Stupid Question ™
April 11, 2005
By John Ruch
© 2005
Q: What are the
origins of the names of all the U.S. states?
—Johannsen,
from the Internet
A: The most
common origin is terms from the Native Americans the states displaced,
typically of dubious translation, and filtered through English, French, Spanish
or even Russian.
Where a
credible translation is known, it often refers either to a local tribe or a
major waterway or region. (Many of the following states were definitely named
based on the Native American-derived name for a river or lake.) Possible
tribe-derived names include: Alabama,
Arkansas, North/South Dakota, Illinois,
Kansas, Massachusetts,
Missouri, Texas
and Utah.
Possible
waterway/region-derived names include: Alaska,
Arizona, Connecticut,
Kentucky, Michigan,
Minnesota, Mississippi,
Nebraska, Ohio,
Oregon and Wisconsin.
Tennessee
is known to be of Native American origin, but its meaning is a mystery. Some
sources propose it came from the name of a town.
Hawaii
is a native Polynesian name of unknown origin, possibly referring to its
original discoverer or a legendary Polynesian motherland.
Iowa
comes with varying guesses, either as a possible place name, or an insulting
term for a tribe known as the “sleepy ones.”
Wyoming
is an oddball in the bunch. It’s named for the Wyoming
Valley in Pennsylvania,
which in turn was derived from an Algoquin/Delaware
term meaning something like “large plains,” which in turn may be an English
invention made by mashing Native American words together.
Naming
states for people is also popular. Georgia
was named for England’s
King George II.
Maryland
was dedicated to Queen Henrietta Maria, the wife of England’s
King Charles I. Ol’ Chuck himself was memorialized
with North/South Carolina, the feminized (as place names
always are) adjectival version of his name in Latin.
Virginia
(and by extension, West Virginia)
was named for England’s
Queen Elizabeth I, known as the “Virgin Queen.” Louisiana
comes from the French La Louisianne, their name for
the whole Mississippi Valley,
which was a French colony under the eponymous King Louis XIV.
Among
lesser royalty, Delaware was
named for the bay and river, which in turn were named for Thomas West, Baron
(Lord) De La Warr, who was a governor at Virginia’s
Jamestown colony. New
York was a tribute to James Stuart, the Duke of York
and Albany. York,
of course, is a district of England.
George
Washington, who refused to become royalty at all, gave his name to Washington
State. Pennsylvania,
a Latinized form of “Penn’s woodland,” is named in theory for state founder
William Penn’s father, conveniently also named William.
Foreign
(though not foreign during the original colonial period) or modern Latin
descriptive phrases are responsible for several names. Colorado
(Spanish for “reddish”) originally referred to the Colorado River.
Florida is Spanish for “filled
with flowers”; it can also refer to “Feast of Flowers,” or Easter, and the
state’s land was reputed spotted by Ponce de le Leon on Easter Sunday.
Montana
is modern Latin for “mountainous area.” Nevada,
which means “snow-covered” in Spanish, originally referred to the Sierra
Nevada mountains, not the desert
interior. Vermont is a flipped-around corruption of the French “Les Monts Verts,” or “Green
Mountains”—also the name of the state’s major mountain chain.
New
Mexico’s origin is pretty obvious, as are the
English-dubbed New Hampshire and New
Jersey.
Rhode
Island’s name is a mystery that could be a foreign
phrase or a borrowed place name. Some argue it means “red
island,” from the Dutch “roodt,” while others
propose it was named in honor of the Greek island and seaport of Rhodes.
A few state
names were deliberately invented. Indiana
is modern Latin for “land of the Indians.” Idaho
is fake Native American and doesn’t mean anything as far as anyone can tell.
Oklahoma
comes from the Choctaw words for “red” and “people.” But it’s not a Choctaw
term. Instead, it was invented by European-Americans as a term for the area in
which they planned to dump all the Native Americans they drove out of other
places.
California
is an invented term of fantastical, quasi-mythical origins. It’s the name of an
island populated by gold-clad Amazons, ruled by a Queen Calafia, in a 1510
Spanish romance. Taken seriously by many explorers, it gave its name to the
modern state, which indeed was depicted as an island on early maps of the
Pacific coast.
The only
name of utterly mysterious origin is the rather plain Maine.
Some speculate it referred to the mainland of New England
(a la the “Spanish Main”). Others suggest an inspiration
in the French province of Maine,
though no clear link has been established.
SQ
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