Both Illinois and Missouri have a ton of history in each state, but one website claims they have fun with some of the craziest facts that will blow your mind.

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Bestlifeonline.com has come up with some of the craziest facts known in all 50 states. What they have to say might surprise you and some may already know these fun facts.

Illinois

Illinois has several big cities in the state, but nothing can compare to Chicago known as The Windy City. I always thought it was called The Windy City because of the lake, but nope I was wrong. It actually has nothing to do with weather, but an event that happened in 1893.

It is believed to have been coined in 1890 by New York Sun editor Charles Dana referring to its competitor for the 1893 World's Fair as full of "hot air." While Chicago would win the hosting gig, the nickname stuck.

There are other rumors that it was also named The Windy City due to a rival with Cinnicinatti, but that rumor is not as popular as the World's Fair. I had no idea this was a thing, I am sure many of you thought that the nickname came from the weather, but nope from a disgruntled journalist who was made New York didn't get the World's Fair. See, mind blown.

Missouri

The crazy fact about Missouri is more devastation than a silly nickname. Missouri is home to the U.S.'s deadliest tornado that hit back in 1925. The F5 tornado went through three states including Illinois, Missouri, and Indiana and killed 695 people, and destroyed over 15,000 buildings.

the deadliest tornado in U.S. history—the Tri-State tornado of March 18, 1925, which killed 695 people and injured 2,027 (not to mention destroyed about 15,000 homes throughout the region).

Iowa is home to a large number of mammoths that have been known to die in the state. There have been several digs throughout the state that have found bones of these large animals.

LOOK: Milestones in women's history from the year you were born

Women have left marks on everything from entertainment and music to space exploration, athletics, and technology. Each passing year and new milestone makes it clear both how recent this history-making is in relation to the rest of the country, as well as how far we still need to go. The resulting timeline shows that women are constantly making history worthy of best-selling biographies and classroom textbooks; someone just needs to write about them.

Scroll through to find out when women in the U.S. and around the world won rights, the names of women who shattered the glass ceiling, and which country's women banded together to end a civil war.

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