol-2000, p. 214

    STATE OFFICES:

    State web site: www.iowa.gov

    Office of the Governor State Capitol Bldg Des Moines, IA 50319 515-281-5211 fax: 515-281-6611 www.governor.state.ia.us

    Secretary of State 321 E 12th St 1st Fl Des Moines, IA 50319 515-281-5204 fax: 515-242-5953 www.sos.state.ia.us

    Iowa State Library 112 E Grand Ave Des Moines, IA 50319 515-281-4105 fax: 515-281-6191 www.statelibraryofiowa.org

    Legal Holidays:

    Day after ThanksgivingNov 25, 2011; Nov 23, 2012; Nov 29, 2013; Nov 28, 2014; Nov 27, 2015; Nov 25, 2016; Nov 24, 2017; Nov 23, 2018; Nov 29, 2019; Nov 27, 2020; Nov 26, 2021; Nov 25, 2022; Nov 24, 2023

    Iowa

    a state of the N central US, in the Midwest: consists of rolling plains crossed by many rivers, with the Missouri forming the western border and the Mississippi the eastern. Capital: Des Moines. Pop.: 2 944 062 (2003 est.). Area: 144 887 sq. km (55 941 sq. miles)
    MedicalSeeIA

    Iowa


    Related to Iowa: Iowa State Fair

    IOWA. The name of one of the new states of the United States of America.
    2. This state was admitted into the Union by the act of congress, approved the 3d day of March, 1845.
    3. The powers of the government are divided into three separate departments, the legislative, the executive, and judicial and no person charged with the exercise of power properly belonging to one of these departments, shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others, except in cases provided for in the constitution.
    4.-I. The legislative authority of this state is vested in a senate and house of representatives , which are designated the general assembly of the state of Iowa.
    5.-1. Of the senate. This will be considered with reference, 1. To the qualifications of the electors. 2. The qualifications of the members. 3. The length of time for which they are elected. 4. The time of their election. 5. The number of senators.
    6.-1. Every white. male citizen of the United States, of the age of twenty-one years, who shall have been a resident of the state six months next preceding the election, and the county, in which he claims his vote twenty days, shall be entitled to vote at all elections which are how or hereafter may be authorized by law. But with this exception, that no person in the military, naval, or marine service of the United States, shall be considered a resident of this state, by being stationed in any garrison, barrack, military or naval place or station within this state. And no idiot or insane person, or person convicted of any infamous crime, shall be entitled to the privilege of an elector. Art. 3.
    7.-2. Senators must be twenty-five years of age, be free white male citizens of the United States, and have been inhabitants of the state or territory one, year next preceding their election; and, at the time of their elections have an actual residence of thirty days in the county or district they may be chosen to represent. Art. 4, s. 5.
    8.-3. The senators are elected for four years. They are so classed that one-half are renewed every two years. Art. 4, s. 5.
    9.-4. They are chosen every second year, on the first Monday in August. Art. 4, B. 3.
     10.-5. The number of senators; is not less than one-third, nor more than one-half the representative body. Art. 4, s. 6.
     11.- 2. Of the house of representatives. This will be considered in the same order which has been observed with regard to the senate.
     12.-1. The electors qualified to vote for senators are electors of members of the house of representatives.
     13.-2. No person shall be a member of the house of representatives who shall not have attained the age of twenty-one years; be a free male white citizen of the United States, and have been an inhabitant of the state or territory one year next preceding his election; and at the time of his election have an actual residence of thirty days in the county or district he may be chosen to represent. Art. 4, s. 4.
     14.-3. Members of the house of representatives are chosen, for two years. Art. 4, s. 3.
     15.-4. They are elected at the same time that senators are elected.
     16.-5. The number of representatives is not limited.
     17. The two houses have respectively the following power's. Each house has power: To choose its own officers, and judge of the qualification of its members. To sit upon its adjournments; keep a journal of its proceedings and publish the same; punish members for disorderly behaviour, and, with the consent of two-thirds, expel a member but not a second time for the same offence; and shall have all other power necessary for a branch of the general assembly of a free and independent state.
     18. The house of representatives has the power of impeachment, and the senate is a court for the trial of persons impeached.
     19.-II. The supreme executive power is vested in a chief magistrate, who is called the governor of the state of Iowa. Art. 5, s. 1.
     20. The governor shall be elected by the qualified electors, at the time and place of voting for members of the general assembly, and hold his office for four years from the time of his installation, and until his successor shall be duly qualified. Art. 5, s. 2.
     21. No person shall be eligible to the office of governor, who is not a citizen of the United States, a resident of the state two years next preceding his election, and attained the age of thirty-five years at the time of holding said election. Art. 5, s. 3.
     22. Various powers are conferred on the governor among others, he shall be commander-in-chief of the militia, army, and navy of the state; transact executive business with the officers of the government; see that the laws are faithfully executed; fill vacancies by granting temporary commissions on extraordinary occasions convene the general assembly by proclamation; communicate by message with the general assembly at every session adjourn the two houses when they cannot agree upon the time of an adjournment; may grant reprieves and pardons, and commute punishments after conviction, except in cases of impeachment shall be keeper of the great seal; and sign all commissions. He is also invested with the veto power.
     23. When there is a vacancy in the office of governor, or in case of his impeachment, the duties of his office shall devolve on the secretary of state; on his default, on the president of the senate and if the president cannot act, on the speaker of the house of representatives.
     24.-III. The judicial power shall be vested in a supreme court, district courts, and such inferior courts as the general assembly may, from time to time, establish. Art. 6, s. 1.
     25.-1. The supreme court shall consist of a chief justice and two associates, two of whom shall be a quorum to hold court. Art. 6, s. 2.
     26. The judges of the supreme court shall be elected by joint ballot of both branches of the general assembly, and shall hold their courts at such time and place as the general assembly may direct, and hold their office for six years, and until their successors are elected and qualified, and shall be ineligible to any other office during the term for which they may be elected Art. 6, s. 3.
     27. The supreme court shall have appellate jurisdiction only in all eases in chancery, and shall constitute a court for the correction of errors at law, under such restrictions as tho general assembly may by law prescribe. It shall have power to issue all writs and process necessary to do justice to parties, and exercise a supervisory control over all inferior judicial tribunals, and the judges of the supreme court shall be conservators of the peace throughout the state. Art. 6, s. 3.
     28.-2. The district court shall consist of a judge who shall be elected by the qualified electors of the district in which he resides, at the township election, and hold his office for the term of five years, and until his successor is duly elected and qualified, and shall be ineligible to any other office during the term for which he may be elected.
     29. The district court shall be a court of law and equity, and have jurisdiction in all civil and criminal matters arising in their respective districts, in such manner as shall be prescribed by law. The judges of the district courts shall be conservators of the peace in their respective districts. The first general assembly shall divide the state into four districts, which may be increased as the exigencies require. Art. 6, s. 4.

    IOWA


    AcronymDefinition
    IOWAIdiots Out Wandering Around (band)
    IOWAImproving Our Workplace Award (University of Iowa)
    IOWAI Oughta Went Around
    IOWAInterpreted Objects for Web Applications
    IOWAIowa Online Warrants & Articles (law enforcement)
    IOWAInformation Operations, Warfare, and Assurance (est. 1996)
    IOWAInvestigating Officer Workload Analysis (Metropolitan Police Service; UK)

    Iowa


    Related to Iowa: Iowa State Fair
    • noun

    Synonyms for Iowa

    noun a member of the Siouan people formerly living in Iowa and Minnesota and Missouri

    Synonyms

    • Ioway

    Related Words

    • Siouan
    • Sioux

    noun a state in midwestern United States

    Synonyms

    • Hawkeye State
    • IA

    Related Words

    • Corn Belt
    • middle west
    • Midwest
    • midwestern United States
    • U.S.A.
    • United States
    • United States of America
    • US
    • USA
    • America
    • the States
    • U.S.
    • Davenport
    • Cedar Rapids
    • Clinton
    • capital of Iowa
    • Des Moines
    • Dubuque
    • Mason City
    • Ottumwa
    • Sioux City
    • Little Sioux River

    noun a dialect of the Chiwere language spoken by the Iowa

    Synonyms

    • Ioway

    Related Words

    • Chiwere
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