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Content derived from Wikipedia article on Des Moines

 

Des Moines, Iowa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

 

Des Moines, Iowa

 

 

Flag Seal

 

Nickname: "Hartford of the West, DSM"

 

Location in the State of Iowa, USA

Coordinates: 41°35′27″N, 93°37′15″W

Country United States

State Iowa

County Polk County

Incorporated September 22, 1851

Mayor Frank Cownie

Area  

 - City 200.1 km²  (77.2 sq mi)

 - Land 196.3 km²  (75.8 sq mi)

 - Water 3.8 km² (1.5 sq mi)

Elevation 291 m  (955 ft)

Population  

 - City (2005) 194,163

 - Density 1,012.0/km² (2,621.3/sq mi)

 - Metro 522,454

Time zone CST (UTC-6)

 - Summer (DST) CDT (UTC-5)

Website: http://www.dmgov.org/

Des Moines (French for '(City) of monks') (pronounced [dɪˈmɔɪn] in English, [demwan] in French listen) is the capital and largest city of the U.S. state of Iowa. It was incorporated on September 22, 1851, as Fort Des Moines, until it was shortened to "Des Moines" in 1857.[1] It is also the county seat of Polk County.

 

Des Moines is the headquarters for the Principal Financial Group, the Meredith Corporation, and Ruan Transportation. Other major corporations such as Wells Fargo, ING Group, and John Deere have large operations in or near the metro area. Forbes Magazine ranked Des Moines as the 11th "Best Place for Business" in 2006.

 

U.S. Interstates 35 and 80 pass through the city of Des Moines.

 

Contents

 

1 History

2 Geography

2.1 Metropolitan area

2.2 Suburbs

3 Demographics

4 Economy

5 Government

6 Transportation

7 Colleges and universities

8 Culture

8.1 Media

8.1.1 AM radio stations

8.1.2 FM radio stations

8.1.3 Television stations

8.1.4 Print

8.2 Points of interest

8.3 Sports

9 Notable natives

9.1 Bands

10 Sister cities

11 References

12 External links

12.1 Civic and cultural links

12.2 Other links

 

 

 

History

Des Moines was founded in May 1843 when Captain James Allen built a fort on the site where the Des Moines and Raccoon Rivers merge. Allen wanted to use the name Fort Raccoon, but the American War Department told him to name it Fort Des Moines. The original origin of the name Des Moines is uncertain. It could have referred to the river of the Moingonas, named after an Indian tribe that resided in the area and built burial mounds. Others see it as referring to Trappist monks, some of whom lived in huts at the mouth of the river, or connected to the phrase de moyen in French, meaning middle, because of its location between the Mississippi and Missouri rivers.

 

Settlers came and lived near the fort, and on May 25, 1846, Fort Des Moines became the seat of Polk County. On September 22, 1851, it was incorporated as a city, and its town charter was approved in a vote on October 18. In 1857, the name Fort Des Moines was shortened to Des Moines alone and it was made the capital of Iowa. (The capital was in Iowa City before that.) By 1900, Des Moines was Iowa's largest city with a population of 62,139.

 

 

Fort Des Moines memorial is north of Principal ParkIn 1907, the city adopted a city commission government known as the Des Moines Plan, comprising an elected mayor and four commissioners who were responsible for public works, public property, public safety, and finance. This form of government was scrapped in 1950 in favor of a council-manager government, and tweaked in 1967 so that four of the six city council members were elected by ward rather than at-large.

 

Like many cities, Des Moines began losing population to the suburbs after reaching a peak population of 208,982 in 1960. Construction of the Interstate Highway System during the late 1950s and 1960s, capped off with the completion of Interstate 235 in 1968, made access to the suburbs easier.

 

The skyline of downtown Des Moines changed during the 1970s and 1980s as several new skyscrapers were built. Until then the 19-story Equitable Building, dating from 1924, was the tallest building in the city. That changed as the 25-story Financial Center was completed in 1972 and the 36-story Ruan Center was completed in 1974. They were later joined by the 30-story Marriott hotel (1981), the 18-story Hub Tower (1985), and Iowa's tallest building, Principal Financial Group's 44-story tower at 801 Grand (1990). This time period also saw the opening of the Civic Center of Greater Des Moines (1979), the Des Moines Botanical Center (1979), the Polk County Convention Complex (1985), and the State of Iowa Historical Building (1987). The Des Moines skywalk system also began to take shape during the 1980s. By the beginning of 2006, the skywalk system was more than three miles (5km) long and connected most main downtown buildings.

 

Des Moines made national headlines during the Great Flood of 1993. Heavy rains throughout June and early July caused the Des Moines and Raccoon Rivers to rise above flood stage levels. The Des Moines Water Works was submerged by floodwaters during the early morning hours of July 11, 1993, leaving an estimated 250,000 people without running water for 12 days and without drinking water for 20 days.

 

The city is in the midst of major construction in the downtown area. The new Science Center of Iowa and the Iowa Events Center opened in 2005, while the new central branch of the Des Moines Public Library, designed by David Chipperfield, opened on April 8, 2006. The World Food Prize Foundation, which is based in Des Moines, announced in 2001 that it will restore the former Des Moines Public Library building as the Dr Norman Borlaug/World Food Prize Hall of Laureates. In 2002 the Principal Financial Group and the city announced plans for the Principal Riverwalk, which will feature trails, pedestrian bridges across the river, a fountain and skating plaza, and a "civic garden" in front of the City Hall. Several existing downtown buildings are being converted to loft apartments and condominiums. This trend is highlighted by the success of the "East Village" district of shops, studios, and housing between the capitol district and the Des Moines River.

 

The Des Moines metro area is also experiencing a boom, in particular the western suburbs. West Des Moines, in particular, now has over 50,000 people and is home to the Jordan Creek Town Center, the largest shopping center in Iowa, as well as several Wells Fargo office complexes, including a new corporate campus that is scheduled for completion in 2007. Nearby Dallas County was the 38th fastest-growing county in the United States between 2000 and 2005, according to the United States Census Bureau. [2]

 

 

Geography

 

The State Capitol of Iowa, featuring its golden dome.Des Moines is located at 41°35′27″N, 93°37′15″W (41.590939, -93.620866)GR1.

 

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 200.1 km² (77.2 mi²). 196.3 km² (75.8 mi²) of it is land and 3.8 km² (1.5 mi²) of it (1.88%) is water.

 

In November 2005, Des Moines voters approved a measure that allowed the city to annex certain parcels of land in the northeast, southeast, and southern corners of Des Moines, particularly areas bordering the Iowa Highway 5/U.S. 65 bypass.

 

 

Metropolitan area

The Des Moines-West Des Moines Metropolitan Statistical Area consists of five central Iowa counties: Polk, Dallas, Warren, Madison, and Guthrie. The area had a 2000 census population of 481,394 and an estimated 2005 population of 522,454 [3]. The Des Moines-Newton-Pella Combined Statistical Area consists of those five counties plus Jasper and Marion counties; the 2000 census population of this area was 550,659 and the estimated 2005 population was 593,112 [4]. (Before metropolitan areas were redefined in 2003, the Des Moines metropolitan area only consisted of Polk, Dallas, and Warren counties.)

 

 

Suburbs

Des Moines's suburbs include Altoona, Ankeny, Bondurant, Carlisle, Clive, Grimes, Johnston, Pleasant Hill, Polk City, Urbandale, Waukee, West Des Moines, and Windsor Heights.

 

 

Demographics

City of Des Moines

Population by year [5]

1880 22,408

1890 50,093

1900 62,139

1910 86,368

1920 126,468

1930 142,559

1940 159,819

1950 177,965

1960 208,982

1970 200,587

1980 191,003

1990 193,187

2000 198,682

2005 194,163

As of the censusGR2 of 2000, there were 198,682 people, 80,504 households, and 48,704 families residing in the city. The population density was 1,012.0/km² (2,621.3/mi²). There were 85,067 housing units at an average density of 433.3/km² (1,122.3/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was 82.29% White, 8.07% Black or African American, 0.35% Native American, 3.50% Asian, 0.05% Pacific Islander, 3.52% from other races, and 2.23% from two or more races. 6.61% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.

 

There were 80,504 households out of which 29.5% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 43.7% were married couples living together, 12.6% had a female householder with no husband present, and 39.5% were non-families. 31.9% of all households were made up of individuals and 10.2% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.39 and the average family size was 3.04.

 

In the city the population was spread out with 24.8% under the age of 18, 10.6% from 18 to 24, 31.8% from 25 to 44, 20.4% from 45 to 64, and 12.4% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 34 years. For every 100 females there were 93.8 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 90.5 males.

 

The median income for a household in the city was $38,408, and the median income for a family was $46,590. Males had a median income of $31,712 versus $25,832 for females. The per capita income for the city was $19,467. About 7.9% of families and 11.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 14.9% of those under age 18 and 7.6% of those ages 65 or over.

 

 

Economy

Many insurance companies are headquartered in Des Moines, including the Principal Financial Group, EMC Insurance Group, Allied Insurance (now part of Nationwide), AmerUs Group, and American Republic Insurance Company. Des Moines has been referred to as the "Hartford of the West" because of this. Principal is the only Fortune 500 company to have its headquarters in Des Moines, ranking 261st on the magazine's list in 2006. [6] As a center of financial and insurance services, other major corporations headquartered outside of Iowa have established a presence in the Des Moines Metro area, including, Wells Fargo, ING Group, and Electronic Data Systems.

 

According to the Des Moines Business Record Book of Lists for 2006, the 20 largest private employers in the Des Moines area (with the number of employees in parentheses) are:

 

Wells Fargo Banks (10,500)

Principal Financial Group (7,600)

Mercy Medical Center (4,467)

Iowa Health System, operators of Iowa Methodist Medical Center and Iowa Lutheran Hospital (4,018)

Wells Fargo Financial (3,710)

MidAmerican Energy Company (3,500)

Pioneer Hi-Bred International (2,000)

Firestone Agricultural Tire Company (1,800)

UPS (1,600)

FBL Financial Group (1,551)

Citigroup's Citi Cards division (1,500)

Qwest (1,500)

Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Iowa (1,470)

Hy-Vee supermarkets (1,423)

John Deere Des Moines Works (1,390)

Allied Insurance (1,228)

Communications Data Services (1,200)

Casey's General Stores (1,076)

Prairie Meadows Racetrack and Casino (1,021)

Meredith Corporation (964)

In 2006, Forbes magazine ranked the Des Moines metropolitan area 11th on its list of "Best Places For Business And Careers," based on factors such as the cost of doing business, cost of living, educational attainment, and crime rate. [7]

 

 

Government

 

Des Moines City HallDes Moines currently operates under a council-manager form of government. The council consists of a mayor (who, as of 2005, is Frank Cownie), two at-large members, and four members representing each of the city's four wards.

 

A plan to merge the governments of Des Moines and Polk County was rejected by voters during the November 2, 2004, election. The consolidated city-county government would have had a full-time mayor and a 15-member council that would have been divided among the city and its suburbs. Each suburb would have still retained its individual government but had the option to join the consolidated government at any time. Although a full merger was soundly rejected, many city and county departments and programs have been consolidated.

 

 

Transportation

 

The Des Moines skyline as seen through the Edna M. Griffin Memorial Pedestrian Bridge over Interstate 235.Most residents of Des Moines get around the region by car. Interstate 235 cuts through the city, and Interstate 35 and Interstate 80 both pass through the Des Moines metropolitan area. U.S. Route 65 and Iowa Highway 5 form a freeway loop to the east and south of the city. U.S. Routes 6 and 69 and Iowa Highway 28, 141, Iowa Highway 163, and 415 are also important routes to and within the city. A new northern beltway is being planned to help with northside congestion in growing suburbs such as Grimes and Ankeny.

 

Des Moines's public transit system, operated by the Des Moines Metropolitan Transit Authority, consists entirely of buses, including regular in-city routes and express and commuter buses to outlying suburban areas. A name change is currently planned and the system will become the DART, Des Moines Area Regional Transit.

 

Downtown Des Moines features a 3.5 mile-long (5.6 km) skywalk system, allowing people to move between buildings without going out of doors.

 

Greyhound Bus Lines and Jefferson Lines run long-distance, inter-city bus routes to Des Moines. The nearest Amtrak train station is in Osceola, about 40 miles (64 km) south of Des Moines. Trains on the route that passes through Osceola, the California Zephyr, go east to Chicago, Illinois and as far west as Oakland, California.

 

The Des Moines International Airport (DSM), located in the southern part of Des Moines, on Fleur Drive, offers non-stop service to destinations within the United States, including to major hub airports such as Chicago O'Hare, Atlanta Hartsfield, Dallas-Ft. Worth International Airport, and New York's LaGuardia Airport. Recent growth in the usage of the airport has led to a spike in the number of routes, with four new destinations coming online in the past year, such as Orlando and Salt Lake City. This has led to a growing speculation that Southwest Airlines may begin service at the airport. Despite its name, there are no direct commercial passenger flights, as of 2005, between the airport and destinations outside of the United States. However, international air-freight flights regularly travel to and from Des Moines International.

 

 

Colleges and universities

AIB College of Business

Des Moines University

Des Moines Area Community College - main campus in Ankeny; branches in downtown Des Moines and West Des Moines

Drake University

Grand View College

Hamilton College - in Urbandale

Mercy College of Health Sciences

Simpson College - classrooms in Ankeny and West Des Moines

Upper Iowa University - classrooms in Ankeny and West Des Moines

William Penn University - College for Working Adults in West Des Moines

 

Culture

 

Media

 

AM radio stations

WOI 640, NPR affiliate (generally talk)

KPSZ 940, Christian music and programming

WHO 1040, news, talk radio, University of Iowa sports

KWKY 1150, Christian talk, music, University of Northern Iowa sports

KRNT 1350, "Great Songs, Great Memories",

KXNO 1460, sports talk

KBGG AM 1700 "La Indomable" (Mexican Music and Des Moines Buccaneers Hockey

 

FM radio stations

KDPS 88.1 "Edge 88" Urban

KWDM 88.7 "The Point" Modern Rock

KJMC 89.3 "K-Jam" Urban Contemporary

WOI-FM 90.1, NPR Affiliate (Generally music) Classical, Jazz, Public Broadcasting

KJJY 92.5, country music

KIOA "Oldies 93.3", oldies

KDRA 94.1 "The Dog", college alternative

KGGO 94.9, classic rock

KHKI 97.3 "The Hawk", country music

KWQW 98.3 "Wow FM", talk radio (Formerly KRKQ 98 Rock)

KZZQ Positive Hits "Q99.5 KZZQ" Christian CHR

KDRB "100.3 The Bus" Adult hits/"Jack FM" format, Iowa State University sports

KSTZ "Star 102.5," hot adult contemporary

KAZR "Lazer 103.3," active rock

KLTI "Lite 104.1," soft adult contemporary

KCCQ 105.1 "Channel Q," Modern Rock

KPTL "Capital 106.3" Adult Album Alternative

KNWI 107.1 "Life 107.1" Christian Music

KKDM 107.5 "Kiss 107 FM," Top 40/CHR

 

Television stations

WOI 5, local ABC affiliate

KCCI 8, local CBS affiliate

KDIN 11, local PBS member station, Iowa Public Television network flagship

WHO 13, local NBC affiliate

KDSM 17 local Fox affiliate

KCWI 23 local CW affiliate

KFPX 39 local i affiliate

KDMI 56 local MyNetworkTV and A1 affiliate (digital signal only)

 

Print

Des Moines Register, newspaper

Cityview, an alternative weekly newspaper

Des Moines Business Record

Juice, a weekly publication from the Register targeted toward the 18- to 34-year-old demographic

Central Iowa Business

 

Points of interest

 

The East VillageIowa State Fair and Grounds

Downtown Attractions

Iowa State Capitol, featuring a genuine gold-covered dome

The Iowa Events Center

East Village Shopping Area

Science Center of Iowa and IMAX theatre Court Ave

Des Moines Botanical Center

Downtown Farmer's Market

Principal Riverwalk

Des Moines Art Festival

Des Moines Civic Center

Hoyt Sherman Place

Sherman Hill Neighborhood, historic district just north of downtown

Des Moines Art Center, designed by I.M. Pei and other international architects

The Blank Park Zoo

Arie den Boer Arboretum

Lilac Arboretum and Children's Forest

 

Kruidenier Trail bridge across Gray's LakeLiving History Farms A living/working farm & restaurant related to the history of agriculture in Iowa

Merle Hay Mall, one of Iowa's oldest and largest shopping malls

Terrace Hill, home of the governor of Iowa

Jordan Creek Town Center, central Iowa's newest and largest mall

Adventureland, a regional theme park

Prairie Meadows, a casino and thoroughbred raceway in Altoona

Valley West Mall

Southridge Mall

Recreational Trail System

Gray's Lake Park and the Kruidenier Trail

Saylorville Lake

Fort Des Moines Museum, The museum and education center honors the U.S. Army's first officer candidate class for African American men in 1917, and the establishment of the first Women's Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC's) in 1942.

 

Sports

The Iowa Cubs baseball team of the Pacific Coast League, the Class AAA affiliate of the major-league Chicago Cubs. They play their home games at Principal Park (formerly Sec Taylor Stadium).

The Des Moines Dragons basketball team played in the IBL from 1997-1998 season until the end of the 2000-2001 season. They played at Veterans Memorial Auditorium.

The Des Moines Menace soccer team plays in Waukee.

The Des Moines Buccaneers of the United States Hockey League play at 95KGGO Arena (formerly the Metro Ice Sports Arena and Buccaneer Arena) in neighboring Urbandale.

The Iowa Stars of the American Hockey League play at Wells Fargo Arena (part of the Iowa Events Center).

The Iowa Barnstormers of the Arena Football League moved to New York in 2000 and are now the New York Dragons. The same nickname, colors and uniforms were used for the Iowa Barnstormers of the arenafootball2 league in 2001. That team folded after one season.

The Drake Relays are held annually at Drake University each April.

Des Moines is also home to the state tournaments for baseball, basketball, and wrestling.

The Knights Cricket Club (http://www.knightscricket.org), formed in 1999 is a Des Moines area cricket club. The Cricket League of Iowa was formed in 2003-4 in Des Moines, and is currently comprised of 6 teams from Iowa.

 

Notable natives

Casey Blake, Major League Baseball player (from nearby Indianola)

Steve Bartkowski, former NFL quarterback

Bill Bryson, author

Stephen Collins, actor

Scott Clemmensen, National Hockey League player

Thomas M. Disch, author

Rory Freeman, star on television show Survivor: Vanuatu

Dr. Stephen Gleason, advisor to President Clinton and Governor Vilsack

Tana Goertz, star on television show The Apprentice 3

David Anthony Higgins, actor, Malcolm in the Middle

Steve Higgins, producer of Saturday Night Live

Cloris Leachman, actress

Kevin Love - NASCAR driver

The McCaughey septuplets, the first surviving set of septuplets, were born in Des Moines to a couple from nearby Carlisle.

Kyle Orton, Chicago Bears quarterback (from nearby Altoona)

Chris Pirillo, television personality and technology figure

Shawna Robinson, NASCAR driver

Brandon Routh, star of the film Superman Returns (from nearby Norwalk)

Ronald Reagan worked as a disc jockey (radio d.j.) in Des Moines.

Bill Stewart, well known jazz drummer with Pat Metheny Group.

Stephen Stucker, actor, best known for his role as the air traffic controller in the 1980 movie, Airplane!

Kevin Tapani, Major League Baseball player

Corey Taylor, rock/metal musician best known for being the vocalist of Slipknot and Stone Sour.

Mick Thompson, guitarist of Slipknot

Tionne "T-Boz" Watkins, member of the singing group TLC

 

Bands

Eight of the nine members of the band Slipknot were born in Des Moines. (Paul Gray was born in Los Angeles.)

The hard rock band Stone Sour began their music career in Des Moines. Both Slipknot and Stone Sour feature vocalist Corey Taylor and guitarist James Root.

The Des Moines Riot, a Scottish indie/rock band based in Edinburgh, took their name from Des Moines.

Metal band Facecage, signed to Corey Taylor's independent label Great Big Mouth records, are from Des Moines.

Other Local bands include Mindrite, The Cassandra Disease and Destrophy.

The *Des Moines Big Band is a contemporary jazz group performing weekly since 1959, currently appearing at The Adventureland Inn restaurant every Monday evening. Guests from New York and LA regularly appear throughout the year.

The title of the song Map Ref. 41°N 93°W on Wire's third album 154 gives Des Moines's coordinates.

 

Sister cities

 Kofu, Japan

 Naucalpan, Mexico

 Saint-Etienne, France

 Shijiazhuang, the People's Republic of China

 Stavropol, Russia

 

References

City of Des Moines Action Center Historical Guide

Des Moines Business Record Book of Lists: 2006. Des Moines: Business Publications, Inc., 2006.

Henning, Barbara Beving Long, and Patrice K. Beam, Des Moines and Polk County: Flag on the Prairie (ISBN 1-892724-34-0). Sun Valley, California: American Historical Press, 2003.

 

External links

 

Civic and cultural links

City of Des Moines

Des Moines International Airport

Blank Park Zoo

Civic Center of Greater Des Moines

Des Moines Art Center

Des Moines Art Festival

Des Moines Big Band

Des Moines Metro Opera

Des Moines Public Library

Des Moines Public Schools

Des Moines Symphony

Downtown Community Alliance

Greater Des Moines Partnership

Historic Des Moines Drake University photo collection

The World Food Prize

Iowa State Fair

Living History Farms

Salisbury House

Science Center of Iowa

 

Other links

absoluteDSM.com - Info on the city's construction and development projects, including forums and photo galleries.

desmoinesalive.com - Info and reviews on Restaurants, Bars, Clubs, etc.

IowaNightlife.com - One-stop, online nightlife resource guide for Iowa. Users use IowaNightlife to find out which bars, clubs, and restaurants are most popular from night to night. In addition, IowaNightlife provides useful information including hours of operation, directions, food/drink specials and on-location photo albums.

Maps and aerial photos Coordinates: 41.590939° -93.620866°

Street map from Google Maps, or Yahoo! Maps, or Windows Live Local

Satellite image from Google Maps, Windows Live Local, WikiMapia

Topographic map from TopoZone

Aerial image or topographic map from TerraServer-USA

 State of Iowa

Regions Coulee Region | Des Moines metropolitan area | Great River Road | Iowa Great Lakes | Loess Hills | Omaha-Council Bluffs metropolitan area | Quad Cities | Siouxland

Largest cities Ames | Ankeny | Bettendorf | Burlington | Cedar Falls | Cedar Rapids | Clinton | Council Bluffs | Davenport | Des Moines | Dubuque | Fort Dodge | Iowa City | Marion | Marshalltown | Mason City | Muscatine | Ottumwa | Sioux City | Urbandale | Waterloo | West Des Moines

Counties Adair | Adams | Allamakee | Appanoose | Audubon | Benton | Black Hawk | Boone | Bremer | Buchanan | Buena Vista | Butler | Calhoun | Carroll | Cass | Cedar | Cerro Gordo | Cherokee | Chickasaw | Clarke | Clay | Clayton | Clinton | Crawford | Dallas | Davis | Decatur | Delaware | Des Moines | Dickinson | Dubuque | Emmet | Fayette | Floyd | Franklin | Fremont | Greene | Grundy | Guthrie | Hamilton | Hancock | Hardin | Harrison | Henry | Howard | Humboldt | Ida | Iowa | Jackson | Jasper | Jefferson | Johnson | Jones | Keokuk | Kossuth | Lee | Linn | Louisa | Lucas | Lyon | Madison | Mahaska | Marion | Marshall | Mills | Mitchell | Monona | Monroe | Montgomery | Muscatine | O'Brien | Osceola | Page | Palo Alto | Plymouth | Pocahontas | Polk | Pottawattamie | Poweshiek | Ringgold | Sac | Scott | Shelby | Sioux | Story | Tama | Taylor | Union | Van Buren | Wapello | Warren | Washington | Wayne | Webster | Winnebago | Winneshiek | Woodbury | Worth | Wright

 

 

End of Wikipedia content, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Des_Moines,_Iowa

 

 

Resources for Des Moines

 

Des Moines Yellow Pages, Des Moines IA Guide – Area Connect

Des Moines Directory – Rate It All 

 

 

 

 

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