the main ones are hay and potatoes but there is also apples peaches corn and some others
2 Rhode-Island
no, Rhode Island was 13th state to join the union
1. Rhode Island is the smallest U.S. state. 2. Samuel Salter built America's first successful waterpower textile in Rhode Island. 3. Rhode Island is the 13th colony. 4. The navy is especially trained in Rhode Island. 5. The largest bugs live in Rhode Island.
about $2
Just one: Westerly, Rhode Island.
The address of the Western Rhode Island Civic Historical Society is: Po Box 2, Coventry, RI 02816-0001
Three 1. Rhode 2. Is 3. Land
The Rhode Island House of Representatives has 75 members.
== == I only know 2. Providence and New Port.
John S. McKiernan (born October 15, 1911 in Providence, Rhode Island; died March 9, 1997 in Warwick, Rhode Island) succeeded John O. Pastore as the sixty-second Governor of Rhode Island, serving between December 19, 1950 and January 2, 1951. Following the end of McKiernan's term as Governor of Rhode Island, Dennis J. Roberts (born April 8, 1903 in Providence, Rhode Island; died June 30, 1994 in Providence, Rhode Island) became the sixty-third Governor of Rhode Island, serving between January 2, 1951 and January 6, 1959.
There are 75 members in the Rhode Island House of Representatives.
Samuel Ward King (born May 23, 1786 in Johnston, Rhode Island; died January 20, 1851 in Providence, Rhode Island) succeeded William Sprague III as the fifteenth Governor of Rhode Island, serving between May 2, 1839 and May 2, 1843. Between May 19, 1842 and January 23, 1843, Thomas Dorr (born November 5, 1805 in Providence, Rhode Island; died December 27, 1854) became the extralegal Governor of Rhode Island. Following the end of Ward King's term as Governor, James Fenner (born January 22, 1771 in Providence, Rhode Island; died April 17, 1846 in Providence, Rhode Island) became the seventeenth Governor of Rhode Island, serving between May 2, 1843 and May 6, 1845.