I’ve driven on Rough and Ready Highway in Grass Valley, but I haven’t actually been in the town of Rough and Ready.
The town of Paris, Panama, is not named after the city in Texas ;), but after a local Indian chief.
Now I just went and looked at Rough and Ready on Google Maps, and it appears there’s a little dead end street there named Slave Girl. At least that’s how it’s labeled on the map. On Street View I couldn’t see any street sign with that name on it. So I’m not sure if that’s the official name of the street or a case of Google Maps vandalism (if there is such a thing). But it would be interesting if we had a case of an odd name within a place with an odd name.
There’s a Pasadena in Newfoundland of all places (and it was, in fact, named after the one in California) and a California in England. Haven’t been to either one, though.
I’ve been to Truth or Consequences, New Mexico!
I’ve also been to Sunspot, NM- which may not be such a strange name when you consider the National Solar Observatory facility located there. Well worth a visit.
My sister and brother-in-law live just outside Persia, Iowa.
I took a road trip to Oregon and went the long way up CA 1. It was taking too long so I found a route to I-5. Along the way I came to an intersection with a CA highway sign that only said “Remote” with an arrow pointing right. I wanted to check it out but I was already running late. I still regret passing it by.
I once hopped a bus from **Cuba **to La Florida, both town names in the Risaralda department of Colombia.
I could give directions from my former home in Cayman to **Hell**that included taking the first right turn after the intersection of Off the Beaten Path Road.
I’ve been to Te Urewera, New Zealand, which is Maori for “The Burnt Penis.” One tale says it’s from a chief who rolled into a fire while sleeping and burned his naughty bits. Others say the member was burned in vengeance.
I’ve also been to Shag Point, which is named after a kind of cormorant, rather than Austin Powers’ favorite activity.
According to the map I had at the time, I must have driven through Dirty Sock, CA as I approached Yosemite from the south, though I don’t remember noticing any sort of town or settlement. There’s still a place called Dirty Sock Spring, CA, but that’s quite some distance away from where Dirty Sock is, or was.
And Ontario, California takes its name from the Canadian province:
I’ve been to Storm King Mountain, New York, and Mount Aspiring, New Zealand, both of which sound like they’re something out of Tolkein. Breakneck Ridge is across the Hudson from Storm King. I’ve also camped on the Hen and Chicken Islands in New Zealand.
I’ve seen Lois Lane, Margo Lane, Dunwich Rd. and Green Acres Rd.
Been to Giggleswick ![]()
Also been to Pennsylvania, Catbrain, and London Apprentice. All of which are in England and tiny.
I’ve been to Pennsylvania too! Almost went to the Shell station but was too exhausted to make the 100 feet off the Cotswold Way even if it meant the possibility of indulging in alcohol before hitting Bath.
Make up your mind.
Is it “Boring”, or is it “and Drain”, or something else? :rolleyes:
It’s unclear. The story that the name was changed is based on one person’s memoirs, but he refuses to name the person who made the name change, making it sound like a bit of a story.
There’s also an earlier parish return that has a longer form of the name, not quite the same as the current version, but of similar length.
It may be that there were different forms of the name floating about, some longer, some shorter, before it got set in the mid-19th century.
From wikipedia:
The true originator and date of the longer version of the name is less certain, however: an ecclesiastical directory published several years before the claimed renaming gives what it calls the “full” parish name in the slightly differing form of Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerbwlltysiliogogo (“St Mary’s church of the pool of the white hazels over against the pool of St Tysilio Gogo [Tysilio of the cave]”),[17] while exactly the same form appears in an paper on placenames published in 1849, its author noting that “the name was generally abridged” by locals.[8] While the addition regarding the Swellies is supposed only to have been made in the 1860s, early 19th century guidebooks had already suggested a derivation of the element pwllgwyngyll from pwll, gwyn and gwyll (“gloomy raging pool”), in reference to the Swellies.[24]
When my family and I went to Hawaii, I insisted that we stop for sign pictures in Aiea (the only city/town in North America with no consonants in the name) and in Ka’a’awa (the only city/town in North America with three of the same letter consecutive - at least in purely English letters, not sure how that apostrophe-thing counts).
I’ll agree that these are city/town names in the United States, but not in North America. ![]()
More like suburbs rather than towns, but I’ve been to The Village outside Annapolis MD and Barraterria outside St. Augustine FL.
There is also The Villages in Florida, which I have driven past on the way to Walt Disney World.
I used to have family in Oconomowoc, Wisconsin, whom I visited. And stayed with some friends in England in the town of Biggleswade (which, IMHO, is the best name for an English town; does anything sound more ‘English’ than Biggleswade)?