Maine Place Names

  1. Caswell
    • Clifton
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "place on a cliff"
      • Description:

        A less-used cross between Clifford and Clinton.
    • Clyde
      • Origin:

        Scottish river name
      • Description:

        Even though in the past Clyde may have been identified as half of the infamous outlaw duo with partner Bonnie Parker—especially after the 1967 movie in which he was played by Warren Beatty—Clyde has always had an element of jazzy cool that could overcome all the rest.
    • Cooper
      • Origin:

        English occupational name
      • Meaning:

        "barrel maker"
      • Description:

        The genial yet upscale and preppy Cooper was one of the first occupational last names to catch on -- and Cooper remains a pleasing option.
    • Corinna
      • Origin:

        Greek
      • Meaning:

        "maiden"
      • Description:

        Delicate and gentle old-fashioned name, the kind found in early English poetry. While Corinna and the original Green Korinna are technically diminutives of the ancient Kore, now the popular Cora, this name will often be mistaken for other similar-sounding though unrelated names, such as Karenna. But it's pretty and is backed by more tradition than you'd guess.
    • Crosby
      • Origin:

        Irish
      • Meaning:

        "village with crosses"
      • Description:

        Crosby is an attractively laid-back Irish surname with retro musical associations to Bing and Crosby, Stills, and Nash, and with a jaunty air. Crosby Braverman was the name of a character on the TV show Parenthood, played by Dax Shepard.
    • Cutler
      • Origin:

        English occupational name
      • Meaning:

        "knife maker"
      • Description:

        Cooper would be a more engaging C-starting occupational choice.
    • Casco
      • Castine
        • Damaris
          • Dexter
            • Origin:

              Latin
            • Meaning:

              "dyer, right-handed"
            • Description:

              The jazzy, ultra-cool Dexter, like most names with an "x," has a lot of energy and dynamism. Over the years, it's been attached to a number of diverse real and fictional personalities—C. K. Dexter Haven, the witty Cary Grant character in The Philadelphia Story; Dexter Green, the protagonist of the F. Scott Fitzgerald story "Winter Dreams"; great jazz tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon; the boy-genius protagonist of cartoon Dexter's Laboratory; and the most recent TV series Dexter based on the books by Jeff Lindsay, whose lead happens to be a genial but sociopathic serial killer.
          • Dover
            • Origin:

              British place-name
            • Description:

              Two-syllable place-names are stylish, and this one is attached to a British city noted for its white chalk cliffs, but there are a couple of minuses: associated with the fish, Dover sole, and also rhymes with the doggy Rover.
          • Dresden
            • Origin:

              German place name
            • Meaning:

              "people of the forest"
            • Description:

              Sad tinge to the name of the beautiful German city firebombed during World War II. Its name derives from Sorbian drezga, meaning "forest".
          • Daicey
            • Easton
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "east-facing place"
              • Description:

                Easton is a stylish Ivy League-ish place and surname name, more modern than Weston, on its way up for both sexes as part of the new direction baby names are taking, as in North and West. Easton was used for her son by Jenna Elfman--and by Elizabeth Rohm for her daughter.
            • Eliot
              • Origin:

                Variation of Elliot
              • Meaning:

                "Jehovah is God"
              • Description:

                Sleekened spelling.
            • Ellsworth
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "nobleman's estate"
              • Description:

                One of the many El- names for boys that boomed in the 1910s and 1920s, but has long been out of fashion. This surname/place name has an aristocratic flavor, and a creative namesake in the artist Ellsworth Kelly. Polar explorer Lincoln Ellsworth also gives it an adventurous connection.
            • Etna
              • Franklin
                • Origin:

                  English
                • Meaning:

                  "free landholder"
                • Description:

                  A doubly Presidential name, via Pierce and Roosevelt, Franklin was given an initial boost via the fame of Benjamin Franklin. It also has a literary tie to the main character of the Wilkie Collins classic The Moonstone.
              • Hale
                • Origin:

                  English
                • Meaning:

                  "someone who lives in a hollow"
                • Description:

                  This name projects a sense of well-being - hale and hearty - is unusual but accessible, with a clear simple sound, and a worthy namesake, Revolutionary War hero Nathan Hale, as an added bonus.