How many states have a city with another state name?

Interestingly enough, though, the state of Wyoming is named after the Wyoming Valley in northeastern Pennsylvania.

Virginia City sure went downhill after the Ponderosa went under.

There’s also an Ottawa, KS.

There’s a China Grove (Doobie Brothers rock, man!) and an Orient in Texas.

Texas City, Texas. That has to count for something.

Yes, it’s just north of Ottawa. :slight_smile: And there’s a Toronto, Australia.

There is also a wide spot in the road along Highway 48 called Virginia, Ontario. It has a Virginia Beach.

There’s another Delaware in Ohio, which is the county seat of Delaware County, and the birthplace of a president.

There’s a town called Delaware in New York also. And we have a Washington. I missed those in my previous post.

So New York has Alabama, Delaware, Florida, Maine, Maryland, Ohio, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming. And we have New Connecticut and Vermontville.

“Nevada City, California”-Utah Phillips and Ani DiFranco

And if you include poetic names and/or near spellings, there’s Chili, Scotia, Albion, and Batavia, not to mention all the ancient Mediterranean city-states.

Home of Indiana University of Pennsylvania, which is a frequent athletic rival of California University of Pennsylvania, which is located in California, Pennsylvania.

A game between Indiana University-Purdue University of Indianapolis and Indiana University of Pennsylvania would pretty much have the I’s, U’s, and P’s covered.

There is a Onalaska in Wisconsin

[QUOTE=wikipedia]
The name for the city comes from the poem, “The Pleasures of Hope”, by the Scottish poet Thomas Campbell. The original spelling of the name in Campbell’s poem was “Oonalaska” (an Aleutian island and fishing village).
[/QUOTE]

Brian