With that in mind, I thought I'd re-post the article I did a few years ago listing the statehoods west of the Mississippi where most of our historical western books take place. Always a good reference!
Listed in alphabetical order are the 24 states,
when they officially became states and brief trivia about the origins of their state
names, many of which came from Native American languages. Although not a part of the contiguous United States, Alaska
and Hawaii are included in the list of 24 states west of the Mississippi.
ALASKA, Jan. 3, 1959 Historically a district from 1867, it became
an organized territory in 1912. The name originates from an Aleut word,
"Alyeska," meaning "great land." The Aleuts are people
inhabiting the Aleutian Islands and western Alaska.
ARIZONA, Feb. 14, 1912 The name is debated by historians, however,
the region was sometimes called Arizona before 1863, although it was still in
the Territory of New Mexico. The Spanish called the region Arizona based on Native
American words translated to mean "silver-bearing" or "place of
the small spring."
ARKANSAS, June 15, 1836 The
name originated with the Native American Quapaw tribe by way of early French
explorers.
CALIFORNIA, Sept. 9,
1850 The name originated from the
Spanish conquistadors, after "Califia," a mythical island paradise
described in Las Serges de Esplandian, by Garcia Ordonez de Montalvo, c. 1500.
COLORADO, Aug. 1, 1876 Spanish origin, meaning "colored
red." The name was given to the Colorado river because of the red
sandstone soil of the region.
HAWAII, Aug. 21, 1959 The
name is possibly based on the native Hawaiian word for homeland, Owhyhee.
Captain James Cook discovered the islands in 1778 and named the group,
"the Sandwich islands" in honor of the Earl of Sandwich. This name
lasted until King Kamehameha I united the islands under his rule in 1819 as the
Kingdom of Hawaii.
IDAHO, July 3, 1890 Mining
lobbyist George M. Willing presented the name "Idaho" to congress for
a new territory around Pike's Peak, claiming it was a Shoshone Indian phrase:
"E Dah Hoe," supposedly meaning Gem of the Mountains.
IOWA, Dec. 28, 1846 The name Iowa comes from the Iowa River,
which was named for the Native American Iowas, a Sioux tribe.
KANSAS, Jan. 29,1861 Origin from a Sioux word meaning "people
of the south wind."
LOUISIANA, April 30,
1812 Named in honor of Louis XIV of
France
MINNESOTA, May 11, 1858 From
a Dakota Souix word meaning "sky-tinted water."
MISSOURI, Aug. 10, 1821 Named after the Missouri Indian tribe,
meaning "town of the large canoes."
MONTANA, Nov. 8, 1889 Derived from the spanish word meaning
"mountain."
NEBRASKA, March 1, 1867 From the Oto Indian word meaning "flat
water," referring to the Platt River.
NEVADA, Oct. 31, 1864 Spanish, meaning "snowcapped." The
Spanish "Sierra Nevada" is also a mountain range in Spain.
NEW MEXICO, Jan. 6, 1912 New Mexico was named by the Spanish for lands
north of the Rio Grande. Mexico is an
Aztec word meaning "place of Mexitli" (an Aztec god).
NORTH DAKOTA, Nov. 2,
1889 Dakota is the Sioux Indian name for
"friend."
OKLAHOMA, Nov. 16, 1907 From two Choctaw Indian words meaning
"red people."
OREGON, Feb. 14, 1859 Uncertain to the name's origin, however, it
is generally accepted that it was taken from the writings of an English army
officer, in which he refers to "the River called by the Indians,
Ouragon."
SOUTH DAKOTA, Nov. 2, 1889
Dakota is the Sioux Indian name for "friend."
TEXAS, Dec. 29, 1845 Derived from the word "teyshas,"
meaning friends or allies, from the Native American Caddo language.
UTAH, Jan 4, 1896 From the Ute tribe, "people of the
mountains."
WYOMING, July 10, 1890 From the Delaware Indian word, meaning
"mountains and valleys alternating," and was first used by the
Delaware people as a name for the Wyoming Valley in Pennsylvania.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 11,
1889 Named in honor of George
Washington, our first president of the United States and the only state in the
Union that is named after a president.
Happy Trails, Happy Writing!
Stop by my website and get to know me and the books I've written.
Thanks for the interesting tidbits :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by, Wendy! Happy Thanksgiving.
ReplyDelete