Full Name Counties

Almost exactly a year ago, 12MC published Jeff Davis, a treatise on the use of the Confederate leader’s full name as a geographic identifier at the county level of government. Davis County wasn’t a good enough name for some of those deeply-Southern states. No, it had to be Jeff Davis or the more formal Jefferson Davis. That made sure everyone clearly understood the defiant reference. I intended to list other full-name (first name + surname) county combinations later and then it slipped my mind. Months passed and that brings us to today.

Let’s begin with basic ground rules and caveats. I searched for first and last names only. I’m sure Pocahontas (Iowa, West Virginia) the great Powhatan Indian chiefs’ daughter had only that one single name. Technically that might qualify as a “full name county” too. However in my own defense I also discounted royalty (sorry Prince William) and religion (ditto St. Louis) so hopefully I won’t be criticized too harshly as unduly Eurocentric.

I’ll highlight some of my favorites and list the rest.


Wade Hampton

Wade Hampton III - Brady-Handy. Mathew Brady, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Wade Hampton served as a cavalry officer in the Confederate Army. Later he later as the governor of South Carolina and a United States Senator. So that would seem like an unlikely choice to inspire the name of a remote, frozen corner of western Alaska on the Bering Sea (map). Fewer than 10,000 people live in Wade Hampton today. Its principal town, Hooper Bay (or Naparyarmiut in Yup’ik), barely registered as more than a small cluster of homes.

What did a South Carolina soldier and politician have to do with Alaska? Absolutely nothing, well, except for one tiny tenuous thread. His daughter Mary Singleton Hampton married John Randolph Tucker, a well-connected politician, and a real Virginia gentleman who descended from one of the Commonwealths most established families. President Woodrow Wilson, another Virginia native, appointed Tucker to the bench of Alaska Territory’s United States Court Division 2 in 1913.

“After arriving in Nome some of his first few official acts dealt with the large St. Michael mining district south of Nome. He divided the district in half. The new recording precinct was named for his wife’s father, Wade Hampton… Judge Tucker served exactly four years on the bench at Nome but his father-in-law’s name has lasted to present day…”

More properly the place is known as the Wade Hampton Census Area of Alaska’s Unorganized Borough so some might scoff at including it on the list. I liked the story so it remained.

UPDATE: This became the Kusilvak Census Area in July 2015.


Jim Hogg

Ima Hogg. Photo by Kent Wang; (CC BY-SA 2.0)

The Texas State Historical Association’s Handbook of Texas included a lengthy article on Jim Hogg County “in the Rio Grande Plain region of South Texas.” (map) as well as an extensive biography of the man himself. James Stephen Hogg became the first governor of Texas who was actually born in Texas.

Jim Hogg is probably better know for what he did to his daughter. He named her Ima, as in Ima Hogg (“I’m a Hog” for those in the 12MC audience for whom English is a foreign language). Essentially he bestowed upon his daughter a name that declared that she was a pig. Sources differed as to whether he fully realized the implications at the time or not. The handbook said,

“According to family history, Ima was named for the heroine of a Civil War poem written by her uncle Thomas Elisha. Her name became a part of Texas folklore, along with the myth of a fictitious sister supposedly named Ura. Ima Hogg was affectionately known as Miss Ima for most of her long life. She was eight years old when her father was elected governor…”

Her unusual name certainly never hampered her success. Ima Hogg became a philanthropist, a patron of the arts, a master gardener and a force for historic preservation in Texas and beyond. Many referred to her as “The First Lady of Texas.”


Ben Hill

Benny Hill. Ricardo Liberato, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Wouldn’t it be hilarious if Ben Hill County (map) in Georgia was named for Benny Hill? Sadly, it wasn’t. This Ben Hill was Benjamin Harvey Hill, a 19th Century politician who “actively opposed disunion until the secession ordinance” and then served in the Confederate Congress. After the war he served in the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate. I’m beginning to detect a pattern with all of these old Confederates and their full name counties.

I don’t have anything more to add except that — thanks to the Benny Hill reference — I have Yakety Sax stuck in my head.


And the Rest

  • Anne Arundel County, Maryland (map): Anne Arundell (with two l’s unlike the county named for her) was wife of Lord Baltimore, founder of the Maryland colony. She was also the only woman I found on the Full Name Counties list. (source)
  • Charles Mix County, South Dakota (map): Probably named for a Commissioner of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (source)
  • Deaf Smith County, Texas (map): Erastus “Deaf” Smith was a hero of the Texas Revolution. (source)
  • Jim Wells County, Texas (map): James Babbage Wells, Jr., was a judge in south Texas and a Democratic party boss (source)
  • Jo Daviess County, Illinois (map): All of the counties named for Joseph Hamilton Daveiss spell his name incorrectly; only one included both his first and last name though. He commanded the Indiana Dragoons at the Battle of Tippecanoe, where he died. People who died in battle often got more counties named for them than those who survived (unless they subsequently went on to become President or something, like Jackson and Grant). (source)
  • Kit Carson County, Colorado (map): Christopher “Kit” Carson was a mountain man who gained renown as a guide for the Fremont expeditions and later as a frontier soldier; his highly fictionalized exploits were mainstays of numerous 19th Century dime novels. (source)
  • Roger Mills County, Oklahoma (map): Roger Quarles Mills was another one of the former Confederate officers that later served in the US House of Representatives and Senate. (source)
  • Tom Green County, Texas (map): 12MC already featured this place in an earlier article.

I can’t guarantee I found every example although this list should be pretty close. I examined the full set of US counties manually, and that’s 3,142 at the moment I think, so I could have missed one or two.


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One response to “Full Name Counties”

  1. The Basement Geographer Avatar

    Going through Canada, all of its full-name counties are in Quebec (Glen McPherson, Saskatchewan is named for a valley and not a guy named Glen, apparently):

    Antoine-Labelle, Quebec (map): Nicknamed ‘King of the North’, François-Xavier-Antoine Labelle was a priest who used both his position and his 335-pound bulk to campaign against Quebecois emigration to New England in favour of colonising and developing the northern frontier of the province in the 19th century.
    La-Jacques-Cartier, Quebec (map): Named for the river west of Quebec City that is in turn named for the explorer that claimed the area for France in 1534.
    Maria-Chapdelaine, Quebec (map): Named for the titular protagonist of a 1913 novel about a convent girl growing up in northern Quebec. The book has been adapted for film three separate times over the past century.
    Pierre-De Saurel, Quebec (map): Pierre De Saurel was a 17th century military captain who was an early landowner and military leader in the then-New France.
    Robert-Cliche, Quebec (map): Robert Cliche was the former leader of the provincial New Democratic Party and a prominent lawyer and judge.

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