Idaho Panhandle

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The Idaho Panhandle is the northern region of the U.S. State of Idaho that encompasses the ten northernmost counties of Benewah, Bonner, Boundary, Clearwater, Idaho, Kootenai, Latah, Lewis, Nez Perce, Shoshone. The southern part of this region is sometimes referred to as North Central Idaho, with the rest as North Idaho. The panhandle is bordered by Washington state to the west, Montana to the east and British Columbia to the north.

Coeur d'Alene is the region's largest city. Other important cities include Lewiston, Moscow (home of the University of Idaho), Post Falls, Hayden, Sandpoint, and the smaller St. Maries and Bonners Ferry. The region has a land area of 54,422.49 km² (21,012.64 sq mi), or 25.39 percent of Idaho's land area; there is also 839.07 km² (323.95 sq mi) of water area. The estimated population of the Idaho Panhandle as of 2004 was 295,160, or slightly more than 21% of Idaho's estimated population of 1,393,262. The 2000 census number was 278,866 residents, or 21.55% of the state's population at the time.

The Panhandle region observes Pacific Time north of the western-flowing Salmon River in the southern part of Idaho County. The rest of the state observes Mountain Time, which begins at Riggins. The Idaho Panhandle is also the only panhandle of a United States which borders two other states and a foreign country (Canada).

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The Idaho Panhandle was originally created when the Montana Territory was organized from the Idaho Territory in 1864. All territory west of the continental divide was to go to Idaho. However, the surveyors charged with carving out the new territory mistook the Bitteroot mountain range for the continental divide. By the time they realized their mistake, they were as far north as modern-day Sandpoint, so the thin panhandle was left intact. Parts of present-day Montana that are west of the continental divide include Butte, Missoula, Kalispell, Flathead Lake, and the western half of Glacier National Park.

When the seat of territorial government was moved to Boise from Lewiston in late 1864, it was thought that the panhandle region was hard to govern. A proposal was made to make the northern part of the state its own state. The proposal failed, but was attempted again in 1901. This time it was proposed to join the panhandle with Eastern Washington to form the "State of Lincoln", but failed a second time.

There are recent concerns about the waning political influence of the region. In 2006 neither the Republicans nor the Democrats nominated an Idaho Panhandle resident to a major statewide office. [1] The region has not elected a governor since Cecil D. Andrus (D) in the 1970s (Andrus, an Oregon native, was a resident of Orofino; Boise was his residency during his later campaigns), or a member of the United States Congress since Compton I. White, Jr. (D) in the 1960s.

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