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What is the least populated town in North America?

The least populated town in North America?Hundreds and hundreds of ghost towns, which are still considered towns despite having no people, have a population of 0.Additionally, the smallest incorporated town in North America is Monowi, Nebraska, a place that famously has a population of 1.Canada’s smallest town is unincorporated Jordan River, British Columbia, with a population of 1. Admittedly, this settlement actually has a vacation home that does not function as a primary residence.Shockingly, even after that infamous mandatory evacuation of Centralia, Pennsylvania, decades ago, the town inexplicably maintains a population of 10 despite no public services.You might also appreciate these Quora articles:The strangest cities in AmericaThe scariest cities in America

What is the weirdest city in America?

Weirdest cities in AmericaThrough relentless road trips over 50 years, I’ve been fortunate to visit thousands and thousands of American cities and towns. In fact, it’s probably more extensive than you think. The famed Dr. Alan Hogenauer and I managed to visit all 19,353 incorporated cities and towns in the 48 states, right down to Monowi, Nebraska, with a population of 1. It took a lifetime to do this, and I witnessed some stunning and remote scenery out there that few will ever see. But there are also some shockingly WEIRD places!The listAdmittedly, I haven’t been to nearly all of the “unincorporated” communities in the 48 states, not even close. There are thousands of those! But I humbly submit to you that I can offer an interesting perspective with an enormous sample size! Keep in mind that everyone’s interpretation of weird is different, and that my opinion is not the authority just because I’ve been everywhere.I’ve disqualified ghost towns and only considered places in which people actually live. For me personally, after the blur of passing through tens of thousands of establishments over the past 50 years, there are 13 sealed in my memory as the most unusual.DisclaimerFEW OF THE PICTURES BELOW will strike you as excessively odd. With only a handful of photographs even available, a picture could never capture the weirdness of these places. I’ve done my best to intrigue you with photos. But if you really want to experience the oddity of these towns, you MUST visit in person.The Top 101.) Luxora, ArkansasCrumbling buildings, unique people, right up against the Mississippi River flood plain with a giant wall; we saw some weird anomalies there and I immediately noted that this was the weirdest place I’d ever been in America. Precisely every third house was burned to the ground on one street, everyone standing on both sides of another street was a dwarf, a clerk looked like a zombie. Most of these cities have odd scenery. Luxora had that AND a weird vibe amongst the people as well!2.) Springdale, NevadaOne paved road, a couple of buildings, and many miles from the nearest gas station, this place is odd. No modern pictures even exist on the Internet, so this screenshot from Google Street View will have to do. It is literally in the middle of nowhere. To truly feel the oddity of its survival, you really have to travel between Vegas and Reno to feel the nothingness of the drive through the desert before and after Springdale. A picture is interesting, but feeling the isolation firsthand on that arduous drive is the only way to truly understand.3.) Centralia, PennsylvaniaJust some typical scenery in Centralia, Pennsylvania, a road no longer maintained and damaged by the underground fire. This town was almost completely abandoned after a fire grew out of control beneath the surface in 1962. It still burns today. But a few people inexplicably remain, despite government suggestions to leave, toxic gases seeping from the ground, and overgrown foliage. They recently paved over the road above to deter graffiti artists from coming to the area.4.) Schurz, NevadaNo businesses to speak of, no people on the streets, it feels like a ghost town. But apparently, around 1,000 people do live here. After sunset, it’s completely silent and deserted, and someone pays a lot for significant street lighting in this tiny town the middle of the desert.5.) Indian Springs, NevadaAn odd military town in the middle of nowhere with otherworldly scenery, it feels like they've colonized Mars when you drive through it.6.) Hawthorne, NevadaAre you seeing a theme? Nevada towns are simply unusual! This one has a military base featuring hundreds of oddly-shaped huts, again with the feel of a colony on another planet.7.) Huslia, AlaskaI selected Huslia as the least-known town in the United States on another Quora post (here), estimating that fewer than 10,000 people have ever heard of it. The irony is that - since I’ve been very fortunate to have 1 million monthly readers on Quora since 2020 - I’ve probably statistically eliminated Huslia as being the least known town now. Oops. With fewer than 400 people, it’s among the 149 incorporated towns in Alaska. A few hundred homes lie in this city founded in the 1960s with only a few roads that lead to nowhere. You can’t drive to Huslia, you can only fly, as every road dead ends.8.) Rapidan, VirginiaThis tiny Southern community is frozen in time, and not in a charming way, but more like a weird apocalyptic movie set kind of way. I immediately added it to my travel log as one of the weirdest places through which I’ve driven in America!9.) Van Meter, PennsylvaniaAn impoverished coal-mining town straight out of a movie, the houses all resemble each other, the roads are unusually narrow, the width of one car, and there isn’t much business here to keep residents afloat. I surmise they’re all coal miners. Only the image above from Google Maps will do it justice unless you simply visit in person. It has a strange vibe!10.) Beowawe, NevadaThe name alone tells you how weird this place is! It’s supposed to be pronounced bay-uh-WAH-wee, but locals use three drastically different pronunciations! How is that possible with fewer than 500 people? They can’t come to a consensus? Like some of the other Nevada towns, the scenery outside the city is weirdly beautiful.Honorable MentionBombay Beach, California, is a tiny square in the middle of the desert on the east coast of the Salton Sea, very hot in the summer, decaying and barely functioning.Monowi, Nebraska, population 1 where the only resident is the librarian and the bartender.Cairo, Illinois, is an unusual and crumbling town slowly becoming extinct yet still functioning against all odds.Making it to every county and citySince I field so many questions about this, indeed it’s been fascinating to visit all the incorporated American towns outside of Alaska, and all 3,070 U.S. counties as well. When Colorado founded a new county in 2001 (Broomfield), and California incorporated a new city in 2011 (Jurupa Valley), yup, I had to run out and visit those too! I’m that obsessed. The late Dr. Alan Hogenauer thankfully made it to Jurupa Valley before his untimely death in 2013. It’s hard to believe anyone has accomplished such a crazy feat, but we did it.You might also appreciate these Quora articles:America’s most populated towns beginning with XThe scariest cities in AmericaThe smallest towns in North America

When you arrive at the airport in Hawaii, they give you a lei. If every state gave you something upon arrival, what would it be for each state?

OK, OK, several killjoys have pointed out that you don’t actually get a lei when you arrive in Hawaii, unless your friends bring you one, or you pay for one in advance as part of a tour package.But let’s answer the question as it was asked: hypothetically, what traditional gifts should you receive in each state, as soon as you crossed the border or stepped off the plane? EDIT: As of now I still don’t have all fifty states represented, but I’ve taken suggestions from the comments section, reworking some of them, and will add more as time goes by.Louisiana: A large colorful plastic bead necklace. But only if you’re female and attractive, and only if you. . . well, never mind.New Mexico: A traditional ristra of dried chile peppers, which you must eat within thirty minutes if you want to be allowed to stay.Texas: A plate of barbecued brisket, marred by a ten-minute harangue about how Texas could secede any time it wanted to and is only hanging around with the other, lesser 49 states because it feels like it, by damn.Northern California: A small, decorative window box, made of sustainably harvested, ethically sourced, fair-trade timber, carved and painted with traditional shamanic designs by a cooperative of indigenous craftspeople from a proud but struggling Third World nation, and planted with organically grown heirloom variety culinary herbs. If you’re moving to the Bay Area, it can double as your apartment.Southern California: A Botox injection, a double-double animal style, and fifty gallons of free water (courtesy of Northern California).Oregon: On the west side of the Cascades, you get a starter culture of bacteria and yeast (SCOBY) for making your own kombucha. On the east side of the Cascades, you get a rifle.Washington state: A ceremonial evergreen branch and a venti coffee that’s not actually all that good, delivered by a drone dropped from a 747.Nevada: A $10 voucher for the slot machines at the airport departure gates. For every jackpot you win, you are allowed to reclaim one piece of your luggage.Florida: A live baby alligator—inserted down your trousers, because the headlines have just been too prosaic lately.Georgia: A bumper sticker proclaiming “GEORGIA—The Best of Both Worlds! Soulless urban sprawl AND backwards hovels!” (Also: Virginia.)Tennessee: A Day-Glo orange vest, for wearing to the football game on Saturday, and picking up roadside trash the rest of the week.Kentucky: A model race car, in honor of the most famous sporting event in. . . no, wait, is that Indiana? I thought Indiana was the one with the horses. . . well, it’s one or the other, anyway.North Carolina: A souvenir basketball dipped in that weird vinegary barbecue sauce.South Carolina: Immediate conscription into the 15th South Carolina Infantry, which, technically, never did surrender in 1865, and whose commander has just decided the time is right for a swift and decisive bayonet charge against the hated Yankee occupation forces’ encampment on Parris Island.Maryland: A case of crabs. And also, a case of crabs.Pennsylvania: A small plastic statue, suitable for display on your car’s dashboard, of your choice of one of the patron saints of the state: St. Franco Harris, St. Reggie White, or St. Rosey Greer.West Virginia: A scale model of a majestic mountain. To add extra realism, a small dynamite charge is packed inside. In three days, the top will blow off, the model will be left a toxic ruin, you’ll mysteriously get cancer, and Don Blankenship will be a few million dollars richer.Wisconsin: A bust of Vince Lombardi carved from cheese curds.Michigan: A souvenir vial of water. Do not drink it under any circumstances.Iowa: A breaded pork tenderloin sandwich from the deli at your local Hy-Vee—where there’s a helpful smile in every aisle!Indiana: A free sampler of Eli Lilly’s latest product line. Kind of like a chocolate sampler, but nothing is labeled; you just take one and see how you like the results.Illinois: A tax invoice. You don’t need to ask what it’s for.Ohio: Your city is gone. Hey, oh, way to go, Ohio.Minnesota: A warm, filling tuna casserole, served with mild-mannered courtesy that probably masks seething resentment.Nebraska: A wreath woven of corn leaves, tassels, and ears, placed on your head just before your blood is ritually spilled in the fields to bring bountiful crops and appease the spirits of the harvest.North Dakota: We’re not sure, but durum wheat is apparently involved.South Dakota: A title deed to your very own 160 acres of the sacred land of the Lakota nation, stolen from them at gunpoint.Wyoming: A little dogie, whatever that is.Alaska: It used to be that every visitor to the state would receive a traditional delicacy: seal testicles skewered on an oosik. Unfortunately, declining revenues from the Permanent Fund mean that new customs had to be developed. Now, every visitor to The Last Frontier is ceremonially beaten with a smelt by Alaskans shouting their traditional war chant, “You betcha!”Colorado: You can’t quite remember, but dude, it was primo shit, man. Got any more of that pizza?Delaware: Articles of incorporation.New Jersey: What? You’s expectin’ some goddamn present jus’ f’comin’ here? I got somethin’ for ya right here, pal!New York City: A fast, fun and entertaining card game against a smiling, friendly challenger. Only three cards are involved. You can’t lose!New York State: Something called a “Garbage Plate.” I wouldn’t ask if I were you.Vermont: A speeding ticket. Don’t you know that we tracked your plane arriving at 150 miles per hour? That’s an automatic $1000 fine and three points on your license, sir.New Hampshire: Indifference.Maine: Paul LePage, but only if you promise to take him with you when you leave.Rhode Island: A souvenir T-shirt saying “YES, WE ACTUALLY DO EXIST.”Massachusetts: A piping hot bowl of clam chowder. Unfortunately, you’re responsible for paying the tax on it.Utah: A copy of the Book of Mormon, written on golden plates in Reformed Egyptian, with your own personal Urim and Thummim to help you read it. If you don’t like it, you get a personal visit from John D. Lee under a flag of truce.Kansas: Puzzled looks from people wondering why in the world anyone would voluntarily visit Kansas.Idaho: A traditional item of fine Idaho jewelry: a necklace, handcrafted from three pounds of russet potatoes strung on a three-foot length of WF flyfishing line.Washington DC: A free ticket to the Presidential Inauguration, retroactive to January 20, 2017. See, it really was the biggest inaugural crowd in history!Montana: Your very own emotional support sheep.Arizona: Immediate deportation if you’re caught speaking Spanish in Maricopa County.Arkansas: A torn Wal-Mart plastic bag containing a rock of crystal meth.Alabama: A friendly invitation to squeal like a pig.Missouri: Sincere condolences.Oklahoma: A frontal lobotomy.Mississippi: Gonorrhea.

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