For some reason the other day I got to wondering which state’s capital is the farthest from the geographical center of the state, and therefore nearest to that state’s border. Some poking around with maps has led me to suspect it may be Boston. If you know better, please say so.
Then the idea of coming up with some superlatives for as many states’ capitals as we can quickly followed.
Here are some teasers to get this started:
Which capital(s) is/are that state’s largest city?
Which capital is highest in elevation?
Which capital is lowest in elevation?
Which capital gets the least annual rainfall?
Which capital gets the least snow?
Which state has had the most different capitals?
Which state’s capital is farthest from a large body of water (lake, ocean, river)?
If you can think of some other off-the-wall superlative(s) that may apply to your own state’s capital, add that to this list.
By the way, for non-US Dopers, you can apply any and all these issues to your own country, if you wish. That way we can all get some decent geography trivia to amuse our friends and neighbors with.
Columbus, Ohio (if you’re counting metro areas; if just city proper, the largest is Cleveland)
Phoenix, Arizona
Denver, Colorado
Honolulu, Hawaii
Hmm, could it be California? San Jose → Vallejo → Benicia → Sacramento
or Ohio? Chillicothe → Zanesville → Chillicothe → Columbus (if you’re willing to count Chillicothe twice)
Do seats of government prior to the declaration of statehood count? If so, Texas has had quite a few captials, including one in a different state altogether and one aboard ship.
Since you “spoilered” it, I’m guessing there’s a joke here. I guess you “whooshed” me, then.
Just to be pedantic, the USGS lists Denver at 5,470 ft and Atlanta at 1,086 ft. Mind you, that list isn’t exhaustive, as it only shows the elevations of the 50 largest American cities, so possible contenders like Santa Fe and Cheyenne aren’t included.
I’m gonna have to fight you over that one…haven’t you ever heard of Madison, WI. We have a riot scheduled for this weekend. We protest protests and some people want to ban bans. Madisonioans refer to their town as 78 square miles surrounded by reality. Commutes get shorter in the winter because you can shortcut across one of the lakes. We had a kite festival…in February…on a lake. We have kayak to work day in the summer. Dogs aren’t allowed in parks because “parks are for families.” People are willing to take jobs at half the salary they could get elsewhere just because they want to work in Madison. Oh…and we haven’t had a random bombing since Christmas and the local police haven’t killed anyone in a week or so.
I would have to guess my home state of Louisiana (Baton Rouge). Louisiana doesn’t do hills much let alone mountains and Baton Rouge is only about 50 feet above sea level.
I am fairly certain that Santa Fe is the oldest state capital. As in, the oldest city that is now a state capital. My second post was supposed to say this, not really sure what happened.
According to this site Columbus is the largest city. I’m betting the metropolitan Cleveland area is larger, but according to this Columbus proper is larger than Cleveland proper.