ilmrr'0 omett4ing in a Namt
HOW THE COUNTIES AND COUNTY SEATS OF
THE FIRST CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF
KENTUCKY GOT THEIR
INTERESTING NAMES
MARTHA GRASSHAM PURCELL
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There's Something in a Name
-0-
HOW THE COUNTIES AND COUNTY SEATS OF
THE FIRST CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF
KENTUCKY GOT THEIR
INTERESTING NAMES
- To
MARTHA GRASSHAM PURCELL
-0-o-
From time immemorial we have heard on every
hand, "There's nothing in a name," but we believe
if you'll think with us a while you'll agree there is a
great deal in a name.
Felicia Brown Hemans, the English writer, says:
"There's beauty all about our paths,
If but our watchful eyes
Could trace it midst familiar things
And in their lowly guise."
Begging the pardon of Mrs. Hemans, we would
say, there's history all about our paths if only we
would pause to consider. Every day we see places,
use familiar household words that are teeming with
interest, beauty, romance, history, and none are quite
so full of them as names. When we hear of a new
invention, we immediately look up the etymology of
the word to see why it is so called. When a baby is
christened we wonder why it is so named, especially
if the name be a new or odd one. So it
is with places, and these place-names are not
mere words, words, words that fell by chance
upon a certain locality as rain from the heavens.
Time was when no place of our American conti-
nent, not even the continent itself, was the proud
possessor of a name. Then how and why did cer-
tain names come to be affixed to certain places
We loyal Kentuckians long ago read that the name
of our state meant "Dark and Bloody Ground," but
more recent research has disclosed a more beautiful,
more promising meaning. Conquering the Ohio Val-
ley, yet not daring to occupy it, the Iroquois Indians
held it in reserve, so if they were driven from their
present home as so many Eastern tribes had been,
they could take refuge in this, their land in the West.
So saving their possessions here for that purpose,
they spoke of them as "The Land of Tomorrow," that
is, the land where they intended to live in the future.
They sent the Wyandots (Iroquoian) to live in it and
manage it. So our state has a name derived from
the Wyandot's dialect of the Iroquoian tongue.
"Land of Tomorrow"
The Wyandot (Iroquoian) Kah-ten-tah-teh. means
2
a day, shortened to Ken-tah-teh, it is "The coming
day," or "Tomorrow." Thus was fixed upon the Iro-
quoian possessions, both north and south of the Ohio,
the name which meant the land where we will live
tomorrow or in the future. It was only a step from
Ken-tah-teh to Cantockey, Cantuckee, Kaintuckee,
on through many changes, until we have the name
we love so well-Kentucky, "The Land of Tomor-
row." Somehow it seems a promise, a prophecy that
our state will yet forge ahead of anything she has
yet done; that more than ever before her sons and
daughters will be in the vanguard of all good works
and we can truly sing,
"The sun shines bright in my old Kentucky
home."
Bringing the subject of names nearer home, we
know our own First Congressional District was dub-
-bed "The Old Gibraltar," because it proved impreg-
nable to the assaults of Republican visions and votes,
and gave for so many years a handsome Democratic
majority in all elections.
A part of this district was owned by the Chicka-
saw Indians until on October 19, 1818, the United
States, through its commissioners, General Andrew
Jackson and Governor Isaac Shelby, purchased it,
hence "The Purchase," or "Jackson's Purchase."
The nickname, "The Pennyrile," comes from the
abundance of pennyroyal growing in this section.
The thirteen counties comprising this section of west-
"History of Kentucky"-Judge Charles Kerr, Editor.
3
ern Ketucky, in the naming of both counties and
county seats, present a panorama of historical hap-
penings of wide range.
The same year that marked the birth of our na-
tion saw the county of Fincastle in Virginia (our
mother state) divided into three parts, one of which
was called Kentucky county. Four years later, the
march of civilization continuing westward, it became
necessary that the seats of justice should be nearer
the people, so this county was divided into Jefferson,
Fayette and Lincoln. These were divided and sub-
divided until nine counties had been created which,
on June 1, 1792, were admitted into the union as a
separate state bearing the name of the original coun-
ty, Kentucky.
Livingston Came First
Of these nine counties, we of the western part of
our commonwealth are more directly interested in
that section bearing the name of Lincoln, because
from Lincoln in 1792 came Logan, from Logan in
1796 was carved Christian, and from Christian in
1798 was formed Livingston, the 29th county created
in our state, but the first in "The Old Gibraltar." The
name of this county perpetuates that of Robert R.
Livingston, of New York, who was one of the com-
mittee that prepared that immortal document, the
Declaration of Independence, and who was also one
of its courageous signers. Appointed by Thomas
Jefferson as Minister to France, he, in conjunction
with James Monroe, conducted the treaty by which
4
we acquired the Louisiana Territory, a tract of 1,-
000,000 square miles, and the control of the great
Mississippi River and its tributaries. Well did Mr.
Livingston say, as they arose from signing the treaty
of cession, "We have lived long, but this is the no-
blest work of our whole lives."
The first county seat of the original county of
Livingston was called Salem, an abbreviation of the
name of the Holy City-Jerusalem. Many of the sur-
rounding counties were formed wholly or in part,
from Livingston, the last division being in 1842.
which left the boundary of the county as at present.
The county seat was then removed to Smithland,
which owes its name to old Smithland which flour-
ished for a few years a mile or more below the mouth
of the Cumberland. This was named for Col. James
Smith, of Pennsylvania, who had many thrilling ex-
periences with the Indians who called him Scouwa.
Col. Smith, with three other white men and a mulat-
to slave, explored the Cumberland for many, many
miles till they reached its junction with the Ohio.
Here the others separated from Col. Smith and the
mulatto boy, who were for a long time alone in the
wilderness. It is very fitting that the county capital,
situated at the junction of these rivers, should bear
the name of the first white man to explore southern
and southwestern Kentucky.
Caldwell is Created
In 1809 a new county, the fifty-first in the state,
was created from Livingston and called Caldwell in
5
honor of Gen. John Caldwell, of Virginia, who served
as a subaltern under Gen. George Rogers Clark in
the campaign of 1786 against the Indians. Gen.
Caldwell was later a member of the conventions held
at Danville and in 1804 became Lieutenant-Governor
of Kentucky. The seat of justice was first fixed at
Eddyville, so named from the eddies in the Cumber-
land River near there. The county seat was later
transferred to Centerville (being near the center of
the county) ; later it was returned to Eddyville; again
removed, and permanently fixed at Princeton, named
in honor of its pioneer settler, William Prince.
In 1820, the 66th county of the commonwealth
was formed from parts of Christian and Caldwell,
and given the name, Trigg, for Col. Stephen Trigg,
of Virginia, who came to Kentucky in 1779. He set-
tled Trigg's Station near Harrodsburgh and fell at
the bloody battle of the Blue Licks, 1782, while lead-
ing his men in a charge. Cadiz, the county seat,
bears a trans-Atlantic name from Cadiz, Spain.
From parts of Caldwell and Livingston, in 1821,
Hickman, the 71st county came. It perpetuates the
name of Captain- Paschal Hickman, who migrated
from Virginia, was distinguished for his activities
aganist the In