Greenwood, Idaho

Greenwood was an unincorporated community located in Jerome County, Idaho, United States.

The community was one of many new settlements formed in Idaho's Magic Valley in the 1910s after several dam projects enabled farming in the area.

It took its name from pioneer couple Annie Pike and Charles Greenwood; Annie was an author and teacher who documented much of the community's early history, while Charles was a politician who served in the Idaho House of Representatives and Idaho Senate.

The school's closure initiated Greenwood's decline as a community, and the construction of Interstate 84 in the early 1960s split the community in half, essentially dissolving it.

This Jerome County, Idaho state location article is a stub.

Map of Idaho highlighting Jerome County