T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
192.1 | Booker T. or George? | TOPDOC::SLOANE | | Thu May 29 1986 17:37 | 8 |
| There must be towns named Washington in 20 states, plus D. C., and
the state of, plus Mt. Washington, Washington Crossing State Park
(PA or NJ - where he crossed the Delaware, plus who knows what else.
No wonder he slept in so many places!
-bs
|
192.2 | | NETMAN::CALLAHAN | | Thu May 29 1986 17:53 | 2 |
|
And don't forget the town of George in the state of Washington.
|
192.3 | | SANFAN::GOYETTEPA | Paul Goyette | Thu May 29 1986 18:02 | 9 |
| re .0
Seems I recall there being another town in Pa. called Blue Balls
The story went that you:
Start with "Bird" in hand, went on to Intercourse, and through
Paradise to get to Blue Balls...
Boy, those PennDutch sure were imaginative when it came (no pun
intended) to naming their towns!
|
192.4 | | SUPER::GALVIN | | Thu May 29 1986 19:47 | 7 |
| One of my favorites is Chagrin Falls, Ohio, a suburb of Cleveland.
It's located on the Chagrin River, and the main street is Chagrin
Boulevard.
Maine has other "foreign cities" besides Norway and Poland. There's
a famous road sign with arrows pointing to at least six different
countries, including Mexico, Peru, and Denmark.
|
192.5 | You missed one :-; | LYMPH::LAMBERT | Sam Lambert | Fri May 30 1986 10:54 | 7 |
| re: .3
You forgot to Mount Joy in the process...
(Sorry, couldn't resist!)
-- Sam
|
192.6 | more from Pa. | DYO780::DYSERT | Barry Dysert | Fri May 30 1986 10:54 | 2 |
| Speaking of Pennsylvania, many people find the names Blue Knob and
Scalp Level amusing.
|
192.7 | Penn heard from, again! | TLE::SAVAGE | Neil, @Spit Brook | Fri May 30 1986 13:44 | 2 |
| Not far from Intercourse and Blue Ball [note: no s] is the town
of Fertility, Pa.
|
192.8 | A place to found a plumbing empire | TLE::SAVAGE | Neil, @Spit Brook | Fri May 30 1986 13:47 | 1 |
| Flushing, NY
|
192.9 | ... | SUMMIT::NOBLE | | Fri May 30 1986 13:50 | 7 |
|
Hell, Michigan
Moscow, Maine
Rome, and Mesopotamia, Ohio
|
192.10 | Spit Brook | TOPDOC::SLOANE | | Fri May 30 1986 14:01 | 1 |
|
|
192.11 | Spelling unsar--er uncertain | GRDIAN::BROOMHEAD | Ann A. Broomhead | Fri May 30 1986 14:21 | 1 |
| Hell fer Sartin, Kentucky
|
192.12 | a few in the Carolinas | KUDZU::SESSIONS | Captain Video | Fri May 30 1986 14:59 | 5 |
|
Climax, North Carolina (They have a problem keeping a sign
that states, "Now entering Climax")
North, South Carolina
|
192.13 | do the Garden State Stomp | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Distributed Systems Ideology | Fri May 30 1986 18:09 | 8 |
| Double Trouble, New Jersey. Which is definitely not Buena, New
Jersey. But the latter is pronounced "bo - ee' - na", not the
same as the Spanish word for "good" (bway'na).
Dave Van Ronk (the folksinger) did a song called (I think) Garden
State Stomp whose lyrics were all places in New Jersey, a state
which has six different Washington Townships, plus a Washington
Borough.
|
192.14 | Van Ronk digression | FURILO::BLINN | Dr. Tom @MRO | Sat May 31 1986 14:08 | 4 |
| I've never heard that Van Ronk song -- do you have a copy of
the record (was it ever recorded?)?
Tom
|
192.15 | A Play on Town Names | EVER::MCVAY | Pete McVay | Sat May 31 1986 18:53 | 5 |
| A single major highway connects several towns in a striaght line
through a canyon in South Dakota: the towns of Lead (pronounced
"Leed"), Deadwood, and Hot Springs. A favorite sign to hang on
the back of honeymooning newlyweds' cars is "Hot Springs tonight--
Deadwood tomorrow".
|
192.16 | Changing Place Names | EVER::MCVAY | Pete McVay | Sat May 31 1986 18:59 | 10 |
| NOAA has a cartographic division which registers all place names
in the united States. Periodically, communities petition this division
to change names. Whether or not they succeed depends upon (1) the
desires of the local population, (2) "propriety" of the change,
and (3) "authenticy" or local historical significance of the change.
Shitorbust, New Mexico, disappeared several years ago. A mountain
range near the Grand Tetons used to be called Maggies' Nipples;
now it's called Swelling Breast. Anyone remember any other name
changes?
|
192.17 | no Van Ronk in my collection | DEREP::GOLDSTEIN | Distributed Systems Ideology | Tue Jun 03 1986 12:00 | 4 |
| re:.14,
Sorry, I don't have a copy of the Van Ronk song. I don't know if
it's on record. Probably, but it's equally likely to be on some
obscure disk, like a concert, or on a hard-to-get label.
|
192.18 | From Rump to Hump | FOREST::ROGERS | | Wed Jun 04 1986 10:56 | 5 |
| re.: 16
Camel's Hump, the mountain in Vermont just south of Waterbury, used to be
called Lion's Rump. I think we lost something in the change...
Larry
|
192.19 | Re: .18: not the version I heard | TLE::SAVAGE | Neil, @Spit Brook | Wed Jun 04 1986 13:25 | 3 |
| ...that the earliest name for Camel's Hump was the french, "Le lion
couchant" (referring to the pose a lion strikes when lying down
with the hind legs tucked under).
|
192.20 | another new jersey doosie | NATASH::BECKETT | | Wed Jun 04 1986 14:36 | 4 |
|
how about
west new york, new jersey?
|
192.21 | More on locations | EVER::MCVAY | Pete McVay | Wed Jun 04 1986 21:15 | 2 |
| Out at the other end of Route 2 in Mass, there's "North South New
Salem". I don't know if there's a South South New Salem, etc...
|
192.22 | for Jack Douglas fans | RAJA::BROOMHEAD | Ann A. Broomhead | Fri Jun 06 1986 14:46 | 1 |
| Reminds me of the fictional Old New Litchridge.
|
192.23 | pretty sure of this: | NERSW5::MCKENDRY | Medium John | Fri Jun 06 1986 18:15 | 4 |
| If my memory hasn't let me down, East Aurora, N.Y. is about 90
miles west of Aurora, N.Y.
-John
|
192.24 | | NY1MM::BONNELL | Jersey Girl | Mon Jun 09 1986 13:04 | 24 |
| Personal faves...
Jersey Shore PA. (which is somewhere in the middle of PA)
Sandy Hook, Conn. (also in the middle of the state.) (and nowhere
NEAR Sandy Hook, NJ)
I've also heard a myth of a newpaper editor who sent a reporter
to Hohokus NJ to get ANY story which could be run under the headline
"Hokus-Pokus in Hohokus"
...diane
re: Dave Van Ronk - GREAT tune! I've heard it a few times on the
Sunday Morning Folk Show on WNEW here in NYC. If you are REALLY
desperate for a copy, you might try contacting the DJ who runs that
show - he might be able to provide label info, etc...:
Pete Fornatale - Mixed Bag
WNEW-FM
655 3rd Ave
|
192.25 | Whereboro? | JON::MORONEY | Pravda ne izvestia, Izvestia ne pravda | Mon Jun 09 1986 23:59 | 4 |
| How about Mass. towns, where Northboro is west of Southboro, and
Westboro is south (southEAST if you push it) of Northboro?
-Mike
|
192.26 | Or was that starboard? | 4GL::LASHER | | Tue Jun 10 1986 04:34 | 2 |
| ... and then there's East Northport, New York, which is due south
of Northport.
|
192.27 | this is a true story" | SIERRA::OSMAN | and silos to fill before I feep, and silos to fill before I feep | Wed Jun 11 1986 10:52 | 6 |
| No joking, the new rentors of my house are coming from
Philidelphia St.
Indiana, Pennsylvania
!Eric
|
192.28 | They kept the initials, but... | HARDY::KENAH | On a Blue Jaunte | Thu Jun 12 1986 17:55 | 9 |
| Several years ago, the town of East Paterson, New Jersey changed
its name to Elmwood Park. Their motive was to disassociate their
town (a fairly well-to-do community) from Paterson (a typically
rundown midsize city).
Not soon after, it was suggested in a city council meeting that
Paterson should change its name to West Elmwood Park.
andrew
|
192.29 | A few Aussie ones | 60602::PUCKETT | Fortran will Never Die | Mon Jun 16 1986 22:20 | 10 |
| Nevertire
Goonoo Goonoo
Tom Groggin
Pullabooka
Most are in New South Wales, itself a pretty weird name.
How about some more names from some more subversive foreigners??
- Giles
|
192.30 | Walpole | BUCKY::MPALMER | | Tue Jun 17 1986 14:12 | 10 |
| re: .28 - how about the case of Walpole Prison, in Walpole, MA?
They recently renamed it to "Cedar Junction" or something like that
because of all the negative connotations that had latched on to
"Walpole", a not-very-nice place. But the town is still "Walpole".
It would probably be much more effective to rename the town in this
case (and probably much more expensive as well)....
MP
|
192.31 | Hoosier curiosities | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Jun 20 1986 13:17 | 4 |
| Indiana boasts a town named Gnawbone and the twin metropoli of Pinhook
and Pinola.
Earl Wajenberg
|
192.32 | enough to drive you to drink | PAUPER::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Fri Jun 20 1986 14:55 | 3 |
|
Then, of course, there's Long Island, Kansas
(Kansas being a dry state in many ways).
|
192.33 | Not the name, but the reason | EVER::MCVAY | Pete McVay | Fri Jun 20 1986 15:40 | 9 |
| There's also the twon of Eleva, Illinois.
The town Feed Store had a giant grain elevator which was being
repainted: the store's name was "Hanson's Elevator Company" (or
something like that). The painters knocked off for lunch after
completing "Eleva" on the freshly-whitewashed tower. The agent
for the Bureau of Surveying (which I think now is NOAA) chose that
moment to come through town, and duly recorded the name for the
maps...
|
192.34 | Lawn Guyland, KANSAS?!?! | HARDY::KENAH | On a Blue Jaunte | Fri Jun 20 1986 17:57 | 5 |
| > Then, of course, there's Long Island, Kansas
Is that anywhere near Manhattan, Kansas?
andrew
|
192.35 | No wonder they changed it | CLOSET::DEVRIES | | Fri Jul 11 1986 14:13 | 4 |
| Moscow, Idaho used to be known as Hog Heaven, Idaho.
(Now it is known as the Dried Pea and Lentil Capital of the World,
but not as an official town name.)
|
192.36 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Did I err? | Wed Jul 16 1986 03:22 | 12 |
| re:.12
There's also a Climax in Michigan. As the joke goes---
Q: How do you reach Climax?
A: Take I-94 west to exit 88...
Little do people realize that Massachusetts has *two* Southboro(ugh)s.
One is obvious; what is the second one?
--- jerry
|
192.37 | | SIERRA::OSMAN | and silos to fill before I feep, and silos to fill before I feep | Thu Jul 17 1986 11:05 | 3 |
| Maybe the other is south of Middleborough ?
/Eric
|
192.38 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Did I err? | Fri Jul 18 1986 02:30 | 5 |
| re:.37
No, it's...
Sudbury
|
192.39 | Lineage please? | APTECH::RSTONE | | Fri Jul 18 1986 09:41 | 5 |
| Re: .37
I realize that Southborough and Sudbury have the same literal meaning,
but could you give us the language derivations?
|
192.40 | french?? | NATASH::WEIGL | breathum via turbo - ergo faster | Fri Jul 18 1986 11:46 | 4 |
|
re: -.1
maybe this is a part?? South in French is SUD....
|
192.41 | | LOGIC::DESMARAIS | Anything you can do I can do Meta | Fri Jul 18 1986 13:51 | 3 |
| Are we forgetting (or omitting by consensus) that apocryphal favorite:
Gelatinous, Mass.
|
192.42 | AMASSING | OBLIO::SHUSTER | Red Sox Addition: 1986 = 1975 + 1 | Fri Jul 18 1986 14:34 | 3 |
| or
Looknohands, MA
|
192.43 | I'll play your silly game! | APTECH::RSTONE | | Fri Jul 18 1986 14:50 | 1 |
| Donhavno, MO
|
192.44 | Not on the map | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Notable notes from -bs- | Fri Jul 18 1986 17:31 | 11 |
| Noahs, Ark.
Eeniemeenieminee, MO
Doremefasol, LA
Feeling, Ill.
Outside, IN
Friendly, MS
Either, OR
Doyouwant, Samoa?
-bs
|
192.45 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Did I err? | Sat Jul 19 1986 02:20 | 6 |
| re:.39
The same method of slurring that produces "sin-jun" from "St. John"
is responsible for "Southborough" becoming "Sudbury".
--- jerry
|
192.46 | UNinteresting | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Have pen, will travel | Fri Aug 15 1986 17:23 | 4 |
| What is the most common place name in North America?
Springfield
|
192.47 | | MODEL::YARBROUGH | | Mon Aug 18 1986 17:51 | 1 |
| West, Texas. That's the name. Also the location.
|
192.48 | Onomastic Double Entendre | IND::KABEL | Rhetorical Questions Answered | Thu Jul 30 1987 10:39 | 7 |
| According to an article in _Maledicta_ (a journal devoted to
the best of bad words) there is also:
Bloody Dick Creek, Idaho
an eponym for a settler of British ancestry who settled by the
creek.
|
192.49 | | ARMORY::CHARBONND | Real boats rock! | Fri Jul 31 1987 14:49 | 8 |
| As a native of Ware, Mass. I'm sometimes involved in
'Where were you born?'
"Ware"
"Yes, Where?"
"Ware !"
Tiresome.
|
192.50 | who's on first? | WEBSTR::RANDALL | goodbye all | Fri Jul 31 1987 16:22 | 6 |
| That's what you get for not pronouncing your 'aitches'.
I get so tired of talking to people who can't tell me which witch
is which :) :) :)
--bonnie
|
192.51 | Weare, NH = Ware, Mass. | DSSDEV::STONE | Roy | Mon Aug 03 1987 11:08 | 5 |
| People who live in Weare, N.H. have the same problem. As a transplant
from Mass. I thought the town was pronounced like _wee-er_. I've
been corrected...it's pronounced _ware_, just like the one in Mass.
So much for phonetic pronunciation in English!
|
192.52 | Political Digression | FOREST::ROGERS | Lasciate ogni speranza, voi ch'entrate | Mon Aug 03 1987 11:30 | 10 |
| Re. .49:
Remember when Chub Peabody used to be governor of Massachusettes? The joke
going around at the time was something like:
Question: What three towns are named after the governor?
Answer: Peabody, Marblehead, and Athol.
Larry
|
192.53 | Where do you live? Ans: Nowhere! | TLE::SAVAGE | Neil, @Spit Brook | Mon Aug 03 1987 13:53 | 6 |
| Re: .49 and .51:
The town of Weare, N.H. consists of the villages of North Weare, Weare,
South Weare, and Chase Village. This all seems trivial, except that the
inhabitants of North Weare have the habit of telling outsiders that
they live in No. Weare, which they delight in pronouncing as "nowhere."
|
192.54 | | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Abseiling is a real let-down! | Mon Jun 20 1988 09:23 | 37 |
| G'day,
Some more (belated) towns from downunder -
Wagga Wagga
Wooloomooloo
Bucketty (and a few miles up the track Broke)
Putty
Goodiwindi
Orange (where they grow apples)
Coonabarrabran
1187 (in Queensland the town name is a number - Can't remember
the number so 1187 will do :-) )
Gularganbone
Cockatoo
Dubbo
Mudgee
Hat Head
Maelstom
Sawtell
Iron knob
Rum Jungle
Wagerup
and some apocryphal ones
Kickatinalong
Whykikamookow
Wheelabarraback
and I see there's a Melbourne Fla
Djw
|
192.55 | Melbourne | IOSG::VICKERS | Entropy isn't what it used to be | Mon Jun 20 1988 12:11 | 5 |
|
There's a Melbourne in Hertfordshire too. Just down the road from
Cambridge, near Royston.
Paul V
|
192.56 | Another one. | TARKIN::WISMAR | Dobry weicz�r. | Wed Nov 16 1988 19:31 | 5 |
| This comes late, as well, but oh well....
North East, Pennsylvania, which is, of course, in the northWESTernmost
corner of the state....
-John.
|
192.57 | Another Interesting Name.... | WR1FOR::ADELMAN_AA | | Thu Mar 30 1989 03:14 | 5 |
|
I once knew a girl from Bucksnort, Kentucky...........
aaron
|
192.58 | They talk funny down there, you know... | PSTJTT::TABER | It offends my freakin' dignity | Mon Apr 03 1989 18:53 | 3 |
| re: .57
Are you sure there's an "r" in Bucksnort?
|
192.59 | | EGYPT::CRITZ | Not overweight, just undertall! | Wed Jun 21 1989 19:44 | 7 |
| May have been mentioned, but:
Russia, Ohio (pronounced Roosha)
Temperance, Michigan
Scott
|
192.60 | | EGYPT::CRITZ | Not overweight, just undertall! | Wed Jun 21 1989 19:49 | 5 |
| Sorry, but I forgot about:
Big Ugly, West Virginia
Scott (No, I don't make these up)
|
192.61 | Hop Bottom, PA | NYEM1::SCHEIBEL | | Mon Jun 26 1989 23:26 | 1 |
|
|
192.62 | | ORION::DAVEY | | Tue Jun 27 1989 00:35 | 5 |
| Six Mile Bottom, Cambridgeshire (UK).
It used to make me chuckle as a kid!
John
|
192.63 | I kid you not... | CURRNT::PREECE | Whose garden was this ? | Tue Jun 27 1989 10:55 | 6 |
|
Sandy Balls, in Hampshire, England.
Honest !
IP
|
192.64 | Porcine Void | GALVIA::MOONEY | Nollaig O'Maonaigh as Tiobraid Arann | Tue Jun 27 1989 11:18 | 5 |
| In County Tipperary, Ireland there's a village called PollnaMuca. This
is its Irish name which is still used. Poll (pronounced powl)
translates to hole, Muc (pronunced muck) translates to pig, and the
conjunction "na" indicates possesion. I'll leave it to you to work out
the literal translation.
|
192.65 | Mexia, Texas | BLAS03::FORBES | Bill Forbes - LDP Engrng | Wed Jun 28 1989 05:05 | 25 |
| This story may be untrue, but it was told to me as though it were
not:
Two friends were driving through central Texas. As they approached the
town of Mexia, they got into an argument over the pronunciation. The
truth is, that Mexia is pronounced muh-HAY-a. Now, anyone who knows
any Spanish will tell you that the proper pronunciation is muh-HEE-a.
(Let it be noted that no Texan would even think of suggesting that it
might be pronounced MEX-ee-a.) So, anyway, the fact is that the
"correct" pronunciation, muh-HAY-a, seems dead wrong to many people.
The two friends had stopped at a Dairy Queen (a fast-food joint, for
you Brits and Poms) and were continuing their argument over their
burgers and fries. Eventually, one of them suggested that the best
way to resolve the issue was to ask a local citizen. So when the
waitress came to give them their bill, one of them asked her:
"Excuse me, ma'am, but my friend and I are having this argument, see,
over how you pronounce the name of this place and we were wondering
if you could tell us how YOU pronounce it..."
To which she replied,
"Why, Honey, I just call it DAY-er-ree KWANE, same's ever one else."
|
192.66 | you want to go where ! | GALLOP::COOPERM | It's a Bee-u-tiful place bob ! | Wed Jun 28 1989 15:11 | 15 |
| One of my friends swears that this story is true. It's such a good
story I like to believe him.
While walking through town (In the U.K.) he was hailed by a couple of
young guys in a beat up VW camper van. They turned out to be Aussies,
on the typical round the world tour that all Australians seem to
do.
They wanted directions to the town of Looga-borooga, which sounds
rather like an aboriginal settlement in the Oz outback, but nothing
like anywhere in England. My friend suggested that they had got
the wrong name (or wrong continent), but they were insistent that
they had an address in Looga-borooga, where they were to meet some
friends. My friend asked to see the address : the town they were
looking for was
loughborough (luth-burra)
|
192.67 | where? | LEDS::HAMBLEN | Professional procrastinator | Wed Jun 28 1989 20:22 | 20 |
| A friend, Serafino Salvatore Perra, (Sal) told me this story about
an event in his recent family history. His uncle Luigi, having an
intense desire to visit his brother's family in America, wrote Sal's
dad and inquired how to get to the American Perra's abode. There
ensued a flurry of letters, and Uncle Luigi embarked on the ocean
liner which would get him to Boston. He had the directions how to
get to Sal's house clutched tightly in his hand as he entered the
subway. He got to Park Street station OK, but had to change trains
there. He waited and waited for a train with the right destination
board, but none came. He got anxious; perhaps he wasn't in the right
place for the particular train he wanted, so he approached a gentleman
in uniform and inquired (in his best Italian) for the train to Sal's
town. The starter was puzzled by the fluent Italian, so Luigi just
kept repeating the place-name in his instructions: "Revvera Bahtch,
Revvera Bahtch" in ever-louder tones. No telling where this would
have ended, but Luigi (finally) saw a train approaching with the right
destination board, boarded it, and eventually got to Sal's house OK.
The town he was looking for, of course, was...
Revere Beach
|
192.68 | Double-checking Loughborough | SEEK::HUGHES | Thus thru Windows call on us(Donne) | Wed Jun 28 1989 20:36 | 10 |
| Re .x:
> friends. My friend asked to see the address : the town they were
> looking for was
> loughborough (luth-burra)
^^^^
Really??? for all of the years I lived in the UK I thought that
it was "luff-burra" .... just curious.
Jim
|
192.69 | Omnibus adventures | GALVIA::MOONEY | Nollaig O'Maonaigh as Tiobraid Arann | Thu Jun 29 1989 11:26 | 15 |
| I've heard a story of the rustic dweller who travelled to Dublin
(our capital city) for a day's shopping. He was a bit anxious about
using the public transport, and was told by his cosmopolitan friends to
observe the natives in action and copy them. Armed with this advice, he
hopped on his first city bus and took a seat. When the lady beside him
was approached by the bus conductor he heard her say, "Sallynoggin from
Stoneybatter" as she handed over 50 pence. Surprised at this, but
relying on his friends advice, he spouted "Tom Murphy from Killarney"
as he proffered his money.
Sallynogin (pronounced as is) and Stoneybatter ( pronounced stoney
baher) are both location names in Dublin.
Noel
|
192.70 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri Jun 30 1989 00:41 | 3 |
| Re: .69
Just where in Ireland is Tom Murphy, and how far is it from Killarney?
|
192.71 | | EGAV01::DKEATING | Who Stole The Baba's Goog? | Fri Jun 30 1989 16:20 | 9 |
| Another story from my hometown.
An American tourist drives into the main square and directs the
following one-liner to one of the locals...'Hey sunny...is this
the a$$-hole of Ireland'?
To which the local replied...
'Yes...and you must be the sh!t passing thru' !!! :-)
|
192.72 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Tue Jul 04 1989 17:22 | 12 |
| There's a couple of little villages in the Cotswold Hills in
Gloucestershire (UK) not far from Stow on the Wold (where they say
the wind blows cold) called Upper and Lower Slaughter ... collectively
The Slaughters.
I've never been to them, although I have passed by them many, many
times ... I haven't been able to pluck up the courage!
There are lots of interesting place names here in Canada too, but
one of the most famous is in Newfoundland, called Come by Chance.
Stuart
|
192.73 | Oi! Did you Peover my fence? | ECCGY4::HAIGH | Ich glaube mein Schwein pfeift! | Wed Jul 05 1989 14:52 | 7 |
| In Cheshire, England, are two little villages called Upper Peover and
Lower Peover, I won't tell you the correct pronounciation as saying
saying it wrong is far more fun.
In Austria there is a place called Wank, everybody seems to think this
is funny but I don't know why!
|
192.74 | ... | RADVAX::MCDONOUGH | | Thu Dec 14 1989 18:50 | 2 |
| I've always been partial to Scaggsville, Maryland. I imagine a
beauty contest being held there.
|
192.75 | | TRNSAM::HOLT | Robert Holt, ISVG West | Mon May 14 1990 19:44 | 4 |
|
Manteca (=Lard), California
Salsipuedes (=roughly, "Get out while the gettings good"), California
|
192.76 | Wooloomooloo | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon May 14 1990 20:06 | 1 |
| My favorite is Wooloomooloo, a suburb of Sydney, Australia.
|
192.77 | lots in Oz | UILA::WHORLOW | D R A B C = action plan | Wed May 16 1990 10:13 | 15 |
| G'day,
Wooloomooloo is pronounced (roughly) woolahmahloo
Goonoo Goonoo is also in Australia and pronounced Gunny Gahnoo
There is of course
Piddletrenthide in the UK..
derek
|
192.78 | from ireland... | MACNAS::DKEATING | Celibacy is NOT Hereditary! | Wed May 16 1990 13:42 | 2 |
| Newtownmountkennedy
|
192.79 | Flea Street | SHIRE::MOHN | blank space intentionally filled | Wed Jun 20 1990 11:58 | 2 |
| Then there's the thoroughfare in a VERY posh neighborhood on the
Peninsula near San Francisco: Alameda de los Pulgas.
|
192.80 | Back roads and blue highways... | CUPCSG::RUSSELL | | Fri Jun 29 1990 02:46 | 10 |
| On the west shore of Lake Cayuga in the Finger Lakes District of New
York State there is a road called Swamp College Road.
On the East Shore, there is a road called Bird Cemetary Road.
A friend in New Hampshire lives on Purgatory Road.
And a house in Trumansburg, NY sports the sign "Appropriate Manor"
...must be a nice way to live.
|
192.81 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri Jun 29 1990 18:05 | 3 |
| Emerson Hospital in Concord, Massachusetts, is on the "Old Road to Nine
Acre Corner". That's a bit long for the street sign, which shortens it
to "Old Road to NAC".
|
192.82 | | WAGON::MAGIK::DONHAM | Nothing up my sleeve... | Mon Jul 09 1990 19:28 | 5 |
|
In Keene NH, the road next to the cemetary on South Main is called Silent
Way. It's appropriately marked, "Dead End."
-Perry
|
192.83 | Private Lane wasn't | SHARE::SATOW | | Mon Jul 09 1990 19:54 | 7 |
| I have some friends who used to live in Anandale, VA, on Private Lane.
Private Lane was not private; it was a public street. Why was it named
"Private Lane"? Well, the other streets around it were name Corporal Lane,
Sergeant Lane, Captain Lane, etc.
Clay
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192.84 | Was he ever promoted to General Lane? | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Tue Jul 10 1990 10:02 | 3 |
| It's nice to hear that Private Lane got his promotion, though, and
nice that they were naming roads after him even in his humble estate.
In France they only name roads after generals. ;-)
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192.85 | mo' from Mo. | HPSCAD::ALTMAN | BARB | Fri Nov 02 1990 23:56 | 4 |
| Well, better late than never I suppose. This is in reply to a much earlier
note. Missouri, in addition to having a Mexico, has Cuba, Haiti,
Washington, and, of course, Kansas City. My favorite, however, is Devil's
Elbow, between Rolla and Fort Leonard Wood.
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192.86 | Some more, 2� years later... | ULYSSE::POOK | | Tue Apr 13 1993 09:00 | 4 |
| Good Grief, Idaho.
Also, New Hampshire contains both a Derry and a Londonderry
(two places, not one and the same as in N. Ireland).
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192.87 | | CALS::GELINEAU | | Tue Jun 29 1993 10:08 | 4 |
| what about Belchertown (MA)
and Hamilton!, OH (yes, the ! is part of the name)
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192.88 | | MU::PORTER | life is a cabernet, old chum.. | Tue Jun 29 1993 11:59 | 4 |
| >and Hamilton!, OH (yes, the ! is part of the name)
Shouldn't that be "Hamilton, OH!" ?
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192.89 | unauthorized use of apostrophe | RAGMOP::T_PARMENTER | The cake of liberty | Tue Jun 29 1993 14:58 | 3 |
| I believe Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, is the only US town with an apostrophe,
or was until the federal map police took it away.
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192.90 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | I just passed myself going in the other direction! | Fri Jul 16 1993 12:53 | 1 |
| In Quebec, there is "St. Louis de Haha!"
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192.91 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Jun 22 1994 09:02 | 2 |
| I was looking at a map of Uxbridge, Massachusetts, and I saw a street
named Wong Way.
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