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  2. Mar 10, 2006 · Burke County, whose eastern edge shares the border with South Carolina along the Savannah River, is one of Georgia’s eight original counties. When the colony was established in 1732, the area now known as Burke County was called the Halifax District.

  3. Burke County was originally a part of "Imperial Ward," but was cut off and became a domain by itself in 1909, being organized as Burke County on July 15th, 1910. Burke County contains over 700,000 acres of as fertile land as it is possible to find. The entire county is practically level, although there is a narrow range of hill land running ...

    • Sacramento County
    • Placer County
    • San Joaquin County
    • Stanislaus County
    • Sutter County
    • El Dorado County
    • Tuolumne County
    • Sonoma County
    • Nevada County
    • Yolo County

    According to the California State Association of Counties,the origin of the name comes from the Sacramento River, which was given by Gabriel Moraga, a Spanish expeditionary. The word Sacramento signifies “Sacrament” or “Lord’s Supper.” A Sacrament is a religious ceremony or ritual that is held to be a means of divine grace, according to Merriam-Web...

    Placer County was founded in 1851 and derived its name from numerous places where the method of extracted gold took place, according to the CSAC. The method of extracting gold is called placer mining. “‘Placer” is probably a contraction of the words plaza de oro (the place of gold) and in Spanish means, “A place near a river where gold is found,” t...

    The county was founded in 1850 and is one of California’s original 27 counties. Its name comes from the San Joaquin River, which was also named by Moraga after an expedition in the Central Valley in the early 1800s, according to the CSAC. The meaning of San Joaquin is Saint Joachim.

    The county was founded in 1854 and is named after the Stanislaus River, which was first discovered by Moraga in 1806, according to the CSAC. “The word Stanislaus is a corruption of Estanislao, the baptismal name of a mission-education renegade chief who led a band of Native Americans in a series of battles against Mexican troops,” the CSAC website ...

    The county was founded in 1850 and is one of California’s original 27 counties. Sutter County is named after John Sutter, who is known for establishing Sutter’s Fort and numerous California landmarks bearing his name. Sutter was a Swiss native who obtained a large land grant from the Mexican government. According to the CSAC, Sutter’s first settlem...

    The county was founded in 1850 and is one of California’s original 27 counties. According to the CSAC, a section of gold was discovered in the region where El Dorado County now stands. The name’s translation from Spanish to English means “the gilded one.” According to the CSAC, the name “appears at the beginning of the 16th century as that of a myt...

    The county was founded in 1850 and is one of the state’s original 27 counties. The name Tuolumne is of Native American origin and has been given different meanings such as Many Stones Houses, The Land of Mountain Lions and Straight Up Steep, according to the CSAC. The latter meaning was an interpretation of William Fuller, a native chief. According...

    The county was founded in 1850 and is one of California’s original 27 counties. According to the CSAC, the word Sonoma is a Chocuyen Native American name and is translated by some as “Valley of the Moon” and by others as “land or tribe of the Chief Nose.”

    The county was founded in 1851 and is named after the mining town of Nevada City, a name derived from the term “Sierra Nevada,” according to the CSAC. Nevada in Spanish means “snowy” or “snow covered.”

    The county was founded in 1850 and is one of California’s original 27 counties. According to the CSAC, Yolo is a Native American name that is believed to be a mispronunciation of an tribal name Yo-loy meaning “a place abounding in rushes.” The county’s name was originally spelled as Yola when it was founded, the CSAC said.

    • Jeremiah Martinez
  4. The first State House opened in 1794. The namesake of the capital was Sir Walter Raleigh, a nobleman who sponsored the first English colonists to what his contemporaries called the New World. The street names are now as they were in 1792. The streets named North, South, East, and West were the respective boundaries of the 400 acres that ...

  5. breckhistory.org › the-history-of-breckenridge-coThe Naming of Breckenridge

    How did Breckenridge get its name? Historians have debated this for decades. Researchers have studied documents looking for the truth. Two stories emerge--both have elements of truth. Some think that John Cabell Breckinridge, who served as vice-president under James Buchanan before retiring to the U.S. Senate representing Kentucky after his term as vice-president ended, is the namesake. Others ...

  6. Burke County is a county in the northern U.S. state of North Dakota. As of the 2020 census, 2,201 people lived there. [1] The county seat is Bowbells . The county is on the southern border of Canada .

  7. May 16, 2023 · How did Lee County get its name? Lee County is named after Robert E. Lee, a Confederate general in the American Civil War who eventually commanded all Confederate armies.

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