List of U.S. county name etymologies (S–Z)
S
T
County name | State | Origin |
---|---|---|
Talbot County | Georgia | Named for Matthew Talbot, 30th Governor of Georgia. |
Talbot County | Maryland | Named for Grace, Lady Talbot, the wife of Sir Robert Talbot, an Irish statesman, and the sister of Cecil Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore. |
Taliaferro County | Georgia | Named for Colonel Benjamin Taliaferro of Virginia, an officer in the American Revolution. |
Talladega County | Alabama | The name Talladega is derived from a Muscogee (Creek) Native American word Tvlvteke, from the Creek tålwa, meaning "town", and åtigi, or "border" -- "Border Town"—a town indicating its location on the boundary between the lands of the Creek tribe and those of the Cherokee and Chickasaw.[1] |
Tallahatchie County | Mississippi | Choctaw name meaning "rock of waters". |
Tallapoosa County | Alabama | Name of Creek origin. |
Tama County | Iowa | Named for Taimah, a leader of the Meskwaki Indians. |
Taney County | Missouri | Named in honor of Roger Brooke Taney, fifth Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. |
Tangipahoa Parish | Louisiana | Tangipahoa comes from an Acolapissa word meaning "ear of corn" or "those who gather corn." |
Taos County | New Mexico | "Place of red willows" in the Taos language. |
Tarrant County | Texas | Named in honor of General Edward H. Tarrant.[2] |
Tate County | Mississippi | Named for Thomas Simpson Tate, one of the first prominent settlers of the area. |
Tattnall County | Georgia | Named for Josiah Tattnall Sr., U.S. Senator and 25th Governor of Georgia. |
Taylor County | Florida | Named for Zachary Taylor, twelfth President of the United States of America. |
Taylor County | Georgia | |
Taylor County | Iowa | |
Taylor County | Kentucky | |
Taylor County | Texas | Named for Edward Taylor, George Taylor, and James Taylor, three brothers who died at the Battle of the Alamo. |
Taylor County | West Virginia | Named for Sen. John Taylor of Caroline. |
Taylor County | Wisconsin | Probably named for William Robert Taylor, 12th Governor of Wisconsin |
Tazewell County | Illinois | Named in honor of Littleton Waller Tazewell, U.S. Senator and Governor of Virginia, and/or Littleton's father, prominent Virginia politician Henry Tazewell. |
Tazewell County | Virginia | Named after Henry Tazewell, a United States Senator from Virginia as well as a state legislator and judge. |
Tehama County | California | Named after Tehama, California; possibly from Spanish tejamanil ("shingle"), or a Native word for "high water." |
Telfair County | Georgia | Named for Edward Telfair, sixteenth governor of Georgia and member of the Continental Congress. |
Teller County | Colorado | Named for Henry M. Teller, a U.S. Senator and the 15th United States Secretary of the Interior. |
Tensas Parish | Louisiana | Derived from the Taensa people. |
Terrebonne Parish | Louisiana | French for "good land" or "good earth". |
Terrell County | Georgia | Named for U.S. Representative William Terrell. |
Terrell County | Texas | Named for Texas state senator Alexander W. Terrell. |
Terry County | Texas | Named for Benjamin Franklin Terry, a colonel in the Confederate Army. |
Teton County | Idaho | Named after the Teton Mountains.[3] |
Teton County | Montana | Named for the Teton River (Montana) |
Teton County | Wyoming | Named for the Teton Range |
Texas County | Missouri | Named after the Republic of Texas. |
Texas County | Oklahoma | So named because it was wholly included within the limits of the Texas Cession of 1850, whereby the ownership of the area was passed from the State of Texas to the United States Government. |
Thayer County | Nebraska | Named after the General and Governor John Milton Thayer.[4] |
Thomas County | Georgia | Named for Jett Thomas, officer in the War of 1812; also known for overseeing the construction of the first building at the University of Georgia as well as the state capitol at Milledgeville. |
Thomas County | Kansas | Named for George Henry Thomas, Union General in the American Civil War. |
Thomas County | Nebraska | Named after General George H. Thomas.[5] |
Throckmorton County | Texas | Named for William Throckmorton, an early Collin County settler. |
Thurston County | Nebraska | Named after U.S. Senator John M. Thurston.[6] |
Thurston County | Washington | Named after Samuel R. Thurston, the Oregon Territory's first delegate to Congress. |
Tift County | Georgia | Named for Nelson Tift, founder of the city of Albany and United States Representative. |
Tillamook County | Oregon | Named for the Tillamook, a Native American tribe. |
Tillman County | Oklahoma | Benjamin Tillman, U.S. Senator and 84th Governor of South Carolina |
Tioga County | New York | Derived from an American Indian word meaning "at the forks", describing a meeting place. |
Tioga County | Pennsylvania | Named for the Tioga River. |
Tippah County | Mississippi | The name "Tippah" is a Chickasaw word meaning "cut off", and is taken from the creek of the same name that flows across much of the original county from northeast to southwest before emptying into the Tallahatchie River. The creek probably was so named because it, and the ridges on either side, "cut off" the western part of the region from the eastern portion. |
Tippecanoe County | Indiana | Named for the Tippecanoe River and the Battle of Tippecanoe. |
Tipton County | Indiana | Tipton is named for John Tipton, a soldier of the Battle of Tippecanoe. |
Tipton County | Tennessee | Named for Jacob Tipton, who was killed by Native Americans in a conflict over the Northwest Territory. |
Tishomingo County | Mississippi | Tishomingo (1734–1838), a Chickasaw chieftain |
Titus County | Texas | Named for Andrew Jackson Titus, an early settler. |
Todd County | Kentucky | Named after John Todd, an early frontier military figure.[7] |
Todd County | Minnesota | Named after John Blair Smith Todd, delegate from Dakota Territory to the United States House of Representatives and General in the Union Army during the American Civil War. |
Todd County | South Dakota | |
Tolland County | Connecticut | Named for the town of Tolland, Connecticut, which itself is named after Tolland, Somerset. |
Tom Green County | Texas | Named for Thomas Green, a Confederate brigadier general. |
Tompkins County | New York | Named in honor of Daniel D. Tompkins, Governor of New York and Vice President of the United States of America. |
Tooele County | Utah | It is thought that the name derives from a Native American chief, but controversy exists about whether such chief lived. Alternate explanations hypothesize that the name comes from "tu-wanda", the Goshute word for "bear", or from "tule", a Spanish word of Aztec origins meaning "bulrush" (Schoenoplectus). |
Toole County | Montana | Named for Joseph Toole, Montana's first governor. |
Toombs County | Georgia | Named for Robert Toombs, United States representative and senator. |
Torrance County | New Mexico | Named for Francis J. Torrance, a promoter of the New Mexico Central Railroad. |
Towner County | North Dakota | Named after Oscar M. Towner, a member of the United States House of Representatives. |
Towns County | Georgia | Named for lawyer, legislator, and politician George W. Towns. |
Traill County | North Dakota | Named after Walter John Strickland Traill, an employee of the Hudson's Bay Company and son of Canadian pioneer Catharine Parr Traill.[8] |
Transylvania County | North Carolina | Derived from the Transylvania Company and has Latin origins: trans ("across") and silva or sylva ("woods"). |
Traverse County | Minnesota | Named for Lake Traverse |
Travis County | Texas | Named in honor of William Barret Travis, commander of the Republic of Texas forces at the Battle of the Alamo. |
Treasure County | Montana | From the state nickname of Montana, the "Treasure State", so called because of its gold and silver mines. |
Trego County | Kansas | Named for Edgar Poe Trego of the 8th Kansas Volunteer Infantry Regiment, killed at the 1863 Battle of Chickamauga.[9] |
Trempealeau County | Wisconsin | French fur traders were the first Europeans to enter this land. At the mouth of the Trempealeau River, which flows from northeast to southwest across the county on its way to the Mississippi River, they found a bluff surrounded by water and called it "La Montagne qui trempe à l'eau", which means "mountain with its foot in the water." The name was later shortened.[10] |
Treutlen County | Georgia | Named for John A. Treutlen, Georgia's first state governor following adoption of the state Constitution of 1777. |
Trigg County | Kentucky | Named for Stephen Trigg, a frontier officer in the American Revolutionary War who died in the Battle of Blue Licks. |
Trimble County | Kentucky | Named for Robert Trimble, attorney, judge, and justice of the United States Supreme Court. |
Trinity County | California | Named after the Trinity River, which was named in 1845 by Major Pierson B. Reading, who was under the mistaken impression that the river emptied into Trinidad Bay. Trinity is the English translation of Trinidad. |
Trinity County | Texas | Named after the Trinity River (Texas). |
Tripp County | South Dakota | Named for Bartlett Tripp. |
Troup County | Georgia | Named for George Troup, thirty-fourth governor of Georgia, U.S. representative, and senator. |
Trousdale County | Tennessee | Named for William Trousdale, Creek and Mexican–American War soldier and officer, state senator and Governor of Tennessee. |
Trumbull County | Ohio | Named for Jonathan Trumbull, Governor of Connecticut, who once owned the land in the region. |
Tualatai County | American Samoa | Tuālā, v. to put a canoe before the wind; n. the back of a sail.[11][12] The ‘tai’ suffix designates this county as being the Tuālā county on the side towards the sea, whereas Tuālā-uta is the Tuālā county on the side towards the land or inland. |
Tucker County | West Virginia | Named after Henry St. George Tucker, Sr., a judge and Congressman from Williamsburg, Virginia.[13] |
Tulare County | California | Named for Tulare Lake. |
Tulsa County | Oklahoma | Named for Tulsa, Oklahoma, which takes its name from the Creek Tallasi, "old town." |
Tunica County | Mississippi | Named for the Tunica Native Americans. |
Tuolumne County | California |
The name Tuolumne is of Native American origin and has been given different meanings, such as Many Stone Houses, The Land of Mountain Lions and, Straight Up Steep, the latter an interpretation of William Fuller, a native Chief. Mariano Vallejo, in his report to the first California State Legislature, said that the word is "a corruption of the Miwok word talmalamne which signifies 'cluster of stone wigwams.'" The name may mean "people who dwell in stone houses", i.e., in caves. |
Turner County | Georgia | Named for Henry Gray Turner, U.S. representative and Georgia state Supreme Court justice. |
Turner County | South Dakota | Named for John W. Turner. |
Tuscaloosa County | Alabama | Named in honor of the pre-Choctaw chief Tuskaloosa. |
Tuscarawas County | Ohio | The name is a Delaware word variously translated as "old town" or "open mouth". |
Tuscola County | Michigan | Neologism created by Henry Schoolcraft. |
Twiggs County | Georgia | Named for American Revolutionary War general John Twiggs. |
Twin Falls County | Idaho | The county is named for a split waterfall on the Snake River of the same name. The Snake River is the county's northern boundary. |
Tyler County | Texas | Named for John Tyler, the tenth President of the United States. |
Tyler County | West Virginia | Named after John Tyler, Sr., father of President John Tyler. |
Tyrrell County | North Carolina | Named for Sir John Tyrrell, one of the Lords Proprietors of Carolina. |
U
County name | State | Origin |
---|---|---|
Uinta County | Wyoming | Named for the Uinta(h), a Native American tribe associated with the Ute people. |
Uintah County | Utah | |
Ulster County | New York | Named for the Irish province of Ulster, which was an earldom of the Duke of York at the time of naming. |
Umatilla County | Oregon | Named for the Umatilla River. |
Unicoi County | Tennessee | Name is a Native American word for the southern Appalachian Mountains, probably meaning white or fog-draped. |
Union County | Arkansas | Named in recognition of the 1829 citizens' petition for a new county, stating that they were petitioning "in the spirit of Union and Unity". |
Union County | Florida | Named to honor the concept of unity. |
Union County | Georgia | The Union Party, a political group that supported removing Native Americans from the area and opening it to white settlers, is the probable inspiration for the county's name. |
Union County | Illinois | Named for a joint revival meeting of the Baptists and Dunkards, called a "union meeting". |
Union County | Indiana | So named because it is the product of a union of parts of Fayette, Franklin and Wayne counties, as united into one county in 1821. |
Union County | Iowa | Named in honour of the Union which the people wished to preserve at the time of founding (1853). |
Union County | Kentucky | Named for the unanimous decision of the residents to unite together and create a new county. |
Union County | Mississippi | This county was formed as a union of pieces of several other counties. |
Union County | New Jersey | In reference to the Federal Union of the United States. |
Union County | New Mexico | The county is named "Union" because the citizens, in 1893/94, were united in their desire for the creation of a new county out of three existing New Mexico counties. |
Union County | North Carolina | Its name was a compromise between Whigs, who wanted to name the new county for Henry Clay, and Democrats, who wanted to name it for Andrew Jackson. |
Union County | Ohio | The name is reflective of the county's origins, being the union of pieces of Franklin, Delaware, Madison, and Logan Counties.[14] |
Union County | Oregon | The name, which is taken from the city of Union within the county's borders, references the Union states, or Northern States, of the American Civil War.[15] |
Union County | Pennsylvania | The name is an allusion to the Federal Union. |
Union County | South Carolina | Received its name from the old Union Church near Monarch Mill. |
Union County | South Dakota | Originally named Cole County, the named was changed to Union because of Civil War sentiment. |
Union County | Tennessee | Named either for its creation from parts of five counties or to memorialize East Tennessee's support for preservation of the Union in the years before the Civil War. |
Union Parish | Louisiana | Reportedly took its name from a statement made by Daniel Webster: "liberty and union, now and forever, one and inseparable". |
Upshur County | Texas | Named for Abel P. Upshur, who was U.S. Secretary of State during President John Tyler's administration. |
Upshur County | West Virginia | |
Upson County | Georgia | Named in honor of noted Georgia lawyer Stephen Upson. |
Upton County | Texas | Named for brothers John C. and William F. Upton, both Colonels in the Confederate army. |
Utah County | Utah | Named for the Spanish name (Yuta) for the Ute Indians. |
Uvalde County | Texas | Named for Juan de Ugalde, the Spanish governor of Coahuila. |
V
W
Y
County name | State | Origin |
---|---|---|
Yadkin County | North Carolina | Named for the Yadkin River which is derived from Yattken, or Yattkin, a Siouan Indian. The meaning of the word is unknown but it may mean "big tree" or "place of big trees" in Siouan language. |
Yakima County | Washington | Named after the Yakama tribe of Native Americans. |
Yakutat City and Borough | Alaska | From the Tlingit name Yaakwdáat, meaning "the place where canoes rest", although it may originally derive from an Eyak name which has been lost. |
Yalobusha County | Mississippi | Yalobusha is a Native American word meaning "tadpole place". |
Yamhill County | Oregon | Origin of name uncertain, but probably from an explorer's name for a local Native American tribe, the Yamhill, who are part of the North Kalapuyan family. |
Yancey County | North Carolina | Named in honor of Bartlett Yancey, U.S. Congressman (1813–1817) and speaker of the N.C. Senate (1817–1827). |
Yankton County | South Dakota | Named for the Yankton tribe of Nakota (Sioux) Native Americans. |
Yates County | New York | Yates County is named in honor of Joseph C. Yates, seventh governor of New York (1823–1824). |
Yavapai County | Arizona | Named after the Yavapai people, who were the main inhabitants of the area at the time of annexation by the United States. |
Yazoo County | Mississippi | Named for the Yazoo River. |
Yell County | Arkansas | Named after Archibald Yell, the state's first member of the United States House of Representatives and the second governor of Arkansas; he later fell in combat at the Battle of Buena Vista during the Mexican–American War. |
Yellow Medicine County | Minnesota | The name is based on an Indian name for the bitter root of the Moonseed plant, which they used for medicinal purposes. |
Yellowstone County | Montana | Named for the Yellowstone River which roughly bisects the county from southwest to northeast.[24] |
Yoakum County | Texas | Named for Henderson King Yoakum, a Texas historian. |
Yolo County | California | Yolo is a Native American name variously believed to be a corruption of a tribal name Yo-loy meaning "a place abounding in rushes" or of the name of the chief Yodo or of the village of Yodoi. |
York County | Maine | In 1664, what had been the Province of Maine was given a grant by Charles II of England to James, Duke of York. Under the terms of this patent the territory was incorporated into Cornwall County, part of the Province of New York. The patent to James for this territory was renewed in 1674 and survives in York County. |
York County | Nebraska | Either named after the city of York in England or for York County in Pennsylvania.[25] |
York County | Pennsylvania | Named either for the Duke of York, an early patron of the Penn family, or for the city and shire of York in England. |
York County | South Carolina | Named for Yorkshire, England. |
York County | Virginia | Named for the city of York in Northern England. |
Young County | Texas | The county is named for William Cocke Young, an early Texas settler and soldier.[26] |
Yuba County | California | Named after the Yuba River for the Native American village Yubu, Yupu or Juba near the confluence of the Yuba and Feather rivers, or for the quantities of wild grapes (uvas silvestres in Spanish) growing on its banks. |
Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area | Alaska | The Yukon River and one of its major tributaries, the Koyukuk River, whose respective drainages comprise the vast majority of the census area's land mass. |
Yuma County | Arizona | Named for the Quechan (Yuma) indigenous people. |
Yuma County | Colorado | Yuma County is named for the town of Yuma, Colorado, which itself was supposedly named for a Quechan railroad worker (or a man named "Yuma") who died near the town while building a line for the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad. |
Z
County name | State | Origin |
---|---|---|
Zapata County | Texas | Named after Colonel Jose Antonio de Zapata, a rancher who rebelled against Mexico in 1839.[27] |
Zavala County | Texas | Named after Lorenzo de Zavala, Mexican politician and signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence.[28] |
Ziebach County | South Dakota | Named after local leader Frank M. Ziebach. |
References
- Jack Martin and Margaret McKane Mauldin, A Dictionary of Creek/Muskogee (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2000), s.vv. "Tvlvtēke", "Talladega."
- http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hct01
- Idaho.gov - Teton County Archived 2009-08-15 at the Wayback Machine accessed 2010-05-24
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2010-03-19.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Accessed 2010-05-24.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2010-03-19.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Accessed 2010-05-24.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2010-03-15.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Accessed 2010-05-24.
- "North Dakota government county history page". Archived from the original on 2015-02-02. Retrieved 2010-05-24.
- http://www.ksgenweb.org/trego/Captain-Trego.htm
- Elkins, Winston (1985). Trempealeau and the Mississippi River Dam. Trempealeau County, Wisconsin: Trempealeau County Historical Society, p.1
- Tregear, E. (1891). The Maori-Polynesian Comparative Dictionary. Netherlands: Lyon and Blair.
- Pratt, G. (1862). Samoan Dictionary: English and Samoan, and Samoan and English, with a Short Grammar of the Samoan Dialect. American Samoa: London Missionary Society's Press.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-02-20. Retrieved 2010-03-19.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) West Virginia Division of Culture and History – Tucker County History web page, accessed 2010-05-24
- "Union County data". Ohio State University Extension Data Center. Archived from the original on October 29, 2007. Retrieved 2007-04-28.
- Deumling, Dietrich (May 1972). The roles of the railroad in the development of the Grande Ronde Valley (masters thesis). Flagstaff, Arizona: Northern Arizona University. OCLC 4383986.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2010-03-19.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Retrieved on March 14, 2008.
- "Van Wert County data". Ohio State University Extension Data Center. Archived from the original on December 3, 2007. Retrieved 2007-04-28.
- History of Van Zandt County (Van Zandt County History Book Committee. Dallas, Texas: 1984)
- Donehoo, George (1995). "French Creek". Indian Villages and Place Names in Pennsylvania. Gateway Press. Retrieved 24 Jan 2007.
- "Vilas County History". Archived from the original on 2012-11-07. Retrieved 2010-03-19.
- "Vinton County data". Ohio State University Extension Data Center. Archived from the original on October 27, 2007. Retrieved 2007-04-28.
- "History of Washoe County" (PDF). Wilbur D. May Center.
- "About Winneshiek County". Winneshiek County. Retrieved 2020-08-22.
- "Montana Digital Atlas – Montana Natural Resources Information System". Montana State Library, State of Montana. Archived from the original on 2007-07-15. Retrieved 2007-09-27.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-08-19. Retrieved 2010-03-19.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Retrieved on March 15, 2008.
- "Young, William Cocke". The Handbook of Texas Online. The Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 2009-05-27.
- "Handbook of Texas Online: Zapata County". University of Texas at Austin. Retrieved 2007-10-17.
- "Handbook of Texas Online: Zavala County". University of Texas at Austin. Retrieved 2007-10-17.
See also
- Lists of U.S. county name etymologies for links to the remainder of the list.
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