States' Fun Facts
California
"General Sherman," a 3,500-year-old tree, and a stand of bristlecone pines 4,000 years old are the world's oldest living things
New Mexico
Fun: "Smokey Bear," a cub orphaned by fire in 1950, buried in Smokey Bear Historical State Park in 1976
New Hampshire
Fun: Artificial rain, first used near Concord in 1947 to fight a forest fire
Mississippi
Fun: Coca-Cola, first bottled in 1894 in Vicksburg
Tennessee
Fun: Graceland, the estate and gravesite of Elvis Presley
Montana
Fun: Grasshopper Glacier, named for the grasshoppers that can still be seen frozen in ice
Kansas
Fun: Helium discovered in 1905 at the University of Kansas
Washington
Fun: Lunar Rover, the vehicle used by astronauts on the moon; Boeing, in Seattle, makes aircraft and spacecraft
West Virginia
Fun: Marbles; most of the country's glass marbles made around Parkersburg
Wisconsin
Fun: Marbles; most of the country's glass marbles made around Parkersburg
Missouri
Fun: Mark Twain and some of his characters, such as Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn
Texas
Fun: NASA, in Houston, headquarters for all piloted U.S. space projects
Utah
Fun: Rainbow Bridge, the largest natural stone bridge in the world, 290 feet high, 275 feet across
Nevada
Fun: Rare fish such as the Devils Hole pup, found only in Devils Hole, and other rare fish from prehistoric lakes; also the driest state
Rhode Island
Fun: Rhode Island Red chickens, first bred in 1854; the start of poultry as a major American industry
Wyoming
Fun: The "Register of the Desert," a huge granite boulder covering 27 acres with 5,000 early pioneer names carved on it
Michigan
Fun: The Cereal Bowl of America, Battle Creek, produces most cereal in the U.S.
Georgia
Fun: The Girl Scouts, founded in Savannah by Juliette Gordon Low in 1912
Indiana
Fun: The famous car race: the Indy 500
Massachusetts
Fun: The first World Series, 1903: the Boston "Americans" (became the Red Sox in 1908) vs. the Pittsburg Pirates (Pittsburgh had no "h" between 1890-1911)
Ohio
Fun: The first electric traffic lights, invented and installed in Cleveland in 1914
Delaware
Fun: The first log cabins in North America, built in 1683 by Swedish immigrants
Pennsylvania
Fun: The first magazine in America: the American Magazine, published in Philadelphia for 3 months in 1741
Oklahoma
Fun: The first parking meter, installed in Oklahoma City in 1935
New York
Fun: The first presidential inauguration: George Washington took the oath of office in New York City on April 30, 1789.
South Carolina
Fun: The first tea farm in the U.S., created in 1890 near Summerville
North Dakota
Fun: The geographic center of North America, in Pierce County, near Balta
Vermont
Fun: The largest production of maple syrup in the U.S.
Kentucky
Fun: The largest underground cave in the world: 300 miles long, the Mammoth-Flint Cave system
Idaho
Fun: The longest main street in America, 33 miles, in Island Park
Louisiana
Fun: The most crayfish: 98% of the world's crayfish
Maine
Fun: The most easterly point in the U.S., West Quoddy Head
Minnesota
Fun: The oldest rock in the world, 3.8 billion years old, found in Minnesota River valley
Virginia
Fun: The only full-length statue of George Washington, placed in capitol in 1796
Nebraska
Fun: The only roller skating museum in the world, in Lincoln
Hawaii
Fun: The only royal palace in the U.S. (Iolani)
Illinois
Fun: The second tallest building in the U.S., Sears Tower, in Chicago
Iowa
Fun: The shortest and steepest railroad in the U.S., Dubuque: 60° incline, 296 feet
New Jersey
Fun: The world's first drive-in movie theater, built in 1933 near Camden
South Dakota
Fun: The world's largest natural, indoor warmwater pool, Evans' Plunge in Hot Springs
Colorado
Fun: The world's largest silver nugget (1,840 pounds) found in 1894 near Aspen
Oregon
Fun: The world's smallest park, totaling 452 inches, created in Portland on St. Patrick's Day for leprechauns and snail races
Florida
Fun: U.S. spacecraft launchings from Cape Canaveral, formerly Cape Kennedy
North Carolina
Fun: Virginia Dare, the first English child born in America, on Roanoake Island in 1587
Arkansas
The only active diamond mine in the U.S.
Connecticut
The first American cookbook, published in Hartford in 1796: American Cookery by Amelia Simmons
Maryland
The first umbrella factory in the U.S., 1928, Baltimore
Largest state by land area
Alaska, then Texas, then California
Largest state by Population
California, then Texas, then New York
Alaska
The longest coastline in the U.S., 6,640 miles, greater than that of all other states combined
Arizona
The most telescopes in the world, in Tucson
Smallest state by land area
Rhode Island, then Delaware, Then Connecticut
Smallest State by population
Wyoming, then Vermont, then North Dakota
