In the Land of Pleasant Living: Names in Virginia's Northern Neck

Abstract Virginia's Northern Neck, also known as the “Land of Pleasant Living,” has many historic places and names dating from the first decade of the 1600s. The earliest names were recorded in 1608 by Captain John Smith from an Algonquian dialect of the local Native Americans. Major watercours...

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Main Author: Mary Rita Miller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2000-12-01
Series:Names
Online Access:http://ans-names.pitt.edu/ans/article/view/1596
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author Mary Rita Miller
author_facet Mary Rita Miller
author_sort Mary Rita Miller
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description Abstract Virginia's Northern Neck, also known as the “Land of Pleasant Living,” has many historic places and names dating from the first decade of the 1600s. The earliest names were recorded in 1608 by Captain John Smith from an Algonquian dialect of the local Native Americans. Major watercourses and tracts of land in the Northern Neck still retain forms of these names. After 1652 there was intensive settlement from the Jamestown area of southern Virginia and the British Isles. These English-speaking people bestowed their own familiar names on places, tracts of land, and houses, providing a name cover with a very distinctive British flavor. The history of naming in the Neck, though not unlike other areas of the eastern seaboard, has its own characteristic patina of names’ that reflect the sequence of occupation, economy, and attitudes of people to the land.
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spelling doaj.art-b6d1d245349f485a818a72fa613553fe2022-12-22T02:08:54ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghNames0027-77381756-22792000-12-0148310.1179/nam.2000.48.3-4.169In the Land of Pleasant Living: Names in Virginia's Northern NeckMary Rita MillerAbstract Virginia's Northern Neck, also known as the “Land of Pleasant Living,” has many historic places and names dating from the first decade of the 1600s. The earliest names were recorded in 1608 by Captain John Smith from an Algonquian dialect of the local Native Americans. Major watercourses and tracts of land in the Northern Neck still retain forms of these names. After 1652 there was intensive settlement from the Jamestown area of southern Virginia and the British Isles. These English-speaking people bestowed their own familiar names on places, tracts of land, and houses, providing a name cover with a very distinctive British flavor. The history of naming in the Neck, though not unlike other areas of the eastern seaboard, has its own characteristic patina of names’ that reflect the sequence of occupation, economy, and attitudes of people to the land. http://ans-names.pitt.edu/ans/article/view/1596
spellingShingle Mary Rita Miller
In the Land of Pleasant Living: Names in Virginia's Northern Neck
Names
title In the Land of Pleasant Living: Names in Virginia's Northern Neck
title_full In the Land of Pleasant Living: Names in Virginia's Northern Neck
title_fullStr In the Land of Pleasant Living: Names in Virginia's Northern Neck
title_full_unstemmed In the Land of Pleasant Living: Names in Virginia's Northern Neck
title_short In the Land of Pleasant Living: Names in Virginia's Northern Neck
title_sort in the land of pleasant living names in virginia s northern neck
url http://ans-names.pitt.edu/ans/article/view/1596
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