The first designated National Historic Landmark was the __ in Sioux City, Iowa. | |
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| Numbers Don't Lie |
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| Width (in miles) of the Strait of Gibraltar, the distance from Morocco to Spain | 8 |
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| | Year Morocco gained independence from France | 1956 |
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| Length of the Moroccan coastline (in miles; precise count varies) | 1,140 |
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| | Run time (in minutes) of the 1942 film "Casablanca," named after the port city in Morocco | 102 |
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| The first non-President U.S. national monument honored a famous Black inventor. |
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One of the greatest inventors in U.S. history is George Washington Carver, who dedicated his life to agricultural science and changed the world in the process. Born enslaved around 1864, Carver fought against overwhelming odds and institutional racism to receive a Bachelor of Science degree in 1894. He immediately put his inquisitive mind to use by developing myriad products using sweet potatoes, soybeans, and especially peanuts, creating products such as milk, cooking oils, cosmetics, and much, much more. Carver also created the Jesup Wagon, a kind of "moveable school" named after his New York financier, so he could share his discoveries and teach farmers about agricultural science topics such as crop rotation. Carver died in 1943 at the age of 78, and a grateful nation founded the George Washington Carver National Monument that same year in southwest Missouri — the first national monument dedicated to a Black person in the U.S. and the first to honor any non-President. | |
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You might also like | 6 Towering Facts About the Empire State Building | In a metropolis filled with architectural marvels both new and old, the Empire State Building still carries major clout as a defining landmark of New York City. Here are six facts about the longtime stalwart of 34th Street and Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. | |
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