Page:Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States (1905).djvu/21

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

THE NAMES AND THEIR ORIGIN.


Aaronsburg; town in Center County, Pennsylvania, named for Aaron Levy, who laid it out in 1786.
Abahtacook; creek in Maine, branch of the Matamiscontis River. An Indian word meaning "stream that runs parallel with a big river."
Abajo; mountains in Utah. A Spanish word meaning "low."
Abanako; village in Van Wert County, Ohio, named from an Indian tribe. The word means "the east land."
Abaquage; pond near the source of Little River, Connecticut An Indian word meaning "flaggy meadow."
Abbeville; county, and town in same county, in South Carolina, settled and named by immigrants from France, for the French town of that name.
Abbot; town in Piscataquis County, Maine, named for Prof. John Abbot, treasurer of Bowdoin College.
Abbotsford; village in St. Clair County, Michigan, named from the home of Sir Walter Scott.
Abbott; village in Arapahoe County, Colorado, named for Albert F. Abbott, who platted it.
Abbott8town; town in Adams County, Pennsylvania, named for John Abbott, who laid it out in 1753.
Aberdeen; city in Monroe County, Mississippi, town in Moore County, North Carolina, and numerous other places, named from the city in Scotland.
Abert; lake in Oregon, named for Col. J. J. Abert, topographical engineer, United States Army.
Abiathar; peak in Yellowstone Park, Wyoming, named for Charles Abiathar White, of the United States Geological Survey.
Abilene; city in Dickinson County, Kansas, and village in Charlotte County, Virginia, named from the province of ancient Syria. The word, means "grassy plain."
Abilene; city in Taylor County, Texas, named from the city in Kansas.
Abingdon; city in Knox County, Illinois, named from Abingdon, Maryland, the birth place of one of its founders.
Abingdon; village in Harford County, Maryland, town in Washington County, Virginia, and several other places, named generally from the borough in Berkshire, England.
Abington; town in Plymouth County, Massachusetts, and several other places, named from the parish of Cambridgeshire, England.
Ableman; village in Sauk County, Wisconsin, named for Col. S. V. R. Ableman, who settled there in 1851.
Abocadneticook; creek in Maine, a branch of the Penobscot River. An Indian word meaning "stream narrowed by the mountains."
Aboljackarmegas; creek in Maine, a branch of the Penobscot River, at the foot of Mount Katahdin. An Indian word meaning "bare" or "bold."
15