Wednesday, February 22, 2017

Is America great or what?

You can tell you are in the land of God, Guns and Trump when you run across an ad in the local newspaper for the 3rd Annual North Georgia Men’s Conference sponsored by the North Georgia Baptist Men and the Georgia Baptist Men’s Ministry which features shotguns as door prizes. Even though I am not Baptist I’m tempted to attend to hear the “inspiring music” and “message of hope” and maybe win a shotgun.

I’ll say one thing— the North Georgia Baptist Men and the Georgia Baptist Men’s Ministry certainly know their target audience. Most men in these parts think that the Second Amendment is one of the Ten Commandments. Odds are you will not find any pantywaist MoveOn.org members at the conference, and it’s for damn sure that neither George Soros or Michael Bloomberg are guest speakers.

Boy, I love this place.

On an entirely different subject, I drove Meredith to the Chattanooga Airport the other day so she could fly to Camp Lejeune, N.C., to bring Mike’s truck back here while he is on his overseas deployment. The drive to Chattanooga from here is picturesque to say the least. We go north on Georgia State Road 60 and pick up U.S. Highway 64 West near Ducktown, Tenn. U.S. 64 is mostly two lane, and it winds through the Ocoee National Forest along the Ocoee River past the Ocoee Whitewater Center, the site of the whitewater kayaking events during the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.

On the way I noticed a sign in Polk County, Tenn., proudly claiming that it was the birthplace of Nancy Ward. I googled the name and discovered that Nancy Ward was a famous “Beloved Woman” of the Cherokee. Among her accomplishments, she introduced the Cherokee to loom weaving, farming and dairy production which helped transform Cherokee society from a communal agricultural society into a society very similar to that of their European-American neighbors.

She is also credited with introducing chattel slavery to the Cherokee and was one of the first Cherokees to own African slaves. Oops. I guess if you haven’t got anything better to boast about then you have to go with what you got.

That made me wonder whether there are other towns and counties in the country that have to claim credit for some infamous person or event for lack of anything better to brag about. Is there a sign in West Allis, Wisc, saying that it’s the birthplace of Jeffrey Dahmer? Does Henning, Tenn, have a sign proudly boasting that it’s the home of the Fort Pillow Massacre where 277 Federal black troops were killed by Confederate soldiers after surrendering? 

This got me thinking about how towns and counties struggle to find some attribute or historical fact to set themselves off from other towns and counties. For instance, Fannin County, Ga., where I live, doesn’t have any famous or infamous person to boast about so it touts itself as the trout capital of Georgia.

The slogan of Cherokee County which is just north of Atlanta is “Where metro meets the mountains.” Pickens County, which is just north of Cherokee County, calls itself the marble capital of Georgia for the obvious reason that they mine a lot of good quality marble there. If it weren’t for that I imagine that Pickens County’s slogan might have been “Even further from Atlanta and closer to the mountains than Cherokee County.”

I couldn’t find a list of county slogans on the internet but I did find a list of city slogans. Some pretty silly. I’m pretty sure some of these slogans are not official ones adopted by the city fathers or the local chamber of commerce.

Here’s my analysis:

Cities that do not sound very interesting. There are a lot of these.
Albany, Ore. - Grass Seed Capital of the World.
Albertville, Ala. - Fire Hydrant Capital of the World.
Anchorage, Alaska – Hanging Basket Capital of the World.
Artesia, Miss. - Johnston Grass Capital of the World.
Austin, Minn. - Spamtown
Bakersfield, Cal. - The Armpit of California
Bertram, Tex. - Home of the Oatmeal Festival
Berrien Springs, Mich. - Christmas Pickle Capital of the World
Cheshire, Conn. - Bedding Plant Capital of Connecticut
Concord, N.H. - The City In A Coma
DeKalb, Ill. - Barbed Wire Capital of the World
Dove Creek, Col. - Pinto Bean Capital of the World
Forestville, Cal. - Poison Oak Capital of the World
Fort Payne, Ala. - Sock Capital of the World
Gordo, Ala. - Fat City
Hastings, Neb. - Birthplace of Kool-Aid
Rumney, N.H. - Crutch Capital of the World
Warsaw, Ind. - Orthopedic Capital of the World

Cities I want to visit just to say I’ve been there.
Beaver, Okla. - Cow Chip Capital of the World
Bishop, Cal. - Mule Packer Capital of the World
Brunswick, Mo. - Home of the World’s Largest Pecan
Cawker City, Kan. - Home of the World's Largest Ball of Twine
Chester, Ill. - The Home of Popeye
Cut Bank, Mont. - Coldest Spot in the Nation

Cities I want to visit to find out what it’s all about:
Dumas, Ark. - Home of the Ding Dong Daddy
Freewater, Ore. - Muddy Frogwater Country
Fruita, Col. - Home of Mike the Headless Chicken
Nederland, Col. - Home of the Frozen Dead Guy
Severance, Col, - Where the Geese Fly And the Bulls Cry
Merseilles, Ill. - Best Little City By A Dam Site

Cities I want to avoid.
Fayetteville, N.C. - Torture Town
Gallup, N.M. - Drunk Driving Capital of America
Huntsville, Tex - Execution Capital of the World
Santa Monica, Cal. - Home of the Homeless

Cities that sound like fun.
Elgin, S.C. - Home of the Catfish Stomp
Genoa, Nev. - Home of the Candy Dance
Gonzales, La. - Jambalaya Capital of the World

Cities that are on the top of my list to visit.
Muskegon, Mich. - The Beer Tent Capital of the World
Peoria, Ill. – Whiskeytown
Roselawn, Ind. - Naked City

Totally politically incorrect cities.
Lake Oswego, Ore. - Lake No-Negro
Medfield, Mass. - The Whitest Town On Earth

All I can say is: Is America great or what?

No comments:

Post a Comment