Iowa's nickname is the "The Hawkeye State".
Iowa is known as The Hawkeye State.
Iowa is known as The Hawkeye State.
The official nickname for Iowa is 'The Hawkeye State', while another nickname is 'The Tall Corn State'.
Iowa has the nickname "Hawkeye State".
The state nickname of Iowa is the Hawkeye State. It got this name from a newspaper that was called The Hawk-Eye which was named as a tribute to Chief Black Hawk
Iowa's nickname is "The Hawkeye State". It is a tribute to Indian leader chief Black Hawk, leader of the native American Sauk tribe.
Iowa is known as the Hawkeye State.
Iowa was nicknamed the Hawkeye State as a tribute to Chief Black Hawk. He was the leader of the Sauk Indians, who were relocated to Iowa after fights with other tribes and settlers forced them out of their native territories.
the 29th state, known as the hawkeye state, is named as a tribute to chief Black Hawk, leader of the Sac Indians, who after the tribes unsuccessful fight against the white settlers, were relocated to Iowa, a state named from the Iowa river, after the ioway Indians
The Hawkeye State
The nickname was adopted early in the state's history. First suggested by James G. Edwars as a tribute to Indian leader Chief Black Hawk. Two Iowa promoters from Burlington are believed to have popularized the name