Wiki Project Missouri

Wiki Project Missouri

Welcome to WikiProject Missouri. We are a board of editors committed to the proper exposition of information about the U.S. state of Missouri throughout Wikipedia. Our primary goal is to research and provide the most accurate and detailed information about Missouri and its history, society, people, places, culture and spirit. This mission is accomplished in our writing without regard for our personal biases, professing an obedience to neutrality in language, ideas and thoughts while respecting the diversity of opinions on each article subject. Our end is to educate all visitors to this academic and encyclopedic forum. Through the creation of WikiProject Missouri, we aspire to improve and coordinate the efforts of subordinate projects such as WikiProject Columbia, Missouri, WikiProject Kansas City and WikiProject St. Louis among others.

If you are interested in participating in this ambitious and important work, we encourage you to join our board of editors and consider this your principal resource center for Missouri-related articles. To participate in WikiProject Missouri, please list your user information below. After you have done that, browse through the subpages and to-do lists provided and choose a project you can take upon yourself. You may also want to start a project of your own. Further inquiries about WikiProject Missouri will be welcomed on the discussion page.

Read more about Wiki Project Missouri:  Active Participants, Inactive Members, News, Templates, Awards, Tools

Famous quotes containing the words project and/or missouri:

    The candidate tells us we are the “backbone of the State,” and we know that it is true, not because we are possessed of certain endowed virtues, but because we are a majority and have the vote.
    —Federal Writers’ Project Of The Wor, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    I was losing interest in politics, when the repeal of the Missouri Compromise aroused me again. What I have done since then is pretty well known.
    Abraham Lincoln (1809–1865)