1001 Kansas Place Names
Sondra Van Meter McCoy and Jan Hults
Illustrated by John Gruber
xvi, 224 pages, 70 line drawings, 5 x 8-1/2
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0392-3, $25.00
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0393-0, $9.95
The Kansas map
is dotted with colorful and intriguing place names that invite
wonderment: Grenola, La Cygne, Cawker City, Wamego, Tonovay,
Liberal, Nicodemus, Skiddy, and White Woman Creek. These--and
1058 others, from Abbeyville to Zurich--are described in this
handy treasure trove of local history. In addition to discussing
how the name originated and what changes it has undergone, McCoy
and Hults provide the inquisitive with the spelling and pronunciation
(of unusual names), the county where located, related anecdotes,
post office dates, and population figures. The result is a fascinating
mosaic of information on Kansas history, families, events, politics,
settlement patterns, and local lore.
Given its geographic location at the crossroads of America,
Kansas understandably boasts a diversity of place names. Native
Americans, blacks, the French, Spanish, Anglo-Irish, German-Russians,
and other ethnic groups have left their stamp on Kansas along
with westward-moving Americans. In Kansas the majority of the
place names were chosen to describe, to acknowledge origins,
or to commemorate. The descriptive include Smoky Hill, Pretty
Prairie, and Saline. American migrants brought Pittsburg, Erie,
Oberlin, and Manhattan; foreign immigrants, Toronto, Liebenthal,
Clyde, Alexanderwohl, and Smolan. But, as elsewhere in the United
States, most names were chosen to commemorate; places are named
for Indians, postmasters, landowners, railroad officials, military
heroes, local politicians, statesmen, judges, and presidents.
McCoy and Hults have included all 105 counties and their seats
of government and all 629 incorporated places as listed in the
1980 U.S. Census. The remaining have been chosen because of historical,
geographic, or geological interest.
Abundantly illustrated with humorous drawings by John Gruber,
this handy place name gazetteer is both a valuable reference
and a source of good fun.
"1001 Kansas Place Names pleases and surprises
on nearly every page. The book is the right size to be taken
on the road where it will get heavy use. Anyone intrigued by
Kansas history, folklore, and places will find this book a valuable
guide."--Kansas History
"There is no end to the fun this book provides, along
with valuable history and vital statistics. Informative and delightful."--Wichita
Eagle
SONDRA VAN METER McCOY is a freelance historian whose
articles have appeared in the Midwest Quarterly and Kansas
History.
JAN HULTS teaches history at the University of Kansas.
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