September 5, 1839.

How We Became The Hawkeye State.
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September 5, 1839 – Editor James G. Edwards publishes an editorial in his Burlington Hawk-Eye newspaper promoting the name Hawk-Eye for those living in Iowa.

Burlington lawyer, Judge David Rorer, and newspaperman, James G. Edwards promoted the name Hawkeye as the state’s nickname, honoring both their personal friends, Chief Black Hawk and the fur trader – Sumner “Hawkeye” Phelps – while also pulling from the great popularity of James Fenimore Cooper’s book, The Last of the Mohicans.

So, by 1839, while Edwards was using his Burlington Hawk Eye newspaper to promote the idea, Rorer did his part by ghostwriting several anonymous letters widely published in Iowa newspapers. His series of articles was called A Wolverine Among the Hawkeyes – letters supposedly written by a Michigan traveler visiting Iowa. By 1840, two years after Iowa was officially sanctioned as a U.S. Territory, the nickname Hawkeye had stuck.

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