The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New Ga. city names terrible

- George Mathis News to Me

The epitaph on poet Charles Bukowski’s grave says “Don’t Try.”

Whoever is naming the new cities around Atlanta has clearly adopted the same philosophy.

To put it kindly, Georgia’s newest cities have lame names.

Stonecrest? If you name anything after a mall you’re doing it wrong.

I’d suggest running whoever came up with that gem out of town but they’d probably like living someplace that doesn’t sound like a subdivisio­n.

South Fulton? I’ve seen squirrels employ more imaginatio­n.

County government is so bad in these parts new cities pop up like mushrooms in a cow pasture after a warm rain.

If you want to buy a house in a town that sounds like it’s rife with vinyl siding, metro Atlanta has you covered.

Chattahooc­hee Hills was incorporat­ed in 2007, Peachtree Corners in 2011. Fortunatel­y for our ears, Greenhaven and LaVista Hills failed to materializ­e.

As bad as those are, it gets worse. Johns Creek sounds like a sewage spill.

New Georgia city names haven’t always stunk.

Our forefather­s didn’t feel the need to get fancy. They just looked at a map of somewhere else and picked a word in a big font.

Georgians in Dublin, Athens and Rome knew a good thing when they saw it.

Sure, some things got mispronoun­ced along the way but that made the cities sound even cooler. It also gave the locals a quick way of spotting interloper­s.

Berlin (BRRR-lin), Georgia sounds nothing like Berlin, Germany.

Cairo (KAY-row) sounds like syrup used to make pecan pies, not the city in Egypt.

Vienna sounds like tiny sausages, not the capitol of Austria.

As a young reporter, I covered the Big Pig Jig and the mayor of Vienna asked me to introduce myself at a city council meeting. I stood up and said I was happy to be in “VEEin-uh” instead of “VIE-anna” and you’d have thought I passed gas by all the hooting and hollering that ensued. I never returned. Cordele, I learned, was less tricky to pronounce.

Some new Georgia cities got it right by sticking with tradition.

Milton sounds like someone’s kind uncle.

It’s also the name of a county that merged with Fulton during the Great Depression to avoid bankruptcy.

If you travel our great state you will quickly learn Georgia was once festering with creativity.

And even though it’s not a real city, the residents of Hopeulikit (pronounced “Hope you like it”) should take a bow.

Down where I’m from almost every village sounds chock full of awesome. Enigma, Ty Ty, Omega, Eldorado, Sparks, Chaservill­e ...

I’m likely biased, but those are the kind of names people might actually enjoy writing on an envelope for the rest of their lives.

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