Portuguese. I don’t know what the one in the US was named for, but according to legend the one in Uruguay is supposed to take its name from a sailor in Magalhaes’ expedition exclaiming “I see a mountain!”
The earliest verifiable mention of the spot, in one of their expedition’s logbooks, describes the area recognizably and says that they named the mountain there Montevidi; the town was founded later and would take its name from the mountain.
Named for James Selkirk, one of the earliest residents and a Revolutionary War veteran. He was an uncle by marriage of Joseph Henry, for whom the unit of electrical inductance is named.
Does it say exactly what Stromsburg in Sweden is? A section of a town could mean a rural area, a village, a neighborhood, or perhaps something else.
Yes, but there’s a chance it may be named after someone named Falun. Perhaps not as great a chance for, say, an English name, since Scandinavians didn’t tend to take their hometown as a last name as was fairly common elsewhere in Europe.
Yes, got those. For those interested, I only have 5 Danish cities: Copenhagen, Helsingør, Nysted, Odense, and Viborg. Not very many, but it’s a lot more than for Portugal where I only have Lisbon. Any additions from those countries will be welcome.
Thanks.
Ignatz, yes I have all those or have eliminated them (Essex is a county and Leicester is named after a person).
Got Delhi, NY? (Pronounced “Dell-high”, unlike its Indian namesake.) Apparently it’s unclear whether [Madras, OR](madras us city) was named after the city (now Chennai) in India or after the plaid madras cloth that the city was known for. There’s a Calcutta, OH (the Indian city now uses the modern spelling Kolkata), a Bombay, NY (in India now mostly spelled Mumbai), and a Simla, CO, not to mention a Lahore, VA.
Singapore, MI is, alas, defunct, but [Lucknow, PA](lucknow us city) is hanging in there.
Upstate NY of course has tons of places named after classical cities: Athens, Rome, Syracuse, Ithaca, Utica. Also Dutch names including Amsterdam and Rotterdam.
Had all those except Simla and Lahore. Thank you very much for those. Lahore is the first on the list from Pakistan. I accepted Singapore MI, despite it being defunct. This is mainly because I have very few from SE Asia. The only other one is Manila, of which there are several in the US (mostly named in the aftermath of the Spanish-American War).
Madras was almost certainly named after the cloth. Lots of small towns were named in meetings of locals, which were sometimes held the General Store, for lack of a better place to meet. When they were stumped for a name, sometimes someone would suggest a name from some product he could see in the store. I expect Madras was named in this way. Anyway, since the cloth is closely associated with the city, I accept it.
Yep, got lots of places from there. Downstate too, like Brooklyn, Harlem, and Flushing.
Ocklebo is a municipality, and also the the largest village/town. Strömsborg is what in Swedish is called a “by”, which could be a village or just a cluster of farms. Judging from map searches on it today it was the latter. People along a 200 m road have it as their address.
Well there are no one in the 1890 US census with a registered last name of Falun, no Swedish born with a last name likely to be an alternative spelling, and limited to Kansas no Swedes at all with anything familysearch.org show as possible spellings.
Yes, I have Vienna NY. Here’s a couple places I’m having trouble with:
Aldie VA Gannett says it’s from a town in Italy. There doesn’t seem to be an Aldie in Italy. Perhaps a different spelling, but what?
Lisle NY. Several sites say it’s from a Lisle in France. There are several Lisle’s there, so I don’t know which one. All are rather small, but I notice that Lisle is also listed as an old spelling of Lille, which is a much bigger city. Any ideas here?
Rivoli Township, IL. Gannett says there’s a Rivoli IL named for the town of Rivoli in Italy. The township is the only Rivoli I can find in Illinois. There’s a good-sized town in the Piedmont region of Italy and a smaller one in Verona, which is perhaps more famous because of an 1848 battle there. Which is it?
Never mind about this one. Just noticed on the wikipage that it’s named for a castle in Scotland. And here I was afraid it was named for the grocery store…
Lodi, New Jersey, Lodi, Illinois, and Lodi, California.
The place in California is named for the place in Illinois. The place in New Jersey is named for the place in Italy. No information as to where the place in Illinois got its name.
Callary says in Place Names of Illinois that Lodi “may have been transferred” from the one in Indiana or in New York; ultimately from Lodi in northern Italy. GNIS lists 54 Lodis in the US.
IMO, almost certain to be the Northern French/Flemish city of Lisle/Lille, which as you note is a far more important metropolis. Lisle/Lille was a major textile manufacturing hub, and the NY Lisle seems to have started up a woolen/carding mill quite early on, so the name might have been somewhat aspirational.
GNIS shows a Lille in Maine, which I don’t have. Nor does Wikipedia. One or both have probably been named for the city in France.
As far as Lodi goes, the one in NJ is all I need. As I said earlier, I’m only looking for one US place named for each foreign city. If someone want to make a list of all US places named for other cities, have fun. Your list will be many times longer than mine. At least 10,000, probably many more.
Ohio has both Mecca and Medina. It is confirmed that both were named after the cities in Arabia.
Ohio also has Mogadore, known to be named after the city in Morocco formerly named Mogadore, now called Essaouira. These are all in Northeast Ohio. Speaking of northeast Ohio, did you get Ravenna? (My daughter was born there. The Ohio one, not the Italian one.)
Pennsylvania has Loretto, named after Loreto in Italy. (The PA one was founded by an ancestor of mine.)
Did you get Golconda, Nevada? It was named after the fortified city in India, because both places were connected with mining. Speaking of mining, Almaden, California, is named after Almadén, Spain, for that reason. The name is from Arabic al-ma‘din ‘the mine’, site of a Roman mercury ore mine.
A couple of things come to mind: maybe useful, maybe not.
There’s a town of Rutland, MA., next door to the above Oakham. Wiki says “Oakham was first settled as part of Rutland…originally named Oakhampton, but name changed for an unknown reason”. For what it’s worth: I don’t know of any Oakhampton in England; but there is in Devonshire, the town of Oakhampton (“spelt differently, pronounced the same”). Might the Massachusetts place have originally been called after the Devon place, but mis-spelt; later changed to Oakham so as to chime in with the “Rutland” connection?
And in addition to those listed; two more towns in Massachusetts:
Billerica – Wiki says, “name borrowed from Billericay, Essex, England” [dropping the final “y”]
New Braintree – this not specifically mentioned by Wiki: but there is a town of Braintree, Essex, England – (dtilque, if I have things rightly, you are interested in "New **** " places in certain circumstances).