US Cities That Changed Their Names, And The Surprising Reasons Why

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Over 500 Ranker voters have come together to rank this list of US Cities That Changed Their Names, And The Surprising Reasons Why
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Vote up the city names you had no idea used to be something else.

From the early inhabitants of the original 13 colonies, to the pioneers who moved West and South as America expanded, there was one common problem when it came to establishing new settlements: What would they name their city?

Some US cities and towns were named after a founder, a nearby geological feature, or a place the settlers had come from, but others had very unusual names.

And the city or town could end up being renamed, sometimes multiple times. Here are the stories about how some US cities got their original monikers, and the reason(s) why the name ended up being changed.


  • For hundreds of years, the land that would eventually be the site of Atlanta, GA, was occupied by Indigenous people known as the Creek. In 1821 the Creek people were forced to cede their land to the US government, and in the following year white settlers began to move into the area.

    These earliest settlers called the area Canebreak (or Canebrake), but in 1837 Col. Abbott Hall Brisbane, chief engineer of the Western and Atlantic (W&A) Railroad, named the settlement Terminus, because the site marked the end point of the railroad line. However, Terminus was never the settlement's official name; from 1837 to 1842 it was also Deanville and Thrasherville. Other suggested names included Lumpkin (after former Gov. Wilson Lumpkin, who was the president of the W&A Railroad) and Mitchell (after Samuel Mitchell, who had provided the land on which the terminus was established).

    On December 23, 1842, the town was formally incorporated as Marthasville, named for Lumpkin's daughter Martha Atalanta. A few years later, it was suggested that the name should be changed to one that was both a nod to Lumpkin's daughter as well as to the railroad that had established the young city as a transportation hub in the Southern United States. Which is how, on December 29, 1847, Marthasville was officially incorporated as the city of Atlanta.

    383 votes
  • At the conclusion of the Mexican-American War in 1848, Mexico ceded its northern territory to the United States. This land, which included the area that would eventually become Phoenix, AZ, became part of the New Mexico Territory, and all of its residents became US citizens.

    In 1863, the Arizona Territory was formed out of the western part of New Mexico Territory. Four years later, Civil War veteran Jack Swilling was living in the mining town of Wickenburg when he realized that the land in the Salt River Valley would make excellent land for farming if it only had a water source. He formed the Swilling Irrigation Canal Company, which began digging a canal. By 1868 a small settlement, named Swilling's Mill after its founder, had been built in the valley. 

    The settlement's name changed several times during the first few months of its existence, going from Swilling's Mill to Helling Mill to Mill City. Swilling, who'd been a Confederate soldier, wanted to name the settlement Stonewall, after Stonewall Jackson, while other residents suggested the name Salina. But neither of these suggestions took. Finally, a man named David Duppa suggested the settlement be named Phoenix, as it was built on the ruins of a civilization built by the Indigenous tribes that had previously lived in the valley.

    Phoenix was officially recognized on May 4, 1868, when the Yavapai County Board of Supervisors formed an election precinct there. An official townsite was selected in October 1870. The town was incorporated in 1881.

    409 votes
  • 3
    570 VOTES

    Hot Springs To Truth Or Consequences, NM

    Hot Springs To Truth Or Consequences, NM
    Photo: SportsGuy789 / Wikimedia Commons / CC-BY-SA 4.0

    “Truth or Consequences” was a long-running game show on both radio and television from the 1940s to the 1980s. When it was approaching its 10th anniversary, Ralph Edwards, the show's original host, asked staff to come up with an original way to celebrate this milestone. A suggestion was made to find an American town or city that would be willing to change its name to Truth or Consequences, then do the anniversary broadcast from that location.

    Several cities applied, but the winning application came from the small resort town of Hot Springs, NM. Originally called Palomas Hot Springs in 1882, the town was named for the area's many mineral hot springs thought to have healing powers. It was quickly shortened to just Hot Springs. 

    Tourism was the main industry, but by 1950 the Hot Springs Chamber of Commerce was looking for a way to separate the town from all the other areas named Hot Springs in the United States. So when the New Mexico State Tourist Bureau informed them that the game show was looking for a town to change its name to Truth or Consequences, they jumped at the idea. A special election was held on March 31, 1950, and the name change passed by a vote of 1,294 to 295. 

    Edwards and the show's crew flew into town, and on April 1, 1950, the game show did its 10th anniversary broadcast from the newly christened Truth or Consequences, NM. The event received a lot of publicity, although because the broadcast was on April Fools' Day, some believed the name change was a joke. 

    Edwards developed a real bond with the New Mexico town. Before his passing in 2005 he returned to Truth or Consequences almost every year for its annual Fiesta, often bringing other celebrities with him. And the town honored the game show host by making April 1 “Ralph Edwards Day.”

    570 votes
  • Throughout its history, Cincinnati, OH, has been given flattering nicknames such as “Little Paris,” “Athens of the West,” and “Queen City of the West." It was given this last moniker in the early 19th century, when it was the capital of the Northwest Territories and the largest inland port in America. 

    But it was given a less melodious name, Losantiville, when the settlement was built on land opposite the mouth of the Licking River. The name was derived by combining the first letter of the river's name; “os,” which is the Greek word for “mouth”; “anti,” which is Latin for “opposite”; and “ville,” which is French for “town.”

    According to one legend, Gen. Arthur St. Clair, the first governor of the Northwest Territories, was not happy with this name. He visited the settlement in 1790, and as soon as he stepped foot off the boat, allegedly exclaimed: 

    What an awful name, damn it. Call it Cincinnati!

    A less colorful version of how the settlement became Cincinnati says the city is named after a group of American Revolution officers called the Society of Cincinnati. These men, who were all civilian soldiers eager to return to their regular lives once the conflict ended, were named after a fifth century BCE Roman soldier named Lucius Quintius Cincinnatus, who is said to have turned down the chance to become dictator after saving Rome from tyranny, instead choosing to return to his life as a farmer.

    340 votes
  • Settler Titus Bronson arrived in southwest Michigan in June 1829, and in March 1831 recorded the first plot of land for the village of Bronson with the county's Register of Deeds office. But other settlers didn't like Bronson's beliefs; he was against alcohol, tobacco, gambling, and dancing. In March 1836 the town's name was successfully changed from Bronson to Kalamazoo, which led to Bronson leaving the area.

    There are conflicting stories about what Kalamazoo means. An atlas from 1823 identifies the river located on the eastern edge of the modern-day city as “Kikalemazo”; this is the first known mention of a word that is similar to Kalamazoo. The most widely accepted story concerning the name's origin is about a man named Fleet Foot, a member of the indigenous Potawatomi people. According to legend, he won his bride by running from the settlement to the river and back again before the water heating in a pot boiled away.

    This legend is the source of the following translations of Kalamazoo: “boiling pot,” “where the water boils in the pot,” “boiling water,” and "place where the water boils.” 

    Other possible meanings include “mirage,” “reflecting river," and “stones seen in the water from which reflection looks like otters.” Yet another possible meaning of Kalamazoo, “smothered,” comes from a legend about a Native American who was nearly slain in a forest fire.

    289 votes
  • Nicknamed “the Athens of America,” Annapolis, located on Chesapeake Bay, is the capital of Maryland as well as the home of the US Naval Academy. Puritan settlers came to the area in 1649, building its original community on the northern shore of the Severn River; this settlement was called Providence. 

    When the settlers later moved to the southern shore of the Severn River, the settlement they built there was known first as Town at Proctor's, then as Town at the Severn. In 1694 it was renamed Anne Arundel's Towne, after the late wife of Lord Baltimore. 

    That same year, Sir Francis Nicholson, the third royal governor of the colony of Maryland, moved the colony's capital from St. Mary's City to Anne Arundel's Towne, then renamed the settlement Annapolis after Princess Anne, the heir to the English crown. Princess Anne became queen in 1702, and in 1708 she issued a charter that made Annapolis a city.

    216 votes