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Idaho Facts

FordDude

Well-Known Dude
Staff member
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1. Idaho got its name because some guy George M. Willing proposed the name to Congress, claiming that it was Shoshone Indian for “Gem of the Mountain,” when it was really just a word he made up.

2. The US Postal Service banned the mailing of people in 1914 after a four-year-old was sent by her parents across the state of Idaho for 53¢.

3. In Idaho, it is legal for cyclists to treat a stop sign as a yield sign, and a red light as a stop sign. This law commonly referred to as the “Idaho Stop” and has not been adopted in any other state.

4. In Idaho, if you commit perjury that leads to the execution of an innocent person, you can be executed for that.

5. The Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactors is a different kind of nuclear reactor, it could generate the entire world’s annual energy needs using 7,000 tons of thorium mined from an area the size of a football field in Idaho.

6. The city of Wallace, Idaho, to protect itself from proposed interstate expansion, managed to list all of its downtown buildings on the National Register of Historic Places. As a result, the federal government was forced to build, at great expense, an elevated viaduct for I-90 around the city.

7. In the 1940s the Idaho Fish and Game Dept relocated beavers into the wilderness by dropping them out of airplanes with parachutes.

8. The largest sand dune in North America is in Idaho.

9. Due to the large Basque population in Idaho, Boise state university is only one of two universities in the US (the other being University of Nevada-Reno) to offer a Basque language course.

10. In March 2008, the Nampa, Idaho library removed “The Joy of Sex” and “The Joy of Gay Sex” from the libraries’ shelves, making them only available upon request in the library director’s office. The books were restored to shelves in September 2008 in response to ACLU threats of litigation.

11. In 1910, a massive firestorm in Idaho killed 87 people with boiling sap from trees creating highly flammable clouds of gas that covered hundreds of square miles, spontaneously combusting and burning an area the size of Connecticut in just 2 days.

12. Instead of a New Years Ball drop, Idaho has a Potato drop.

13. There is a 50 square mile section of Idaho where one could commit a felony and not be prosecuted.

14. There is a bed and breakfast in central Idaho that’s 30 feet tall and shaped like a beagle. It is known locally as the Sweet Willy Dog Bark Park Inn.

15. The USA’s current passenger airbag laws resulted from a tragic accident where a child’s head was knocked off and flew out the broken window when airbags deployed in a fender bender in Boise, Idaho in 1996.

16. Idaho consumes more wine per capita than any other state.

17. Idaho is one of the only two places in the world where you can find star garnet gems.

18. In 1870, almost 30% of Idaho’s population was Chinese.

19. Women were granted the right to vote in Idaho years before the 19th amendment.

20. The town of Preston, Idaho where the movie Napoleon Dynamite was filmed held a “Napoleon Dynamite Festival” for several years with events such as a Tetherball Tournament, Tater Tot Eating Contest Moon Boot Dance and a Football Throwing Contest.

21. Disgruntled ranchers during the depression in Idaho tried to blow up a large dam with dynamite.

22. There is a seaport in Lewiston, Idaho. The port of Lewiston is the only seaport in the state and the farthest inland from the west coast (~450 miles.).

23. America’s first ski resort is in Idaho and is home to the world’s first chairlifts.

24. Idaho has a state holiday called Idaho Human Rights Day, which is celebrated on Jan 16, the same day as MLK Day.

25. The City of Pocatello, Idaho has an unenforced law making it illegal not to smile within city limits. Despite this law, a recent survey determined that Pocatello was only the 9th happiest city in Idaho.

26. Arco, Idaho was the first community in the world ever to be lit by electricity generated solely by nuclear power. This occurred for about an hour on 17 July 1955.

27. 2 Idaho senators voted to extend the Daylight Saving Period so that fast-food chains could sell more French fries made from Idaho potatoes.

28. The US Navy tests submarines in a lake in Idaho.

29. There was a Neo-Nazi compound in Idaho until February of 2001.

fd
 
I learned something about Twin Falls a few weeks ago. There's a network of tunnels blasted in the rock below the city from the 1920s to 1951 to drain water from waterlogged farmland after the Milner Dam was built on the Snake River.
 
From those of us natives of Idaho, please don't visit and if you accidentally do, don't tell anyone about it.

The influx of liberals and crazies from other parts of the country is quickly ruining one of the last great places to live.
 
From those of us natives of Idaho, please don't visit and if you accidentally do, don't tell anyone about it.

The influx of liberals and crazies from other parts of the country is quickly ruining one of the last great places to live.
That's sad to hear. Twin Falls/southern ID is on my short list of places to retire to.
 
When ever Ive crossed Idaho on I-84 there is a distinct and overwhelming smell of dirt in the air the entire way. All I can figure is massive areas of soil have been overturned and the potatoes extracted. I haven't had this experience anywhere else Ive ever been.
 
If you want a remote location to be left alone in retirement, consider Yellow Pine, ID? It is truly out in the sticks.
 
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