Moderators: jcmanson, Sly Fox, BuryYourDuke
Sly Fox wrote:From a national reputation, Cincinnati has branded themselves the Queen City for over a century and has that reputation. Most folks outside the Carolinas aren't familiar with the designation for Charlotte. But both do refer to themselves in that matter.I lived in Maine for 4 years, and Bangor, Maine was called the Queen city....i think its common or something...
SuperJon wrote: I love dc Talk.
The town was originally called King's Cabin. Charles and Francis King lived in a cabin owned by Francis's father for a short time in the 1830s. Being Quakers the King family moved to the free North. According to television journalist and historian Chad Tucker's book Images of America, King (2006), after the King family left their home it was used by locals as a landmark or reference point in giving directions. Several decades later when a post office was established in 1888 it was named for that reference point, King's Cabin. The railroad laid tracks a few years later and shortened the name to King in its business transactions and to eliminate confusion the post office followed on September 26, 1894. Charles and Francis King never returned to Stokes County and never knew their former home became the namesake of a town. According to Tucker, the community grew into an unincorporated town of churches, a school and businesses. With the first automobile arriving by train in October 1911, new highways followed. With new roads, the town's proximity to Winston-Salem, and a new four lane highway 52 built in the 1960s, King opened its doors to growth, turning farmland into subdivisions. Community groups acted as an unofficial town council, providing services such as a fire department, water and sewer. On September 13, 1983, King became an incorporated town, 95 years after the King's Cabin post office opened.
Libertine wrote:According to Wikipedia, the following locations all bill themselves as "the Queen City":Anybody that has been to Buffalo, NY will vouch...Buffalo is no representation of a "Queen City"Interestingly, no localities bill themselves as "the King City" (aside from the few towns that are actually named King City, of course).
- Allentown, Pennsylvania
Bangor, Maine
Buffalo, New York
Burlington, Vermont
Charlotte, North Carolina
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cumberland, Maryland
Helena, Montana
Manchester, New Hampshire
Marion, Indiana
Seattle, Washington
Spearfish, South Dakota
Springfield, Missouri
Staunton, Virginia
Clarksville, Tennessee
He's at a murder scene where the victim had been shot in the "groin" and another cop is there munching on a dog with ketchup on it.
HenryGale wrote:neither does Bangor, Maine...like I said earlier...plus I don't think they have good hot dogs...which is really what this thread is about until somehow it got taken here, hahaLibertine wrote:According to Wikipedia, the following locations all bill themselves as "the Queen City":Anybody that has been to Buffalo, NY will vouch...Buffalo is no representation of a "Queen City"Interestingly, no localities bill themselves as "the King City" (aside from the few towns that are actually named King City, of course).
- Allentown, Pennsylvania
Bangor, Maine
Buffalo, New York
Burlington, Vermont
Charlotte, North Carolina
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cumberland, Maryland
Helena, Montana
Manchester, New Hampshire
Marion, Indiana
Seattle, Washington
Spearfish, South Dakota
Springfield, Missouri
Staunton, Virginia
Clarksville, Tennessee
Here is a side note...I have been to 8 of these cities...
HenryGale wrote:Anybody that has been to Buffalo, NY will vouch...Buffalo is no representation of a "Queen City"Boy are you not kidding. I could not get out of that place fast enough. Blech.
The one thing that makes my stomach turn is ketchup on a hot dog.What he said.
The poor guy didn’t make it very long. :)