Yes! Good job.
“Alice” is two syllables, but I assume this is a reference to Milwaukee.
Here’s one place I used to live:
The March King died here. It has a train line named on a well-known game board. Home to an East Coast farm team.
Steel, smoke and three land veins run through.
Pittsburgh?
– whoops, annoying discourse. @Ellecram
Had to look this one up. Reading, PA
Yes! …and Discourse is so easily annoyed.
Town known for red fruit and juice.
Could be big church in an old song.
This is a big town in the South, with a strong food vibe and a strong jazz vibe. And each year tons and tons and tons of folks come for Fat Day, then next is Ash Day and all the folks go home and the town is not as fun.
New Orleans?
Used to be known as the place of a word that means ground grain. Grew things folks live in on the grain land. Now known as the place of a word that means bloom but is said the same as the word that means ground grain.
- Home of John, Paul, George and Starr on drums, best pop group of all time. Liverpool
- Post World War two all goods came in by air. Berlin
- White Cliffs, next stop France Dover, England
- Huge old Sphinx Cairo
All I can come up with is Flour/Flower but don’t know if those are cities lol!
Yep, The Big Easy.
The Spurs
You’re right so far (as nicknames, not the actual name). And it’s one city, not plural (though like most it’s swallowed some smaller ones as it grew.)
Cow town. Calgary, AB
::ringing in::
“What is Winchester?”
Of course! I’m hoping for the “minimalism” award.
Hmmm…
Big; near Pearl; Isle. Honolulu
Where Lee shot John and Jack shot Lee. Dallas
Yes! Great guess!
Winchester Cathedral was the song I was thinking of.
I know it was! I’m old enough to remember it on the radio in 1965. Also, I know my way around the northern parts of Virginia.