What? I thought I was above mistakes like that.
At how many points do exactly three states meet?
What? I thought I was above mistakes like that.
At how many points do exactly three states meet?
Figures I’d have a post sitting for ten solid minutes while I looked at a few maps for that last bit, then totally ignore the antecedent for the fifth question.
Three states meet at:
ID/OR/WA
NV/OR/CA
CA/NV/AZ
and so on. There are several. I count 40 at least.
I was thinking it was Oklahoma too. But then I checked and Oklahoma borders New Mexico, which was still a territory when Oklahoma became a state. As for Maine (and Vermont for that matter) I think any state which borders Canada can’t be said to be surrounded by other states.
Wyoming and Arizona
California and Louisiana
Oklahoma
North and South Dakota
Maine and Missouri
Well, I didn’t see the rephrasing. The same month as North & South Dakota were Washington and (I think) Montana
Answers:
Missouri and Arkansas (almost 15 years)
California and Louisiana
For those of you who guess Washington, Oregon was admitted before it.
West Virginia (because it split off of Virginia)
North and South Dakota
In fact, when Benjamin Harrison signed them, he covered the tops and mixed them up so no one knows for sure which one actually became a state first!
November 1889. This month saw the most states acheive statehood. December 1787 was the second when the first three states (Delaware, Pennsylvania and New Jersey) ratified the constitution.
How close are NY and Ohio? There is that little bit of Pennsylvania separating the two.
Back in the day before WVA; VA and PA shared a border. But now out on I-70 at Hancock, Maryland is about as wide as the Interstate.
Finishing my thought. VA is about 20 miles south of there(Hancock). So my guess as to states that do not share a common border and are the nearest is Maryland and New Jersey just south of Newark Delaware.
There is exactly one US state, no part of which has ever been under a foreign (ie non-USA) flag (we’re discounting Amerind rulership for the purposes of the question). Which?
When I taught a travel-agent training class, this was my favorite question; in four parts…
Which US state is the westernmost?
The southernmost?
The northernmost?
The easternmost?
No fair looking at a map to get the answers.
And the answers never failed to get a response of “No way!” (or semething like that).
The westernmost? Alaska
The southernmost? Hawaii
The northernmost? Alaska
The easternmost? Alaska
People keep guessing for some reason, but the longest gap between the admission of states is the gap between Arizona (1912) and Alaska (1956?).
49 of the states are named for native words or existing places. One state, however, is a completely made-up name that does not derive from an actual term. What is it?
Seven are named after people, and all of these except one after kings and queens of England: the Carolinas, Georgia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia.
Isn’t Louisiana named after a person?
:smack:
At least I didn’t start with “ummm”.
For what it’s worth, I have no idea what the answer to RealityChuck’s question is.
Washington?
I seem to remember that California is a made-up word.
California?
But thinking a little more, I remember hearing the same thing about Idaho.