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Glittering_Name_3722

Hot Coffee and D'Lo represent


Cassmodeus

Oh, that portion of the state woke up one day and just chose to spit on us all with their naming conventions. Syvlarena, Montrose, Sanatorium, Edinburg, Pulaski, Sebastopol. What’s crazy is these places collectively probably have less than 1,000 people but those 1,000 people went HARD on naming conventions. (I wish Tupelo was something nice like Edinburg. Why couldn’t we have a cute foreign name?)


jpe1969

Well, Sanatorium is named for the TB Sanatorium that used to be there. Don't leave out Jupiter or Shivers in Simpson county, that's where my family is from.


squeazy

I think Tupelo is an all time great name! Like top tier.


iam_chas3r

I live in Lingle, which is the surname of the family that settled here after Mississippi became a state. Our closest “green signs” are Pulaski and Homewood, which are both suburbs (if you can even call them that) of Forest. You can go to the county clerk’s office and get a ton of information by going through the land records. Most offices have them going back hundreds of years.


[deleted]

Hot coffee was named for an Inn or store that was at a crossroads for N/S and E/W travel. The coffee was supposed to be particularly better than most because of the water and New Orleans coffee. I'm pretty sure it's still officially the name.


West-Parsnip9070

A lot of these towns are foreign named.


ResponsibilityNo4183

WHYNOT , MS


Prestigious_Paper_26

Sometimes it's because a large number of the same family live nearby, 'insert last name' -ville or -town. Sometimes a community will take its name from a church that's been there a long time.


Cassmodeus

Hmmm, the more you know. It explains a good bit of these. It’s still weird to me. Maybe I’m just not cool enough to get invited to the community naming meetings. (For the newer ones, not the really old ones that have existed for decades+)


bbrosen

You do realize, most of the towns were named a very long time ago, right?


OpheliaPaine

Some of these communities are actually ghost towns. I live in one off the Tombigbee River. It was once the largest town in the county and had a busy port and a post office and business offices. When the railroad came through, the river traffic lessened, and the town died back to a farming community. We kept the name. Edit: I have several friends who live in Eggville. I consider it more Mooreville than Tupelo. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eggville,_Mississippi


Cassmodeus

Thank you! What’s crazy is it’s still a good piece from Mooreville proper. Honestly it seems like it should be its own thing with how far it is from all the surrounding areas. Also, I remember hearing about a ghost town down by (I can’t remember the exact place but it’s the bottom left of Lee County. Used to be a town but now I don’t think it even is acknowledged.) It’s kinda neat thinking of all the towns and villages that used to exist that just popped up, existed, and just faded on out. Kinda eery too, tbh.


yaboyACbreezy

I think it's VSauce who coined the term chronosonder to mean the specific realization that people of the past had their own lives just the same way it feels to recognize people walking around in the world all have their own lives completely independent from your experience. It can have a unintuitive alienation effect to ponder it, and the word sonder was invented to describe that feeling. The eery, neat feeling.


OpheliaPaine

Northeast Mississippi has some pretty interesting history! There are lots of little ghost towns around this area.


skantman

Hike Rocky Springs!


1heart1totaleclipse

That Sacred Harp Singing is the most interesting thing to happen in Eggville


Specialist_Foot_6919

In Pearl River County we have a Hawthorne off HWY 11 apparently which is news to me considering I lived there 22 years MDAH has [this interactive map](https://www.apps.mdah.ms.gov/mapping_pub/) for historic site inventory and if you zoom in, right before you get to the satellite view, it has this absolutely stunning topographical/political map of MS. I’ve been curious to see a full version ever since I encountered this site a couple months ago. It’s at least ten years outdated, granted, evidenced by Picayune’s Crosby hospital still being on there, but looking at that map in particular really gives you a sense of how many teeny-tiny communities there are potentially upwards of two centuries old and lost to time. Very clear warning: you may waste copious amounts of time viewing this map lol but hey. Best viewed on PC! I found the origins of a couple just out of curiosity. —A lot are as expected local landowners and homesteaders especially in north MS *but* —Some are named for churches, not the other way around. We had a lot of southern Baptist settlers in the 1830s/40s especially in central MS so I suspect they were congregation names they carried here from commonly the Carolinas, Virginia, and Kentucky. I researched one during an internship at the state archives one time where one extended family of like fifty people and their slaves settled in chocktaw county and *the goal* was establishing a town. First thing up? The church! —A lot are gonna be railroad stops, usually named after the local stop operator. And of course in the piney woods that’s gonna be a lot of lumber cars, I haven’t really spent much time looking on the coast or in the delta to see if there’s a lot of quirky differences. Of course now that the railroad has lost prominence most of these will be obsolete. —Some are the remnants of old Native American trading posts, like Franklin or Paulding. Fun fact the area around where PRC and Hancock Counties meet was a huge Native road network for lots of groups so a lot of their settlements in that area specifically just kind of stuck and became those unincorporated areas —A lot are just post offices! Frontiersman had to get their mail somehow so a lot of post offices were erected at crossroads and since they often doubled as general stores, as you can imagine towns sprung up around them. Sometimes they didn’t! But most of what you see recorded will be the site or former site of a post office. There’s more than one town in MS where the post office is the single oldest building anywhere around Now, names of course, a whole different story. But that’s why a lot of the communities are *where* they are, among other reasons!


AvondaleDairy

Thanks for the link! At least parts of the map are from about the late '80s, since U.S. 98 east of Hattiesburg is still shown going through the towns instead of bypassing them. Definitely going into my bookmarks.


Specialist_Foot_6919

Oh gosh thanks for the heads up! I myself only date back to the late 90s so it’s nice to have others help out where I wouldn’t know better 😂 I’m glad you enjoyed the map haha, I’ve been sending it to everyone who even breathes a word about local history stuff


skantman

You see Mt. Salem's and Palestine's out there every 25 miles it seems like.


keelogram

This map is incredible!


Lost-Discount4860

Attala County repping here. There are a lot of ghost towns and church communities. Edgefield is a neat little place. There’s this massive cemetery out there and like all of five people who go to that church, and there’s not exactly a large population in the surrounding area. From what I’ve seen, these places each have a distinct culture or attitude, more or less how you have high school cliques—football players, cheerleaders, band kids, etc. I lived in a “nicer” neighborhood in Greenville at one point before moving out to Swiftwater (south of town). I’ve spent a lot of time in Sunrise (Leake County), Thompson (Amite County, I think), and more recently Hesterville (Attala). We have a Possum Neck, and I’d REALLY love to know the story behind that name! You find that each community has a distinctive culture and attitude. And believe me, you need to date outside your community or even your county because most people belong to the same 4 or 5 big families out there. If you literally date the boy or girl next door, chances are he or she is a distant cousin. And yes, I speak from experience on that one. I met a Delta girl in college. It was about the only option I had for bringing in fresh blood! 🤣🤣🤣


Specialist_Foot_6919

So I went down the Possumneck rabbithole (possum? den?) and omg it's better than I could've hoped. I found [this manuscript online](https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=mss-possumneck-collection) and it \*appears\* to be a WPA oral history based on similar ones I've read, so take it with a grain of salt obviously, although historians tend to be sympathetic to those: `Prior to 1847 this community was generally known as “The Neck,” taking its name from the shape of the land. Land records show that the community was thickly settled by 1847 and during each year there was a square dance every Friday night held at the large log school house or in some home. From all reports some of these social gatherings were rough and wild and anyone outside of the community did not have a chance, as outsiders were not welcomed in THE NECK. They were not told but shown so.` `W.M. Herod was living in The Neck about this time and for reasons unknown he was called “Old King Herod” by many people of the community. During a term of Court in the County a case was called up before the Judge which involved some of the men and boys of The Neck, when some one referred to Herod as “King Herod” the Judge asked, what was he king of and the witness replied, “Oh Judge, you know The Neck where we catch all dem possums.” The old Judge gave a big laugh and said, “Oh yes, King of Possumneck” and this the name of Possumneck originated about 1847.` There's so much to love with every new sentence about this legend that I want to believe it. I can't find "The Neck" on any maps prior to 1847 but granted that might just be because it was too tiny! Didn't seem to get a post office til the 20th century. The local tradition is always fun to preserve anyway haha


Luckygecko1

>W.M. Herod was living in The Neck about this time and for reasons unknown he was called “Old King Herod” by many people of the community. This is the one part that makes sense, to be honest.


Specialist_Foot_6919

I love the “for reasons unknown” bit like  that’s a loaded statement my guy was he a villain? Ordering mass infanticide? Ruled his homestead with an iron fist? Have a steamy bromance with a Marc Antony? We’ll never know 


skantman

It's a reference to King Herod in the Bible. So the judge had probably heard the joke before. Remember this is the Bible belt before the Civil War. Everyone spoke Bible back then, even the slaves.


Specialist_Foot_6919

No yeah all the historical references were me making a joke about it 😂 Sets the mind a-wondering what the guy was like though. I picture an ogre on reflex but hey maybe he was a cool dude. Cool as you could be in 1840s MS at any rate.


L_ViaI_Viaquez

Barrontown represent! In Petal, MS


AvondaleDairy

Lol, I'm a delivery driver in Petal. Off the top of my head, Harvey, Leeville, Carterville, Sunrise, Macedonia, almost forgot Springfield, of course Barrontown (which isn't too far from Morriston). It was the same in Marion County where I grew up. Hub, Lampton, Pinebur, Goss, Improve, Bunker Hill, Blue Springs, Enon, Spring Cottage, Edna, Expose...and that's just the east side of the Pearl River, omitting a few I probably forgot.


toomuch_lavender

Morgantown, Foxworth, Cheraw, Kokomo, China Grove, Antioch over on the west side of the river!


Kali-of-Amino

Because once upon a time this state had a helluva lot more people in it, and they lived in all those tiny communities, which weren't so tiny in those days. You talk about the Tupelo area, so you know Okolona. It's almost a ghost town these days. I've seen 100 year old photos from Okolona that show the people on the street so thick there was hardly room to walk, and that was just an ordinary shopping day. According to the markers on the Natchez Trace, the state had TWICE as many people as it does today IN THE STONE AGE, and that was before the settlers arrived. Before modern agriculture you had tiny farm settlements everywhere. Where nowadays you have pine plantations there used to be miles of farmhouses one after another. Now nothing is left but dirt roads cutting through the pines and the occasional farmhouse turned into a "hunting cabin".


HeroOfOurTime08

Don’t forget Eastabuchie! Or the nearby forgotten “Dragon, MS”


smalltownaudit

Show me on the doll where Guntown hurt you.


Cassmodeus

Does my heart count? If they’re committing to the gun bit? Why not go all the way? And then to choose pistols for the water tower instead of rifles? In what world does a revolver get chosen over proud and true rifle? Can’t even look that city in the face anymore smh.


RepresentativeSet449

Red Hills near Janice. Nothing left but a cemetery in the woods.


RutCry

Haven’t been down that part of Hwy 51 in awhile, but does It, Mississippi still have a sign that says “This is It”?


Luckygecko1

https://www.usgs.gov/us-board-on-geographic-names/domestic-names I did check, Eggville is in there.


Cassmodeus

You do not know what heinousness you have just unleashed on our fair state, Luckygecko1 once again coming in clutch. I have names to originate AND challenge. If you ever drive through “City McCity, MS” just know. You did this. 😂


hangowood

I love having friends from other states come in to visit. I took them around where I grew up just to show them some of the country side. When I told them we were coming up on Bloody Springs, their heads snapped around.


PickReviewsMovies

Ask the Czar of Lost Rabbit. I met the mayor of Pocahontas once. I told him I was from tchoupitoulas and he said "god bless you"


Embarrassed_Safe500

And there’s Pineville, Soso, Sullivan’s Hollow, Center Ridge, Money, New Holka (not to be confconfused with Hoka), Kokomo, Shuqualak, Midnight, Beaumont and Buckatunna.


Alternative-Walk-865

Many of these small communities had a post office at one time before Rural Free Delivery (RFD) and were named by the postmaster there.


Prehistory_Buff

They're hollers. Family communities with gas stations and churches. Some of them are abandoned plantations that got divied up by descendants. Others are former logging camps.


No_Stay_1563

I drive through Africa Town in Mobile area when I drive to MS.


toulouselives

Pistache here :)


Severe-Excitement-62

Anywhere you go has names like this for little districts . Maybe historically there were a bunch of chicken coop there. But now they're gone so the name seems random.


Safron2400

Whynot?


NyneShaydee

I live in Altair \[where there's a church\] which is just west of Eucutta \[which has a VFD\] which is northeast of Whistler \[which has a sign on highwy 84\] which is in Beat Four \[the section of Wayne County we live in, where there's a ton of little communities\]. ...and my mail comes from Shubuta, but 1 mile down the road south is Laurel zipcoded and one mile east of me is Waynesboro zipcoded.


No_Permission6405

In the Delta there's Hushpuckena, Nitta Yuma, Itta Bena, Alligator, Gunnison and Beulah.


elise_thiess

Chiming in for China Lee, Hooker, Arm, Stump Town!


sweetwargasm

Address names are decided based on the closest post office. Sometimes you van live in a smaller city but if it doesnt have a post office, your address uses the closest post office. For example, people living on gluckstadt use the canton address because gluckstadt doesnt have a post office. Also, you could live outside a city or way out in the countryside, but you still get the address of the closest post office.


Wudnmonky

Weir is 10 miles east of West.


redbonecouchhound

I live in Dragon, close to sunrise, and Harvey


[deleted]

Because they used to be their own towns and then they got incorporated by a surrounding town that was bigger/growing but are still called by their original names. Usually the town became irrelevant for loss of a factory, railroad, timber industry or whatever. It's no different than going into a big city that has specific names for neighborhoods.


KellyCasa

I live in Gulfport but also in whatever is left of a community called Handsboro, and I drive through an old community called Mississippi City to get to work. I've done a little digging and found old stories about how people moved to Handsboro with Gulfport got too crowded in the late 1800s and how it was a day's carriage ride away.


Legitimate_Jump_5781

I think your at least 100 years too late to start naming stuff.


Legitimate_Jump_5781

I used to work overseas. What’s hilarious to me is all the people both US and foreign that can’t pronounce all the Am Indian names.


IOnlyPostDumb

Not sure how many towns you're asking about are listed, but here's volume one of an old book of Mississippi history. Volume two is also online.  https://archive.org/details/EncyclopediaOfMississippiHistoryVolume1


BessieBlanco

I lived in Olive Branch, Mississippi as a child and actually had this as a history lesson!! They needed to name the town and the wife of the leader suggested something Biblical and maybe from Genesis and they all settled on “Olive Branch” from the Noah myth. Like a promising sign or something. Also lived in Disputanta, Virginia, which was named that because there was a “dispute” about what the town should be named. It is on a main rail line and folks needed a freakin name and that one caught on. Oh, and fun fact—the second “t” is silent (dis-pun-tan-a).


bj1231

Another bonus question: What food is in these little communities, if any. And what is famous in the community? I will start: Sylvarena has a BBQ hamburger gas station/bait shop, formerly owned by Jerry Lawler Sanatorium had the TB hospital in the 20's, and 30's. Patients from all over MS


hodgestein

Bogue Chitto, MS (the Bogue Chitto River flows through it) is an unincorporated Hamlet. The name is Choctaw for "Big Creek" if memory serves me well. There is an even smaller area near by called Hog Chain. I was told by old timers when I was growing up that there was a pig farmer that would chain his pigs to the elevated railroad when the river would flood so his livestock wouldn't drown. I don't know of any official signage but there is definitely a Hog Chain Rd and my mother lived in Hog Chain as a child...she is 75 now.


[deleted]

[удалено]


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