Triangle

With a name like Triangle, I expected some actual triangles. I pondered that possibility as I sat on Interstate 95 during heavy weekend traffic, returning from an overnight trip to Richmond. I found plenty of time to consider that notion too as I traveled through Triangle on the interminably slow route on a notoriously congested highway.

National Museum of the Marine Corps. Photo by howderfamily.com; (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
National Museum of the Marine Corps

In truth, I already knew about Triangle although I never thought about its name before. It stood just beyond the gates of Marine Corps Base Quantico. The Marines built a wonderful museum bordering Triangle that I visited a couple of years ago. I guessed Triangle must have been roughly triangular. That seemed to be the case when I checked later (map). No online source confirmed it definitively, though. The source of this triangle remained a mystery.


Research Triangle Park, North Carolina

That didn’t keep me from finding other triangles. A famous one sat just one state farther south at Research Triangle Park in North Carolina. The triangle in question referenced three local cities anchored by three major universities: Raleigh (North Carolina State University), Durham (Duke University) and Chapel Hill (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill). The state government, local governments, the universities and private interests banded together in the 1950’s to create a research-friendly area managed by a non-profit organization. Their foresight worked spectacularly.

“Today, we share our home with more than 200 companies and over 50,000 people with expertise in fields such as micro-electronics, telecommunications, biotechnology, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and environmental sciences. Industries invest more than $296 million in R&D at the region’s universities each year – double the average R&D investment for innovation clusters elsewhere in the nation.”

Identifying triangles only got more difficult from there.


Junction Triangle, Ontario, Canada

Junction Triangle map. Image by SimonP, CC BY-SA 3.0; via Wikimedia Commons
Junction Triangle map

Canada offered a recent example with Junction Triangle. It didn’t have much of a name nor much of a presence during most of its history, an isolated parcel on the western side of Toronto. Industry clustered there, and then so did immigrants that worked in the factories through much of the 20th Century. They came from places like Italy and Poland, and later from Portugal. The Portuguese came in such great abundance that soon they dominated the area.

Factories declined precipitously and so did the neighbourhood as the century came to an end. However, conditions changed once again in recent years as young professionals began to covet its inexpensive, conveniently-located housing. The neighbourhood needed a fancy new name to match its changing fortune. A contest in 2010 resulted in hundreds of suggestions. The name Junction Triangle (map) won after officials tallied the votes.

Why Junction Triangle? Railroads hemmed the neighbourhood in on three well-defined sides. They formed a fairly decent approximation of a triangle.


Triangle, Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe. Photo by Ulrika; (CC BY-ND 2.0)
Sugarcane Train

Teasing out the triangle in Triangle, Zimbabwe took a great deal more effort (map). Nothing of roughly triangular shape could be discerned anywhere on the nearby landscape. The town existed solely to service a collocated sugar refinery operated by an agricultural conglomerate, Tongaat Hulett Sugar. It processed up to sixty thousand tonnes of white sugar per year along with related products such as molasses and fuel-grade alcohol. Sugar cane was grown there since the 1930’s on a large property called the Triangle Plantation. Logically, the name of the town derived from the name of the plantation.

I discovered the source of the plantation’s name from Murray MacDougall and the Story of Triangle. Murray MacDougall was a fixture in the area and was primarily responsible for developing the sugar industry there.

“They named the property Triangle after the registered cattle brand which Mac purchased from a fellow farmer named Van Niekerk, as the poor chap was going out of business and had a very simple brand which almost defied alteration in a period when rustling and brand-changing was not uncommon. For a few pounds Mac purchased both the registered brand itself, in the shape of a simple triangle, and the branding irons to go with it.”

MacDougall followed a number of agricultural pursuits including ranching before striking success with sugar. He used the name of the brand that he purchased for his property and retained the name as his enterprise grew.

Comments

3 responses to “Triangle”

  1. Splen Avatar
    Splen

    Downtown Pittsburgh is referred to as ‘The Golden Triangle’, with the Monongahela and Allegheny Rivers as two sides, I-579 the other.

    More obscurely, the name was lent to Pittsburgh’s team in the World Team Tennis league in 1974 – The Pittsburgh Triangles

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pittsburgh_Triangles

  2. Glenn Avatar
    Glenn

    There’s the infamous Grandview Triangle in Kansas City, MO, where five large highways meet in a snarl once considered the worst interchange in Missouri. It’s been “fixed” in recent years and officially renamed “3-Trails Crossing Memorial Highway”, but it’s still called the Triangle locally, and is still heavily congested.

  3. Aaron of Minneapolis Avatar
    Aaron of Minneapolis

    Eden Prairie, Minnesota, has its own Golden Triangle — a mostly commercial/industrial area bordered by US 169, US 212, and I-494 — though it’s probably shaped more like a mutant sock than a triangle. https://goo.gl/maps/QEptFXD8x7T2

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