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What Cities Makeup The Quad Cities In Iowa

Metropolitan area in the The states

Quad Cities

Metropolitan area

Quad Cities Montage.jpg
Map of Quad Cities
Coordinates: 41°31′00″N ninety°32′00″W  /  41.516666666667°N 90.533333333333°West  / 41.516666666667; -90.533333333333
Country United States
State(s) Iowa
Illinois
Largest city Davenport, Iowa
Other cities Moline, Illinois
Stone Island, Illinois
Bettendorf, Iowa
East Moline, Illinois
Area
 • Total 170 sq mi (400 km2)
Highest elevation 850 ft (259 m)
Lowest elevation 590 ft (180 one thousand)
Population
 • Total 383,681
 • Rank 144th in the U.South.
 • Density 1,600/sq mi (618/km2)
Time zone UTC-06:00 (CST)
 • Summertime (DST) UTC-05:00 (CDT)

The Quad Cities is a region of cities (originally four, see History) in the U.Southward. states of Iowa and Illinois: Davenport and Bettendorf in southeastern Iowa, and Rock Island, Moline and East Moline in northwestern Illinois.[1] [2] [3] [4] These cities are the center of the Quad Cities metropolitan expanse, which as of 2013 had a population judge of 383,781 and a Combined Statistical Area (CSA) population of 474,937, making information technology the 90th-largest CSA in the nation.[5] [6] [7]

History [edit]

Early on history [edit]

Before European settlers came to inhabit the Quad Cities, the confluence of rivers had attracted many varying cultures of indigenous peoples, who used the waterways and riverbanks for their settlements for thousands of years. At the time of European encounter, it was a home and principal trading identify of the Sauk and Fob tribes of Native Americans. Saukenuk was the principal village of the Sauk tribe and birthplace of its 19th-century war chief, Blackness Hawk. In 1832, Sauk chief Keokuk and General Winfield Scott signed a treaty in Davenport after the Us defeated the Sauk and their allies in the Blackness Hawk War. The treaty resulted in the Native Americans ceding six one thousand thousand acres (24,000 kmtwo) of land to the The states in exchange for a much smaller reservation elsewhere. Black Hawk State Historic Site in Rock Island preserves part of historic Saukenuk and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The history of urban settlements in the Quad Cities was stimulated past riverboat traffic. For fourteen miles (23 km) between LeClaire, Iowa, and Rock Island, the Mississippi River flowed across a series of finger-like rock projections protruding from either depository financial institution. These rapids were hard for steamboats to traverse. Every bit need for river-based transportation increased along the upper Mississippi, the navigability of the river throughout the "Rock Isle Rapids" became a greater concern. Over time, a minor industry grew upwardly in the area to meet the steamboats' needs. Boat crews needed rest areas to stop before encountering the rapids, places to hire practiced pilots such every bit Phillip Suiter, who was the first licensed pilot on the upper Mississippi River, to guide the boat through the rocky waters, or, when the water was low, places where goods could be removed and transported past railroad vehicle on land past the rapids.[8] Today, the rocks are submerged six feet underwater past a lake formed by 2 locks and dams.

As the Industrial Revolution developed in the Usa, many enterprising industrialists looked to the Mississippi River as a promising source of water power. The combination of free energy and easy access to river transportation attracted entrepreneurs and industrialists to the Quad Cities for development. In 1848, John Deere moved his plough business to Moline. His business organization was incorporated as Deere & Company in 1868. Deere & Company is the largest employer today in the Quad Cities.

The first railroad span built across the Mississippi River continued Davenport and Stone Isle in 1856.[9] It was built by the Stone Isle Railroad Company, and replaced the irksome seasonal ferry service and winter ice bridges as the principal modes of transportation beyond the river. Steamboaters saw the nationwide railroads as a threat to their business concern. On May 6, 1856, simply weeks after completion of the bridge, an angry steamboater crashed the Effie Afton into it. John Hurd, the owner of the Effie Afton, filed a lawsuit against the Rock Island Railroad Company. The Rock Isle Railroad Company selected Abraham Lincoln equally their trial lawyer and won later on he took the case to the US Supreme Courtroom. Phillip Suiter was 1 of his expert witnesses. It was a pivotal trial in Lincoln'southward career.

Evolution of an identity [edit]

Map of the "Tri-Cities" in 1919

Subsequently the Civil War, the region began to gain a common identity. The river towns that were thoughtfully planned and competently led flourished, while other settlements, ordinarily become-rich-quick schemes for speculators, failed to pan out. By World War I, the towns of Davenport, Rock Island, and Moline had begun to mode themselves equally the "Tri-Cities," a cluster of 3 more-or-less as-sized river communities growing around the pocket-sized bend of the Mississippi River where information technology flows w. But with the growth of Rock Island County, during the 1930s the term "Quad Cities" came into faddy, as East Moline was given "equal status." Despite the fact that the region had earned the name "Quad Cities," the National Basketball game Association had a franchise in Moline, Illinois, from 1946 to 1951 called the "Tri-Cities Blackhawks." So, with the opening of an Alcoa (now Arconic) plant east of Davenport in 1948, the town of Bettendorf underwent then much growth that many people in the community discussed the adoption of the name "Quint Cities",[10] Simply past this time, the proper name "Quad Cities" had get known well beyond the expanse, and "Quint Cities" never caught on, despite the efforts of WOC-Tv (at present KWQC-TV) and others. Consequently, when Bettendorf passed East Moline in size, there was some debate about whether Bettendorf had "displaced" East Moline. Instead, local officials, such every bit the Chamber of Commerce,[11] have called an inclusive approach, maintaining the name "Quad Cities" notwithstanding including all v cities.[12]

1980s–electric current [edit]

Showtime in the tardily 1970s, economical conditions caused major industrial restructuring, which disrupted the footing of the region's economy. The major companies, agricultural manufacturers, ceased or scaled back operations in the Quad Cities. Factories which closed included International Harvester in Rock Island and Case IH in Bettendorf. Moline-based John Deere cut its labor headcount past 1 half. Afterwards in the 1980s, Caterpillar Inc. closed its factories at Mount Joy and Bettendorf.

Since the 1990s, the Quad Cities governments, businesses, non-profits and residents take worked hard to redevelop the region. They have achieved national attention for their accomplishments.

Examples of revitalization and rebirth include:

  • Davenport's River Renaissance (a downtown revitalization project that includes a river music history center), an ag-tech venture capital campus, and the Figge Art Museum opened or were completed during the first decade of the 21st century.
  • Moline has invested in what was once a robust downtown. The "John Deere Commons" and TaxSlayer Center (formerly "The MARK of the Quad Cities" and the "iWireless Centre") both opened during the 1990s.
  • In 2007, Davenport and Rock Island competed for and won the title of "most livable minor city" from the National Quango of Mayors, based upon an unfunded proposal called RiverVision.
  • In 2008 Bettendorf was ranked by CNN[xiii] as one of the ten best places to purchase a business firm in the The states.
  • In 2010, the Quad Cities were named "the most affordable metro" by Forbes magazine.[xiv]
  • In 2012, Davenport housing market ranked second in the nation beating the housing bubble, due to its lack of foreclosures and their low unemployment.[15]
  • In 2012, the Quad Cities Metropolitan Area was ranked amidst the fastest-growing areas in the nation in the growth of loftier-tech jobs.[16]
  • In 2012, the Quad Cities were named the "2012 All American City"
  • In 2013, Modern Woodman Park was voted the best minor league ballpark in America.[17]

Proposed mergers [edit]

Over the years, several communities in the Quad Cities region have proposed or performed mergers. As it grew, Davenport annexed the communities of Rockingham, Nahant, Probstei, East Davenport, Oakdale, Cawiezeel, Blackhawk, Mt. Joy, Green Tree, and others. Bettendorf annexed portions of Pleasant Valley in the 1970s. In 1987, Rock Island, Moline, East Moline, Milan, Carbon Cliff, Hampton, Coal Valley and Silvis considered a super-city merger which would have seen the Illinois cities become the second-largest city in the state,[18] simply the proposal ultimately failed. Moline and East Moline considered a merger in 1997.[19] That same yr, Green Rock and Colona did merge.[20]

Geography [edit]

The Quad Cities is located at the confluence of the Rock and Mississippi rivers, approximately 140 miles (230 km) west of Chicago, and form the largest metropolitan area forth the Mississippi River between Minneapolis–Saint Paul and the St. Louis metropolitan area. Interstate eighty crosses the Mississippi River here. The Quad Cities area is distinctive because the Mississippi River flows from east to w equally it passes through the middle of the expanse; the Iowa cities of Davenport and Bettendorf are located due northward of Rock Isle and Moline, respectively.

The Quad Cities surface area is 1 where the phone companies cooperate with regional phone calls. Iowa and Illinois have unlike area codes (563 and 309 respectively), yet most calls originating and terminating inside the core urban area are placed without long-altitude charges by dialing only a 7-digit number. This helps the bi-state area promote itself as a single community, "joined by a river."

The Quad Cities Metropolitan Surface area consists of 3 counties: Scott County in Iowa, and Rock Isle Canton and Henry County in Illinois. The Quad Metropolis metro population is 382,268.[21] The Quad Cities Metropolitan Area is also considered part of the Great Lakes Megalopolis.[22] [23]

Climate data for Quad Cities (Quad City International Airport), 1991–2020 normals,[a] extremes 1871–present[b]
Month January Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Twelvemonth
Record high °F (°C) 69
(21)
74
(23)
88
(31)
93
(34)
104
(40)
104
(forty)
111
(44)
106
(41)
100
(38)
95
(35)
80
(27)
71
(22)
111
(44)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 53
(12)
58
(xiv)
74
(23)
83
(28)
89
(32)
94
(34)
95
(35)
94
(34)
91
(33)
84
(29)
70
(21)
58
(fourteen)
97
(36)
Boilerplate high °F (°C) 31.8
(−0.one)
36.6
(2.6)
49.9
(9.9)
63.0
(17.2)
73.nine
(23.3)
83.1
(28.iv)
86.1
(30.i)
84.i
(28.9)
77.ix
(25.5)
64.8
(18.2)
49.viii
(9.nine)
37.0
(2.8)
61.five
(16.4)
Daily mean °F (°C) 23.3
(−4.8)
27.7
(−ii.4)
39.vii
(4.3)
51.4
(x.8)
62.5
(16.9)
72.1
(22.3)
75.5
(24.2)
73.iv
(23.0)
66.one
(18.ix)
53.seven
(12.1)
xl.iv
(4.7)
28.nine
(−1.seven)
51.ii
(10.7)
Average low °F (°C) 14.8
(−ix.half-dozen)
xviii.viii
(−7.3)
29.6
(−ane.3)
39.9
(4.iv)
51.one
(10.6)
61.0
(sixteen.1)
64.9
(18.iii)
62.seven
(17.1)
54.2
(12.iii)
42.vi
(five.9)
30.9
(−0.6)
20.8
(−6.2)
40.ix
(4.ix)
Hateful minimum °F (°C) −nine
(−23)
−2
(−19)
10
(−12)
25
(−4)
35
(ii)
48
(ix)
54
(12)
52
(11)
39
(4)
26
(−three)
xiv
(−x)
0
(−eighteen)
−fourteen
(−26)
Record low °F (°C) −33
(−36)
−28
(−33)
−19
(−28)
vii
(−14)
25
(−4)
39
(4)
46
(eight)
40
(iv)
24
(−4)
11
(−12)
−10
(−23)
−24
(−31)
−33
(−36)
Average precipitation inches (mm) i.66
(42)
1.83
(46)
2.62
(67)
3.81
(97)
4.67
(119)
five.01
(127)
4.23
(107)
iii.97
(101)
3.32
(84)
two.81
(71)
2.30
(58)
ii.04
(52)
38.27
(972)
Average snowfall inches (cm) x.8
(27)
eight.six
(22)
4.4
(eleven)
i.1
(2.eight)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.3
(0.76)
2.one
(5.iii)
eight.8
(22)
36.ane
(92)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) ix.3 eight.7 10.4 11.iii 12.2 11.3 8.6 9.4 8.4 ix.0 eight.9 9.5 117.0
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 7.2 6.0 3.ii 0.eight 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.iii i.7 five.9 25.one
Average relative humidity (%) 69.9 69.viii 68.3 64.three 64.9 65.eight lxx.5 73.3 72.8 68.1 71.3 74.0 69.4
Average dew signal °F (°C) 11.7
(−xi.three)
16.2
(−8.viii)
27.0
(−ii.eight)
37.2
(2.9)
48.two
(ix.0)
57.9
(14.iv)
64.0
(17.8)
62.half-dozen
(17.0)
54.3
(12.4)
41.5
(five.3)
30.4
(−0.9)
18.iii
(−seven.6)
39.1
(three.ix)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 148.1 153.8 180.v 210.1 255.ane 284.6 301.9 271.four 222.0 192.9 121.7 113.9 2,456
Percent possible sunshine 50 52 49 53 57 63 66 63 59 56 41 forty 55
Source: NOAA (relative humidity, dew point, and sun 1961−1990)[24] [25] [26]

Demographics [edit]

Co-ordinate to the 2010 Us Demography Count, the metropolitan surface area grew to 471,551.[27] As of the 2000 census, a total of 96,495 households and 60,535 families resided in the area.

Race and ethnicity [edit]

The racial makeup of the area is xc.6% White (410,861), 3.7% Black or African American (27,757), 0.6% American Indian and Alaskan Native (1,255), 1.0% Asian (6,624), 0.03% Pacific Islander (156), and ii.0% from 2 or more than races (eleven,929). 7.1% of the population is Hispanic or Latino of any race (37,070).[28] The predominant ethnicities in the Quad Cities are of northern European descent, including German, Irish, and English, also Scandinavian (Mostly Swedish and Norwegian) and Dutch.[29] [30] [31] [32] [33] The primary minority groups in the area are African-Americans, which in Davenport brand upwardly the third largest black population in the country of Iowa, a customs dating back to the 1830s when Iowa was a costless territory. Many of the metropolis's African-American residents accept roots in the Southern/Border states of the U.S., including Mississippi, Arkansas, Alabama, and Missouri. The most significant Asian-American populations are South Asian and Vietnamese American.[34] [35] [36] [37]

Faith [edit]

According to resources, Christianity is the largest religion to exist practiced in the expanse. However, the ii states have a different population of Christian groups. In Davenport and Bettendorf, Catholics make upward an eighteen.v% plurality, only Protestants with 15.one% Mainline and 11.6% Evangelical make upward large minorities as well. The Black Protestants on the Iowa side comes in at ane.two%. On the Illinois side, betwixt Rock Island, Moline, and East Moline, Catholicism is less prevalent at 12.4%, and at 12.5% Evangelical and 11.0% Mainline have smaller declines.[29] [30] [31] [32] [33]

The Jewish population is about 500–600, which is down from well-nigh 1,800–2,000 in the 1950s and 1960s.[38]

Landmarks [edit]

Downtown Rock Isle, Illinois

  • The business Antique Archeology, featured on the History Aqueduct show American Pickers, is located in LeClaire
  • Brady Street Stadium, a major high-schoolhouse sports venue along Davenport'southward Brady Street (U.S. 61)
  • The Col Ballroom, a small arena for music concerts, in Davenport
  • Davenport Skybridge
  • Figge Art Museum, Davenport, formerly the Davenport Museum of Art, designed by British builder David Chipperfield and opened in 2005. Its holdings include all-encompassing collections of Haitian, colonial Mexican and Midwestern art, specially pieces by Thomas Hart Benton, Marvin Cone and Grant Wood, and personal effects from Wood's manor.
  • Fred Schwengel Memorial Bridge, a iv-lane steel-girder span on Interstate lxxx, crossing the Mississippi River to connect LeClaire and Rapids Urban center. Opened in 1966.
  • Authorities Bridge, a double-decked span adjacent to Lock and Dam 15, carrying motor and rail traffic between Arsenal Island and Davenport. The 1896 truss bridge, about 1,950 feet long, includes a 360-degree swing span over the twin locks. It connects to the Illinois side of the river via the Rock Island Viaduct.
  • Iowa 80 Truck Stop – the world'southward largest truck stop is forth Interstate fourscore nearly Walcott, Iowa, west of Davenport.
  • Interstate 74 Bridge, formerly known as the "Iowa-Illinois Memorial Span", connecting Bettendorf and Moline. The twin pause spans beyond the Mississippi River were congenital in 1935 and 1959 and adapted to acquit Interstate 74 in the early 1970s. The twinned towers are a symbol of the ii-country Quad Cities community. The bridge is prepare to exist replaced with eight lanes.
  • John Deere Pavilion, a modest museum and showcase for John Deere equipment, built adjacent to the John Deere Commons in the 1990s in downtown Moline.
  • John Deere World Headquarters, designed by Eero Saarinen and completed in 1963 in Moline.
  • The John Looney Mansion, designed and built in 1897 for the attorney, publisher and gangster John Looney in Rock Island which still stands off 20th Street and 17th Avenue.
  • Lock and Dam No. 15, a one,200-human foot roller dam with twin locks across the Mississippi River between Arsenal Island and Davenport. The roller dam, billed equally the longest of its blazon, maintains a pool upstream that allows river traffic to pass through the once notorious Rock Isle Rapids.
  • Mississippi Valley Fairgrounds, a fair and exposition venue in Davenport
  • Modernistic Woodmen Park, formerly John O'Donnell Stadium, habitation of the Kansas City Royals' class loftier A chapter, the Quad Cities River Bandits, on the Davenport riverfront. With the lights of Rock Island beyond the Mississippi and the Centennial Span looming just beyond the correct-field debate, the park was named by USA Today as one of ten bully places for a baseball game pilgrimage. The ball park added a 110 ft. ferris wheel before the outset of the 2014 flavor.
  • Old Main, completed in 1888, the oldest building on the campus of Augustana College. Located on a barefaced overlooking the Mississippi River, its iconic and newly renovated dome was lighted as of October 2011.
  • Putnam Museum in Davenport
  • Quad Metropolis Botanical Heart in Rock Island
  • Quad Cities Waterfront Convention Center, located in Bettendorf
  • RiverCenter/Adler Theatre, a convention and performing-arts complex in Davenport. The 2,400-seat Adler is the former RKO Orpheum Theater, which opened in 1931, designed by A.S. Graven of Chicago, whose projects included the Drake Hotel in Chicago and the Paramount Theater in New York City. The theater was extensively renovated and expanded in 1984–86 and 2005.
  • River Music Experience, a performance, education and music-history venue in the Redstone Edifice, the former Petersen Harned Von Maur department store
  • Stone Island Arsenal, manufacturer of war machine equipment and ordnance since the 1880s, now the largest government-endemic weapons manufacturing arsenal in the United States. The armory is located on Arsenal Isle (formerly known every bit Rock Isle) in the Mississippi River between Davenport, Iowa, and Rock Island, Illinois. Fort Armstrong was built at that place in 1816. During the ceremonious war, the island held a Matrimony prison camp for Confederate soldiers. The Federal-mode home of Colonel George Davenport, congenital in 1833–34, the oldest extant building in the Quad Cities, is on the north banking concern of the isle.
  • Stone Island Centennial Span over the Mississippi River betwixt downtown Davenport and Rock Isle, completed in 1940 to commemorate Stone Island'southward 100th anniversary. The v arches of the iii,853-foot through-arch span frequently are used every bit a symbol of the Quad Cities.
  • Rock Island Canton Fairgrounds in East Moline, also the site of the Quad City Speedway
  • Stone Island Auction Visitor from the Discovery Channel bear witness Set, Aim, Sold! [39]
  • TaxSlayer Center – xi,000-seat arena in Moline (formerly The Mark of the Quad Cities and the iWireless Center).
  • Vander Veer Botanical Park is a 33-acre (130,000 m2) botanical garden in the Vander Veer Park Historic District of Davenport, Iowa. It is believed to be one of the first botanical parks west of the Mississippi River.[40]
  • The Quarter – a 90-acre (360,000 yard2) site in East Moline, alongside the Mississippi River, featuring shops, restaurants, condominiums, boat docks, sports and interpretive centers, and a working lighthouse, currently under development. (Geographical coordinates: 41°31′47″N 90°26′sixteen″W  /  41.52972°Northward ninety.43778°W  / 41.52972; -90.43778 )[41]
  • Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Freight Business firm, referred to locally as the "Freight House", is an amusement venue
  • TBK Bank Sports Circuitous, also known as the BettPlex, is a state-of-the-art sport and entertainment complex. Containing eight full-size volleyball and basketball courts. Four indoor and five outdoor sand volleyball courts, 10 lighted outdoor baseball game and softball fields, the BettPlex is a 45 meg dollar sporting facility that was created to host weekend sporting tournaments in the Quad Cities.

Noteworthy companies [edit]

  • Arconic
  • Cobham plc
  • Deere & Visitor (also known every bit/branded: John Deere)
  • Genesis Health Organisation
  • Group O
  • Guardian Industries
  • Happy Joe'due south
  • KONE, Inc (formerly Montgomery Elevator)
  • Lee Enterprises
  • Lewis Machine and Tool Company
  • Modern Woodmen of America
  • NestlĂ© Purina PetCare
  • QCR Holdings
  • Sears Seating (besides known as Sears Manufacturing)
  • Von Maur
  • Whitey's Water ice Cream

Peak employers [edit]

According to Quad Cities website,[42] the top employers in the Quad Cities surface area are:

Rank Employer # of employees Industry
ane Deere & Company 7,240 Agricultural Innovation
2 Rock Island Arsenal 6,163 Defence force Manufacturing
3 Genesis Health System v,173 Healthcare
4 Hy-Vee 4,568 Grocery
5 UnityPoint Health - Trinity 3,954 Healthcare
6 HNI Corporation/The Hon Company/Allsteel 3,200 Office Piece of furniture Manufacturing
seven Walmart two,821 Warehouse Clubs and Supercenters
8 Arconic 2,500 Aerospace and Defense Aluminum
9 Tyson Fresh Meats 2,400 Food Processing
ten Amazon two,000 (2022) Warehouse
xi Oscar Mayer/Kraft 1,600 Food Processing

Notable people [edit]

Teaching [edit]

Colleges and universities [edit]

  • Augustana College – A private, four-year liberal arts higher in Rock Island.
  • Bible Missionary Establish – A Bible college in Rock Isle affiliated with the Bible Missionary Church.
  • Black Hawk Higher – Community college in Moline, with a satellite campus in Kewanee, Illinois.
  • Eastern Iowa Customs Higher Commune – Consisting of campuses in Bettendorf, Clinton, and Muscatine. Bettendorf's campus is known as Scott Customs College.
  • Palmer Chiropractic College – Davenport, first chiropractic school in the globe.
  • Saint Ambrose Academy - A academy in Davenport.
  • Upper Iowa University – A satellite campus in Bettendorf.
  • Western Illinois Academy-Quad Cities – The merely public, four-yr university in the Quad Cities region. The campus is located in Moline along the Mississippi Riverfront at the quondam site of the 60,000-square-pes (5,600 yard2) John Deere Technical Site.

Culture [edit]

Since 1916, the region has supported the Quad City Symphony Orchestra, which presents a year-round schedule of concerts at the Adler Theatre in Davenport and Centennial Hall in Rock Island. The Handel Oratorio Club, dating to 1880, is the second-oldest organization of its kind in the nation and presents annual performances of "Messiah" along with another major work for choir and orchestra. The Augustana Choir, founded at Stone Island'south Augustana College in 1934, is one of the nation'due south leading collegiate choruses. Major outdoor summertime music festivals include the Bix Beiderbecke Memorial Jazz Festival, Mississippi Valley Blues Festival, and River Roots Live.

The Quad Cities' three traditional community theaters – Playcrafters Barn Theatre (founded in 1920, comedies and dramas)[43] and Quad City Music Guild (1948, musicals) in Moline, and Genesius social club (1957, outdoor Shakespeare and Greek comedies and tragedies) in Rock Island – were joined in 1976 by Circa '21 Dinner Playhouse, a professional person dinner theater in downtown Rock Island'southward historic Fort Theatre. Ballet is performed at Ballet Quad Cities. ComedySportz provides improv comedy. Bluebox Express is a Bettendorf-based film product company, and many outside productions companies have filmed movies in the Quad Cities in recent years.[44] [45] Historic buildings and sites listed on state and the National Annals of Historic Places interpret the history of people'southward settlement and lives in the surface area.

Media [edit]

The Quad Cities is the 151st largest radio market in the United States.[46] It is ranked 97th past Nielsen Media Research for the 2008–09 television flavour with 309,600 television households.[47]

The area is served past over 13 commercial radio stations, 8 non-commercial radio stations, three low power FM radio stations, 8 TV stations and three daily newspapers.

In 2012, the Mississippi Valley Fair that is held in Davenport served as the film location for Rodney Atkins' music video "Merely Wanna Rock N' Gyre."

As well in 2012, the PBS Frontline documentary Poor Kids was filmed in and around the Quad Cities showing poverty from a kid's perspective.

Transportation [edit]

Four interstate highways serve the Quad Cities: Interstate 80, Interstate 280, Interstate 74 serve both states while Interstate 88 serves but Illinois. United states highways include U.S. Road six and U.S. Route 67 which run through both Iowa and Illinois, while U.S. Route 61 serves just Iowa and U.S. Road 150 serves just Illinois. A full of five bridges accessible by automobiles connect Iowa with Illinois in the Quad Cities across the Mississippi River. The Fred Schwengel Memorial Bridge carries Interstate 80 and connects Le Claire, Iowa, with Rapids City, Illinois. Continuing downstream, the I-74 Bridge connects Bettendorf, Iowa, with Moline, Illinois, and is the busiest bridge with an boilerplate of 70,400 cars a twenty-four hours.[48] The Government Bridge connects Downtown Davenport with the Rock Island Arsenal. Three bridges connect Davenport with Stone Island, Illinois; The Rock Island Centennial Bridge, The Crescent Rail Bridge, and the furthest downstream span, the Sergeant John F. Baker, Jr. Span which carries I-280.

Several state highways too serve the expanse. Iowa Highway 22 is on Davenport'southward southwest side and runs west through the county, while Iowa Highway 130 runs along Northwest Boulevard on Davenport's north edge. Illinois Route 5 (John Deere Road) runs from Stone Isle east till it runs into Interstate 88. Illinois Route 92 runs along the Mississippi River, while Illinois Route 84 runs along the east side of Stone Island Canton. Illinois Route 192 connects Highway 92 with Illinois Route 94 near Taylor Ridge. The Chicago – Kansas City State highway also serves the surface area along Interstates 74, fourscore, and 88.

In that location are three transit operators in the Quad Cities with limited interconnection between them. Rock Island County Metropolitan Mass Transit District (Quad Cities MetroLINK) serves the Illinois cities of Stone Island, Moline, East Moline, Milan, Silvis, Carbon Cliff, Hampton and Colona. It has 12 routes and a armada of about 52 buses. Information technology operates a river craft during summer months. In Iowa, Davenport Citibus has 10 fixed routes and operates 20 buses, vii days a week and Bettendorf Transit operates three routes, Mon–Saturday, and has eight buses.

Amtrak currently does not serve the Quad Cities. The closest station is nearly l miles (eighty km) abroad in Galesburg, Illinois. In 2008, United States Senators Tom Harkin, Chuck Grassley, Dick Durbin, and Barack Obama sent a alphabetic character to Amtrak request them to begin plans to bring track service to the Quad Cities.[49] In October 2010, a $230 one thousand thousand federal fund was announced that will bring Amtrak service to the Quad Cities, with a new line running from Moline to Chicago. They hoped to accept the line completed in 2015, and offer two round trips daily to Chicago.[fifty]

In December 2011, the federal authorities awarded $177 one thousand thousand in funding for the Amtrak connexion. Budgetary and logistical issues have delayed the completion of all necessary track improvements, but the project is still in development.[51] [52] The multi-modal Moline Q Station edifice was completed in early on 2018, with the attached Westin Chemical element hotel opening in Feb.[53] When the full project is completed, information technology will establish passenger rail through the Quad Cities, for the offset fourth dimension since the 1970s.

The Quad Cities is served by the Quad Cities International Drome, Illinois' tertiary-busiest airport, located in Moline. The airport is marketed as a regional alternative to the larger airports in Chicago, nearly 200 miles (320 km) abroad. The smaller Davenport Municipal Aerodrome is the home of the Quad City Air Testify.

Sports [edit]

From 1907 to 1926, Rock Island was home to the NFL'southward Rock Isle Independents. The franchise was a charter member on the National Football League (NFL) in 1920. The showtime NFL Game always was played by the Independents at Douglas Park in September 1920. Football legend Jim Thorpe was a member of the team in 1924.

The Tri-Cities Blackhawks, named in honor of the Sauk war chief Black Hawk, was the adjacent height-level professional sports franchise. The lodge played in the National Basketball League (NBL) from 1946 until its merger in 1949 with the Basketball Clan of America to become the National Basketball Association (NBA). Hall of famer Cerise Auerbach coached the Blackhawks during their first NBA season.

After the 1950–51 basketball flavour, the squad moved to Milwaukee, where they were named the Hawks. After a second move to St. Louis, the team is now the Atlanta Hawks.

Professional basketball returned to the Quad Cities during the 1980s and 1990s with the Quad City Thunder of the Continental Basketball game Association. The CBA served as the NBA's premier developmental league and produced many highly regarded NBA stars. From 1987 through the 1992–93 flavor, the Thunder played at Wharton Field House in Moline. Starting with the 1993–94 flavour, the squad played at The Mark of the Quad Cities (now the TaxSlayer Centre.) After the CBA folded in 2001, the Thunder franchise ceased operations permanently. The TaxSlayer Center occasionally hosts NCAA Sectionalization I college basketball briefing tournaments as well every bit NBA and NHL exhibitions.

The Quad Cities has hosted minor league baseball game teams since the Davenport Brown Stockings first played in 1878. The Rock Island Islanders and Moline Plowboys each fielded teams for many seasons. The Islanders began play in 1901 and played primarily at Douglas Park. The Plowboys were founded in 1914. Their dwelling house was Browning Field.

The Davenport franchise has been a member of the Midwest League since 1960. They have played at Mod Woodman Park since 1931. Today, the Quad Cities River Bandits are High Course A affiliate of the Kansas Metropolis Royals

The PGA Tour makes an annual stop in the Quad Cities. The golf game tournament is currently known as the John Deere Classic. It has drawn dozens of top PGA players over the years, including Tiger Wood, Vijay Singh, and Payne Stewart.

The Quad Cities Marathon has run annually in late September since 1998. Roughly 400-500 participants race through the four cities, starting time and ending in Moline. The race weekend too offers a half marathon and a 5K as well as races for children. Kenyan Kiplangat Terer holds the men'southward record with a 2:14:04, run in 2013. Ethiopian Hirut Guangul holds the woman's tape at 2:35:07, from her 2012 win.[54]

Sports teams [edit]

Social club Sport League Venue Established Championships
Quad Cities River Bandits Baseball High-A Central Modern Woodmen Park 1960 half dozen
Quad Metropolis Steamwheelers Indoor football IFL TaxSlayer Heart 2017 0
Quad Metropolis Storm Ice hockey SPHL TaxSlayer Center 2018 0
  • Quad Metropolis River Bandits is a Class A Midwest League minor league baseball game squad in Davenport. Their dwelling games are played at Modern Woodmen Park, formerly John O'Donnell Stadium. The Davenport team has existed under a diversity of names and Major League Baseball team affiliations since 1901. The River Bandits are currently affiliated with the Kansas City Royals.
  • Quad City Mallards were an ice hockey team that played from 2009 to 2018 with home games held at the TaxSlayer Center in Moline. The new Mallards replaced the old Quad Urban center Flames AHL team which played from 2007 to 2009. The original Mallards played in the United Hockey League from 1995 to 2007.
  • The Quad Urban center Storm was launched for the 2018–19 season in the Southern Professional person Hockey League.[55]
  • The Quad City Steamwheelers were an AF2 arena football franchise that likewise played at the TaxSlayer Center. The Steamwheelers won the league's title game, the ArenaCup, in 2000 and 2001. After the AF2 league folded following its 2009 season, the Steamwheelers also ceased operations.
  • A new Quad City Steamwheelers organization launched for the 2018 flavour in Champions Indoor Football and then moved to the Indoor Football game League for 2019.[56]
  • Quad City Silverbacks were a professional person mixed martial arts team competing in the now-defunct International Fight League. Domicile matches took place at the iWireless Center.
  • Pat Miletich formed and based a mixed martial arts gym and fight team, Miletich Fighting Systems, in the Quad Cities. Miletich Fighting Systems is amidst MMA's first 'super-camps', and housed many of the consensus greatest fighters of the early 2000s, such as Jens Pulver, Matt Hughes, Robbie Lawler, Tim Sylvia, and Jeremy Horn, among others.
  • The Quad City Riverhawks was a PBL (Premier Basketball game League) team. They played domicile games at Wharton Field Firm in Moline during the 2008 flavor. They ended with that flavor. Previously, the Quad Metropolis Thunder were a CBA team playing in the late 1980s thru 2000, showtime at Wharton and then at The Marker.
  • The Quad City Raiders are a semi-professional minor league football squad that was formed in 2011 to serve the Quad Metropolis expanse. The Raiders play in the MidStates Football game League and accept reached the semi-finals in the league playoffs each season.[57]

See likewise [edit]

  • Mississippi Able-bodied Briefing for Iowa high school sports, and Western Big 6 Conference for high school sports in Illinois.

Meet besides [edit]

  • African Americans in Davenport, Iowa
  • Wild Dog (comics)
  • Quad City-manner pizza
  • List of tallest buildings in the Quad Cities
  • Happy Joe'southward Pizza Parlor Concatenation with headquarters in Bettendorf, Iowa
  • Whitey's Ice Foam Parlor Chain with headquarters in Moline, Illinois

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ Mean monthly maxima and minima (i.e. the expected highest and everyman temperature readings at any point during the twelvemonth or given month) calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020.
  2. ^ Official precipitation records for the Quad Cities kept at the Weather Bureau Office (WBO) in Davenport, Iowa from July 1871 to December 1931, alternating betwixt Quad City Int'l (KMLI) and the Davenport WBO from Jan 1932 to 17 February 1937, and remaining at KMLI since xviii February 1937. Temperature, snowfall, and snow depth records date to 1 January 1874, 1 August 1882, and i Jan 1901, respectively. For more data, meet Threadex

References [edit]

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External links [edit]

  • QuadCities.com – Local Information Guide, Business Directory, Effect Calendar
  • Quad Cities Convention & Visitors Bureau
  • Quad City Times newspaper – Local News and Information
  • Quad-Cities Online – Local Information
  • WeAreQC. Quad City Resource. Built by the Quad Cities
  • QCANews.com – Local News

Coordinates: 41°31′North ninety°32′West  /  41.517°North ninety.533°Westward  / 41.517; -90.533

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quad_Cities

Posted by: kennedyliaboarpood.blogspot.com

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