Page:Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States (1905).djvu/27

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PLACE NAMES IN THE UNITED STATES.
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Algonquin; post-offices in Franklin County, New York, and Carroll County, Ohio, named from a prominent Indian tribe. The word seems to mean "(people) on the other side," or "eel-spring place."
Alhambra; post-office in Los Angeles County, California, village in Madison County, Illinois, and six other places, named from the palace in Spain.
Aliquippa; borough in Beaver County, Pennsylvania, named for a Delaware Indian woman. Said to mean "hat," and also spelled Allegrippus in early period.
Aliso; villages in Orange and San Bernardino counties, California. A Spanish word meaning "alder tree."
Alkali; creek in Montana, so named from the alkaline quality of the water.
Allagaah; principal branch of St. Johns River, and plantation and post-office in Aroostook County, Maine. An Indian word meaning "bark cabin lake." The Indians had a hunting camp near the headwaters of the river, hence the name.
Allamakee; county in Iowa. The Iowa Historical Society says it was named for Allen Makee, an Indian trader.
Allegan; county, and village in same county in Michigan;
Allegany; county in Maryland, county, and town in Cattaraugus County, New York, and post-office in Coos County, Oregon;
Alleghany; counties in North Carolina and Virginia;
Allegheny; county, city in same county, and river in Pennsylvania, and mountains in the eastern United States. A corruption of the Delaware Indian name for the Allegheny and Ohio rivers, the meaning of the name being lost.
Alleghany; village and mining camp in Sierra County, California, named by early settlers from Alleghany, Pennsylvania.
Allemands; town in St. Charles Parish, Louisiana, situated on Bayou des Allemands, "bayou of the Germans."
Allen; county in Indiana, named for Col. William Allen, of Kentucky.
Allen; county in Kansas, named for William Allen, United States Senator from Ohio, 1837-1849.
Allen; counties in Kentucky and Ohio, named for Col. John Allen, who fell at the battle of Raisin River, in the war of 1812.
Allen; township in Northampton County, Pennsylvania, named for William Allen, of Pennsylvania, at one time chief justice of the province.
Allendale; village in Wabash County, Illinois, named for a railroad contractor.
Allendale; town in Barnwell County, South Carolina, named for the Allen family, prominent in that district.
Allenhill; post-office in Ontario County, New York, named for Nathaniel Allen, one of the first settlers.
Allenatown; town in Merrimack County, New Hampshire, named for Samuel Allen, to whose children the grant was made in 1722.
Allentown; borough in Monmouth County, New Jersey, and city in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, named for William Allen, of Pennsylvania, at one time chief justice of the province.
Allerton; village in Vermilion County, Illinois, named for Samuel Allerton, founder and extensive land owner.
Alliance; city in Stark County, Ohio, so named because of its location midway the towns of Freedom and Mount Union, and also as the union of two railroads.
Alligator; river and swamp in North Carolina, so named because of the numerous alligators.
Allin; town in McLean County, Illinois, named for James Allin, a pioneer.
Alloway; township in Salem County, and creek in New Jersey, named for a resident Indian chief.