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  • George H. W. Bush (category People from Midland, Texas)
    After graduating from Yale, Bush moved his young family to West Texas. Biographer Jon Meacham writes that Bush's relocation to Texas allowed him to move
    176 KB (19,971 words) - 23:15, 14 March 2025
  • George W. Bush (category People from Midland, Texas) (section Texas governorship (1995–2000))
    family flew from Andrews Air Force Base to a homecoming celebration in Midland, Texas and then they returned to their ranch in Crawford, Texas. They bought
    327 KB (30,378 words) - 23:14, 14 March 2025
  • Oklahoma (category Articles with dead external links from July 2021)
    including 25% from coal and 46% from natural gas. Ten years later in 2019, 53.5% of electricity was produced from natural gas and 34.6% from wind power.
    214 KB (19,523 words) - 01:48, 11 February 2025
  • Mississippi (category Articles with dead external links from July 2010)
    homeless people in Mississippi. From 2000 to 2010, the United States Census Bureau reported that Mississippi had the highest rate of increase in people identifying
    165 KB (17,061 words) - 23:54, 12 February 2025
  • Kansas (category Use mdy dates from November 2024)
    traversed Kansas from 1821 to 1880, transporting manufactured goods from Missouri and silver and furs from Santa Fe, New Mexico. Wagon ruts from the trail are
    185 KB (16,672 words) - 00:07, 22 February 2025
  • Iowa (category Articles with dead external links from May 2014)
    Iowa takes its name from its predecessor, Iowa Territory, whose name in turn is derived from the Iowa River, and ultimately from the ethnonym of the indigenous
    200 KB (16,740 words) - 00:03, 22 February 2025
  • Kentucky (category Use American English from August 2019)
    theory suggests a derivation from the term Kenta Aki, which could have come from an Algonquian language, in particular from Shawnee. Folk etymology translates
    211 KB (19,051 words) - 00:03, 22 February 2025
  • Illinois (category Articles with dead external links from February 2012)
    37.8% from Mexico or Central America, 31% from Asia, 20.2% from Europe, 4.3% from South America, 4.2% from Africa, 1% from Canada, and 0.2% from Oceania
    221 KB (18,978 words) - 00:06, 22 February 2025
  • rancher delegates from across the United States. The Farm Bureau movement started in 1911 when John Barron, a farmer who graduated from Cornell University
    64 KB (5,230 words) - 23:13, 21 December 2024