Strange Facts about the U.S.

More people live in New York City than in 40 of the 50 states.

  • galler1There is enough water in Lake Superior to cover all of North and South America in one foot of liquid
  • galler2There's a town in Washington with treetop bridges made specifically to help squirrels cross the street
  • galler3In 1872, Russia sold Alaska to the Unites States for about 2 cents per acre.
  • galler4It would take you more than 400 years to spend a night in all of Las Vegas 's hotel rooms.
  • galler5Western Michigan is home to a giant lavender labyrinth so big you can see it on Google Earth.
  • galler6There's an island full of wild monkeys off the coast of South Carolina called Morgan Island , and it's not open to humans.
  • galler7There's enough concrete in the Hoover Dam to build a two-lane highway from San Francisco to New York City.
  • galler8Arizona and Hawaii are now the only states that don't observe daylight savings time.
  • galler9Boston has the worst drivers out of the nation's 200 largest cities. Kansas City has the best drivers.
  • galler10Kansas produces enough wheat each year to feed everyone in the world for about two weeks.
  • galler11Oregon's Crater Lake is deep enough to cover six Statues of Liberty stacked on top of each other.
  • galler12The Empire State building has its own zip code.
  • galler13The Los Angeles Coroner's Office has its own quirky gift shop called Skeletons in the Closet.
  • galler14The Library of Congress contains approximately 838 miles of bookshelves long enough to stretch from Houston to Chicago.
  • galler15At 46 letters, Massachusetts's Lake Chargoggagoggmanchauggagoggchaubunagungamaugg has the longest place name in the U.S. (even though it's based on a joke).
  • galler16The entire Denver International Airport is twice the size of Manhattan.
  • galler17In 1893, an amendment was proposed to rename the country to the "United States of Earth."
  • galler18A highway in Lancaster, California plays the 'William Tell Overture' as you drive over it, thanks to some well-placed grooves in the road.
  • galler19The total length of Idaho 's rivers could stretch across the United States about 40 times.
  • galler20The town of Centralia , Pennsylvania has been on fire for 55 years.
  • galler21The one-woman town of Monowi, Nebraska is the only officially incorporated municipality with a population of 1. The sole, 83-year-old resident is the city's mayor, librarian, and bartender.
  • galler22The entire town of Whittier, Alaksa lives under one roof.
  • galler23The number of bourbon barrels in Kentucky outnumbers the state's population by more than two million.
  • galler24Montana's Glacier National Park has a canine "bark ranger" that helps herd wildlife away from high-traffic areas.
  • galler25You can watch more than 100 ponies swim to Chincoteague Island every year in Virginia.
  • galler26In 1943, the temperature in Spearfish, South Dakota jumped 49 degrees in two minutes (-4'F to 45'F), one of the most drastic changes on record.
  • galler27The world's tiniest park is in Portland, measuring a mere two feet wide.
  • galler28The inventor of the Ouija board lived and died in Baltimore; his tombstone stands as a reflection of his achievement.
  • galler29The biggest signature in human history belongs to Texas farmer Jimmie Luecke. The two-mile landmark can be seen from space.
  • galler30Only one-third of all $100 bills are actually inside the United States.
  • galler31In Colma, California the dead outnumber the living by nearly 1,000 to 1.
  • galler32The smallest county in the U.S., Kalawao County on the Hawaiian island of Moloka'i is also a leprosy colony where a few former patients still live.
  • galler33South Florida is the only place in the world where alligators and crocodiles coexist in the wild.

 

Site Security Provided by: Click here to verify this site's security