
Missouri Facts, State Trivia & Information
- Missouri is known as the "Show Me State".
- The 'Show Me State' expression may have began in 1899 when
Congressman Willard Duncan Vandiver stated, "I'm from Missouri and
you've got to show me."
- The first successful parachute jump to be made from a moving
airplane was made by Captain Berry at St. Louis, in 1912.
- The most destructive tornado on record occurred in Annapolis. In 3
hours, it tore through the town on March 18, 1925 leaving a 980-foot
wide trail of demolished buildings, uprooted trees, and overturned cars.
It left 823 people dead and almost 3,000 injured.
- At the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904, Richard Blechyden, served tea
with ice and invented iced tea.
- Also, at the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904, the ice cream cone was
invented. An ice cream vendor ran out of cups and asked a waffle vendor
to help by rolling up waffles to hold ice cream.
- Missouri ties with Tennessee as the most neighborly state in the
union, bordered by 8 states.
- The state animal is the Mule.
- St. Louis; is also called, "The Gateway to the West" and "Home of
the Blues".
- Warsaw holds the state record for the low temperature of -40 degrees
on February 13, 1905.
- Warsaw holds the state record for the high temperature recorded, 118
degrees on July 14, 1954.
- State bird--native Bluebird March 30, 1927
- State insect--honey bee July 3, 1985
- Mozarkite was adopted as the official state rock on July 21, 1967,
by the 74th General Assembly.
- On July 21, 1967, the mineral galena was adopted as the official
mineral of Missouri.
- The crinoid became the state's official fossil on June 16, 1989,
after a group of Lee's Summit school students worked through the
legislative process to promote it as a state symbol.
- On June 20, 1955, the flowering dogwood (Cornus Florida L.) became
Missouri's official tree.
- The "Missouri Waltz" became the state song under an act adopted by
the General Assembly on June 30, 1949
- The present Capitol completed in 1917 and occupied the following
year is the third Capitol in Jefferson City and the sixth in Missouri
history. The first seat of state government was housed in the Mansion
House, Third and Vine Streets, St. Louis; the second was in the Missouri
Hotel, Maine and Morgan Streets, also in St. Louis. St. Charles was
designated as temporary capital of the state in 1821 and remained the
seat of government until 1826 when Jefferson City became the permanent
capital city.
- The first Capitol in Jefferson City burned in 1837 and a second
structure completed in 1840 burned when the dome was struck by lightning
on February 5, 1911.
- Kansas City has more miles of boulevards than Paris and more
fountains than any city except Rome.
- Kansas City has more miles of freeway per capita than any metro area
with more than 1 million residents.
- Jefferson National Expansion Memorial consists of the Gateway Arch,
the Museum of Westward Expansion, and St. Louis' Old Courthouse. During
a nationwide competition in 1947-48, architect Eero Saarinen's inspired
design for a 630-foot stainless steel arch was chosen as a perfect
monument to the spirit of the western pioneers. Construction of the Arch
began in 1963 and was completed on October 28, 1965.
The Arch has
foundations sunken 60 feet into the ground, and is built to withstand
earthquakes and high winds. It sways up to one inch in a 20 mph wind,
and is built to sway up to 18 inches.
- Saint Louis University received a formal charter from the state of
Missouri in 1832, making it the oldest University west of the
Mississippi.
- In 1889, Aunt Jemima pancake flour, invented at St. Joseph,
Missouri, was the first self-rising flour for pancakes and the first
ready-mix food ever to be introduced commercially.
- The tallest man in documented medical history was Robert Pershing
Wadlow from St. Louis. He was 8 feet, 11.1 inches tall
- Creve Coeur's name means broken heart in French, comes from nearby
Creve Coeur Lake. Legend has it that an Indian princess fell in love
with a French fur trapper, but the love was not returned. According to
the story, she then leapt from a ledge overlooking Creve Coeur Lake; the
lake then formed itself into a broken heart.
- The most powerful earthquake to strike the United States occurred in
1811, centered in New Madrid, Missouri. The quake shook more than one
million square miles, and was felt as far as 1,000 miles away.
- Anheuser-Busch brewery in St. Louis, Missouri is the largest beer
producing plant in the nation.
- During Abraham Lincoln's campaign for the presidency, a
dyed-in-the-wool Democrat named Valentine Tapley from Pike County,
Missouri, swore that he would never shave again if Abe were elected.
Tapley kept his word and his chin whiskers went unshorn from November
1860 until he died in 1910, attaining a length of twelve feet six
inches.
- President Harry S. Truman was born in Independence in 1884.
- The first train of the Atlantic-Pacific Railway, which became the
St.Louis-San Francisco Railway, or "Frisco," arrived in 1870.
- Callaway County was organized on November 25, 1820 and named for
Captain James Callaway who was killed in a fight with Indians near
Loutre Creek.
- Missouri was named after a tribe called Missouri Indians; meaning
"town of the large canoes"
- Situated within a day’s drive of 50% of the U.S. population, Branson
and the Tri-Lakes area serves up to 65,000 visitors daily. Branson has
been a "rubber tire" destination with the vast majority of tourists
arriving by vehicles, RVs and tour buses. Branson has also become one of
America’s top motor coach vacation destinations with an estimated 4,000
buses arriving each year.
- Charleston holds the Dogwood-Azalea Festival annually on the 3rd
weekend of April. "Charleston becomes a blooming wonderland."
- Jefferson City, Missouri, the state's capital, was named for Thomas
Jefferson, the third President of the United States.
- Missouri's oldest community, Saint Genevieve, was founded as early
as 1735.
- In 1812 Missouri was organized as a territory and later admitted the
24th state of the Union on August 10, 1821.
- In 1865 Missouri became the first slave state to free its slaves.
- Hermann, Missouri is a storybook German village with a rich
wine-making and riverboat history that is proudly displayed in area
museums. Built in 1836 as the "New Fatherland" for German settlers, the
town has achieved national recognition because of its quality wines and
distinctive heritage.
- Auguste Chouteau founded Saint Louis in 1764.
- Laura Elizabeth Ingalls, writer of Little House on the Prairie grew
up in Missouri.
- "Madonna of the Trail" monument in Lexington tells the story of the
brave women who helped conquer the west and is one of 12 placed in every
state crossed by the National Old Trails Road, the route of early
settlers from Maryland to California.
- Soybeans bring in the most cash for Missourians as a crop.
- Missouri Day is the third Wednesday in October.
- On Sucker Day in Nixa, Missouri, school closes officially and the
little town swells to a throng of 15,000 hungry folks. All craving a
taste of the much maligned but delicious bottom dweller fish loathed by
almost everyone else.
- Point of highest elevation: Taum Sauk Mountain, 540 meters (1,772
feet)
- State folk dance: square dance
- State musical instrument: fiddle
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