Idaho - Important Cities and Towns

Important Cities and Towns

Population > 100,000 (urbanized area)

  • Boise (state capital)

Population > 50,000 (urbanized area)

  • Idaho Falls – Location of the main offices of the Idaho National Laboratory
  • Nampa – Home of Northwest Nazarene University
  • Pocatello – Home of Idaho State University
  • Meridian – Suburb of Boise, Fastest growing city in Idaho

Population > 30,000 (urbanized area)

  • Caldwell – Home of the College of Idaho
  • Coeur d'Alene – Home of North Idaho College, major tourist hub
  • Lewiston – Home of Lewis-Clark State College, Seaport
  • Twin Falls – Home of College of Southern Idaho, BASE jumping

Population > 10,000 (urbanized area)

  • Ammon – Suburb of Idaho Falls
  • Blackfoot – Home of the Idaho Potato Museum
  • Burley
  • Chubbuck, Idaho-Suburb of Pocatello
  • Eagle – Suburb of Boise
  • Garden City – Suburb of Boise
  • Hayden
  • Jerome - Suburb of Twin Falls
  • Kuna – Suburb of Boise
  • Moscow – Home of the University of Idaho
  • Mountain Home – U.S. Air Force Base
  • Post Falls
  • Rexburg – Home of Brigham Young University-Idaho

Smaller Towns and Cities

  • American Falls – first town to be entirely relocated
  • Arco – first city to be lit by electricity generated from a nuclear power plant
  • Bonners Ferry – northernmost major town in Idaho
  • Buhl – "Trout capital of the world"
  • Bone- population 2, but still has gas station
  • Cascade - Lake Cascade and dam
  • Driggs – skiing (Grand Targhee)
  • Eden
  • Emmett
  • Greenleaf
  • Firth
  • Fruitland
  • Filer – suburb of Twin Falls
  • Hazelton
  • Homedale - "Gateway to the Owyhees"
  • Island Park – snowmobiling, world-class fishing
  • Kimberly – suburb of Twin Falls
  • Kellogg – skiing (Silver Mountain Ski Resort)
  • Malad City
  • Mackay
  • McCall – skiing (Brundage Mountain Resort) and Recreation Payette Lake
  • Melba, Idaho - south of Nampa, Idaho
  • Middleton - first city in Idaho
  • Montpelier - bank robbed by the wild bunch
  • Mullan – silver/lead/zinc mining
  • New Meadows - at the 45th parallel north
  • New Plymouth – first planned community in Idaho, third west of the Rocky Mountains
  • Notus
  • Oakley – famous pioneer town, home of many historic buildings
  • Orofino – site of Dworshak Dam, highest straight-axis dam in Western hemisphere
  • Paris – Bear Lake County seat
  • Parma - site of Old Fort Boise
  • Payette – Payette County seat
  • Plummer- CDA tribal headquarters
  • Preston- location of the 2004 film Napoleon Dynamite and the annual International Bed Races
  • Rupert- Minidoka County seat
  • Rigby – television birthplace
  • Salmon – gateway to "River of No Return" (Salmon River)
  • Sandpoint – skiing (Schweitzer Mountain Ski Resort) and recreation Lake Pend Oreille
  • Shelley – home of the Russet potato
  • Soda Springs – U.S.'s only captive geyser
  • St. Anthony – sand dunes and several lava tubes
  • St. Maries – Benewah County seat
  • Stanley, Idaho – heart of the Sawtooth mountains
  • Star, Idaho - suburb of Boise
  • Sun Valley – year-round resort with world-class skiing
  • Wallace – historic district and Shoshone County seat
  • Weiser – Washington County seat, home of the National Oldtime Fiddlers' Contest
  • Wilder - hometown of former governor Phil Batt
  • Worley – casino

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    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    Today as in the time of Pliny and Columella, the hyacinth flourishes in Wales, the periwinkle in Illyria, the daisy on the ruins of Numantia; while around them cities have changed their masters and their names, collided and smashed, disappeared into nothingness, their peaceful generations have crossed down the ages as fresh and smiling as on the days of battle.
    Edgar Quinet (1803–1875)

    The incessant repetition of the same hand-work dwarfs the man, robs him of his strength, wit, and versatility, to make a pin- polisher, and buckle-maker, or any other specialty; and presently, in a change of industry, whole towns are sacrificed like ant-hills, when cotton takes the place of linen, or railways of turnpikes, or when commons are inclosed by landlords.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)