Where’s Waldo?

I selected US Route 23 through Ohio as we drove back from Michigan. This would have been a long detour in normal circumstances. However I wanted to count a few new counties so I cut through a quiet slice of the state instead. So hours passed, boredom hovered nearby and I invented little non sequiturs to pass the time.


Lame Dad Joke

Where's Waldo? Photo by Barbara Friedman; (CC BY-NC 2.0)
There’s Waldo

Lame Dad Jokes became routine. I’m a trained master of Dad Jokes, the worse the better. Each new attempt drew eye rolls from the back seat and only encouraged me more. Then I found Waldo (map). I rarely spot Waldo in those puzzle pictures. My brain didn’t work that way. Even so I clearly noticed a large sign pointing to a highway exit for Waldo, the township in Marion County, Ohio. A repeated string of “Where’s Waldo? — There’s Waldo” left my lips as I pointed to the sign to the kids’ complete indifference. Barely 300 people lived in Waldo although that made little difference. I only needed that large green side along a lonely highway as entertainment for the next fifteen minutes.

According to The History of Marion County, Ohio (1883), “Waldo was laid out in 1831, by Milo D. Pettibone, and named after his son Waldo.” I felt sorry for a family with a Milo and a Waldo. I supposed if someone named me Milo I’d call my kid Waldo out of spite.


Waldo, Maine

Fort Knox, Maine. Photo by howderfamily.com; (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
Fort Knox; Waldo County, Maine

The search for more Waldos began in earnest once I returned. I didn’t realize I’d already captured one, a big one, in Maine (map). Waldo County got its name from the colonial-era Waldo Patent, a land grant to an aristocratic military officer, Samuel Waldo.

I traveled extensively through Maine several years ago. One of our day-trips brought me to Fort Knox — not the one with the gold — a different one, in Waldo County. This Fort Knox perched high above the Penobscot River, protecting inland towns during the War of 1812. It sat adjacent to the very modern Penobscot Narrows Bridge and Observatory. The views from the observatory deserved a detour if you’re ever in the area.


Waldo, Florida

Waldo Flea Market. Photo by jamieca; (CC BY-NC 2.0)
Waldo Flea Market

On the other hand, I’d probably try to avoid Waldo, Florida (map) although the situation improved recently. The Waldo police created quite a moneymaking operation at the height of their speed trap, one of the worst in the nation. CBS News reported that “Waldo’s seven police officers wrote nearly 12,000 speeding tickets [in 2013], collecting more than $400,000 in fines – a third of the town’s revenue.” They also ran afoul of the law because they practiced a ticket quota system specifically prohibited by the State of Florida. As a result, Waldo disbanded its police force in 2014.

I’m still not sure I’d trust driving through there.


Waldo, Oregon

Some Waldos hid better than others. Oregon’s Waldo (map) disappeared by the 1930’s and quickly became a ghost town. It began with promise, even serving as the county’s seat of government during its heyday in the latter half of the 19th Century. Waldo depended on mining and the mines eventually played-out. So everyone left.

Nothing remained except for a couple of cemeteries and an historical marker. The town started with a different name, Sailor’s Diggings, for the people who flocked there after the discovery of gold. They changed it to Waldo because of the most significant event in its brief history. The frontier hadn’t been mapped precisely. Nobody knew exactly where the border fell and residents assumed they lived in California. William Waldo, the Whig candidate for California governor thought so too. He came to Sailor’s Diggings to campaign in 1853.

Town officials with a sense of humor learned of the mistake and chose to honor Waldo, the man who courted California votes in Oregon.


Waldo Ballivián

The Waldo game could be played internationally too. A tiny sliver of Bolivia called Waldo Ballivián Municipality (map) existed in the Pacajes Province of the La Paz Department. Maybe a couple of thousand people lived there.

I found a YouTube video featuring Waldo Ballivián. People danced, they packaged Quinoa and other Andean grains, they also talked a lot into a microphone. I couldn’t speak Spanish although they looked excited about something. Upon further digging and after liberal use of Google Translate it seemed they’d just received a new packaging machine. This would be quite useful in Waldo Ballivián, one of the poorest corners of the nation.


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4 responses to “Where’s Waldo?”

  1. Fritz Keppler Avatar
    Fritz Keppler

    Indirectly, the town of Valdese, NC derives from a Waldo. It was a settlement of Waldensians, pre-Reformation Protestants from Italy.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valdese,_North_Carolina

  2. Joe Avatar
    Joe

    There used to be a Waldo, Missouri, but it was folded into Kansas City and lives today simply as a neighborhood.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waldo,_Kansas_City

  3. Glenn Avatar
    Glenn

    There’s a large area of south Kansas City called Waldo.

  4. The Basement Geographer Avatar

    In southeastern British Columbia, now underneath the waters of Lake Koocanusa, lies the site of town of Waldo, which was demolished in 1972 to make way for the massive reservoir as part of the Columbia River Treaty.

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