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Electric Park, Hancock, Michigan (7 June 1906 – c. 1933) – originally Anwebida ("Let us rest here" in Chippewa) [11] [12] [13] [page needed] Electric Park, Holland, Michigan, also known as Jenison Electric Park [14] [15] Electric Park, Houston, Texas [16] [page needed] Electric Park, Iola, Kansas (ca. 1901–1918), [17] also known as "Iola ...
Amsterdam, New Jersey; Arthur Kill [a]; Barnegat: Barnegat Bay, Barnegat Branch Trail, Barnegat Inlet, Barnegat Light, New Jersey, Barnegat Lighthouse State Park ...
Amsterdam Island, Spitsbergen; Amsterdam Island, Southern Indian Ocean; Bear Island, Norway; Bedloe's Island, now Liberty Island, New York-NJ, USA; Block Island ...
Alderman cites one early 1980s example of a white real estate developer in Chattanooga, Tenn., fearing that he wouldn’t be able to rent office space in a building on a street named after King ...
This is a list of US places named after non-US places. In the case of this list, place means any named location that's smaller than a county or equivalent : cities , towns , villages , hamlets, neighborhoods, municipalities , boroughs , townships , civil parishes, localities, census-designated places , and some districts.
The second Kansas City Electric Park, this time at 46th Street and the Paseo, opened 19 May 1907.Like the first one, it was a trolley park (this time served by the Troost Avenue, Woodland Avenue, and Rockhill lines of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company), [5] At the time, there were a number of unrelated amusement parks in the country named Electric Park, but the second Kansas City park ...
Burlington, 5 places in Kansas, Iowa, Michigan, Vermont, and Wisconsin – Burling family (This family owned the land upon which the city in Vermont was built. The other cities derive their name from the Vermont one). [91] [93] [94] Burnet, Texas – Governor David G. Burnet [91] Burnsville, Indiana – Brice Bruns (founder) [91]
It is near where Tasman first sighted Tasmania. The township of Zeehan, Tasmania near Mount Zeehan was established after the discovery of tin, lead and silver deposits in 1890. Geelvink Channel was named after a ship, but the ship was named after Joan Geelvinck; Vansittart Bay on the coast of Western Australia is a unique anomaly.