Kansas Facts
Kansas Facts
|
| Interesting Kansas Facts: |
|---|
| The name Kansas originates from the Sioux word that means 'people of the south wind'. |
| Kansas' state motto is 'Ad astra per aspera' which means 'to the starts through difficulties'. |
| Kansas capital city is Topeka. |
| The largest city in Kansas is Wichita. |
| The state song for Kansas is 'Home on the Range'. |
| Kansas' state nickname is the Sunflower State, and the Jayhawk State. |
| There are 105 counties in Kansas, and 24 state parks. |
| Kansas residents are called Kansans. |
| Kansas' state flower is the sunflower. |
| Kansas' state tree is the cottonwood. |
| The Kansas state bird is the western meadowlark. |
| The major rivers in Kansas include the Missouri River, Arkansas River, Smoky Hill River, Kansas River and the Republican River. |
| Major lakes in Kansas include Waconda Lake, Cheney Reservoir and Tuttle creek Reservoir. |
| There have been Silvisaurus, Nodosaurus, Hierosaurus and Claosaurus dinosaur fossils found in Kansas. |
| Kansas' state flag was officially adopted in 1927, with the state seal, sunflower and word 'Kansas' in the design. |
| There is a grain elevator in Hutchinson, Kansas that is half a mile long, with 1,000 bins, capable of holding 46 million bushels. |
| The windiest city in the United States is Dodge City, Kansas. |
| The first woman mayor elected in the United States was elected to office in Argonia, Kansas, in 1887. |
| The first black female winner of an Academy Award was Hattie McDaniel for her role in the movie 'Gone With the Wind'. She was a native Kansan. |
| The first female granted a pilot's license by the NAA Amelia Earhart, also the first woman to fly across the Atlantic Ocean, was from Atchison, Kansas. |
| The 34th President of the United States, Dwight D. Eisenhower, was from Abilene, Kansas. |
| There is a growing ball of twine in Cawker City, Kansas weighing 16,750 pounds and being more than 38 feet in circumference. |
| Smith County in Kansas is the geographical center of the Lower 48 States. |
| The three legendary lawmen Wild Bill, Wyatt Earp and Bat Masterson kept the peace in the frontier towns of Wichita, Hays, Dodge City and Abilene, Kansas. |
| There are 27 Walnut Creeks in the state of Kansas. |
| A hailstone that weighted more than 1.5 pounds landed in Coffeyville, Kansas. |
| The first Pizza Hut opened in Wichita, Kansas. |
| The Wheat Capital of the World is considered to be Sumner County in Kansas. |
|
Related Links: Facts US States Facts Animals Facts |