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* [[User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/test6]] - standards organization from WP | * [[User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/test6]] - standards organization from WP | ||
* [[User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/test7]] - Princeton, New Jersey | * [[User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/test7]] - Princeton, New Jersey | ||
** remove the "famous persons"; add a section of cost of living, school ranking, property taxes; parking and housing; local press (and town admin. relations with the press); local scandals | |||
** development pressures and blight grants etc. | |||
** affordable housing | |||
== article counts == | == article counts == |
Revision as of 06:11, 19 April 2023
_NOINDEX__
This is an example...
templates for listing article differently
See User_talk:Karsten_Meyer. Using commas to separate:
Legendre symbol, Liver, John Lennon, Los Angeles, California, Lucas number, Manchester, Paul McCartney,
All pages beginning with Philadelphia
collapsible or expandable (template source U.S. states)
Template:US states {{US states}}
See U.S. States and Territories for a more complete listing including territories and uninhabited islands.
Click on a column header to sort the table by that item.
1Size in square miles, land area only (minus water).
2Population per 2020 census.
3Population density in persons per square mile.
4Electoral votes for the 2024 presidential election.
No | Name | Short | Year | Size1 | Population2 | Density3 | EV's4 | Capital | Subdivisions |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Alabama | AL | 1819 - 22nd | 50,744 | 5,024,279 | 99.0 | 9 | Montgomery | 67 counties |
2 | Alaska | AK | 1959 - 49th | 571,951 | 733,391 | 1.3 | 3 | Juneau | 16 boroughs[1] |
3 | Arizona | AZ | 1912 - 48th | 113,635 | 7,151,502 | 62.9 | 11 | Phoenix | 15 counties |
4 | Arkansas | AR | 1836 - 25th | 52,068 | 3,011,524 | 57.8 | 6 | Little Rock | 75 counties |
5 | California | CA | 1850 - 31st | 155,959 | 39,538,223 | 253.5 | 54 | Sacramento | 58 counties |
6 | Colorado | CO | 1876 - 38th | 103,718 | 5,773,714 | 55.7 | 10 | Denver | 64 counties |
7 | Connecticut | CT | 1788 - 5th | 4845 | 3,605,944 | 744.3 | 7 | Hartford | 8 counties[2] and 169 towns |
8 | Delaware | DE | 1787 - 1st | 1954 | 989,948 | 506.6 | 3 | Dover | 3 counties |
9 | Florida | FL | 1845 - 27th | 53,927 | 21,538,187 | 399.4 | 30 | Tallahassee | 67 counties |
10 | Georgia | GA | 1788 - 4th | 57,906 | 10,711,908 | 185.0 | 16 | Atlanta | 159 counties |
11 | Hawaii | HI | 1959 - 50th | 6423 | 1,455,271 | 226.6 | 4 | Honolulu | 5 counties[3] |
12 | Idaho | ID | 1890 - 43rd | 82,747 | 1,839,106 | 22.2 | 4 | Boise | 44 counties |
13 | Illinois | IL | 1818 - 21st | 55,584 | 12,812,508 | 230.5 | 19 | Springfield | 102 counties |
14 | Indiana | IN | 1816 - 19th | 35,867 | 6,785,528 | 189.2 | 11 | Indianapolis | 92 counties |
15 | Iowa | IA | 1846 - 29th | 55,869 | 3,190,369 | 57.1 | 8 | Des Moines | 99 counties |
16 | Kansas | KS | 1861 - 34th | 81,815 | 2,937,880 | 35.9 | 6 | Topeka | 105 counties |
17 | Kentucky | KY | 1792 - 15th | 39,728 | 4,505,836 | 113.4 | 8 | Frankfort | 120 counties |
18 | Louisiana | LA | 1812 - 18th | 43,562 | 4,657,757 | 106.9 | 8 | Baton Rouge | 64 parishes |
19 | Maine | ME | 1820 - 23rd | 30,862 | 1,362,359 | 44.1 | 4 | Augusta | 16 counties |
20 | Maryland | MD | 1788 - 7th | 9,774 | 6,177,224 | 632.0 | 10 | Annapolis | 22 counties + Baltimore[4] |
21 | Massachussetts | MA | 1788 - 6th | 7840 | 7,029,917 | 896.7 | 11 | Boston | 14 counties, 50 cities, 301 towns[5] |
22 | Michigan | MI | 1836 - 25th | 56,804 | 10,077,331 | 177.4 | 15 | Lansing | 83 counties |
23 | Minnesota | MN | 1858 - 32nd | 79,610 | 5,706,494 | 71.7 | 10 | St. Paul | 87 counties |
24 | Mississippi | MS | 1817 - 20th | 46,907 | 2,961,279 | 63.1 | 6 | Jackson | 82 counties |
25 | [[Missouri]] | MO | 1821 - 24th | 68,886 | 6,154,913 | 89.3 | 10 | Jefferson City | 115 counties |
26 | Montana | MT | 1889 - 41st | 145,552 | 1,084,225 | 7.4 | 4 | Helena | 56 counties |
27 | Nebraska | NE | 1867 - 37th | 76,872 | 1,961,504 | 25.5 | 5 | Lincoln | 93 counties |
28 | Nevada | NV | 1864 - 36th | 109,826 | 3,104,614 | 28.3 | 6 | Carson City | 17 counties |
29 | New Hampshire | NH | 1788 - 9th | 8968 | 1,377,529 | 153.6 | 4 | Concord | 10 counties |
30 | New Jersey | NJ | 1787 - 3rd | 7417 | 9,288,994 | 1,252.4 | 14 | Trenton | 21 counties |
31 | New Mexico | NM | 1912 - 47th | 121,356 | 2,117,522 | 17.4 | 5 | Santa Fe | 33 counties |
32 | New York | NY | 1788 - 11th | 47,214 | 20,201,249 | 427.9 | 28 | Albany | 62 counties |
33 | North Carolina | NC | 1789 - 12th | 48,711 | 10,439,388 | 214.3 | 16 | Raleigh | 100 counties |
34 | North Dakota | ND | 1889 - 39th | 68,976 | 779,094 | 11.3 | 3 | Bismarck | 53 counties |
35 | Ohio | OH | 1803 - 17th | 40,948 | 11,799,448 | 288.2 | 17 | Columbus | 88 counties |
36 | Oklahoma | OK | 1907 - 46th | 68,667 | 3,959,353 | 57.7 | 7 | Oklahoma City | 77 counties |
37 | Oregon | OR | 1859 - 33rd | 95,997 | 4,237,256 | 44.1 | 8 | Salem | 36 counties |
38 | Pennsylvania | PA | 1787 - 2nd | 44,817 | 13,002,700 | 290.1 | 19 | Harrisburg | 67 counties |
39 | Rhode Island | RI | 1790 - 13th | 1045 | 1,097,379 | 1,050.1 | 4 | Providence | 5 counties |
40 | South Carolina | SC | 1788 - 8th | 30,110 | 5,118,425 | 170.0 | 9 | Columbia | sub |
41 | South Dakota | SD | 1889 - 40th | 75,885 | 886,667 | 11.7 | 3 | Pierre | 66 counties |
42 | Tennessee | TN | 1796 - 16th | 41,217 | 6,910,840 | 167.7 | 11 | Nashville | 95 counties |
43 | Texas | TX | 1845 - 28th | 261,797 | 29,145,505 | 111.3 | 40 | Austin | 154 counties |
44 | Utah | UT | 1896 - 45th | 82,144 | 3,271,616 | 39.8 | 6 | Salt Lake City | 29 counties |
45 | Vermont | VT | 1791 - 14th | 9250 | 643,077 | 69.5 | 3 | Montpelier | 14 counties[6] |
46 | Virginia | VA | 1788 - 10th | 39,594 | 8,631,393 | 218.0 | 13 | Richmond | 95 counties, 39 independent cities |
47 | Washington | WA | 1889 - 42nd | 66,544 | 7,705,281 | 115.8 | 12 | Olympia | 39 counties |
48 | West Virginia | WV | 1863 - 35th | 24,078 | 1,793,716 | 74.5 | 4 | Charleston | 55 counties |
49 | Wisconsin | WI | 1848 - 30th | 54,310 | 5,893,718 | 108.5 | 10 | Madison | 72 counties |
50 | Wyoming | WY | 1890 - 44th | 97,100 | 576,851 | 5.9 | 3 | Cheyenne | 23 counties |
NOTE: Contents of the above table is from this template.
ongoing
- United_States_of_America/Catalogs/States_and_Territories
- User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox#Capital_cities_list
- United States of America - example of expandable / collapsible element
keep these
- known issues - also, important manuals and extensions
test area
Getting Started | Organization | Technical Help |
Policies | Content Policy |
test pages
- User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/test - off the record
- User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/test2 - us govt
- User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/test3 - home automation from WP (refs fixed)
- User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/test4 - home automation by Pat
- User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/test5 - Delaware River
- User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/test6 - standards organization from WP
- User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/test7 - Princeton, New Jersey
- remove the "famous persons"; add a section of cost of living, school ranking, property taxes; parking and housing; local press (and town admin. relations with the press); local scandals
- development pressures and blight grants etc.
- affordable housing
article counts
Citable Articles (146)
Developed Articles (1,128)
Developing Articles (7,393)
Stubs (7,672)
External_Articles (182)
(16,469 total articles)
test articles
test template
See below: Template:User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/test_template
BEGINNING
Links from User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox#test_template
<--* The number of users is: 103
- The number of users is: 103 --!>
<--* The number of active users is: 8
- The number of active users is: 8 --!>
|align=center bgcolor="#" style="white-space: nowrap; border-bottom:1px solid #aaaaaa; border-top:1px solid #aaaaaa; border-right:1px solid #aaaaaa; font-size:0.9em;"|[[Talk:|Discussion]]
END
Other templates
Templates to look at sometime:
subpages of this page
subpages template
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- Template:Subpages - top level
- Template:Subpage style - link text for /Talk
- Template:Default3 - link text for /Related Articles, /Bibliography and /External Links
- Template:Default4
subpage types
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Ten examples of the Authors or Contribs template:
AUTHORS: 1 name
Authors [about]:
join in to develop this article! |
Note that '1' yields "and another author"; anything else (such as a 'y') yields "and other authors".
- {{Authors|Pat Palmer}}
- {{Authors|Pat Palmer|others=1}}
- {{Authors|Pat Palmer|others=y}}
AUTHORS: multiple names
Authors [about]:
join in to develop this article! |
Let's see how the first one below looks (see right).
- {{Authors|Pat Palmer1|Pat Palmer2|Pat Palmer3}}
- {{Authors|Pat Palmer1|Pat Palmer2|Pat Palmer3|Pat Palmer4|others=1}}
- {{Authors|Pat Palmer1|Pat Palmer2|Pat Palmer3|Pat Palmer4|others=y}}
CONTRIBS: invisible unless at least 5 contributors
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CZ is an open collaboration. Please join these people in developing this article! |
And how let's see how the Contribs template looks (with 5+ names does).
- {{Contribs|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer}}
- {{Contribs|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer}}
- {{Contribs|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer|others=1}}
- {{Contribs|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer|others=y}}
OLDER STATES TABLE
http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=United_States_of_America/Catalogs/States_and_Territories&action=edit§ion=1Name | Capital | Date of Admission to the Union[7] | Governor | Senators | Subdivisions | History |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alabama (U.S. state) | Montgomery | 14 December 1819 (22nd) | Bob Riley (Republican) | Jeff Sessions (Republican) Richard Shelby (Republican) |
67 counties | History of Alabama |
Alaska (U.S. state) | Juneau | 3 January 1959 (49th) | Sarah Palin (Republican) | Lisa Murkowski (Republican) Mark Begich (Democratic) |
16 Boroughs (including Municipality of Anchorage) and Unorganized Borough, administered directly by the state) | History of Alaska |
Arizona (U.S. state) | Phoenix | 14 February 1912 (48th) | Jan Brewer (Republican) | Jon Kyl (Republican) John McCain (Republican) |
15 counties | History of Arizona |
Arkansas (U.S. state) | Little Rock | 15 June 1836 (25th) | Mike Beebe (Democratic) | Blanche Lincoln (Democratic) Mark Pryor (Democratic) |
75 counties | History of Arkansas |
California (U.S. state) | Sacramento | 9 September 1850 (31st) | Arnold Schwarzenegger (Republican) | Barbara Boxer (Democratic) Dianne Feinstein (Democratic) |
58 counties | History of California |
Colorado | Denver | 1 August 1876 (38th) | Bill Ritter (Democratic) | Mark Udall (Democratic) Michael Bennet (Democratic) |
64 counties | History of Colorado |
Connecticut | Hartford | 9 January 1788 (5th) | M. Jodi Rell (Republican) | Christopher Dodd (Democrat) Joseph Lieberman (Independent, caucuses with Democrats) |
8 counties (no government powers since 1960), 169 towns | History of Connecticut |
Delaware | Dover | 7 December 1787 (1st) | Ruth Ann Minner (Democratic) | Edward E. Kaufman (Democratic) Thomas Carper (Democratic) |
3 counties | History of Delaware |
Florida | Tallahassee | 3 March 1845 (27th) | Charlie Crist (Republican) | Mel Martinez (Republican) Bill Nelson (Democratic) |
67 counties | History of Florida |
Georgia | Atlanta | 2 January 1788 (4th) | Sonny Perdue (Republican) | Saxby Chambliss (Republican) Johnny Isakson (Republican) |
159 counties | History of Georgia |
Hawaii (U.S. state) | Honolulu | 21 August 1959 (50th) | Linda Lingle (Republican) | Daniel Akaka (Democratic) Daniel Inouye (Democratic) |
5 counties (one administered by the state Department of Health) | History of Hawaii |
Idaho | Boise | 3 July 1890 (43rd) | Butch Otter (Republican) | James Risch (Republican) Mike Crapo (Republican) |
44 counties | History of Idaho |
Illinois | Springfield | 3 December 1818 (21st) | Rod Blagojevich (Democratic) | Richard Durbin (Democratic) Roland W. Burris (Democratic) |
102 counties | History of Illinois |
Indiana | Indianapolis | 11 December 1816 (19th) | Mitch Daniels (Republican) | Evan Bayh (Democratic) Richard Lugar (Republican) |
92 counties | History of Indiana |
Iowa | Des Moines | 28 December 1846 (29th) | Chet Culver (Democratic) | Chuck Grassley (Republican) Tom Harkin (Democratic) |
99 counties | History of Iowa |
Kansas | Topeka | 29 January 1861 (34th) | Kathleen Sebellius (Democratic) | Sam Brownback (Republican) Pat Roberts (Republican) |
105 counties | History of Kansas |
Kentucky | Frankfort | 1 June 1792 (15th) | Steve Beshear (Democratic, governor-elect) | Jim Bunning (Republican) Mitch McConnell (Republican) |
120 counties | History of Kentucky |
Louisiana | Baton Rouge | 30 April 1812 (18th) | Piyush "Bobby" Jindal (Republican) | Mary Landrieu (Democratic) David Vitter (Republican) |
64 parishes | History of Louisiana |
Maine | Augusta | 15 March 1820 (23rd) | John Baldacci (Democratic) | Susan Collins (Republican) Olympia Snowe (Republican) |
16 counties | History of Maine |
Maryland | Annapolis | 28 April 1788 (7th) | Martin O'Malley (Democratic) | Benjamin Cardin (Democratic) Barbara Mikulski (Democratic) |
22 counties and independent city (Baltimore) | History of Maryland |
Massachusetts | Boston | 6 February 1788 (6th) | Deval Patrick (Democratic) | Scott Brown (Republican) John Kerry (Democratic) |
14 counties, with little government function, 50 cities and 301 towns | History of Massachusetts |
Michigan | Lansing | 26 January 1836 (25th) | Jennifer Granholm (Democratic) | Carl Levin (Democratic) Debbie Stabenow (Democratic) |
83 counties | History of Michigan |
Minnesota | St. Paul | 11 May 1858 (32nd) | Tim Pawlenty (Republican) | Amy Klobuchar (Democratic) Al Franken (Democratic) |
History of Minnesota | |
Mississippi | Jackson | 10 December 1817 (20th) | Haley Barbour (Republican) | Thad Cochran (Republican) Roger F. Wicker (Republican) |
History of Mississippi | |
Missouri | Jefferson City | 10 August 1821 (24th) | Jay Nixon (Democratic) | Christopher Bond (Republican) Claire McCaskill (Democratic) |
History of Missouri | |
Montana | Helena | 8 November 1889 (41st) | Brian Schweitzer (Democratic) | Max Baucus (Democratic) Jon Tester (Democratic) |
History of Montana | |
Nebraska | Lincoln | 1 March 1867 (37th) | Dave Heineman (Republican) | Mike Johanns (Republican) Benjamin Nelson (Democratic) |
History of Nebraska | |
Nevada | Carson City | 31 October 1864 (36th) | Jim Gibbons (Republican) | John Ensign (Republican) Harry Reid (Democratic) |
History of Nevada | |
New Hampshire | Concord | 21 June 1788 (9th) | John Lynch (Democratic) | Judd Gregg (Republican) Jeanne Shaheen (Democratic) |
History of New Hampshire | |
New Jersey | Trenton | 18 December 1787 (3rd) | Jon Corzine (Democratic) | Frank Lautenberg (Democratic) Robert Menendez (Democratic) |
History of New Jersey | |
New Mexico | Santa Fe | 6 January 1912 (47th) | Bill Richardson (Democratic) | Jeff Bingaman (Democratic) Tom Udall (Democratic) |
History of New Mexico | |
New York | Albany | 26 July 1788 (11th) | David Paterson (Democratic) | Chuck Schumer (Democratic) Kirsten Gillibrand (Democratic) |
62 Counties | History of New York |
North Carolina | Raleigh | 21 November 1789 (12th) | Beverly E. Perdue (Democratic) | Richard Burr (Republican) Kay Hagan (Democratic) |
100 counties | History of North Carolina |
North Dakota | Bismarck | 2 November 1889 (39th) | John Hoeven (Republican | Kent Conrad (Democratic) Byron Dorgan (Democratic) |
History of North Dakota | |
Ohio | Columbus | 1 March 1803 (17th) | Ted Strickland (Democratic) | Sherrod Brown (Democratic) George Voinovich (Republican) |
History of Ohio | |
Oklahoma | Oklahoma City | 16 November 1907 (46th) | Brad Henry (Democratic) | Tom Coburn (Republican) James Inhofe (Republican) |
History of Oklahoma | |
Oregon | Salem | 14 February 1859 (33rd) | Ted Kulongoski (Democratic) | Jeff Merkley (Democratic) Ron Wyden (Democratic) |
History of Oregon | |
Pennsylvania | Harrisburg | 12 December 1787 (2nd) | Edward G. Rendell (Democratic) | Robert Casey (Democratic) Arlen Specter (Democratic) |
History of Pennsylvania | |
Rhode Island | Providence | 29 May 1790 (13th) | Donald E. Carcieri (Republican) | Jack Reed (Democratic) Sheldon Whitehouse (Democratic) |
History of Rhode Island | |
South Carolina | Columbia | 23 May 1788 (8th) | Mark Sanford (Republican) | Jim DeMint (Republican) Lindsey Graham (Republican) |
History of South Carolina | |
South Dakota | Pierre | 2 November 1889 (40th) | Marion M. "Mike" Rounds (Republican) | Tim Johnson (Democratic) John Thune (Republican) |
History of South Dakota | |
Tennessee | Nashville | 1 June 1796 (16th) | Phil Bredesen (Democratic) | Lamar Alexander (Republican) Bob Corker (Republican) |
History of Tennessee | |
Texas | Austin | 29 December 1845 (28th) | Rick Perry (Republican) | Kay Bailey Hutchison (Republican) John Cornyn (Republican) |
254 Counties | History of Texas |
Utah | Salt Lake City | 4 January 1896 (45th) | Jon Huntsman, Jr. (Republican) | Robert Bennett (Republican) Orrin Hatch (Republican) |
29 counties | History of Utah |
Vermont | Montpelier | 4 March 1791 (14th) | Jim Douglas (Republican) | Patrick Leahy (Democrat) Bernard Sanders (Independent) |
14 counties (with limited governmental powers) | History of Vermont |
Virginia | Richmond | 25 June 1788 (10th) | Tim Kaine (Democratic) | Mark Warner (Democrat) Jim Webb (Democrat) |
95 counties and 39 independent cities | History of Virginia |
Washington | Olympia | 11 November 1889 (42nd) | Christine Gregoire (Democratic) | Maria Cantwell (Democratic) Patty Murray (Democratic) |
History of Washington | |
West Virginia | Charleston | 20 June 1863 (35th) | Joe Manchin (Democratic) | Robert Byrd (Democratic) John D. Rockefeller IV (Democratic) |
History of West Virginia | |
Wisconsin | Madison | 29 May 1848 (30th) | James Doyle, Jr. (Democratic) | Russell Feingold (Democratic) Herb Kohl (Democratic) |
History of Wisconsin | |
Wyoming | Cheyenne | 10 July 1890 (44th) | Dave Freudenthal (Republican | Mike Enzi (Republican) John Barrasso (Republican) |
History of Wyoming |
Capital cities list
- Montgomery, Alabama: Capital of the U.S. state of Alabama. [e]
- Juneau, Alaska: Capital of the U.S. state of Alaska. [e]
- Phoenix, Arizona: Capital of the U.S. state of Arizona. [e]
- Little Rock, Arkansas: Capital of the U.S. state of Arkansas. [e]
- Sacramento, California: Capital of the U.S. state of California. [e]
- Denver, Colorado: Capital of the U.S. state of Colorado; its nickname is Mile High City. [e]
- Hartford, Connecticut: Capital of the U.S. state of Connecticut. [e]
- Dover, Delaware: Capital of the U.S. state of Delaware. [e]
- Tallahassee, Florica: Capital of the U.S. state of Florida. [e]
- Atlanta, Georgia: Capital of the U.S. state of Georgia. [e]
- Honolulu, Hawaii: Capital of the U.S. state of Hawaii. [e]
- Boise, Idaho: Capital of the U.S. state of Idaho. [e]
- Springfield, Illinois: Capital of the U.S. state of Illinois; the home town of President Abraham Lincoln. [e]
- Indianapolis, Indiana: Capital of the U.S. state of Indiana. [e]
- Des Moines, Iowa: Capital of the U.S. state of Iowa. [e]
- Topeka, Kansas: Capital of the U.S. state of Kansas. [e]
- Frankfort, Kentucky: Capital of the U.S. state of Kentucky. [e]
- Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Capital of the U.S. state of Louisiana. [e]
- Augusta, Maine: Capital of the U.S. state of Maine. [e]
- Annapolis, Maryland: Capital of the U.S. state of Maryland, seaport, and the home of the United States Naval Academy. [e]
- Boston, Massachusetts: Capital of the U.S. Commonwealth of Massachussetts. [e]
- Lansing, Michigan: Capital of the U.S. state of Michigan. [e]
- St. Paul, Minnesota: Capital of the U.S. state of Minnesota. [e]
- Jackson, Mississippi: Capital of the U.S. state of Mississippi. [e]
- Jefferson City, Missouri: Capital of the U.S. state of [[Missouri]]. [e]
- Helena, Montana: Capital of the U.S. state of Montana, in the western part of the state; estimated population (2020) 32,362. [e]
- Lincoln, Nebraska: Capital of the U.S. state of Nebraska, on open prairie in the southeastern part of the state; population in 2020 was 291,383. [e]
- Carson City, Nevada: Capital of the U.S. state of Nevada. [e]
- Concord, New Hampshire: Capital of the U.S. state of New Hampshire. [e]
- Trenton, NJ: Add brief definition or description
- Santa Fe, New Mexico: Capital of the U.S. state of New Mexico. [e]
- Albany, New York: Capital of the U.S. state of New York, 2.5+ hours travel time from New York City. [e]
- Raleigh, North Carolina: Capital of the U.S. state of North Carolina (U.S. state). [e]
- Bismarck, North Dakota: Capital of the U.S. state of North Dakota, located in the center of the state. [e]
- Columbus, Ohio: Capital of the U.S. state of Ohio and largest city in the state. [e]
- Oklahoma City, Oklahoma: Capital of the U.S. state of Oklahoma. [e]
- Salem, Oregon: Add brief definition or description
- Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Capital of the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. [e]
- Providence, Rhode Island: Add brief definition or description
- Columbia, South Carolina: Add brief definition or description
- Pierre, South Dakota: Add brief definition or description
- Nashville, Tennessee: Add brief definition or description
- Austin, Texas: Add brief definition or description
- Salt Lake City, Utah: Add brief definition or description
- Montpelier, Vermont: Add brief definition or description
- Richmond, Virginia: Add brief definition or description
- Olympia, Washington: Add brief definition or description
- Charleston, West Virginia: Add brief definition or description
- Madison, Wisconsin: Add brief definition or description
- Cheyenne, Wyoming: Add brief definition or description
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Notes and Refs
- ↑ Alaska boroughs include Municipality of Anchorage and an Unorganized Borough administered directly by the state.
- ↑ Connecticut counties have had no government power since 1960)
- ↑ One Hawaii county is administered by the state Dept. of Health
- ↑ Baltimore, Maryland is an independent city not in any county.
- ↑ Counties in Massachussetts have little government function.
- ↑ Vermont counties have limited governmental powers.
- ↑ The 50 State Quarters 10-Year Schedule. U.S. Mint. Retrieved on 08-07-2007.