Did You Know?
- Scottish Placenames in Houston, Texas, USA

Houston family recorded in Paisley Abbey
Elsewhere on Rampant Scotland there is a collection of Scottish Placenames which can be found in other parts of the world - probably taken there by Scottish emigrants. But Ian Kendall, who now lives in Melbourne, has been researching more deeply into Scottish placenames around the world and he has produced an impressive list of the suburbs of a number of towns and cities with Scottish connections - see the table below for Houston, Texas.

For comparability with other large cities around the world, Greater Houston has been defined as the entire urban area including and surrounding the City of Houston. This area extends from Pinehurst, The Woodlands and New Caney in the north to Alvin and Galveston in the south, and from Katy and Rosenberg in the west to Mont Belvieu and Baytown in the east. This is a vast metropolitan area, typical of the urban sprawl that characterises most American cities as a consequence of the steady population influx from rural areas, the post-WWII baby boom and the 1960s 'flight to the suburbs'. Suburban growth was further accelerated in Houston's case by the oil boom of the 60s and 70s.

Of the names of the 796 suburbs and neighbourhoods in Greater Houston that have been identified to date, 124 (15.6%) are based, in whole or in part, on placenames that can be found in Scotland, on Scottish family names, or on Scottish words. Of course, many of the names are used in other parts of the British Isles as well but 62 (7.8%) of these appear to be exclusive to Scotland. Many of these neighbourhoods contain the name Houston itself, for example, Houston Heights or Mount Houston.

A similar list has been created for:

Suburbs and neighbourhoods with names that are definitely or most probably of Scottish origin in Houston are:



Other localities with names that can be found in Scotland but that are not unique to Scotland are:


Other placenames in Greater Houston that have a "Scottish ring" to them, but that have not yet been established as places that actually exist in Scotland or that are connected with the country in other ways include Heather Glen, McHattie, McKamy Meadows, Park Glen and Park Glen West. Some of the above names have probably been made up to sound Scottish or have perhaps been borrowed from other American cities.

Acknowledgements:

© Ian Kendall
Melbourne, Australia, April 2004
Revised May 2005

If you wish to contact Ian about his research, his e-mail address is iankendall@bigpond.com.



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