IOWA
TRIVIAIOWA
TRIVIACOMPILED BY JANICE BECK STOCK, ALAN BECK,
AND KEN BECK
Rutledge Hill Press
Nashville, Tennessee Copyright 1996 by Janice Beck Stock, Alan Beck, and Ken Beck. All rights reserved. Written permission must be secured from the publisher to use or reproduce any part of this book, except for brief quotations in critical reviews and articles. Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Rutledge Hill Press, 211 Seventh Avenue North, Nashville, Tennessee 37219. Typography by D&T/Bailey Typesetting, Inc., Nashville, Tennessee.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Stock, Janice Beck, 1954 Iowa trivia / compiled by Janice Beck Stock, Alan Beck, and Ken Beck. cm. cm.
ISBN 1-55853-396-6 (pbk.) 1. IowaMiscellanea. I. Beck, Alan, 1956 . II. III. Title. Title.
F621.S84 1996 977.7dc20 96-2093 CIP Printed in the United States of America. 4 5 6 7 8 9 99 98 PREFACE
This book was designed to be informative, interesting, and entertaining. We hope to give fellow Iowans a greater awareness of their states rich heritage and continuing unique role. We also hope it will entice others to come visit and learn more about the Hawkeye State. But whoever you are and wherever youre from, it is our wish that it will make you smile and thereby prove true the claim of the states division of tourism.
First question: What is the current Iowa Division of Tourism slogan?
Answer: Iowayou make me smile.
To the wonderful people of the state of Iowa
TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER ONE Q. The states geographic center is in what county? A.
Story County. Q. For how many miles does the Des Moines River flow through Iowa? A. 485. Q. Sabula. Q. Q.
Where can one find Snake Alley, designated by RipleysBelieve It or Not! as the crookedest street in the world? A. Burlington. Q. What was the original name of Des Moines? A. Fort Raccoon. Q.
The Nodaway, Middle Nodaway, and East Nodaway Rivers in southwest Iowa take their name from the Indian word for what reptile? A. Rattlesnake. Q. The name of what town in Clayton County honors a bedouin emir of Algeria? A. Elkader. Q.
Where is the home of the Worlds Largest Strawberry? A. Strawberry Point. Q. What are the five largest natural lakes in Iowa? A. East Okoboji, West Okoboji, Clear, Spirit, and Storm. Q.
What popular ice cream treat was invented in Onawa in 1920? A. Eskimo Pie. Q. How many counties are in Iowa? A. Ninety-nine. Q.
What is Iowas largest county by land area? A. Kossuth. Q. What city is known both as the Pearl of the Mississippi and as Melon City? A. Muscatine. Q.
What is the only village in the Amana Colonies without the word Amana in it? A. Homestead. Q. What two towns were named for the first letters of the names of six pretty women who accompanied railroad officials to the sites? A. Le Mars and Delmar. John I. John I.
Blair, builder of the Chicago and Northwestern and director of seventeen railroads, has what two towns in Iowa named for him? A. Blairstown and Blairsburg. Q. What towns motto is In Deo spes nostra et refugium (In God is our hope and refuge)? A. Pella. Q.
In the past, what was the greatest number of covered bridges at one time found in Madison County? A. Nineteen. Q. Originally, what was the name of Atlantic supposed to be? A. Pacific. Q.
What is the most common translation of the Indian word Iowa? A. Beautiful land. Q. The third-largest insurance center in the world, what city is home to more than fifty insurance companies? A. Des Moines. Q.
What two explorers met with the Missouri and Oto Indians at Council Bluffs in 1804? A. Lewis and Clark. Q. Between which two towns was the birthplace of Buffalo Bill Cody? A. LeClaire and McCausland. Q.
The states first interurban concrete highway connected what two cities? A. Clear Lake and Mason City. Q. Since 1915 the nickname of what two towns has been the Golden Buckle of the Corn Belt? A. Rockwell City and Dysart. Q.
The states smallest city park is situated in the middle of the road in what town? A. Hiteman. Q. Where is the oldest water tower still in service in Iowa? A. Scranton. Q.
Every street in what town is named for an event or person in the life of the admiral for whom it was named? A. Farragut (Adm. David G. Farragut). Q. What is the name of the most scenic route through the Des Moines Recreational River and Greenbelt area, which passes through nine counties along the Des Moines, Boone, and Raccoon Rivers? A.
Dragoon Trail. Q. What three rivers create the states eastern and western boundaries? A. Big Sioux, Missouri, and Mississippi. Q. Osceola. Q. Q.
What is the states oldest city? A. Dubuque. Q. Where was Elk Horns Danish Windmill built? A. Norre Snede, Denmark. Q.
How large are Iowa townships? A. Six miles square. Q. A replica of the Little Mermaid statue in Copenhagen Harbor can be seen in what town? A. Kimballton. Q.
The Boone and Iowa Rivers have their source in Linden Township in what county? A. Winnebago. Q. Iowa, which originally had forty-four counties, had how many in 1851? A. 101. Q.
What town was named after a heavy piece of machinery that fell in a creek and was lost? A. Cylinder. Q. The two farms given to Abraham Lincoln for his services in the Black Hawk War of 1832 were near what two present-day towns? A. Garwin and Denison. Q.
Where was the first public high school in Iowa? A. Tipton. Q. What town was named because an early resident, Mrs. James Baker, had a fondness for a Scottish song? A. Q. Q.
In what town is Winnebago Industries located? A. Forest City. Q. What trade did the first four settlers of Mechanicsville ply? A. Mechanic. Q.
What was the only fort ever built by the U.S. government to protect one Indian tribe from another? A. Fort Atkinson. Q. The Iowa District was first placed under the laws of the United States in 1834 by being annexed to what territory? A. Q. Q.
What college of some sixteen hundred students has half of its student body studying abroad? A. Central University. Q. The golden spike that marked completion of the first transcontinental railroad in 1869 is in what city? A. Council Bluffs. Q.
In what town are refrigerators, freezers, and microwave ovens manufactured? A. Amana. Q. What town has a statue of the Worlds Largest Bullhead? A. Crystal Lake. Q.
The state capital was first in what town? A. Iowa City. Q. What is the only basilica in the United States situated outside of a major metropolitan area? A. Saint Francis Xavier Basilica in Dyersville. Q.
Of the original twelve national cemeteries designated by Congress at the same time as Arlington, which one is in Iowa? A. Keokuk National Cemetery. Q. What famous western lawman lived in Pella from age two to sixteen? A. Wyatt Earp. Q.
What school was designated by the state legislature in 1904 to act as a highway commission? A. Iowa State College. Q. What town in northeast Iowa has the largest ethnic museum in the United States? A. Decorah. Q.
The Mormon settlement Rushville became the town of Coonville but is now known by what name? A. Glenwood. Q. What is the largest body of water in the state? A. Rathbun Dam and Reservoir. Q.
What was the former name of Monroe County? A. Kishkekosh. Q. What part of the state is known as the Nursery Capital of the World? A. Southwest Iowa. Q.
Iowa became part of the United States after what famous land deal with France? A. Louisiana Purchase. Q. How many miles does the Effigy Mounds National Monument extend along the Mississippi River? A. Six. Q.
The worlds smallest church, Saint Anthony of Padua Chapel, is in what town? A. Festina. Q. How many miles wide is Iowa from east to west? A. 324. Q.
Next page