Book reveals some of Iowa’s stranger secrets

Volkwagen Beetle Spider in Avoca. Photo: Council Bluffs CVB

As a lifelong Iowan, Business Record columnist Dave Elbert knows a lot about Iowa. But even he learned a few things from a book called “Secret Iowa: A Guide to the Weird, Wonderful and Obscure.” It was written by Megan Bannister, a Chicago native who moved to Des Moines more than a decade ago to study journalism at Drake University and stayed.

Elbert noted a few highlights in a recent column, including the “usual Iowa suspects” like Albert the Bull in Audubon, Snake Alley in Burlington and the Fenelon Place Elevator in Dubuque. He also wrote about:

  • Iowa’s “wacky arachnid,” a spider sculpture that consists of the body of a Volkswagen Beetle held aloft by eight legs of welded steel pipe in Avoca.
  • A 60-foot stack of 200 rusted wagon wheels that resemble a giant menorah in Grinnell.
  • A pink fiberglass elephant that took a ride on giant skis before it was installed outside the Pink Elephant Supper Club in Marquette.


Elbert’s column also mentions the infamous Cardiff Giant, a 19th-century hoax that was carved out of chunk of Fort Dodge gypsum, touted as an ancient relic in a touring shows and stored for decades in the home of former Des Moines Register publisher Gardner Cowles, whose son and his grade-school buddies “smashed a delicate part of the giant’s anatomy with a hammer.” The original Cardiff Giant ended up in Cooperstown, New York, but you can see a replica – a fake of a fake — at the Fort Museum and Frontier Village in Fort Dodge.

You May Also Like

Poke around the carnival in Pocahontas

Standing a whopping 25 feet tall, the Princess Statue on the eastern edge of Highway ...

It’s tulip time in Orange City, too

Tiptoe through the tulips virtually with the interactive Tulip Tracker, courtesy of the Orange City ...

Food for the Iowan Soul

Who needs a beach? Children play in a sandbox full of corn at last ...