Ohio History Journal

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A CLASSIFICATION OF OHIO PLACE-NAMES

A CLASSIFICATION OF OHIO PLACE-NAMES

 

by WILLIAM COYLE

Associate Professor of English, Wittenberg College

For the academic mind classification is an occupational disease.

But sifting data into logical categories is a harmless, though

pedestrian, form of mental exercitation, which may possess a certain

value in suggesting new approaches to the data or in providing a

framework for systematic examination and discussion. Although the

full story behind each Ohio place-name has disappeared with the

generation that chose it, enough information exists to suggest

schematic differentiation.

An initial difficulty in the classification process is finding a

fundamentum divisionis, a basis for division, which groups all

names with a minimum of overlapping. Function, often a useful

standard, has no value here; for all names have one ultimate func-

tion-identification. Although interesting, etymological origin lacks

significance, because most Ohio place-names are derived from

terms which have a long linguistic history intervening between

their origin and their use in Ohio. Chronological classification has

no real efficacy, for most Ohio localities were named within a rela-

tively brief period. The methods of selection, ranging from the toss

of a coin to the fiat of a postal official, likewise lack consistent

relevance.

Although it has certain limitations, there remains a basis for

division which embraces yet differentiates Ohio place-names. Names

are bestowed by human beings, and in any human activity one

can expect to find diversified motives. The reasons underlying the

choice of most place-names have deep roots in human nature.

Despite meager and contradictory information, Ohio names seem,

on the basis of the probable motivation prompting their selection,

to fall into four broad classes:

I. COMMEMORATIVE: individuals, groups, places

II. ASSOCIATIVE: nostalgic, exotic, Biblical

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