Friday, November 20, 2009

A street named desire

Yeah, yeah, I know, it’s actually “A Streetcar Named Desire,” but what I’ve been thinking about since looking through my holiday address labels yesterday is who the hell names our streets? And is it a job I can get?

I think it would be fun. I googled “street names” yesterday, just for kicks, and found a website that generates the names for you, which completely eliminates my new job, except that the names were shit, which was the website’s point. When did American street names became so excessive and quixotic?

You know, those three- and four-word street names that have nothing to do with the geography or history of the place? Like the one my former condo was located on-- Caminito del Cervato (Little way of the deer)? I assure you, the street has not seen a deer in many, many decades, if ever, at least not since before the university next door was built in the late 1940s.

I tried the before mentioned website’s “street name generator” five times, and it, too, came up with a deer-inspired street name: Quaking Deer Highland, which when you think of it might actually make sense as the deer are surely trembling in fear as bulldozers plow down ever more of their habitat.

It also came up with Bright Beaver Vale, Thunder Bridge Lane (perhaps adjacent to Springsteen's Thunder Road?), and Round Beacon Villa, the latter of which makes no sense at all, but actually sounds familiar to me. A sign that the street naming business is certainly out of control.

In grade school and high school I lived in a beautiful neighborhood where the streets were all British-inspired names like Stoneleigh, Chumleigh, and Hatherleigh. Not a winning theme, if you ask me.

The first house I ever bought was located in another beautiful little neighborhood where the street names were author-inspired. I myself resided on Dumas Street, with Elliott and Browning and Alcott Streets, etc. to the north and south.

The streets in another section of the neighborhood I currently live in are all gem and rock inspired: Agate, Tourmaline, Diamond, Felspar, and the like. This theme works for me, which is nothing more than personal preference.

The most important street you’ll ever live on, of course, is the first one, the one you lived on when you parents brought you home from the hospital, because this street name makes up half of your ever-essential stripper name. We’ve all gotta have one of these to fall back on, especially if our choice jobs, like street namer, fall through.

I lived on Sherwood Road with a cat named Tuesday when I was a baby, so, when they introduce Tuesday Sherwood to the stage, you’ll know it’s me (which sure beats the pants off Samba Caminito del Cervato).

11 comments:

Logical Libby said...

There is a subdivision her where all the streets are named after Tolkien characters... Not kidding.

living on Anna between Belle and Pine Tree said...

hmmm...I was brought home from the hospital in Bozeman MT to Julia Martin Drive and I think our first kitty was Cinnamon. Not really good news for my stripper name :)
I SO loved the names in Stoneleigh but maybe that's b/c I didn't live there. I was stuck on Loch Crest Ct between Limit Ave and Falkirk Ave.

I know a developer here in State College and noticed that one of the neighborhoods he built has streets named after his relatives (flattering, unless he ran out of streets and didn't get to your name)
But my favorite street name comes from my husband's childhood in a small town off Rt 11/15 that Beth traveled on her way b/t Baltimore and NY. He had a friend whose family was very well off and they lived on Easy Street (no lie) I recently met a woman from that town whose last name is Perfect. When I asked her where she lived, her reply was, "Easy Street"...don't know her pet's name but any future daughter of hers should end up with a great stripper name :)

Pickles and Dimes said...

That stripper name thing always bummed me out because my childhood road was named Route 3. :)

Me, You, or Ellie said...

No, I like both of them:

Julia "Cinnamon" Martin and 3 Dimes

unmitigated me said...

My inlaws lived for awhile on Leicester Court. If you live there, it's "Lye-kester." If you live in the U.K., it's "Lester" I'm not sure which makes sense.

unmitigated me said...

Also, I live right near Salem and Winston, and as a kid, I assumed they were named after cigarettes.

Me, You, or Ellie said...

I always thought my stripper name was Yobo Bettswood, but that is NOT the house I came home from the hospital to, that one was in Seoul! What street did we live on, mom? Did we have a pet there?

I recently addressed a letter to someone who lived on Karma Drive. I like that one.

I'm glad you don't live on Camino del whats-its-name anymore Beth, that one hardly fit on a label without reducing the font size.

Jacquie

Me, You, or Ellie said...

I always thought your stripper name was your first pet (first name) and your mother's maiden name (last name). Oh, wait, maybe that's your porn star name. And Mistah has the Best. One. Ever.

Ready?

Dickie Lavender.

(Gay porn star, clearly).

Ellie

Me, You, or Ellie said...

Clearly.

beth

Kathi D said...

Look for me billed as Ginger Hess.

I pity children who have to learn to spell these street names, or worse, direct someone to their home.

The favorite address of our married life was 1431 3rd St. It was the last time we had a reasonable street name.

Mom C said...

hi Jaccq, I just asked dad for the address in Korea. Not sure of the number, but it was Eighth Army Drive - has a nice ring to it, don't you think?? No pets, just stuffed animals. love, mom