Bill LeslieBill Leslie's Carolina Conversations
People are always asking me where to take vacation. What's a cool place? What's the most scenic drive? Carolina Conversations attempts to answer those questions and others.

Say It Right!

A trainer at the gym was telling me about her recent move to Wendell. I asked her if she knew the history of the town’s name. She did not. The eastern Wake County town was named for Oliver Wendell Holmes of literary and judicial fame. So why isn’t Wendell pronounced like Mr. Holmes said his name, WEN-duhl, with the accent on the first syllable?  The correct pronunciation for the town is WEN-DELL with a stress on both syllables and especially the second syllable. This can be traced to the town’s railroad heritage. Train conductors used to stretch out the pronunciation of both syllables of Wendell. The pronunciation stuck with the young locals.

What other interesting stories are there about North Carolina town names? Feel free to share. Do you know how Morganton got its name? How about Spring Hope and Warsaw? And why did Whynot get its peculiar name? Plus, what’s the history of Snow Camp?

Getting back to Wendell – let’s make sure we say the name of its neighbor correctly. Ever been to Zebulon? Just remember it is not pronounced ZEB-yoo-lawn. It’s not a lawn service. It is ZEB-yoo-lun. My grandfather William Wesley Bergeron grew up on a farm near Zebulon.

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I guess one of the most common town names also are Beaufort, NC (BO-fert) and Beaufort, SC (BU-fort).

Beaufort, NC and Beaufort, SC. In NC our Beaufort is BO-fort; in SC it is BU-fort.

Bill, I used to ride horses off of Bergeron Road near the southwestern Nash County area, near Zebulon. Any coincidence there with your family?

My husband gets so tickled at me every time we pass a sign near the town of Conetoe, which I believe is near Pinetops. The first time I saw it I asked "Who in the world would name a town Cone-toe" My husband laughed and said it is pronounce ca-nee-ta". Another town name that I think is pronounced differently by out of towners would have to be Bahama.

Shallotte (Brunswick County) - One local legand is that it was named after the wild shallot onions that grew there when it was settled.

wmbrantley - yes! Yes, that is the same family! Thanks for pointing that out about the Bergerons.

I was lucky when I started working here, having lived most of my life overseas, some of my colleagues were very helpful with teaching me to pronounce some of the county names as well as towns. Perquimans, Currituck, Watauga, then on to Manteo and I still trip a bit with Chinquapin in Duplin. I love this State!

People call our town Henderson HENison or HUNison

Youngsville used to be called "Pacific" before the railroad came in the 19th century. Got its present name from a local family. Pilot in southern Franklin County, just north of Zebulon was at one time called "Loafer's Crossroads". I guess because of the local work ethic! j/k More than likely it got its name from the elderly congregants at the local store.

White Level in Northeastern Franklin county was once called "Dickens". It came from the family name of the folks that ran the local store/post office, starting in 1897. A church was built in 1906 and Named "White Level Baptist" after the characteristics of the surrounding landscape. A school was built around the 1930s (probably by WPA or CCC) and carried the name "White Level Elementary". Although the name of the community changed early in regards to the hearts and minds of the residents, it wasnt until the mid-1970s that it was officially changed from "Dickens" to "White Level" on state maps.

A small community in northern Franklin County is named Alert. Many new-comers misspronounce it. It is A-lert. This community is located surrounded by the communities of Moulton, Lickskillet and Schloss. The last one I cant figure out. I believe "Schloss" is german for Castle. Maybe a German immigarant named it many years ago. Not much there except for a closed dirt race track.

You can always tell that someone isn't from North Carolina when they pronounce Topsail Island as "Top Sail" rather than "Topsul."

There's another "KA-row" (Cairo) in Georgia, along with "ALL-benny" - (Albany), "VI-DAY-lee-ah" (Vidalia) and At-LAN-na...

Ooops...I realized this was a NC town thread after my post...sorry!

Angier is an-jur, not an-jeer

Tarboro is pronounced Tarboro, but some of the locals pronounce it tah-buh.

curiousgeorgia. . . I'm from the big city of Beulaville, in good ole Duplin County, just down the road from Chinquapin. Both have several pronunciations that are acceptable, but not necessarily correct. Like you I love this state.

Welcome from Buncombe County and the town of Leicester (LES-tur) NC!

Mine's boring: Fayetteville. Named for Marquis de LaFayette in 1783, and was a "combining" of Campbellton and Cross Creek - much like Fuquay Springs and Varina Station came together to be Fuquay-Varina (my current hometown). LaFayette came to Fayetteville sometime in the 1800s to visit the town named for him - his horse-drawn carriage from that trip still exists and is maintained somewhere down there in Cumberland County IIRC.

Cary isn't hard to pronounce, but I think it's interesting that so many elderly natives pronounce it CAY-ree! Cary was named for Ohio prohibitionist Samuel Fenton Cary. It was named such by Cary's "founder", Allison Francis "Frank" Page, who owned the land that Page-Walker Hotel (now Page-Walker Arts and History Center) was on.

Bill, thanks for clearing up Zebulon, I have lived here 40 years and cringe everytime I hear it pronounced wrong, now if the newcomers would get the new school name right...It's Wake-lun..not Wake-lawn

I can't stand it when yanks come down here and say "top-sail" for Topsail (Island).

In northwestern Bertie (bur-TEE) County is Lewiston. For reasons I never knew, the oldtimers pronounced it LUR-stun. It's just down the road from Rhoades (ROW-jez) Crossroads.

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