I
am hopeful you will publish this note on your blog, with fair attribution to me
since it is one of my fondist wishes
for the coming year. It is to see our
fair city go from being officially known as “Louisville” to “Kentucky.” “Louisville” is such a burden to pronounce
and even write out. Much is lost with
respect to the name. Kentucky, Kentucky,
on the other hand has such a ring to it.
Like New York, New York or Oklahoma City, Oklahoma-- Kentucky-- Kentucky
says it all. Hardly anyone I know can name another city in New York or Oklahoma
besides those two major cities. Make it
easy for everyone—Kentucky, Kentucky.
We
shouldn’t be beholden to any dead French king whose name is followed by Roman numerals
none of us can determine. I’m
disappointed that Mitch, Rand and Jerry did nothing but let “Louisville” remain
on the books, root, branch and all.
There’s
panache in telling someone from a distant place that you live in Kentucky,
Kentucky rather than in Louisville, Kentucky.
When you say Louisville what usually follows is the all to familiar
question, “Where is Louisville in the state of Kentucky?” Forget trying to explain to anyone we are not
a “state” but a “commonwealth.”
Kentucky, Kentucky eliminates all that explaining and people can get on
with the important parts of a conversation.
Once
we are known far and wide to everyone as Kentucky, Kentucky, we won’t have to
suffer confusion with places like Mississippi or Colorado to name just a few
states that have cities named Louisville.
How often are we asked when we say we are from Louisville, “Is that
Louisville, Mississippi or Louisville, Colorado?” I can’t count the times. Plus, we can unload the name on some other
town. Maybe Lebanon Junction will opt to
be “New Louisville” or Baghdad, or evenWaddy-Peytonia will want to adopt the
name Louisville. Better yet, the name
Louisville is more akin to the area eighty or so miles southeast of here. Perhaps Fayette County or some town like Paris,
Kentucky or Versailles, Kentucky, will be enticed by the name Louisville. Look what “Oklahoma” and “New York, New York,
It’s a Wonderful Town” have done for those places. Our future possibilities are
endless! Let’s get those petitions
circulating, folks.
Joe
Golden of Prospect for now but in the future,
I counting on it being known as Upper
East, Kentucky, Kentucky