Please email or share this article!

Colorado Facts For Kids

Colorado is a popular tourist destination for bikers, skiers, climbers, and anyone who loves the outdoors. The state is known for its natural beauty, with scenic mountains, deserts, rivers and much more.

Related: Colorado State History

It boasts four national parks, including one of the most popular, the Rocky Mountain National Park.

Seal Of Colorado

Wildlife includes bighorn sheep, mountain goats, mountain lions, black bears, prairie dogs, and bison.

Quick Facts

Capital: Denver

Population: 5.6 million

Nickname: The Centennial State

Key Cities: Boulder, Denver, Colorado Springs, Aurora, Fort Collins, Aspen

Postal Abbreviation: CO

Major Industries: Agriculture, manufacturing, mining, tourism

mining-excavation

History

How did Colorado get its name: The state’s name comes from the Spanish language and means “colored red.”

Spanish explorers came up with this name after seeing the reddish silt in the Rio Colorado (a river).

In 1861, the United States used this name to refer to the entire territory.

Date admitted to the Union: Tuesday, August 1, 1876

united-states-facts

Geography

Size: 104,185 sq. miles

Lowest point: Arikaree River at 3,315 feet

Highest point: Elbert at 14,433 feet

Counties: 64

Famous locations: Rocky Mountain National Park, Mesa Verde National Park, Pikes Peak, Vail, San Juan Skyway Scenic Byway

mountains

Famous Coloradans

Tim Allen- actor

Jack Dempsey- boxer

Gene Fowler- writer

Kristin Davis- actress

Kristin Davis

Chris Fowler- sports broadcaster

Chauncey Billups- basketball player

Fun Facts

The name “cheeseburger” was first coined in Denver, Colorado in 1935 by Louis Ballast, owner of the “Humpty Dumpty Drive-In.”

Jolly Ranchers, too, were invented by a Colorado resident (Bill Harmsen) in 1949.

jolly-ranchers

At Colorado’s Picketwire Canyon, you can find one of the world’s largest preserved sets of dinosaur tracks. You can follow the dino prints for more than 1,300 steps across 0.25 miles.

Colorado is called the Centennial State because it officially joined the Union 100 years after the Declaration of Independence was signed.

writing the declaration of independence

In the United States, there are a total of 91 “fourteeners” (mountain peaks taller than 14,000 feet). 56 of them are in Colorado.

In fact, Colorado contains 75% of land area over 10,000 feet in the United States. It’s no wonder that the state is best known for its mountains! The Rocky Mountains are particularly famous.

first olympic games

Colorado is the only state in history to turn down the Olympics. Denver was set to host the Olympics in 1976, but 62% of state voters rejected the idea because of cost, pollution, and an increased population.

The tallest sand dune in America is located in Colorado’s Great Sand Dunes National Monument. The 700-foot sand peaks were formed by ocean waters and wind more than one million years ago!

United States

united-states-facts