Posted on 09/08/2005 10:41:41 AM PDT by BurbankKarl
Actually the term "village" isn't very common in the South, so I suppose you can make the case it IS unusual...although the term "fishing village" is used....I suspect that's where it comes from.
Also, technically, a population of 25 thousand is a city...New York City actually shouldn't be called a City, its a megalopolis. People from Los Angeles or Chicago would call a 50k population a "town" but its not...its a city...a town is a lot smaller. NY, LA, Chic, Philly et al have gone past what a "city" is. I can't remember the cutoff for the terms though..but it doesn't take much to be a "city". I guess I'm going to have to use a search engine and refresh my memory from the class I took on this 10 years ago.
I grew up on a Maine island. There are two municipalities on the island. One is referred to as a town, the other as a village. There is a distinct difference in the size (and services provided) of each.
Those definitions vary widely, from state to state. Illinois, apparently calls some pretty large cities "villages." It's part of their state structure, I guess.
In any case there was nothing insulting meant by calling those little towns in LA villages. It's just a turn of the phrase.
And those were fishing villages, to be sure.
>>>a town is a lot smaller.
In NY state, a town is actually a civil division and in no way relates to the number of people living within it. I'm a former resident of the Village of Lakewood and the Town of Busti. Counties are broken-up into townships, sort of like states are broken up into counties (or parishes). Here in NC, they don't seem to have such distinctions. Federalism at work.
Thank God!
LOL! Me, too. I have to confess, I miss Justin cooking..."and add a little Tabasco...(as the bottle is completely emptied.)"
And don't let those townships slip under the radar! "TWP" is globalist code dontcha know...
Not sure if this is the same area, but there were reports last week than quite a few of the shrimp fishermen were lost out on their boats, they had tried to sit out the storm and save their boats out on the water.
Here in Northern Jersey the rich yuppie towns think it's cute to refer to themselves as "villages" even though they have plenty of commerce and a municipal government almost identical to the traditional borough setup.
Just a guess: it's an Eastern thing, most likely those in the original 13 colonies. They like that kind of stuff.
....towns built on a delta mud flat - That is to be expected that they would be erased.....
Think Bangladesh
This set of images made available Friday, Sept. 2, 2005 by the U.S. Geological Survey shows the same area of the Chandeleur Islands, approximately 100 kilometers east of New Orleans, La. The top image, taken in July 2001, shows narrow sandy beaches and adjacent overwash sandflats, low vegetated dunes, and backbarrier marshes broken by ponds and channels. The bottom image shows the same location on August 31, 2005, two days after Hurricane Katrina made landfall on the Louisiana and Mississippi coastline. Storm surge and large waves from Hurricane Katrina submerged the islands, stripped sand from the beaches, and eroded large sections of the marsh. Today, few recognizable landforms are left on the Chandeleur Island chain. (AP Photo/USGS)
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