List of counties in Idaho
This is a list of 44 counties in the U.S. state of Idaho.
Each county in Idaho has a license plate prefix, according to the first letter of the county name. The first county for a given letter is given #1, the second county #2, etc. For example, Ada and Adams are the only two counties with the letter 'A'. Since Ada comes before Adams alphabetically, Ada is '1A' while Adams is '2A.' There are four counties that start with the letter 'L': Latah, Lemhi, Lewis, and Lincoln; the license plate prefixes for these counties are 1L, 2L, 3L, and 4L, respectively.
Elmore, Idaho, Kootenai, Nez Perce, Shoshone, Valley, and Washington counties are the only ones in the state with those beginning letters. Therefore, the license plate prefix would be the first letter of the county name, without a number. The letter 'B' has ten counties, 'C' has seven, and 'L' has four; the remaining letters have two or fewer.
Alphabetical list
County |
FIPS code[1] | County seat[2] | Established[2] | Origin[3] | Etymology[4] | Population[2][5] | Area[2][5] | Map |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ada County | 001 | Boise | 1864 | Boise County | Ada Riggs, daughter of H. C. Riggs, a member of the Idaho Territorial Legislature. | 300,904 | 1,055 sq mi (2,732 km2) |
|
Adams County | 003 | Council | 1911 | Washington County | John Adams (1735-1826), second President of the United States (1797-1801). | 3,476 | 1,365 sq mi (3,535 km2) |
|
Bannock County | 005 | Pocatello | 1893 | Bingham County | Bannock Native American tribe. | 75,565 | 1,113 sq mi (2,883 km2) |
|
Bear Lake County | 007 | Paris | 1893 | Oneida County | Bear Lake on the Utah/Idaho border. | 6,411 | 971 sq mi (2,515 km2) |
|
Benewah County | 009 | St. Maries | 1915 | Kootenai County | Benewah, chief of the Coeur d'Alene Tribe | 9,171 | 776 sq mi (2,010 km2) |
|
Bingham County | 011 | Blackfoot | 1885 | Oneida County | Henry H. Bingham (1841-1912), a general in the American Civil War and a U.S. Congressman from Pennsylvania. | 41,735 | 2,095 sq mi (5,426 km2) |
|
Blaine County | 013 | Hailey | 1895 | Alturas County | James G. Blaine (1830-1893), United States Secretary of State (1881, 1889-1892). | 18,991 | 2,645 sq mi (6,851 km2) |
|
Boise County | 015 | Idaho City | 1864 | Original county | Boise River | 6,670 | 1,902 sq mi (4,926 km2) |
|
Bonner County | 017 | Sandpoint | 1907 | Kootenai County | Edwin L. Bonner, originator of a 1864 ferry service on the Kootenai River. | 36,835 | 1,738 sq mi (4,501 km2) |
|
Bonneville County | 019 | Idaho Falls | 1911 | Bingham County | Benjamin Bonneville (1796-1878), a French-born explorer of the West. | 82,522 | 1,869 sq mi (4,841 km2) |
|
Boundary County | 021 | Bonners Ferry | 1915 | Bonner | Borders Canada on the north. | 9,871 | 1,269 sq mi (3,287 km2) |
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Butte County | 023 | Arco | 1917 | Bingham, Blaine, and Jefferson counties | Buttes rising from the Snake River Plain. | 2,899 | 2,233 sq mi (5,783 km2) |
|
Camas County | 025 | Fairfield | 1917 | Blaine County | Camassia, a plant species important as a food source among Native Americans and early settlers. | 991 | 1,075 sq mi (2,784 km2) |
|
Canyon County | 027 | Caldwell | 1892 | Ada County | Disputed, either a canyon of the Boise River near Caldwell or a canyon of the Snake River which forms part of the county's boundary. | 131,441 | 590 sq mi (1,528 km2) |
|
Caribou County | 029 | Soda Springs | 1919 | Bannock County | Caribou Mountains | 7,304 | 1,766 sq mi (4,574 km2) |
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Cassia County | 031 | Burley | 1879 | Owyhee County | Disputed, either Cassia Creek or a member of the Mormon Battalion, James John Cazier. | 21,416 | 2,567 sq mi (6,648 km2) |
|
Clark County | 033 | Dubois | 1919 | Fremont County | Sam K. Clark, early settler and a member of the Idaho Senate. | 1,022 | 1,765 sq mi (4,571 km2) |
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Clearwater County | 035 | Orofino | 1911 | Nez Perce County | Clearwater River | 8,930 | 2,462 sq mi (6,377 km2) |
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Custer County | 037 | Challis | 1881 | Alturas and Lemhi counties | General Custer mine, named after George Armstrong Custer (1839-1876), United States Army general. | 4,342 | 4,926 sq mi (12,758 km2) |
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Elmore County | 039 | Mountain Home | 1889 | Alturas County | Ida Elmore mines, locally noted for gold and silver production in the 1860s. | 29,130 | 3,078 sq mi (7,972 km2) |
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Franklin County | 041 | Preston | 1913 | Oneida County | Franklin D. Richards (1821-1899), early LDS Church apostle. | 11,329 | 666 sq mi (1,725 km2) |
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Fremont County | 043 | Saint Anthony | 1893 | Bingham County | John C. Frémont (1813-1890), an explorer of the West. | 11,819 | 1,867 sq mi (4,836 km2) |
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Gem County | 045 | Emmett | 1915 | Boise and Canyon counties | State nickname of "Gem State." | 15,181 | 563 sq mi (1,458 km2) |
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Gooding County | 047 | Gooding | 1913 | Lincoln County | Frank R. Gooding (1859-1928), seventh Governor of Idaho (1905-1909), U.S. Senator (1921-1928). | 14,155 | 731 sq mi (1,893 km2) |
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Idaho County | 049 | Grangeville | 1864 | Original county | Columbia River steamship Idaho launched in 1860. Name predates both Idaho Territory and the State of Idaho. | 15,511 | 8,485 sq mi (21,976 km2) |
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Jefferson County | 051 | Rigby | 1913 | Fremont County | Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826), third President of the United States (1801-1809). | 19,155 | 1,095 sq mi (2,836 km2) |
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Jerome County | 053 | Jerome | 1919 | Gooding and Lincoln counties | Disputed, either North Side Irrigation Project developer Jerome Hill, his son-in-law Jerome Kuhn, or his grandson Jerome Kuhn, Jr. | 18,342 | 600 sq mi (1,554 km2) |
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Kootenai County | 055 | Coeur d'Alene | 1864 | Nez Perce County | Kootenai Native American tribe. | 108,685 | 1,245 sq mi (3,225 km2) |
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Latah County | 057 | Moscow | 1888 | Nez Perce County | Latah Creek, Nez Perce for "the place of pine trees and sestle." | 34,935 | 1,077 sq mi (2,789 km2) |
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Lemhi County | 059 | Salmon | 1869 | Idaho County | Limhi, king of the Nephites according to the Book of Mormon. | 7,806 | 4,564 sq mi (11,821 km2) |
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Lewis County | 061 | Nezperce | 1911 | Nez Perce County | Meriwether Lewis (1774-1809), a leader of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. | 3,747 | 479 sq mi (1,241 km2) |
|
Lincoln County | 063 | Shoshone | 1895 | Logan County | Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865), sixteenth President of the United States (1861-1865). Idaho Territory was founded under Lincoln's administration. | 4,044 | 1,206 sq mi (3,124 km2) |
|
Madison County | 065 | Rexburg | 1913 | Fremont County | James Madison (1751-1836), fourth President of the United States (1809-1817). | 27,467 | 472 sq mi (1,222 km2) |
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Minidoka County | 067 | Rupert | 1913 | Lincoln County | Disputed Native American origin, either Lakota for "a fountain or spring of water" or Shoshoni for "broad expanse." | 20,174 | 760 sq mi (1,968 km2) |
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Nez Perce County | 069 | Lewiston | 1864 | Original county | The Nez Perce, a Native American tribe. | 37,410 | 849 sq mi (2,199 km2) |
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Oneida County | 071 | Malad City | 1864 | Original County | Oneida Lake in New York state, where many early settlers were from. | 4,125 | 1,200 sq mi (3,108 km2) |
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Owyhee County | 073 | Murphy | 1863 | Original county | Corruption of Hawaii. Hawaiian fur trappers explored the area in 1819 and 1820. | 10,644 | 7,678 sq mi (19,886 km2) |
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Payette County | 075 | Payette | 1917 | Canyon County | Francois Payette (1793-1844?), Canadian-born fur trader and early settler. | 20,578 | 408 sq mi (1,057 km2) |
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Power County | 077 | American Falls | 1913 | Bingham, Blaine, and Oneida counties | The American Falls Power Plant | 7,538 | 1,406 sq mi (3,642 km2) |
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Shoshone County | 079 | Wallace | 1864 | Original county | Shoshone Native American tribe. | 13,771 | 2,634 sq mi (6,822 km2) |
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Teton County | 081 | Driggs | 1915 | Bingham, Fremont, and Madison counties | Teton Range and valley. | 5,999 | 450 sq mi (1,165 km2) |
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Twin Falls County | 083 | Twin Falls | 1907 | Cassia County | Twin Falls waterfall on the Snake River. | 64,284 | 1,925 sq mi (4,986 km2) |
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Valley County | 085 | Cascade | 1917 | Boise and Idaho counties | Long Valley located in the county. | 7,651 | 3,678 sq mi (9,526 km2) |
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Washington County | 087 | Weiser | 1879 | Ada County | George Washington (1732-1799), first President of the United States (1789-1797). | 9,977 | 1,456 sq mi (3,771 km2) |
Defunct Idaho counties
- Alturas County: A huge county in south-central Idaho that was formed in 1864, but split up and abolished in 1895.
- Lah-Toh County: A county in northern Idaho that was formed in 1864, but it was abolished a short time later in 1867.
- Logan County: Formed by a partition of Alturas County in 1889, bit it was shortly abolished in 1895.
References
- ^ "EPA County FIPS Code Listing". EPA.gov. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
- ^ a b c d National Association of Counties. "NACo - Find a county". Retrieved 2008-04-26.
- ^ Hailey, John (1910). The History of Idaho. Press of Syms-York company. pp. 305–307. OCLC 5793481. Retrieved 2008-04-26.
- ^ "List of Idaho Counties - Idaho.gov". State of Idaho. Retrieved 2008-07-30.
- ^ a b "Idaho QuickFacts". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved 2008-04-23. (2000 Census)