West North Central States
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The West North Central States form one of the nine geographic divisions within the United States that are officially recognized by that country's census bureau.
Seven states comprise the division: Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota, and it makes up the western half of the United States Census Bureau's larger region of the Midwest, the eastern half of which consists of the East North Central States of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin. The Mississippi River marks the bulk of the boundary between these two divisions.
Where the East North Central States are seen as being synonymous (though not absolutely coterminous) with the Rust Belt by the vast majority of Americans, the West North Central States are regarded as constituting the core of the nation's "Farm Belt." Almost all of the territory contained within the West North Central division falls into what Joel Garreau called The Breadbasket in his 1981 book The Nine Nations of North America, and what James Patterson and Peter Kim labelled the Granary in their similarly-themed work The Day America Told The Truth (the only exception being southern Missouri, placed in Dixie by Garreau and Old Dixie by Patterson and Kim). Another name popularly applied to the division is the "Agricultural Heartland," or simply the "Heartland."
Beginning in the early 1990s, the West North Central division has consistently had the lowest unemployment rate in the United States (especially in its many college towns), and has also been noted for its plentiful supply of affordable housing.
[edit] Demographics
As of 2000, the West North Central States had a combined population of 19,237,739. This number was estimated to increase 3.0% to 19,815,497 by 2005. The West North Central region covers 507,913 square miles (1,315,489 km²) of land, and has an average population density of 37.88 people per square mile.
State | 2005 est. | Land area | Density |
---|---|---|---|
Iowa | 2,926,324 (3rd) | 55,869 (7th) | 52.38 (3rd) |
Kansas | 2,744,687 (4th) | 81,815 (1st) | 32.86 (4th) |
Minnesota | 5,132,799 (2nd) | 79,610 (2nd) | 61.79 (2nd) |
Missouri | 5,800,310 (1st) | 68,886 (6th) | 81.22 (1st) |
Nebraska | 1,758,757 (5th) | 76,872 (3rd) | 22.26 (5th) |
North Dakota | 636,677 (7th) | 68,976 (5th) | 9.31 (7th) |
South Dakota | 775,933 (6th) | 75,886 (4th) | 9.95 (6th) |
City | 2000 Pop. | |
---|---|---|
1 | Kansas City, Missouri | 441,545 |
2 | Omaha, Nebraska | 390,007 |
3 | Minneapolis, Minnesota | 382,618 |
4 | St. Louis, Missouri | 348,189 |
5 | Wichita, Kansas | 344,284 |
6 | St. Paul, Minnesota | 287,151 |
7 | Lincoln, Nebraska | 225,581 |
8 | Des Moines, Iowa | 198,682 |
9 | Springfield, Missouri | 151,580 |
10 | Sioux Falls, South Dakota | 151,300 |
11 | Overland Park, Kansas | 149,080 |
12 | Kansas City, Kansas | 146,866 |
13 | Topeka, Kansas | 122,377 |
14 | Cedar Rapids, Iowa | 120,758 |
15 | Independence, Missouri | 113,288 |
16 | Davenport, Iowa | 98,359 |
17 | Olathe, Kansas | 92,962 |
18 | Fargo, North Dakota | 90,599 |
19 | Duluth, Minnesota | 86,918 |
20 | Rochester, Minnesota | 85,806 |
21 | Bloomington, Minnesota | 85,172 |
22 | Sioux City, Iowa | 85,013 |
23 | Columbia, Missouri | 84,351 |
24 | Lawrence, Kansas | 80,098 |
25 | St. Joseph, Missouri | 73,990 |
26 | Lee's Summit, Missouri | 70,700 |
27 | Waterloo, Iowa | 68,747 |
28 | Brooklyn Park, Minnesota | 67,388 |
29 | Plymouth, Minnesota | 65,894 |
30 | Eagan, Minnesota | 63,557 |
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