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1969 – Boise College becomes Boise State College; 1970 – New Bronco Stadium opens, constructed in less than a year. Population: 74,990; 1971 - The Boise Redevelopment Agency purchased and demolished the remaining core of Boise's Chinatown. 1972 – St. Alphonsus Hospital moves to present site from downtown [23] 1973 – Boise Co-op founded ...
Territorial census records from a special 1864 enumeration list the population of Boise as 1,658, and an act of December 12, 1864, was the first attempt by the Idaho Territorial Legislature to incorporate the city. [32] [33] This was rejected by voters the following March. Two more unsuccessful attempts were made to organize a city ...
Year Date Event 2019: January 7: Brad Little assumes office as the 33rd Governor of the State of Idaho. 2010: April 1: The 2010 United States census enumerates the population of the State of Idaho, later determined to be 1,567,582, an increase of 21.1% since the 2000 United States census. Idaho remains the 39th most populous of the 50 U.S. state.
Nearly 40 percent of Idaho's total population lives in the area. Boise, from its foothills. As of the 2021 estimate, the Boise–Nampa, Idaho Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) had a population of 795,268, [4] while the larger Boise City–Mountain Home–Ontario, ID–OR Combined Statistical Area (CSA) had a population of 850,341. [5]
This is a list of the largest cities in each U.S. state and territory by historical population, as enumerated every decade by the United States Census, starting with the 1790 Census. Data for the tables below is drawn from U.S. Census Bureau reports.
Boise, Idaho: College of Social Sciences and Public Affairs, Boise State University. ISBN 0-932129-13-7. Sowards, Adam M. ed. Idaho's Place: A New History of the Gem State (2014), essays; Stapilus, Randy. Idaho Myths and Legends: The True Stories Behind History's Mysteries (Rowman & Littlefield, 2020) online; Stoll, William Tecumseh.
Huff et al. (2010) rejected all models with an ancient effective population size larger than 26,000. [9] For ca. 130,000 years ago, Sjödin et al. (2012) estimate an effective population size of the order of 10,000 to 30,000 individuals, and infer an actual "census population" of early Homo sapiens of roughly 100,000 to 300,000 individuals. [10]
As the United States has grown in area and population, new states have been formed out of U.S. territories or the division of existing states. The population figures provided here reflect modern state boundaries. Shaded areas of the tables indicate census years when a territory or the part of another state had not yet been admitted as a new state.