Dubuque County, Iowa

When lead deposits began becoming exhausted, the pioneers developed boat building, lumber yards, milling, brewing, and machinery manufacturing to take its place.At an extra session of the Sixth Legislative Assembly of Michigan Territory held in September 1834, the Iowa District was divided into two counties by running a line due west from the lower end of Rock Island in the Mississippi River.The land in present day Minnesota and the Dakotas was transferred to the newly created Fayette County in this action.In the 1980s, the farm crisis set in, and devastated large sections of the Midwest, including Dubuque County.These areas have expanded so much that concerns now lie with trying to manage the growth, a sharp change from just 20 years ago.Current supervisors include Ann McDonough, Wayne Kenniker and Harley Pothoff (chairperson).The city of Dubuque and surrounding areas adjacent to the Mississippi River have many steep hills, bluffs, and ravines.During the last ice age, much of the Mississippi Valley near Dubuque County was bypassed by glacial flows, which flattened the surrounding land in eastern Illinois, Wisconsin, and western Iowa, leaving the Driftless Area unusually rugged.2005 estimates by the census indicated that Dubuque had a population that identified itself as being 95.5% non-Hispanic white, 1.3% African American, 0.7% Asian and 1.5% Latino.Now, alongside manufacturing, which still employs thousands of workers, many county residents work in the tourism/gaming, health care, education, publishing, and financial service sectors.With the exception of industrial areas in Cascade, Dyersville, and Peosta, almost all of the rest of the county is rural and agriculturally driven.Dubuque County has, in recent years, enjoyed job growth, low unemployment, and the rapid expansion of business and commerce.In the 2022 elections, the county continued to trend rightward, with Republican governor Kim Reynolds winning reelection by a margin of over 16 points.Tertiary education: K-12 school districts include:[26] As of 2022[update], Dubuque County has a large percentage of Catholic residents.
Population of Dubuque County from US census data
2022 US Census population pyramid for Dubuque County from ACS 5-year estimates
Map of Iowa highlighting Dubuque County
CountyDubuque County CourthouseBeaux-Arts architectureNamed forJulien DubuqueDubuqueTime zoneUTC−6CentralUTC−5U.S. state2020 censuscounty seatEuropeanMetropolitan Statistical AreaFrench CanadianMeskwakiMichigan TerritoryIowa DistrictRock IslandMississippi RiverDavenportMinnesotaNorth DakotaSouth DakotaWisconsin TerritorySaint Francis Catholic ChurchDubuque Packing CompanyDes Moines CountyMichigan Territorialat largeDubuque, IowaSheriffDubuque Police DepartmentIllinoisWisconsinU.S. Census BureauMaquoketa RiverCoulee RegionLittle Maquoketa River Mounds State PreserveParks in DubuqueU.S. Highway 20U.S. Highway 52U.S. Highway 61U.S. Highway 151Iowa Highway 3Iowa Highway 32Iowa Highway 136The JuleClayton CountyGrant CountyJo Daviess CountyJackson CountyJones CountyDelaware CountyDriftless Area National Wildlife RefugeUpper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refugepopulation pyramidBlack or African AmericanNative AmericanPacific IslanderOther/MixedHispanicLatinocensuspopulation densityAfrican Americanother racesmarried couplesmedian household incomeper capita incomepoverty lineDeere and CompanyGeorgia-PacificDubuque Community School DistrictMercy Medical Center - DubuqueFinley HospitalPrudential FinancialRepublicanDemocraticThird party(ies)John F. KennedyBarack ObamaDonald TrumpPresident Eisenhower2022 electionsKim ReynoldsreelectionChuck GrassleyU.S. Senate electionAshley Hinsonelection for U.S. House of RepresentativesIowa's 1st congressional districtClarke UniversityDivine Word CollegeEmmaus Bible CollegeLoras CollegeNortheast Iowa Community CollegeUniversity of DubuqueWartburg Theological SeminaryMaquoketa Community School DistrictMonticello Community School DistrictWestern Dubuque Community School DistrictAsburyBalltownBankstonBernardCascadeCentraliaDurangoDyersvilleEpworthFarleyHoly CrossLuxemburgNew ViennaPeostaRickardsvilleSagevilleSherrillWorthingtonZwingleFillmoreKey WestWashington MillstownshipsCenterConcordUnited States Census BureauDubuque†List of counties in IowaNational Register of Historic Places listings in Dubuque County, IowaThe American CyclopædiaWayback MachineThe New RepublicGrant County, WisconsinJo Daviess County, IllinoisCitiesUnincorporatedcommunitiesBallycloughBennettsvilleFive PointsMasseyWaupetonDes MoinesTopicsArchaeologyArea codesAttorney GeneralAuditor of StateCapitolClimate changeCongressional districtsDelegationsRepresentativesSenatorsElectionsCaucusesEnvironmentGovernorGun lawsHistoryHistoric PlacesLegislatureSenateLGBT rightsMuseumsPeopleNative AmericansPolitical partiesLibertarianSecretary of AgricultureSecretary of StateState ParksSupreme CourtSymbolsTreasurer of StateRegionsCoteau des PrairiesDes Moines metropolitan areaDissected Till PlainsDriftless AreaGreat River RoadHoney LandsIowa Great LakesLoess HillsOmaha–Council Bluffs metropolitan areaQuad CitiesSiouxlandLargest citiesAnkenyBettendorfBurlingtonCedar FallsCedar RapidsClintonCouncil BluffsFort DodgeIowa CityMarionMarshalltownMason CityMuscatineOttumwaSioux CityUrbandaleWaterlooWest Des MoinesCountiesAllamakeeAppanooseAudubonBentonBlack HawkBremerBuchananBuena VistaButlerCalhounCarrollCerro GordoCherokeeChickasawClarkeClaytonCrawfordDallasDecaturDelawareDickinsonFayetteFranklinFremontGreeneGrundyGuthrieHamiltonHancockHardinHarrisonHowardHumboldtJacksonJasperJeffersonJohnsonKeokukKossuthLouisaMadisonMahaskaMarshallMitchellMononaMonroeMontgomeryO'BrienOsceolaPalo AltoPlymouthPocahontasPottawattamiePoweshiekRinggoldShelbyTaylorVan BurenWapelloWarrenWashingtonWebsterWinnebagoWinneshiekWoodburyWright