T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
545.1 | I thought _everybody_ knew that ... :-D | ERASER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Mon Aug 01 1988 20:58 | 19 |
| Re .0 (Paul):
>One of the questions brought up was how Buffalo got its name.
>The answer given by the professor was that nobody really knows
>for sure.
In the early days when the English colonies were getting started,
there wwere a few, brave and lonely French-colonial fur trappers
who set up their camps on the shores of Lake Erie. They had only
each other to see, so when a stranger arrived, they would greet
him with cries of greeting, simultaneously presenting him with a
jacket of buff leather. Naturally, the greeting was called a "buff
'allo." From thence came the name.
In the unlikely event it was a lady traveler, the lonely trappers
would expose themselves to her. That action was given the same
name, as it happened.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
545.2 | I think I like Steve's version better | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Mon Aug 01 1988 21:28 | 18 |
| re: .0
Um, not to cast aspersions on anyone's authority, but can you cite
an authority for your assertion that there were never buffalo in
the area of Buffalo?
The journals of various trappers and explorers in the 1820's and
1830's indicate that said trappers and explorers believed that
there were, or had once been, buffalo covering the entire midwest,
from the foothills of the Appalachians all the way to the Rockies
and as far north as the tundra.
Now it's possible these trappers and explorers were mistaken; folk
etymology is not a new thing. However, I'm not giving in without a
good authority.
--bonnie, who read a lot of those journals of said trappers and
explorers for her American Literature course
|
545.3 | Sudden inspiration! | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IED/Reading UK | Tue Aug 02 1988 17:48 | 3 |
| Maybe it's from the French "buffe � l'eau". Sounds feasible.
Jeff.
|
545.4 | | OXMYX::POLLAK | Counting trees, in the Sahara. | Tue Aug 02 1988 18:56 | 1 |
| Maybe they where buffaloed into using the name?
|
545.5 | Beautiful River | CAMONE::MAZUR | | Wed Aug 03 1988 16:30 | 36 |
| > The journals of various trappers and explorers in the 1820's and
> 1830's indicate that said trappers and explorers believed that
> there were, or had once been, buffalo covering the entire midwest,
> from the foothills of the Appalachians all the way to the Rockies
> and as far north as the tundra.
> However, I'm not giving in without a good authority.
Re: .2 ( Bonnie )
I don't have a reference for you on my claim that there were never
any buffalo in Buffalo.
As for the trappers and explorers, Buffalo is not in the midwest
or in the foothills of the Appalachians. It is a very unique city
geographically as well as demographically. ( I know I'm going to
get a response to that claim.) My definition of the midwest is any
area that has rivers and streams that drain into the Mississippi
or any other river that eventually drains into the Missiissippi.
If you go about 50-60 miles south of Buffalo, there are some creeks
( or cricks ) (e.g. Conewango ) that drain into the Allegheny River.
I think that the midwest edge and the foothills that you read about
were the areas around eastern Ohio and NW Pa. I don't think that
the buffalo would go over "the hump" of the Appalachians. Unless
they wanted to see Niagara Falls.
The theory I believe have to do with trappers though, the French
variety. The French term for "beautiful river" is "beau fleuve".
It is believed that the French called what is now the Buffalo River
"Beau fleuve". And what has happened with so many French and Indian
terms happened to Buffalo.
- Paul
|
545.6 | I needed a good argument | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Wed Aug 03 1988 17:50 | 30 |
| By your definition, then, Chicago isn't in the Midwest, since it's
on Lake Michigan, which connects to the St. Laurence eventually.
But buffalo lived in Chicago once. Buffalo are also known to have
lived north of the Great Lakes, in the basins of rivers that drain
into Hudson's bay. Buffalo have little or no difficulty with
mountainous terrain. They prefer plains, but if a need for food
or water pushed them, crossing the hump that divides Buffalo from
the rest of the world wouldn't be much of a trick.
[An aside -- though heavy hunting is normally blamed for the
decline of the buffalo, there is considerable archaeological
evidence that the number and range of the buffalo herds had
already declined drastically before the arrival of the horse.
There are remains of buffalo jumps in places in northern Ontario.]
This doesn't prove there were buffalo in Buffalo, however, only
that they could have been.
"Buffalo" might well be the corruption of a French phrase. But
"belle fleuve" isn't the greatest candidate -- most French words
changed into English receive English pronunciation and lose
unaccented syllables. "Belle fleuve" would be more likely to
become "bellflow" than "buffalo". But since bellflow sounds
similar to buffalo, and the trappers of all nationalities believed
there were buffalo in Buffalo, the change might be reasonable.
I'm going to have to go back into my notes and see what I can
come up with.
--bonnie
|
545.7 | were there bison in the basin ? | GAOV11::MAXPROG6 | By popular demand , today is off | Wed Aug 03 1988 17:58 | 2 |
|
John J
|
545.8 | might be onto something here | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Wed Aug 03 1988 18:14 | 15 |
| I think we might be able to turn this into a hit muscial comedy:
There were buffalo in Buffalo
Antelope on the range
The bison in the basin
Thought it very strange
.
.
.
Et cetera.
--bonnie
|
545.9 | _nobody_ liked my hypothesis??? | MARKER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Wed Aug 03 1988 18:32 | 13 |
| Re .6 (bonnie):
> .. An aside -- though heavy hunting is normally blamed for the
>decline of the buffalo, ...
Will Cuppy suggested that people interested in the American Bison
visit one at a zoo. As he put it, "The hunters didn't make them
nearly extinct. The moths got them."
But who reads Will Cuppy these days? Alas ...
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
545.10 | Olaf Fub | CAMONE::MAZUR | | Wed Aug 03 1988 18:44 | 25 |
| > By your definition, then, Chicago isn't in the Midwest, since it's
> on Lake Michigan, which connects to the St. Laurence eventually.
> But buffalo lived in Chicago once.
RE: .6
By my "geographical" definition, Chicago isn't in the Midwest.
Chicago and Buffalo are in the Great Lakes region. Demographically,
Chicago is midwestern and Buffalo has strong midwestern leanings.
But that reaaly doesn't have much to do with buffalo.
I wasn't trying to say that if a city wasn't in my definition of
the Midwest then buffalo never existed there. What I was trying
to say was that the buffalo that these trappers and explorers observed
were probably located only as far east as western PA.
The French term for beautiful river that I was referring to was
"Beau fleuve". Which would make a better candidate for Buffalo
than "Belle fleuve".
-Paul "Glad I'm not from Intercourse, PA" Mazur
|
545.11 | I liked your hypothesis. . . it's as good as the rest | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Wed Aug 03 1988 18:45 | 5 |
| Judging from the specimens I've seen in the Museum of Natural
History, the moths may have gotten to the lions and the musk
oxen, too.
--bonnie
|
545.12 | if you go back far enough, they lived in Europe... | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Wed Aug 03 1988 18:51 | 13 |
| re: .10
Oh, my, we're going thick and fast here . . .
I am apparently not making my point very clear.
Buffalo didn't restrict themselves to the Mississippi drainage.
They are known to have lived in the St. Laurence valley and
in the areas that drain into Hudson's bay as well. Their
range was not restricted by obvious geographic features.
--bonnie
|
545.13 | Shuffled buffalo | CAMONE::MAZUR | | Wed Aug 03 1988 19:07 | 20 |
| I think we have a lot of related questions that are making this
monumental question more difficult to answer.
1) Is Buffalo in the Midwest ?
Not by my definition.
2) Did buffalo ever exist in what is now Buffalo?
Maybe. Bonnie sure has an arsenal of flea-bitten trivia that
can't be ignored.
3) Did buffalo exist in what is now Buffalo in the late 1700's
when Buffalo first settled ?
Probably, not. The buffalo mentioned in the travelers and
explorers stories probably were located west of PA.
4) Did buffalo strictly exist in the midwest.
No.
5) Is this all a cruel hoax played by the founders of the city?
It has to be.
-Paul
|
545.14 | How are things in Bison, N. Y.? | TOPDOC::SLOANE | He's STILL on the loose! | Wed Aug 03 1988 19:26 | 7 |
| Re: .5
Is Buffalo a "very unique" city?
Or is it just unique?
-bs
|
545.15 | Getting back to the point | HAVOC::WESSELS | Hi DEC, I'm back! | Wed Aug 03 1988 19:32 | 29 |
|
Let's get our thoughts organized.
Relative to the original question:
1) We don't care whether buffalos restricted themselves to the
Mississippi and its tributaries or not. We do care whether or not
they were found East of them before or around the time that Buffalo
was named.
2) It is pointless to argue on and on about what is "midwest."
We only need to know what was the common understanding of "midwest"
at the time that trappers or whoever said that they "ranged in the
midwest." (Assuming that is how it is actually put in specific
texts). And not only at the time of the trappers, but also at the
time of the individuals who wrote and/or edited these historical
treatises/documents. Remember that "midwest" might mean something
different to someone writing before this country stretched from
one ocean to the other.
3)Are we assuming that the city had this name first, or the
animal?
4)If we visit our local library after 5:00 today, which I don't
think anyone here actually has yet, it will probably be relatively
easy to find some information about this.
Just trying not to lose sight of the subject.
Brian W.
|
545.16 | Euclid would be proud | CAMONE::MAZUR | | Wed Aug 03 1988 20:07 | 12 |
| re: .15 (Brian)
Boy oh boy, you are losing sight of a hidden topic in ALL notes
files. Geometry !! If you notice, tangents abound, obtuseness
is a prerequisite, everbody has a new angle. and most statements
are based on a set of fundamental "truths" that are assumed to be
true. ( Kind of like how I assumed people believed that there were
never any buffalo in Buffalo. )
-Paul "sometimes square but never complementary" Mazur
|
545.17 | Let's not get buffaloed | ERASER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Wed Aug 03 1988 20:34 | 42 |
| Re .13 (Paul):
>1) Is Buffalo in the Midwest ?
> Not by my definition.
Well, when I lived in Buffalo, there was a nearby fort (Fort Niagara?)
that was called something like "the Western Frontier" fort. When
the Big 13 started the United States going, the least easternmost
part of New York was on the Western Frontier of its day. So yopu're
right: Buffalo isn't a Midwestern city; it's a Western one! [Hear
that, Tombstone?]
>3) Did buffalo exist in what is now Buffalo in the late 1700's
> when Buffalo first settled ?
> Probably, not.
Well, make up your mind. ;-)
>4) Did buffalo strictly exist in the midwest.
> No.
Their existence, I gather, was rather permissive. :-)
Re .14 (Bruce):
>Is Buffalo a "very unique" city?
Actually, that's a typo. Buffalo's "unque," which is short for
"unqueue." Try to catch a bus there, and you'll appreciate it's
_very_ unqueue. :-P
Re .15 (Brian W.):
> 3)Are we assuming that the city had this name first, or the
>animal?
Probably the animal had the name before the city. But the city
had the name first before it acquired any of the animal, at least
officially. [Is there today an official Buffaslo for the City of
Buffalo? Inquiring minds couldn't care less. ;-)]
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
545.18 | | TOPDOC::SLOANE | He's STILL on the loose! | Wed Aug 03 1988 20:37 | 3 |
| Re: .17
Thankqueue.
|
545.19 | oh bury me out . . . | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Wed Aug 03 1988 22:53 | 6 |
| re: .17, the western frontier
The western frontier always begins twenty miles west of the
last gas station :) :) :)
--bonnie, still Montanan in her heart
|
545.20 | Let's deviate.. | THEONE::PARSONS | So many notes, so little time..... | Thu Aug 04 1988 01:35 | 4 |
| A thought from afar....
If this BUFFALO place was named by someone who claimed to be an
American, then there's every chance it actually is an acronym!
Guy
|
545.21 | How does the city look like? ^^) | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Home, on a global trip | Thu Aug 04 1988 09:56 | 10 |
| I thought it is derived from Buffa-LOO, Buffa being short for "Opera buffa",
you know, that musical style that tended to become longer and longer, people
forcing to listen to it longer and longer, with perfectly natural consequences.
The style is extinct now....
Arie
(by the way, I live in a city called "Alphen"; anyone wants to give *that a
try?)
|
545.22 | haven't you herd? | MARKER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Thu Aug 04 1988 15:10 | 7 |
| Re .20 (Guy):
> ... then there's every chance it actually is an acronym!
Such as Bison United For Foraging Aside Lake Ontario?
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
545.23 | Straight to the source | CAMONE::MAZUR | | Thu Aug 04 1988 18:24 | 19 |
|
According to the Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society, buffalo
never existed in Buffalo. Also, they claim that nobody knows for
sure how Buffalo got its name but the leading theory is the
"Beau fleuve" theory.
I think that a little known theory will become more popular soon.
An developer of the young city wanted this new town to be a
manufacturing center, so they sent out brochures to the presidents
of all the big companies. It stated:
WANTED: Build Unlimited Factories. Free American Land Opportunity
As for Alphen, I think that it was named after a Swiss chicken,
but that theory has holes in it.
-Paul
|
545.24 | car boff | PSTJTT::TABER | The project killer | Thu Aug 04 1988 18:25 | 6 |
| > (by the way, I live in a city called "Alphen"; anyone wants to give
> *that a try?)
That's the place where all the women drive Alphen Romeos, isn't it?
>>>==>PStJTT
|
545.25 | Oh no chicken, not there! | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Home, on a global trip | Thu Aug 04 1988 20:30 | 16 |
| -2
>......named after a Swiss chicken.
-1
>......where all the women drive Alphen Romeos, isn't it?
Or the place where only Swiss chickens are allowed to drive Romeo (crazy, that
is...)
I believe Alphen is developing a rich history here! ^-)
But I will give you a clue: calculate the distance from Alphen to Buffalo (in
femtoparsecs), compare it to the sum of the ASCII values of each letter in both
names, and you will see that Alphen and Buffalo are more related than you might
have guessed as first sight!
Arie
|
545.26 | Buffalopolis | CAMONE::MAZUR | | Thu Aug 04 1988 21:03 | 7 |
| Re: .25
Is Buffalo between Alphen and Gambia ? I really can't understand
your clue. It's all Greek to me.
- Paul Mazuropolous
|
545.27 | makes sense to me | PSTJTT::TABER | The project killer | Thu Aug 04 1988 22:32 | 9 |
| > But I will give you a clue: calculate the distance from Alphen to
> Buffalo (in femtoparsecs), compare it to the sum of the ASCII values of
> each letter in both names, and you will see that Alphen and Buffalo are
> more related than you might have guessed as first sight!
Ah, I get it. Alphen is the town where the Swiss make Vodka out of
chickens and drink it while driving their buffalo to Alpine Rodeos.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
545.28 | Let's pluralIZE it! | DSSDEV::STONE | Roy | Thu Aug 04 1988 23:08 | 2 |
| I thought Alphen was the plural of Alph. (As in Ox -> Oxen,
VAX --> VAXen, etc.)
|
545.29 | Destined to Doom ? | CAMONE::MAZUR | | Thu Aug 04 1988 23:57 | 17 |
| While we're talking about Buffalo and other cities, I was wondering
if anybody out there heard about the "Theory of Cities Whose Names
End in Vowels ( esp. O )" ?
Somewhere, a while ago, I heard that cities whose names end in vowels,
especially O, have a smaller chance of having championship teams.
Until recently, there were few sports teams that contadicted this
theory. There have been very few if any championship teams from
Buffalo, Atlanta, Toronto (except the Leafs), San Diego, Chicago
(Yes there may have been SOME but that was over a long period of time)
I may not really believe this theory, but as a BuffalOnian, I need
to know if there is any truth to this so that I can give up on the
Bills and Sabres and move on to the Whalers and Patriots.
Paul Mazur
|
545.30 | Eh? | THEONE::PARSONS | So many notes, so little time..... | Fri Aug 05 1988 02:16 | 2 |
| Yes, I suppose vowel preoccupation may limit the time available
to become good at sport. .......................Guy
|
545.31 | The Bosto Red Sox, The New Engla Patriots, for example | PSTJTT::TABER | The project killer | Fri Aug 05 1988 16:51 | 7 |
| I suppose there's something to that. Take the Nashua Pirates --please.
(ta-dum--rimshot)
Actually, if it worked, then I'd petition that Boston be renamed Bosto.
At least then we wouldn't have these teams that take us right to the
wire then flub it.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
545.32 | hey, I liked the Pirates! | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Fri Aug 05 1988 21:29 | 4 |
| Better than never having been in it . . .
--bonnie, whose first beloved sports team was the Seattle Pilots
|
545.33 | Need A Lexitive? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Aug 10 1988 19:05 | 5 |
| re .30 et alia - sounds like something a good vowel movement could
fix.
len.
|
545.34 | Buffe � l'eau in Europe? Film at 11. | SMURF::BINDER | A complicated and secret quotidian existence | Wed Aug 10 1988 21:17 | 16 |
| Re: .12
Buffalo in Europe, Bonnie? Er, ahm, might you not have been thinking of
the now-extinct aurochs, which obviously was the target of too many
well-guided missiles?
"Hey, what are you hunting with today?"
"Aw, rocks."
And are you really a Montanan? In that case, all is forgiven. Mother
says you can come home. Ever been in Bozeman? Let's see the Lexers
produce a derivation for *that* one! If anybody comes up with the story
about the Sioux archer who had three arms I'll personally attend to it.
- Dick
|
545.35 | ...and the bison you rode in on! | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Aug 11 1988 00:14 | 11 |
| Europe had both wild cattle and bison. The names are
"aurochs" and "wisent".
The former are woodland animals, the latter plains animals.
Small populations of both exist today. In the case of the
aurochs, the animal has been "bred back" by crossings of
domesticated cattle, as the aurochs was extinct in the wild,
though there were half-breeds around.
-John Bishop
|
545.36 | but he didn't spell it with an 'e' | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Aug 11 1988 23:05 | 9 |
| re: .34
I'm FROM Bozeman. Want to make something of it?
Bozeman is named for John Bozeman, an early scout and explorer. As
I recall, he guided the first wagon train to the area. And from
what I've heard of the guy, he probably named it for himself.
--bonnie
|
545.37 | Ik? Boos? | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Home, on a global trip | Fri Aug 12 1988 09:29 | 8 |
| RE .34
>...... Ever been in Bozeman? Let's see the Lexers
>produce a derivation for *that* one!
This is an easy one! It is Dutch, and it means "angry man".
Any specialities in the city? ;-)
Arie
|
545.38 | Nit Alert!!!!! | SHIRE::MOHN | blank space intentionally filled | Mon Aug 22 1988 16:22 | 7 |
| re: several ago
If memory serves me, doesn't the Chicago River drain into the
Mississippi basin? I know, it's unnatural drainage :^). So, is
Chicago in the mid-West, or the Great Lakes Region?
Bill
|
545.39 | | RANCHO::HOLT | Great Caesar calls (he's such a tyrant!) | Thu Aug 25 1988 08:59 | 10 |
|
re buffalo jumps
I assume they competed in the buff...
re where the West begins
I have it on good authority that the West actually starts at a line
running between Ft Wayne, Indiana, and the Tarrant County line
between Dallas and Ft Worth.
|
545.40 | | YIPPEE::LIRON | | Thu Aug 25 1988 15:58 | 9 |
| As no buffalo existed in that area, the first immigrant
decided to name the place:
"How_come_there_is_no_buffalo_around_here"
This initial name was later abbreviated in "Buffalo" as we know
it today.
roger
|
545.41 | But why is the Far East west of Cal. ? | KESU::PETERS | Steve Peters, @VBO x5470 | Tue Sep 06 1988 13:12 | 10 |
| Re .-2
> I have it on good authority that the West actually starts at a line
> running between Ft Wayne, Indiana, and the Tarrant County line
> between Dallas and Ft Worth.
Does it really? I thought West started to the left of a line drawn from
the North pole to the South Pole, passing through Greenwich, meantime.
As it were.
Steve
|
545.42 | I'm facing towards the sea... | FNYFS::WYNFORD | Scribbling Loon | Tue Sep 06 1988 19:23 | 16 |
| > Does it really? I thought West started to the left of a line drawn from
> the North pole to the South Pole, passing through Greenwich, meantime.
> As it were.
Your left or mine?
Gavin
PS My train of thought then ran:
You left a mine?
You left some wine?
Who left some wine?
Who laughed some time?
I wonder if there's a topic there, somewhere... No? Ho hum.
|
545.43 | rathole | THEONE::PARSONS | So many notes, so little time..... | Wed Sep 07 1988 05:53 | 1 |
| Have all the buffalo gone west?
|
545.44 | Geography lesson | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Copyright � 1953 | Wed Sep 07 1988 10:06 | 9 |
| The East is anything on the east side of Route 128.
The Mid-West is anything between 128 and I-495.
The West starts at 495 and ends at the Rockies.
Beyond the Rockies is the Mythic Far West.
--- jerry
|
545.45 | | TKOV51::DIAMOND | This note is illegal tender. | Thu Apr 12 1990 06:37 | 11 |
| Re .22
> Such as Bison United For Foraging Aside Lake Ontario?
Surely that's: Buffalo United For Foraging Aside Lake Ontario.
Why omit any opportunity for recursion?
The problem, of course, is that Buffalo is aside Lake Erie.
However, it is the world's most Uncute City.
Uh, maybe not the world's most. The New World's most, anyway.
|
545.46 | trivia overload | RANGER::BRADLEY | Chuck Bradley | Thu Jun 15 1995 11:32 | 27 |
|
a late, tangential nit:
re .38 and others around .10 about Chicago and the Mississippi basin.
The Chicago river now drains into the Mississippi basin.
It originally drained into Lake Michigan, which is still the source of
drinking water for Chicago and many other towns, but the natives wanted to
use the river as a sewer, so they diverted it to join most of the other
flowing water in the area. The Sanitary and Ship Canal connects the
revised Chicago River to the DesPlaines River. It still carried a fair
amount of barge traffic the last time I saw it. Trust Chicago to have
a profitable open sewer.
The DesPlaines River flows within 1/2 mile
of Chicago and through many of the city's suburbs and without
any assist joins the Illinois and ultimately the Mississippi.
The North Branch of the Chicago River and the DesPlaines River are about 3
miles apart, a reasonable walk, even with a canoe and other gear.
Chicago was a popular portage area between the Great Lakes and the
Misssissippi basin, but not the most popular one. That is why
there is Portage, Indiana.
Now to return to this notes file, already in progress:
There are occasional debates in Chicagoland about DesPlaines vs Des Plaines
vs Desplaines. It is still an unimaginative name.
|
545.47 | More trivia | KOLFAX::GOODMAN | I see you shiver with antici.........pation! | Mon Jun 19 1995 13:15 | 4 |
| I guess it's obvious what Des Plaines, IL and Las Vegas, NV have in
common...
Roy
|