Sunset over Cedar Rapids Iowa
24/7 Iowa Strategic Prayer Call
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About Iowa
Iowa is a landlocked Midwestern U.S. state, bordered by Minnesota to the north, Wisconsin to the northeast, Illinois to the east and southeast, Missouri to the south, Nebraska to the west, and South Dakota to the northwest.
Iowa is the only state whose eastern and western borders are created entirely by rivers.
In the west, the Big Sioux River marks most of the border with South Dakota, then the river joins the Missouri, which constitutes the entire section of the state’s border with Nebraska. The Mississippi River defines Iowa’s eastern borders with Wisconsin and Illinois.
Some History
In colonial times the area of today Iowa was first part of French Louisiana and later part of Spanish Louisiana when Spain acquired the more or less uncharted territory from France. But Spain was slow to take actual possession of its newly acquired colony, and French colonists were understandably upset and even resentful to the idea of Spanish rule.
After the Louisiana Purchase, first American settlers moved to Iowa in June 1833, people and families from Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Indiana, Kentucky, and Virginia in search of new frontiers.
In 1838, the U.S. Congress established the Territory of Iowa (Population 23,242).
Eight years later, on 28 December 1846, Iowa became the 29th state in the Union.
Short after admittance to the Union, Iowa organized campaigns for settlers and investors, boasting the young frontier state’s fertile farmlands, with fine citizens, a free and open society, and a good government.
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