May 30 2008
How to Name a Town: First, Find a Barn…
Hey, Brillig here. Please welcome today’s guest-blogger, a brand new friend of mine, MommyTime of Mommy’s Martini!
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* * * * * A little Preamble…
I’d like to thank the lovely and talented Brillig for letting me guest post. I am honored, and I look forward to all the new (to me) voices I’ll be reading here in the next month. What a fun way to meet new writers and readers.
For those of you who don’t know me: I write daily on Mommy’s Martini about things that fascinate me and things that make me laugh. I have two children (Son, age 4, and Daughter, age 2). I am lucky enough to be a professor, which allows me to have the kids in daycare only three days a week. It’s a balancing act I don’t always manage gracefully, trying to get in the rest of the hours for my fulltime job on nights and weekends, keeping everyone in clean socks, and coming up with fun family projects. The blog is my personal time out, a virtual martini for those moments when I need break. My theory is that one should always seize the moment for what is really important: creativity and writing as an outlet, or jumping in puddles with the kids for a laugh, or snuggling quietly with a little one sleeping on my shoulder…all of it is more important than vacuuming. The dirt will always be there tomorrow.
* * * * * And now, on to today’s scheduled post…
I live in a Michigan town that was once generally known as “Podunk.” I kid you not. The government website for my town records this fact on its History page, as an introduction to information about the official naming of the town. What the government website does not say is that the 1827 meeting to choose a name took place in the barn of one of the town’s founding citizens, a fact which to me seems poignant and important. These were pioneers, literally, who were looking to establish the legitimacy of their little hamlet. They had no township buildings, no civic location in which to meet, and so they chose the most logical of places: large, roofed in, dry, and associated with the gumption of the very first settlers, the Tibbits’ barn served as their town center. It does not seem a stretch to conclude that the impetus for that meeting was the desire to resist Podunk becoming the recorded name on maps and government documents.
At this meeting, I have also learned, there was much discussion in favor of the name Peking, in honor of the general interest in all things from China. There is, in fact, a town in Michigan called Canton, presumably for the same reason — a reason which, in the 1820s, also inspired the Prince Regent (later King George IV) of England to decorate Brighton Pavilion (his seaside palace) with a crazily “Asian” room in which he placed everything that seemed like it was probably Chinese or Japanese, or whatever, he wasn’t picky, including fantastical wallpaper painted with giant stands of flowering bamboo. I’ve seen it. The pink-and-ivory orchid-like flowers are enormous and lush. Bamboo doesn’t actually flower at all, let alone flower like a Hawaiian orchid, but verisimilitude was not the strong suit of our 1820s forefathers. What they wanted was the fantasy of Chinoiserie. And so, in the case of my town, they — stout settler stock that they were — contemplated the name Peking.
For reasons that are unclear, despite its popularity, Peking was abandoned as the town’s official name in favor of LeRoy. Honestly, I could not make this stuff up if I tried. With a perceptive forward-thinking apparently far beyond that of the eager settlers, the Governor of the Michigan Territory (it was not yet a State), chose to approve instead the second choice name that the settlers put forth. It was a name I am sure they felt was no where near as romantic and lilting as LeRoy. At least, I assume they felt that about LeRoy. To me, that name is practically synonymous with “junk yard dog,” but presumably in this pre-rock-and-roll era, it sounded exotic. Or something. Anyway, thanks to Governor Cass’s eminently sensible judgment, I live in a town with a perfectly ordinary name, one that the Puritan settlers of New England happily bestowed upon many towns — a name like Portsmouth, or Salem, or Haverford.
I’m sure at this remove of time, it would not matter if I lived in Peking, Michigan instead. It would not be any different than living in Versailles, Vermont (pronounced VER-sails, with a nice hard “r” in there). Which is to say, I would still be a Michigander, and the name of the town would have no particular resonance, no specific connotations, except to occasion a wondering query, “What were they thinking?”
But I do wonder, now that I know this history, what life would have been like for those early settlers if Peking had carried the day. Would they have felt more worldly? Held themselves a little straighter when they announced with pride the name of their town? Felt secretly pleased that they had taken the public step of labeling their town as different from those already-old towns of New England? Would they have felt particularly modern to live in a town called Peking in the Territory of Michigan? Even though they would never travel to China themselves, would probably never meet a Chinese person, quite possibly never even speak to a soul who had been to China, would they have felt proud that they were doing their part to enter into the increasingly global economy, to participate in becoming world citizens, by naming their town after one halfway around the world?
A part of me thinks they would have. And admires them for it. In 1827, still ten years away from becoming the 26th state, Michigan was wilderness and farmland. Settlers worked long hours carving farms out of the fertile soil. Tibbits is credited with bringing the first pony to the area. Say what you will about the problematic dynamics between settlers and Native Americans (what you say will be true); life in such a place was certainly not easy for the new settlers.
Perhaps the fantasy of China, the dream of the exotic, glimmered in those settlers’ minds for a while on that February night in 1827. Perhaps they, with their work-worn hands and woolen clothes, stomped their thick boots to keep warm as they discussed the choice of a town name and quietly hoped to grasp what little they could of the reported glories of travel.
In the end, they chose a name less explicitly foreign (LeRoy) and, as one might argue is endemic of Midwestern farmers, offered up a second choice that was incredibly safe. The Governor, of course, preferred the latter. But like the questioning speaker in Robert Frost’s “The Road Less Traveled,” I wonder what would have happened in the formative years of my town if boldness had prevailed. And I am pleased to be reminded again that however much we twenty-first century citizens see ourselves as responsible for the phenomenon of the “global village,” that shrinkage was already beginning nearly 200 years ago through the hard work and gleams of vision that filled the lives of people like those who lived in a place that was nearly named Peking, Michigan.






“Perhaps the fantasy of China, the dream of the exotic, glimmered in those settlers’ minds for a while on that February night in 1827. Perhaps they, with their work-worn hands and woolen clothes, stomped their thick boots to keep warm as they discussed the choice of a town name and quietly hoped to grasp what little they could of the reported glories of travel.”
Fantastic imagery! Seriously, I could picture a small group of settlers huddled close in a barn while hashing out names for their town. Wonderful description and interesting perspective!
I have a hankering to see that funky Asian-looking room now.
Great post! It immediately made me start thinking what on EARTH the settlers of my state were thinking when they actually named a city Levan. (Emphasis on VAN.) The rumor is that the city is roughly in the middle of the state–the navel–and Levan is “navel” spelled backwards. Funny story, but did the pioneers really have that kind of sense of humor? Or did they just name the place after some guy in their group?
To me, that name is practically synonymous with “junk yard dog,”
Ok first I have to say that this line almost made me choke because I laughed so hard.
This post was really very interesting. It wasn’t something I had given much thought to, but made me reflect on where my hometown got it’s name.
We Canadians are a bit more boring and predictable…we tended to name towns in honour of dead generals and prime ministers..lol.
Thanks for the insight…great post!!!
That’s so not fair that you get to be from the town Podunk. I live in Iowa and grew up outside of any town and I’m proud to claim “Podunk” as my home’town’. I vote that you get to be from LeRoy because then people will almost take you seriously. hehe
Obviously, I followed you over here from your place… Thanks for pointing me to another blog to read (like I need more).
well, i just love you and your writing. i’m so glad that i got to ‘meet’ you!
Hilarious history — proof that truth is stranger than fiction.
How they went from Peking to LeRoy (Bad, bad LeRoy Town)…
the dots just don’t connect.
I liked your musings on the sense of self-respect tied to a placename: “Would they have felt more worldly? Held themselves a little straighter when they announced with pride the name of their town? Felt secretly pleased that they had taken the public step of labeling their town as different…”
I wonder what it would feel like to have to write a really embarrassing street name, for example, as your return address.
I’ve lived on both Princeton and Cambridge (avenue and street, respectively) but have visited streets like Elmer, or towns like Monkey’s Eyebrow, Ky or Boring, OR and thought, that can’t be good for one’s sense of pride.
Great writing.
I feel so….so….so CULTURED after reading that lovely post, MommyTime! And strangely enough, I feel like some Chinese food for dinner….hmmm….
That was an awesome post. I live in Pleasant Grove. Hmmm. Wonder where that came from? Tee hee hee.
Thanks, everyone, for the kind words so far. I really really appreciate your commenting on a post by a guest blogger. I’m looking forward to stopping by your bloggy homes this weekend and reading all of your words too. (Tonight I actually have a girls’ night out! So shockingly, I will not be embarking on my usual Friday night m.o., blogging the night away.)
Charette, you made me laugh aloud with “Bad, Bad, LeRoy Town” — which is, of course, the song I was thinking of — I only wish I’d been clever enough to think of that for the post!
Nicole, yes, I think lots of people have a legitimate claim to Podunk. I just never knew any town was ACTUALLY called that.
Canadianflake, isn’t it sad that “predictable” tends to win out in the end? It did here. But I kind of wish it hadn’t. I’d like to be able to say I live in Peking, MI.
Annette, it’s an excellent question about Levan, and I think that you should try reading your town’s government pages and see if any useful history pops up. You never know what you’ll find. I went looking for something completely unrelated when I stumbled across the little gem of a story about my town’s naming. And then, of course, geek that I am, I spent about two hours following one link to the next to learn all that I could and read about the pioneers here.
History is so fascinating.
Thanks, Lilacspecs, and drbolte, and Dedee for the compliments. I’m off to “meet” you all this weekend too.
not kidding…just sent the husband out for chinese food
born and bred in my own small town, i eat this stuff up. thanks for sharing!
This was a fascinating post for this former Indiana girl. Who literally grew up 5 miles from MI!
And guess what my grandfathers name is……..LeRoy! Kid you not! I think it is an old name that obviously used to be very popular if even towns were named that.
And as a former American History Teacher I love hearing stories about how things came to be!
Kudos to you for the knowledge, and the beyond clever way to tell the story!
I might be hooked Mommytime!!
Loved it!
Just wanted to pop in and let ya know I have the linky love up for this weekend’s SOS…incase any eager beavers come here looking. Come one come all with some great soapiness..lol.
I loved your assessment of LeRoy but then Charette with bad, bad LeRoy town… hahahahahahaha.
They might have thought that the “Le” made it sound French.
Now you’ve got me singing “Bad, bad LeRoy brown and craving chinese food also.
Fun post!
the junk yard dog think made me fall of my seat.i must say you have a great sense of humor which livens up this blog.looking forward to more such posts of yours.
Growing up around jun yards my whole life made me appreciate this one.
To me, that name is practically synonymous with “junk yard dog,”
Ok first I have to say that this line almost made me choke because I laughed so hard.
I completely agree.