I enjoy a good road trip, especially one that can include nights in hotels with American television.
A few weeks ago I was on such a trip, this story picking up with me deep in the heart of
Slippery Rock. What a name.
It amused me as I drove by, my mind filling with images of just how a town could get such a name.
I picture a young village being built, people excitedly moving into their homes as the villages founder sat at his desk, quill in hand and he scribbled out potential names for the town. He needed the perfect one, the kind of name that would inspire the villages' citizens to do great thing. The kind of name that would bring them pride. The kind of name that would see this village grow to one of
He took his job seriously, sitting at that desk day after day as he burnt away the midnight oil at an alarming pace. It probably would've been smart not to burn the midnight oil during the day, but he had more important things on his mind, so burn it did.
Then one day he had come up with it! The perfect name, one that was classy, that demanded respect, one that captured the spirit of its citizens and the geography around them.
He called all the villagers together, dozens and dozens gathered down by the river. To address them all the village's founder stood up on a nearby rock and he began to speak to them.
"We gather on this momentous occasion to name this beotch of a burg."
Okay, this may not be a direct quote.
"And folks, I have thought long and hard," he continued, "and today I proclaim that our little town shall forever be known as..."
Now the rock that this man had stood upon, being so close to the rivers splashing waves was a little damp, and it was at this particularly inopportune moment that he decided to shift his weight, causing a foot to give way.
He began to loose his balance, on the verge of falling and embarrassing himself. Luckily a panicked flail of his arms had saved him this humility. But still he'd lost his balance and was not looking to graceful, so he begins to laugh it off.
"Slippery rock," he chuckled.
Suddenly the crowd began to cheer. Hats were thrown, a fiddler randomly starts a'fiddlin' and everyone begins celebrating.
Confused the village's founder stands upon the rock trying to understand what was going on.
Then slowly he realizes, he had just proclaimed the town to be forever known as Slippery Rock.
Desperate he tries to tell nearby revelers the real name he had carefully crafted but they are to busy celebrating.
That's how I imagined it went down, but a fact check on this story informs me that it is not the case.
Here's the story those Slippery Rockians would have you believe.
Natives went and attacked
So I guess as a slap in the face people living nearby said, "Oh wow! You soldiers sure are something! In fact to honour your amazing soldering we're going to rename our town after you!"
Missing the sarcasm one soldier probably asked, "really? Like 4th
"Oh no, no, no. We were thinking Slippery Rock." And then the town laughed in their face.
Think about that, the soldiers screwed up and a town was renamed after their screw up.
What if your town was renamed after a particularly bad mistake you made?
I believe this is how Enterprise, Alabama got its name. You know, after a guy's girlfriend stumbled across his shockingly large collection of Star Trek Enterprise collectibles, and don't even get me started on the embarrassing incident that led to Spanish Fork, Utah.
I don't live in a small town myself, so I feel spared such a fate as thousands of embarrassing things happen every minute in this city I am sure. I did go to college in a small town though, and I can't help but imagine if a poor choice on my part had been immortalized by the locals.
I once had one to many Canadian Killer Kool-aids, a drink consisting of vodka, amaretto, melon liqueur and cranberry juice as it turns out. The problems included a 'drunk dial' that night, and then a sleeping in and missing the call time I had to be on set for a cooking show... I was directing.
The point of this story was supposed to be thank goodness they didn't rename the town Killer