Mike

Twelve Mile Circle highlighted Mundane First Name Places in the previous article. However, I left out the most prolific mundane name I’d discovered to date. That one, I really wanted to feature it in its own stand-alone spotlight. It didn’t make sense to combine it with all of the others because of its sheer popularity and abundance.

Simply, I called him Mike.


Meet Mike

Mike, Hungary via Google Street View (December 2011)
Mike, Hungary via Google Street View

I didn’t know Mike existed in Hungary although clearly it was there in the form of a village in the southwestern corner of the nation (map). It hid in relative obscurity although I found a website that offered quite a comprehensive history of Mike — such as it was — since Mike didn’t have much in the way of historical significance in the larger scheme of things. Still, I appreciated the author’s efforts. Someone cared enough to chronicle Mike’s twists-and-turns throughout the centuries at a level of detail befitting a much larger town.

“The settlement is situated in the south of Somogy County, in the north-west of Zselic region, between Kadarkut and Lábod. It is 18 km from the nearest town, Nagyatád. There is no railway, our railway station is Kutas… The first written notes are from 1213, the settlement is mentioned as Mica.”

Neither Mike nor Mica translated into anything meaningful from Hungarian into English so the mystery remained. I wish we could flip the name and then we’d have Hungary Mike. 12MC would have had a lot of fun with that one, perhaps a close cousin to Hungry Jack.


Tin Can Mike

Speaking of Mike in an unexpected location, I found Tin Can Mike Lake in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness of northern Minnesota (map). Hundreds of lakes dotted this remote corner of the border between the United States and Canada. I guess early explorers started running out of normal-sounding names. They must have resorted to, well, things like Tin Can Mike Lake. Apparently they called it the more mundane Murphy Lake previously. Then they decided to change it somewhere along the way.

Tin Can Mike seemed to have been a real person. I found a forum dedicated to those who appreciated this canoe area wilderness. There they enjoyed sharing various tips and experiences of their journeys among themselves. One thread explained, “Tin Can Mike was named after Mike Murphy (thus the former name of Murphy Lake). Apparently Mike Murphy always carried and used a cup made from a tin can and got the nickname Tin Can Mike’” In the Land of 10,000 Lakes it took only a tin can to justify the name of a body of water.

The Wilderness Area also included a Hungry Jack Lake by strange coincidence (“putatively named for Anderson Jackson Scott, a surveyor’s assistant who at this lake was temporarily without food supplies“), although it lacked a Hungry Mike.


Ivy Mike

"Ivy Mike" atmospheric nuclear test - November 1952. Photo by The Official CTBTO Photostream; (CC BY 2.0)
The “Ivy Mike” atmospheric nuclear test – November 1952

Ivy Mike wasn’t a place although it connected to a particular patch of geography, specifically Enewetak Atoll in the Ralik Chain of the Marshall Islands (map). The U.S. government conducted more than forty atmospheric nuclear tests at the atoll between 1948 and 1958. Some were more remarkable than others, including Ivy Mike. This marked the first detonation of a hydrogen bomb. It became a frightening escalation in nuclear weapons technology during the height of the Cold War.

The group that posted the Ivy Mike photo was an interesting lot. The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO) didn’t technically exist. Rather, the current version was actually the Preparatory Commission for the CTBTO based in Vienna, Austria as will the actual CTBTO if it ever truly comes to pass.

The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty laid out precepts for a CTBTO. It would verify a test ban once 44 nations ratify the treaty. The parties signed the treaty in 1996 and it still remained inactive twenty years later, awaiting final ratification by a handful of holdout nations including the United States. Meanwhile the Preparatory Committee continued on its merry way. It is implementing an infrastructure to complete its future duties, assuming it ever has the authority to move forward.


MKE

Milwaukee Airport Security Sign. Photo by howderfamily.com; (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
Recombobulate at MKE

Not Mike, rather MKE, was the International Air Transport Association code for General Mitchell International Airport in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (map). I already knew that from the many times I’d flown in and out of Milwaukee on visits to the in-laws over the last couple of decades. I still smile every time I pass through security and into the recombobulation area on the way to the passenger gates. That one appeared previously on 12MC in More Strange Signs, in 2009. So MKE didn’t technically fit the Mike theme although it had a special connection and I included it anyway.

It also referred more generically as a shorthand for the city of Milwaukee. As an example it appeared prominently in the website URL and logo of the Milwaukee Brewing Company. Other local businesses have used the abbreviation too.

Comments

4 responses to “Mike”

  1. Philip Newton Avatar
    Philip Newton

    That reminds me of a question I saw recently (I think it was on Quora but it might have been here): how many cities have nicknames derived from an IATA code for a local airport?

    You mention MKE; PDX is another such case and I believe LAX is as well.

    1. Rhodent Avatar
      Rhodent

      RDU gets used for the Raleigh-Durham area fairly often, although that’s a region and not a city. I can also think of one city that most definitely does not use the IATA: Richmond Virginia’s airport code is RCM, but the people I know who live there tend to refer to it as RVA instead.

      On a related note, I’ve noticed over the years that many people seem to regard the airport’s abbreviation as the official abbreviation for the city. For example, on a mailing list (remember those?) for minor league hockey I once abbreviated Columbus, Georgia as COL and was informed I was “wrong” and it should be CSG. This being in my younger, more sarcastic days, I responded by asking the person whether he felt the proper abbreviation for the Chicago Blackhawks was MDW or ORD.

    2. John Wood Avatar
      John Wood

      I am not sure if “OKC” was derived from the airport code or not. I’ve always just assumed it was used before then, but then again, OKC seems to make a lot more sense than many airport codes.

  2. Peter Avatar

    Ivy Mike made for an impressive fireball but was wholly useless as an actual weapon. It was far too heavy to be delivered by an aircraft or missile, weighing something like 75 tons, and had to be assembled on-site.

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