This is the fifth and final of my five-part blog series of
weird state facts.
Everyone's home state has special…and weird…claims to fame,
maybe even weirder than you realize. For
every proud historical landmark, event and hero your state has produced, there
are countless bizarre ones it can claim.
I hope you enjoy these random pieces of trivia about the states.
South Dakota—The
world's fastest recorded change in temperature.
On January 22, 1943, the temperature in Spearfish changed
from 4 degrees below zero Fahrenheit to 45 degrees above zero in two minutes, a
difference of 49 degrees, making it the world record holder for fastest
temperature change. Later in the day, after the town heated up a bit more, the
temperature dropped back to 4 degrees below zero, causing windows to crack.
Tennessee—The band
PARAMORE broke a decades long Nashville
Curse...but were then accused of being a fake band.
The Nashville Curse
began in the early 1980s and plagued rock bands from Music City for more than
two decades. The legend claims that a band called JASON & THE NASHVILLE
SCORCHERS agreed to take the word Nashville out of their name to secure a
record deal. This supposedly cast a curse that prevented them from reaching
mainstream success. The curse followed
around other rock bands who never surpassed local fame. It was finally declared
broken by the band PARAMORE in 2008, but in 2010 two of the original
co-founders claimed they were a fake band created by their record label. Lead
singer Haley Williams has denied this. The Nashville band KINGS OF LEON has
gone platinum since.
Texas—The state
legislature once honored the Boston Strangler.
On April 1, 1971, Texas state Rep. Tom Moore proposed a bill
to honor Albert DeSalvo, the self-confessed Boston Strangler who allegedly
murdered 13 women. Moore's point was to show that his colleagues didn't read
the bills they were voting on, a point that was proven correct when the state
House approved the bill. Moore retracted the bill after its passage.
Utah—NASA measures space sickness using the name of a U.S.
senator from the state.
NASA's unofficial scale for measuring motion sickness in
space is called the Garn Scale. Jake Garn was formerly a U.S. senator from Utah
and was an astronaut on the Discovery mission, where his job was to
purposefully get sick for research. Garn claims he never actually threw up.
Vermont—A giant dome
was almost built over a city just north of Burlington.
The town of Winooski was almost covered in a giant dome when
city planners decided it might be a good way to address the town's winter
energy conservation problem. This idea apparently came about after a few
glasses of wine, but ended up going far enough to attract political support and
worldwide media attention. In the end, the town couldn't secure the funds,
meaning that Winooski remains domeless.
Virginia—The
residents of a small fishing island still talk in a dialect closely resembling Restoration English.
Tangier Island has retained a dialect that's been determined
to closely resemble the language used during Restoration England, a period just
slightly after Shakespeare's time. Even though the recent proliferation of
television programs and other mass communication devices has deteriorated the
accent, for generations the inhabitants spoke like early English settlers and
are featured in the documentary, AMERICAN TONGUES.
Washington—There's a
mystery soda machine here that is somehow always filled, but no one knows by
whom.
According to legend, nobody knows who stocks or owns the Mystery Coke Machine in Seattle, but it
never runs out of soda. The machine appears to be from the 1970s and features a
Mystery Button that, when chosen,
spits out a random soda that isn't one of the other choices. The machine has a
Facebook fan page that claims the machine is always open for business.
West
Virginia—According to legend, this state is home to Mothman, a tall satanic
figure with wings.
In the late 1960s, a couple in the town of Point Pleasant
claimed they had seen a man-bird hybrid with glowing red eyes—and so the legend
of Mothman was born. Mothman has apparently shown up more and more over the
years, so the town immortalized the beast with a statue, festivals and a
museum. Mothman was also featured in the 2002 film, THE MOTHMAN PROPHECIES.
Wisconsin—There's an
upside down replica of the White House that makes absolutely no sense.
Top Secret in Wisconsin Dells is an upside down White House
that also has upside down furniture and a fun house attraction inside. However,
that's not the truly weird part. It has received a poor 1.5 rating on both
TripAdvisor and Yelp, where people have said that despite the high ticket price
tour guides are often nowhere to be found, the heat isn't turned on in the
winter, all that's inside is a "shot of air from an air compressor"
and the place is just really dusty in general. One reviewer seemed to perfectly
sum it up as, "we weren't even sure what the whole point was." That
said, although it doesn't seem to be all that fun inside, the reviewers do
agree the outside is still pretty cool. There's actually a chain of upside down
White Houses called Wonderworks in 4
other states, but they don't nearly compare to the bizarreness of Dells' Top
Secret and seem to be respected establishments.
Wyoming—A whole town
was built on top of an abandoned airport, with the old runways serving as main
roads.
The town of Bar Nunn was established in 1982 atop the old
Wardwell Field airport. The original runways were used as the town's first
streets. Over 2,000 people now live in the community.
BONUS: Washington
D.C.—There's a Darth Vader gargoyle on the National Cathedral.
To raise money for construction on the National Cathedral's
west towers during the 1980s, a contest was held for children to submit
gargoyle designs to add to the construction plans. Christopher Rader won third
place with his Darth Vader design, and the Sith Lord was added to the building.
And there you have it…one weird fact about each of the fifty
states plus Washington, D.C.
2 comments:
I bet most of them still don't read and know what's in the bills they sign, sigh. Great posts. We have a book called Weird NJ. D. V.
D.V. Yeah, that's scary that they would sign off on a bill honoring the Boston Strangler--lawmakers not even reading what they're signing.
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