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States with the most “City” communities
Source: garden-city.orgListed below are the states with the most communities that include “city” in their name. This includes cities, towns, villages, hamlets, municipalities, unincorporated places, and census designated places. It does not include ghost towns, townships nor equivalent “towns” in Wisconsin, New York and elsewhere.
When one thinks about it, the popularity of Garden City makes sense given humans love living in scenic and/or bucolic locations. What name epitomizes those feelings better? Also among the top ten “city” names are Lake City and Forest City. Peace!
Source: townofgardencity.com——-
Leading states:
- Texas = 54
- Illinois = 51
- Missouri = 40
- Florida and Michigan = 38 each
- Iowa = 34
- California = 29
- Indiana = 27
- Kansas and Oklahoma = 26 each
Most common “city” names or variations:
- Garden City = 16
- Lake City = 12
- Junction City = 11
- Union City = 10
- Forest City = 8
- Central City, Oil City, Silver City, White(s) = 7 each
——-
ALABAMA = 11
Alexander City, Dodge City, Frisco City, Garden City, Hobson City, Midland City, Morgan City, Pell City, Phenix City, Rainbow City, and Sardis City
ALASKA = 0
ARIZONA = 13
Arizona City, Black Canyon City, Bullhead City, Central Heights-Midland City, Circle City, Colorado City, Huachuca City, Joseph City, Lake Havasu City, Rainbow City, Sun City, Sun City West, and Tuba City
ARKANSAS = 11
Arkansas City, Bluff City, Buffalo City, Cave City, Central City, Cherokee City, Diamond City, Forrest City, Junction City, Lake City, and Star City
CALIFORNIA = 29
Amador City, Big Bear City, Brandy City, Butte City, California City, Cathedral City, Cave City, City of Industry, Crescent City, Culver City, Daly City, Foster City, Holy City, King City, Lake City, Marin City, Montgomery City, National City, Nevada City, Oil City, Queen City, Redwood City, Sand City, South Yuba City, Spicer City, Suisun City, Temple City, Union City, and Yuba City
COLORADO = 10
Adams City, Canon City, Central City, Colorado City, Commerce City, Garden City, Lake City, Ohio City, Orchard City, and Sugar City
CONNECTICUT = 1
Jewett City
DELAWARE = 0
FLORIDA = 38
Amelia City, Angel City, Cooper City, Crescent City, Cross City, Dade City, Dade City North, Dickerson City, Everglades City, Floral City, Florida City, Forest City, Greenacres City, Grove City, Haines City, Highland City, Highlands City, Intercession City, Jacob City, Kenneth City, Lake City, Leisure City, Little Lake City, Miles City, Myakka City, Ocean City, Orange City, Palm City, Palm River-Clair-Mel City, Panama City, Panama City Beach, Plant City, Polk City, St. James City, Sun City, Sun City Center, and White City (2)
GEORGIA = 15
Garden City, Iron City, Junction City, Lake City, Lumber City, Mountain City, Peachtree City, Pebble City, Pecan City, Ray City, Sale City, Silver City, Tate City, Twin City, and Union City
HAWAII = 2
Lanai City and Pearl City
IDAHO = 6
Butte City, Elk City, Garden City, Idaho City, Malad City, and Sugar City
ILLINOIS = 51
Bay City, Bayle City, Beecher City, Bluff City (2), Calumet City, Central City, Clay City, Coal City, Crescent City, Dallas City, Dalton City, Fairmont City, Farmer City, Forest City, Future City, Gibson City, Granite City, Grove City, Hanna City, Hervey City, Hunt City, Illinois City, Johnston City, Junction City, Lake City, Mason City, Midland City, Miller City, Monroe City, Mound City, New City, Norris City, North City, Park City, Pearl City, Piper City, Prairie City, Rapids City, Rend City, Rock City, Schram City, Shale City, Shanghai City, Standard City, Star City, Steel City, Texas City, West City, White City, and Yates City
INDIANA = 27
Burns City, Cambridge City, Clay City (2), Coal City, Columbia City, Fountain City, Garden City, Gas City, Grant City, Harris City, Hartford City, Lincoln City, Michigan City, Mineral City, Monroe City, Oakland City, Parker City, Prairie City, Rome City, Saline City, Star City, State Line City, Switz City, Tell City, Union City, and Valley City
IOWA = 34
Albert City, Barnes City, Cedar City, Central City, Charles City, Columbus City, Dakota City, Davis City, Decatur City, Dow City, Forest City, Garden City, Gilmore City, Grant City, Iowa City, La Porte City, Lake City, Maharishi Vedic City, Mason City, May City, Orange City, Polk City, Prairie City, Promise City, Rockwell City, Sac City, Shannon City, Silver City, Sioux City, Stone City, Story City, Swea City, Walnut City, and Webster City
KANSAS = 26
Arkansas City, Baldwin City, Bird City, Bluff City, Bush City, Cawker City, Dodge City, Elk City, Empire City, Forest City, Garden City, Gove City, Hill City, Johnson City, Junction City, Kansas City, Lake City, Mound City, Ness City, Osage City, Page City, Park City, Scott City, Strong City, Sun City, and White City
KENTUCKY = 17
Bell City, Calvert City, Cannel City, Cave City, Central City, Clay City, Elkhorn City, Gold City, Junction City, Lee City, Mining City, Oil City, Park City, Silver City, Sublimity City, White City, and Whitley City
LOUISIANA = 6
Amite City, Bossier City, Bridge City, Junction City, Morgan City, and Oil City
MAINE = 1
Forest City
MARYLAND = 7
Chesapeake City, Cottage City, Ellicott City, Maryland City, Ocean City, Pocomoke City, and West Ocean City
MASSACHUSETTS = 0
MICHIGAN = 38
Barton City, Bay City, Beal City, Boyne City, Brown City, Cass City, Cement City, Copper City, Filer City, Foster City, Garden City, Gould City, Grindstone City, Howard City, Huron City, Imlay City, Kent City, Lake City, Mackinaw City, Maple City, Marine City, Mass City, Minden City, National City, Nessen City, Oil City, Pearl City, Rapid City, Reed City, Rogers City, Rose City, Sherman City, Star City, Summit City, Tamarack City, Tawas City, Traverse City, and Union City
MINNESOTA = 17
Alma City, Big Bend City, Cannon City, Center City, Chisago City, Clara City, Forest City, Garden City, Grove City, Hill City, Holmes City, Illgen City, Lake City, Minnesota City, Murphy City, Pine City, and Rush City
MISSISSIPPI = 5
Calhoun City, Delta City, Morgan City, Silver City, and Yazoo City
MISSOURI = 40
Appleton City, Bates City, Bell City, Benton City, Bragg City, Crystal City, Forest City, Garden City, Gilman City, Golden City, Grant City, Green City, Gunn City, Haywood City, Jefferson City, Junction City, Kansas City, Kimberling City, King City, Kingdom City, Lowry City, Missouri City, Monroe City, Montgomery City, Mound City, Neck City, North Kansas City, Pierce City, Platte City, Queen City, Schell City, Scott City, Southwest City, Stark City, Stotts City, University City, Velda City, Webb City, Wilson City, and Wright City
MONTANA = 7
Cooke City, Jefferson City, Martin City, Miles City, Montana City, Park City, and Virginia City
NEBRASKA = 14
Beaver City, Central City, Dakota City, David City, Falls City, Howard City, Loup City, Mason City, Nebraska City, Pawnee City, Republican City, Rising City, South Sioux City, and Steele City
NEVADA = 5
Boulder City, Carson City, Mountain City, Silver City, and Virginia City
NEW HAMPSHIRE = 0
NEW JERSEY = 14
Atlantic City, Bordentown City, Burlington City, Corbin City, Egg Harbor City, Gloucester City, Jersey City, Margate City, Neptune City, Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Surf City, Union City, and Ventnor City
NEW MEXICO = 5
City of the Sun, Cotton City, Navajo City, Silver City, and Whites City
NEW YORK = 6
Garden City, Garden City Park, Garden City South, Johnson City, New City, and New York City
NORTH CAROLINA = 15
Bessemer City, Boger City, Bryson City, Cove City, Elizabeth City, Elm City, Forest City, James City, Morehead City, Oak City, Siler City, Silver City, Soul City, Surf City, and Tabor City
NORTH DAKOTA = 8
Canton City, Grace City, Michigan City, Pick City, Tower City, Valley City, Watford City, and Willow City
OHIO = 22
Beach City, Cream City, Crown City, Dexter City, Grove City, Holiday City, Jerry City, Jones City, Junction City, Lime City, Lore City, Miller City, Mineral City, Murray City, Ohio City, Oval City, Plain City, Pleasant City, Quaker City, Tipp City, Union City, and Valley City
OKLAHOMA = 26
Boise City, Cimarron City, Cox City, Custer City, Del City, Dill City, Eagle City, Elk City, Elmore City, Empire City, Harden City, Kaw City, Little City, Lost City, Marble City, Midwest City, Oil City, Oklahoma City, Ponca City, Ratliff City, Silver City, Spelter City, Strong City, Union City, Webb City, and Wright City
OREGON = 19
Baker City, Canyon City, Columbia City, Dunes City, Elk City, Falls City, Island City, Johnson City, Junction City, Kansas City, King City, Lincoln City, Mill City, Oregon City, Pacific City, Pelican City, Prairie City, Tri-City, and White City
PENNSYLVANIA = 21
Arnold City, Broad Top City, Central City, Dickson City, Evans City, Fayette City, Ford City, Forest City, Grier City, Grove City, Harrison City, Homer City, James City, Jamison City, Karns City, Lake City, Lumber City, Mahanoy City, Oil City, Spring City, and Union City
RHODE ISLAND = 0
SOUTH CAROLINA = 2
Garden City and Lake City
SOUTH DAKOTA = 10
Big Stone City, Central City, Claire City, Crook City, Garden City, Hill City, Lake City, Mound City, North Sioux City, and Prairie City
TENNESSEE = 14
Ashland City, Bluff City, Cumberland City, Jefferson City, Johnson City, Lenoir City, Maury City, Morrison City, Mountain City, Park City, Spring City, Summer City, Tracy City, and Union City
TEXAS = 54
Archer City, Arthur City, Bay City, Beach City, Bridge City, Caney City, Citrus City, Clarksville City, Close City, Coffee City, Colorado City, Crystal City, Dell City, Denver City, Dodd City, Dogwood City, Falls City, Frankel City, Gary City, Garden City, Gun Barrel City, Haltom City, Horizon City, Jacinto City, Johnson City, Karnes City, Knox City, Lake City, Lake Colorado City, Lakeside City, Lane City, League City, Liberty City, Mirando City, Missouri City, Mobile City, Monroe City, Mound City, Mountain City, Ore City, Pearl City, Post Oak Bend City, Queen City, Rio Grande City, Rose City, Royse City, Selman City, Sterling City, Sullivan City, Texas City, Todd City, Universal City, Warren City, Wolfe City,
UTAH = 13
Bear River City, Brigham City, Bryce Canyon City, Cedar City, Garden City, Heber City, Oak City, Park City, Plain City, Salt Lake City, Spring City, West Valley City, and White City
VERMONT = 0
VIRGINIA = 7
Charles City, Chase City, Dale City, Gate City, Pamplin City, Stephens City, and Weber City
WASHINGTON = 12
Basin City, Bay City, Benton City, Coulee City, Electric City, Elmer City, Fall City, Gould City, Junction City, Navy Yard City, Ocean City, and Royal City
WEST VIRGINIA = 12
Coal City, Cub City, Dupont City, Elk City, Hartford City, Lost City, Mineral City, Paden City, Raymond City, Star City, Sulphur City, and Union City
WISCONSIN = 14
Bay City, Bloom City, Buffalo City, Coral City, Cuba City, Fountain City, Genoa City, Glenwood City, Hager City, Junction City, Marathon City, Oil City, Slab City, and Tunnel City
WYOMING = 2
Atlantic City and Jeffrey City
——-
SOURCES: en.wikipedia.org for each state – cities, towns, municipalities, census designated places, villages, hamlets, and unincorporated places.
#CDPs #central #cities #forest #fun #garden #geography #hamlets #history #junction #lake #placenames #places #towns #travel #typonymy #union #villages
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States with the most “City” communities
Source: garden-city.orgListed below are the states with the most communities that include “city” in their name. This includes cities, towns, villages, hamlets, municipalities, unincorporated places, and census designated places. It does not include ghost towns, townships nor equivalent “towns” in Wisconsin, New York and elsewhere.
When one thinks about it, the popularity of Garden City makes sense given humans love living in scenic and/or bucolic locations. What name epitomizes those feelings better? Also among the top ten “city” names are Lake City and Forest City. Peace!
Source: townofgardencity.com——-
Leading states:
- Texas = 54
- Illinois = 51
- Missouri = 40
- Florida and Michigan = 38 each
- Iowa = 34
- California = 29
- Indiana = 27
- Kansas and Oklahoma = 26 each
Most common “city” names or variations:
- Garden City = 16
- Lake City = 12
- Junction City = 11
- Union City = 10
- Forest City = 8
- Central City, Oil City, Silver City, White(s) = 7 each
——-
ALABAMA = 11
Alexander City, Dodge City, Frisco City, Garden City, Hobson City, Midland City, Morgan City, Pell City, Phenix City, Rainbow City, and Sardis City
ALASKA = 0
ARIZONA = 13
Arizona City, Black Canyon City, Bullhead City, Central Heights-Midland City, Circle City, Colorado City, Huachuca City, Joseph City, Lake Havasu City, Rainbow City, Sun City, Sun City West, and Tuba City
ARKANSAS = 11
Arkansas City, Bluff City, Buffalo City, Cave City, Central City, Cherokee City, Diamond City, Forrest City, Junction City, Lake City, and Star City
CALIFORNIA = 29
Amador City, Big Bear City, Brandy City, Butte City, California City, Cathedral City, Cave City, City of Industry, Crescent City, Culver City, Daly City, Foster City, Holy City, King City, Lake City, Marin City, Montgomery City, National City, Nevada City, Oil City, Queen City, Redwood City, Sand City, South Yuba City, Spicer City, Suisun City, Temple City, Union City, and Yuba City
COLORADO = 10
Adams City, Canon City, Central City, Colorado City, Commerce City, Garden City, Lake City, Ohio City, Orchard City, and Sugar City
CONNECTICUT = 1
Jewett City
DELAWARE = 0
FLORIDA = 38
Amelia City, Angel City, Cooper City, Crescent City, Cross City, Dade City, Dade City North, Dickerson City, Everglades City, Floral City, Florida City, Forest City, Greenacres City, Grove City, Haines City, Highland City, Highlands City, Intercession City, Jacob City, Kenneth City, Lake City, Leisure City, Little Lake City, Miles City, Myakka City, Ocean City, Orange City, Palm City, Palm River-Clair-Mel City, Panama City, Panama City Beach, Plant City, Polk City, St. James City, Sun City, Sun City Center, and White City (2)
GEORGIA = 15
Garden City, Iron City, Junction City, Lake City, Lumber City, Mountain City, Peachtree City, Pebble City, Pecan City, Ray City, Sale City, Silver City, Tate City, Twin City, and Union City
HAWAII = 2
Lanai City and Pearl City
IDAHO = 6
Butte City, Elk City, Garden City, Idaho City, Malad City, and Sugar City
ILLINOIS = 51
Bay City, Bayle City, Beecher City, Bluff City (2), Calumet City, Central City, Clay City, Coal City, Crescent City, Dallas City, Dalton City, Fairmont City, Farmer City, Forest City, Future City, Gibson City, Granite City, Grove City, Hanna City, Hervey City, Hunt City, Illinois City, Johnston City, Junction City, Lake City, Mason City, Midland City, Miller City, Monroe City, Mound City, New City, Norris City, North City, Park City, Pearl City, Piper City, Prairie City, Rapids City, Rend City, Rock City, Schram City, Shale City, Shanghai City, Standard City, Star City, Steel City, Texas City, West City, White City, and Yates City
INDIANA = 27
Burns City, Cambridge City, Clay City (2), Coal City, Columbia City, Fountain City, Garden City, Gas City, Grant City, Harris City, Hartford City, Lincoln City, Michigan City, Mineral City, Monroe City, Oakland City, Parker City, Prairie City, Rome City, Saline City, Star City, State Line City, Switz City, Tell City, Union City, and Valley City
IOWA = 34
Albert City, Barnes City, Cedar City, Central City, Charles City, Columbus City, Dakota City, Davis City, Decatur City, Dow City, Forest City, Garden City, Gilmore City, Grant City, Iowa City, La Porte City, Lake City, Maharishi Vedic City, Mason City, May City, Orange City, Polk City, Prairie City, Promise City, Rockwell City, Sac City, Shannon City, Silver City, Sioux City, Stone City, Story City, Swea City, Walnut City, and Webster City
KANSAS = 26
Arkansas City, Baldwin City, Bird City, Bluff City, Bush City, Cawker City, Dodge City, Elk City, Empire City, Forest City, Garden City, Gove City, Hill City, Johnson City, Junction City, Kansas City, Lake City, Mound City, Ness City, Osage City, Page City, Park City, Scott City, Strong City, Sun City, and White City
KENTUCKY = 17
Bell City, Calvert City, Cannel City, Cave City, Central City, Clay City, Elkhorn City, Gold City, Junction City, Lee City, Mining City, Oil City, Park City, Silver City, Sublimity City, White City, and Whitley City
LOUISIANA = 6
Amite City, Bossier City, Bridge City, Junction City, Morgan City, and Oil City
MAINE = 1
Forest City
MARYLAND = 7
Chesapeake City, Cottage City, Ellicott City, Maryland City, Ocean City, Pocomoke City, and West Ocean City
MASSACHUSETTS = 0
MICHIGAN = 38
Barton City, Bay City, Beal City, Boyne City, Brown City, Cass City, Cement City, Copper City, Filer City, Foster City, Garden City, Gould City, Grindstone City, Howard City, Huron City, Imlay City, Kent City, Lake City, Mackinaw City, Maple City, Marine City, Mass City, Minden City, National City, Nessen City, Oil City, Pearl City, Rapid City, Reed City, Rogers City, Rose City, Sherman City, Star City, Summit City, Tamarack City, Tawas City, Traverse City, and Union City
MINNESOTA = 17
Alma City, Big Bend City, Cannon City, Center City, Chisago City, Clara City, Forest City, Garden City, Grove City, Hill City, Holmes City, Illgen City, Lake City, Minnesota City, Murphy City, Pine City, and Rush City
MISSISSIPPI = 5
Calhoun City, Delta City, Morgan City, Silver City, and Yazoo City
MISSOURI = 40
Appleton City, Bates City, Bell City, Benton City, Bragg City, Crystal City, Forest City, Garden City, Gilman City, Golden City, Grant City, Green City, Gunn City, Haywood City, Jefferson City, Junction City, Kansas City, Kimberling City, King City, Kingdom City, Lowry City, Missouri City, Monroe City, Montgomery City, Mound City, Neck City, North Kansas City, Pierce City, Platte City, Queen City, Schell City, Scott City, Southwest City, Stark City, Stotts City, University City, Velda City, Webb City, Wilson City, and Wright City
MONTANA = 7
Cooke City, Jefferson City, Martin City, Miles City, Montana City, Park City, and Virginia City
NEBRASKA = 14
Beaver City, Central City, Dakota City, David City, Falls City, Howard City, Loup City, Mason City, Nebraska City, Pawnee City, Republican City, Rising City, South Sioux City, and Steele City
NEVADA = 5
Boulder City, Carson City, Mountain City, Silver City, and Virginia City
NEW HAMPSHIRE = 0
NEW JERSEY = 14
Atlantic City, Bordentown City, Burlington City, Corbin City, Egg Harbor City, Gloucester City, Jersey City, Margate City, Neptune City, Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Surf City, Union City, and Ventnor City
NEW MEXICO = 5
City of the Sun, Cotton City, Navajo City, Silver City, and Whites City
NEW YORK = 6
Garden City, Garden City Park, Garden City South, Johnson City, New City, and New York City
NORTH CAROLINA = 15
Bessemer City, Boger City, Bryson City, Cove City, Elizabeth City, Elm City, Forest City, James City, Morehead City, Oak City, Siler City, Silver City, Soul City, Surf City, and Tabor City
NORTH DAKOTA = 8
Canton City, Grace City, Michigan City, Pick City, Tower City, Valley City, Watford City, and Willow City
OHIO = 22
Beach City, Cream City, Crown City, Dexter City, Grove City, Holiday City, Jerry City, Jones City, Junction City, Lime City, Lore City, Miller City, Mineral City, Murray City, Ohio City, Oval City, Plain City, Pleasant City, Quaker City, Tipp City, Union City, and Valley City
OKLAHOMA = 26
Boise City, Cimarron City, Cox City, Custer City, Del City, Dill City, Eagle City, Elk City, Elmore City, Empire City, Harden City, Kaw City, Little City, Lost City, Marble City, Midwest City, Oil City, Oklahoma City, Ponca City, Ratliff City, Silver City, Spelter City, Strong City, Union City, Webb City, and Wright City
OREGON = 18
Baker City, Canyon City, Columbia City, Dunes City, Elk City, Falls City, Island City, Johnson City, Junction City, King City, Lincoln City, Mill City, Oregon City, Pacific City, Pelican City, Prairie City, Tri-City, and White City
PENNSYLVANIA = 21
Arnold City, Broad Top City, Central City, Dickson City, Evans City, Fayette City, Ford City, Forest City, Grier City, Grove City, Harrison City, Homer City, James City, Jamison City, Karns City, Lake City, Lumber City, Mahanoy City, Oil City, Spring City, and Union City
RHODE ISLAND = 0
SOUTH CAROLINA = 2
Garden City and Lake City
SOUTH DAKOTA = 10
Big Stone City, Central City, Claire City, Crook City, Garden City, Hill City, Lake City, Mound City, North Sioux City, and Prairie City
TENNESSEE = 14
Ashland City, Bluff City, Cumberland City, Jefferson City, Johnson City, Lenoir City, Maury City, Morrison City, Mountain City, Park City, Spring City, Summer City, Tracy City, and Union City
TEXAS = 54
Archer City, Arthur City, Bay City, Beach City, Bridge City, Caney City, Citrus City, Clarksville City, Close City, Coffee City, Colorado City, Crystal City, Dell City, Denver City, Dodd City, Dogwood City, Falls City, Frankel City, Gary City, Garden City, Gun Barrel City, Haltom City, Horizon City, Jacinto City, Johnson City, Karnes City, Knox City, Lake City, Lake Colorado City, Lakeside City, Lane City, League City, Liberty City, Mirando City, Missouri City, Mobile City, Monroe City, Mound City, Mountain City, Ore City, Pearl City, Post Oak Bend City, Queen City, Rio Grande City, Rose City, Royse City, Selman City, Sterling City, Sullivan City, Texas City, Todd City, Universal City, Warren City, Wolfe City,
UTAH = 13
Bear River City, Brigham City, Bryce Canyon City, Cedar City, Garden City, Heber City, Oak City, Park City, Plain City, Salt Lake City, Spring City, West Valley City, and White City
VERMONT = 0
VIRGINIA = 7
Charles City, Chase City, Dale City, Gate City, Pamplin City, Stephens City, and Weber City
WASHINGTON = 12
Basin City, Bay City, Benton City, Coulee City, Electric City, Elmer City, Fall City, Gould City, Junction City, Navy Yard City, Ocean City, and Royal City
WEST VIRGINIA = 12
Coal City, Cub City, Dupont City, Elk City, Hartford City, Lost City, Mineral City, Paden City, Raymond City, Star City, Sulphur City, and Union City
WISCONSIN = 14
Bay City, Bloom City, Buffalo City, Coral City, Cuba City, Fountain City, Genoa City, Glenwood City, Hager City, Junction City, Marathon City, Oil City, Slab City, and Tunnel City
WYOMING = 2
Atlantic City and Jeffrey City
——-
SOURCES: en.wikipedia.org for each state – cities, towns, municipalities, census designated places, villages, hamlets, and unincorporated places.
#CDPs #central #cities #forest #fun #garden #geography #hamlets #history #junction #lake #placenames #places #towns #travel #typonymy #union #villages
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States with the most “City” communities
Source: garden-city.orgListed below are the states with the most communities that include “city” in their name. This includes cities, towns, villages, hamlets, municipalities, unincorporated places, and census designated places. It does not include ghost towns, townships nor equivalent “towns” in Wisconsin, New York and elsewhere.
When one thinks about it, the popularity of Garden City makes sense given humans love living in scenic and/or bucolic locations. What name epitomizes those feelings better? Also among the top ten “city” names are Lake City and Forest City. Peace!
Source: townofgardencity.com——-
Leading states:
- Texas = 54
- Illinois = 51
- Missouri = 40
- Florida and Michigan = 38 each
- Iowa = 34
- California = 29
- Indiana = 27
- Kansas and Oklahoma = 26 each
Most common “city” names or variations:
- Garden City = 16
- Lake City = 12
- Junction City = 11
- Union City = 10
- Forest City = 8
- Central City, Oil City, Silver City, White(s) = 7 each
——-
ALABAMA = 11
Alexander City, Dodge City, Frisco City, Garden City, Hobson City, Midland City, Morgan City, Pell City, Phenix City, Rainbow City, and Sardis City
ALASKA = 0
ARIZONA = 13
Arizona City, Black Canyon City, Bullhead City, Central Heights-Midland City, Circle City, Colorado City, Huachuca City, Joseph City, Lake Havasu City, Rainbow City, Sun City, Sun City West, and Tuba City
ARKANSAS = 11
Arkansas City, Bluff City, Buffalo City, Cave City, Central City, Cherokee City, Diamond City, Forrest City, Junction City, Lake City, and Star City
CALIFORNIA = 29
Amador City, Big Bear City, Brandy City, Butte City, California City, Cathedral City, Cave City, City of Industry, Crescent City, Culver City, Daly City, Foster City, Holy City, King City, Lake City, Marin City, Montgomery City, National City, Nevada City, Oil City, Queen City, Redwood City, Sand City, South Yuba City, Spicer City, Suisun City, Temple City, Union City, and Yuba City
COLORADO = 10
Adams City, Canon City, Central City, Colorado City, Commerce City, Garden City, Lake City, Ohio City, Orchard City, and Sugar City
CONNECTICUT = 1
Jewett City
DELAWARE = 0
FLORIDA = 38
Amelia City, Angel City, Cooper City, Crescent City, Cross City, Dade City, Dade City North, Dickerson City, Everglades City, Floral City, Florida City, Forest City, Greenacres City, Grove City, Haines City, Highland City, Highlands City, Intercession City, Jacob City, Kenneth City, Lake City, Leisure City, Little Lake City, Miles City, Myakka City, Ocean City, Orange City, Palm City, Palm River-Clair-Mel City, Panama City, Panama City Beach, Plant City, Polk City, St. James City, Sun City, Sun City Center, and White City (2)
GEORGIA = 15
Garden City, Iron City, Junction City, Lake City, Lumber City, Mountain City, Peachtree City, Pebble City, Pecan City, Ray City, Sale City, Silver City, Tate City, Twin City, and Union City
HAWAII = 2
Lanai City and Pearl City
IDAHO = 6
Butte City, Elk City, Garden City, Idaho City, Malad City, and Sugar City
ILLINOIS = 51
Bay City, Bayle City, Beecher City, Bluff City (2), Calumet City, Central City, Clay City, Coal City, Crescent City, Dallas City, Dalton City, Fairmont City, Farmer City, Forest City, Future City, Gibson City, Granite City, Grove City, Hanna City, Hervey City, Hunt City, Illinois City, Johnston City, Junction City, Lake City, Mason City, Midland City, Miller City, Monroe City, Mound City, New City, Norris City, North City, Park City, Pearl City, Piper City, Prairie City, Rapids City, Rend City, Rock City, Schram City, Shale City, Shanghai City, Standard City, Star City, Steel City, Texas City, West City, White City, and Yates City
INDIANA = 27
Burns City, Cambridge City, Clay City (2), Coal City, Columbia City, Fountain City, Garden City, Gas City, Grant City, Harris City, Hartford City, Lincoln City, Michigan City, Mineral City, Monroe City, Oakland City, Parker City, Prairie City, Rome City, Saline City, Star City, State Line City, Switz City, Tell City, Union City, and Valley City
IOWA = 34
Albert City, Barnes City, Cedar City, Central City, Charles City, Columbus City, Dakota City, Davis City, Decatur City, Dow City, Forest City, Garden City, Gilmore City, Grant City, Iowa City, La Porte City, Lake City, Maharishi Vedic City, Mason City, May City, Orange City, Polk City, Prairie City, Promise City, Rockwell City, Sac City, Shannon City, Silver City, Sioux City, Stone City, Story City, Swea City, Walnut City, and Webster City
KANSAS = 26
Arkansas City, Baldwin City, Bird City, Bluff City, Bush City, Cawker City, Dodge City, Elk City, Empire City, Forest City, Garden City, Gove City, Hill City, Johnson City, Junction City, Kansas City, Lake City, Mound City, Ness City, Osage City, Page City, Park City, Scott City, Strong City, Sun City, and White City
KENTUCKY = 17
Bell City, Calvert City, Cannel City, Cave City, Central City, Clay City, Elkhorn City, Gold City, Junction City, Lee City, Mining City, Oil City, Park City, Silver City, Sublimity City, White City, and Whitley City
LOUISIANA = 6
Amite City, Bossier City, Bridge City, Junction City, Morgan City, and Oil City
MAINE = 1
Forest City
MARYLAND = 7
Chesapeake City, Cottage City, Ellicott City, Maryland City, Ocean City, Pocomoke City, and West Ocean City
MASSACHUSETTS = 0
MICHIGAN = 38
Barton City, Bay City, Beal City, Boyne City, Brown City, Cass City, Cement City, Copper City, Filer City, Foster City, Garden City, Gould City, Grindstone City, Howard City, Huron City, Imlay City, Kent City, Lake City, Mackinaw City, Maple City, Marine City, Mass City, Minden City, National City, Nessen City, Oil City, Pearl City, Rapid City, Reed City, Rogers City, Rose City, Sherman City, Star City, Summit City, Tamarack City, Tawas City, Traverse City, and Union City
MINNESOTA = 17
Alma City, Big Bend City, Cannon City, Center City, Chisago City, Clara City, Forest City, Garden City, Grove City, Hill City, Holmes City, Illgen City, Lake City, Minnesota City, Murphy City, Pine City, and Rush City
MISSISSIPPI = 5
Calhoun City, Delta City, Morgan City, Silver City, and Yazoo City
MISSOURI = 40
Appleton City, Bates City, Bell City, Benton City, Bragg City, Crystal City, Forest City, Garden City, Gilman City, Golden City, Grant City, Green City, Gunn City, Haywood City, Jefferson City, Junction City, Kansas City, Kimberling City, King City, Kingdom City, Lowry City, Missouri City, Monroe City, Montgomery City, Mound City, Neck City, North Kansas City, Pierce City, Platte City, Queen City, Schell City, Scott City, Southwest City, Stark City, Stotts City, University City, Velda City, Webb City, Wilson City, and Wright City
MONTANA = 7
Cooke City, Jefferson City, Martin City, Miles City, Montana City, Park City, and Virginia City
NEBRASKA = 14
Beaver City, Central City, Dakota City, David City, Falls City, Howard City, Loup City, Mason City, Nebraska City, Pawnee City, Republican City, Rising City, South Sioux City, and Steele City
NEVADA = 5
Boulder City, Carson City, Mountain City, Silver City, and Virginia City
NEW HAMPSHIRE = 0
NEW JERSEY = 14
Atlantic City, Bordentown City, Burlington City, Corbin City, Egg Harbor City, Gloucester City, Jersey City, Margate City, Neptune City, Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Surf City, Union City, and Ventnor City
NEW MEXICO = 5
City of the Sun, Cotton City, Navajo City, Silver City, and Whites City
NEW YORK = 6
Garden City, Garden City Park, Garden City South, Johnson City, New City, and New York City
NORTH CAROLINA = 15
Bessemer City, Boger City, Bryson City, Cove City, Elizabeth City, Elm City, Forest City, James City, Morehead City, Oak City, Siler City, Silver City, Soul City, Surf City, and Tabor City
NORTH DAKOTA = 8
Canton City, Grace City, Michigan City, Pick City, Tower City, Valley City, Watford City, and Willow City
OHIO = 22
Beach City, Cream City, Crown City, Dexter City, Grove City, Holiday City, Jerry City, Jones City, Junction City, Lime City, Lore City, Miller City, Mineral City, Murray City, Ohio City, Oval City, Plain City, Pleasant City, Quaker City, Tipp City, Union City, and Valley City
OKLAHOMA = 26
Boise City, Cimarron City, Cox City, Custer City, Del City, Dill City, Eagle City, Elk City, Elmore City, Empire City, Harden City, Kaw City, Little City, Lost City, Marble City, Midwest City, Oil City, Oklahoma City, Ponca City, Ratliff City, Silver City, Spelter City, Strong City, Union City, Webb City, and Wright City
OREGON = 18
Baker City, Canyon City, Columbia City, Dunes City, Elk City, Falls City, Island City, Johnson City, Junction City, King City, Lincoln City, Mill City, Oregon City, Pacific City, Pelican City, Prairie City, Tri-City, and White City
PENNSYLVANIA = 21
Arnold City, Broad Top City, Central City, Dickson City, Evans City, Fayette City, Ford City, Forest City, Grier City, Grove City, Harrison City, Homer City, James City, Jamison City, Karns City, Lake City, Lumber City, Mahanoy City, Oil City, Spring City, and Union City
RHODE ISLAND = 0
SOUTH CAROLINA = 2
Garden City and Lake City
SOUTH DAKOTA = 10
Big Stone City, Central City, Claire City, Crook City, Garden City, Hill City, Lake City, Mound City, North Sioux City, and Prairie City
TENNESSEE = 14
Ashland City, Bluff City, Cumberland City, Jefferson City, Johnson City, Lenoir City, Maury City, Morrison City, Mountain City, Park City, Spring City, Summer City, Tracy City, and Union City
TEXAS = 54
Archer City, Arthur City, Bay City, Beach City, Bridge City, Caney City, Citrus City, Clarksville City, Close City, Coffee City, Colorado City, Crystal City, Dell City, Denver City, Dodd City, Dogwood City, Falls City, Frankel City, Gary City, Garden City, Gun Barrel City, Haltom City, Horizon City, Jacinto City, Johnson City, Karnes City, Knox City, Lake City, Lake Colorado City, Lakeside City, Lane City, League City, Liberty City, Mirando City, Missouri City, Mobile City, Monroe City, Mound City, Mountain City, Ore City, Pearl City, Post Oak Bend City, Queen City, Rio Grande City, Rose City, Royse City, Selman City, Sterling City, Sullivan City, Texas City, Todd City, Universal City, Warren City, Wolfe City,
UTAH = 13
Bear River City, Brigham City, Bryce Canyon City, Cedar City, Garden City, Heber City, Oak City, Park City, Plain City, Salt Lake City, Spring City, West Valley City, and White City
VERMONT = 0
VIRGINIA = 7
Charles City, Chase City, Dale City, Gate City, Pamplin City, Stephens City, and Weber City
WASHINGTON = 12
Basin City, Bay City, Benton City, Coulee City, Electric City, Elmer City, Fall City, Gould City, Junction City, Navy Yard City, Ocean City, and Royal City
WEST VIRGINIA = 12
Coal City, Cub City, Dupont City, Elk City, Hartford City, Lost City, Mineral City, Paden City, Raymond City, Star City, Sulphur City, and Union City
WISCONSIN = 14
Bay City, Bloom City, Buffalo City, Coral City, Cuba City, Fountain City, Genoa City, Glenwood City, Hager City, Junction City, Marathon City, Oil City, Slab City, and Tunnel City
WYOMING = 2
Atlantic City and Jeffrey City
——-
SOURCES: en.wikipedia.org for each state – cities, towns, municipalities, census designated places, villages, hamlets, and unincorporated places.
#CDPs #central #cities #forest #fun #garden #geography #hamlets #history #junction #lake #placenames #places #towns #travel #typonymy #union #villages
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Favorite outdoor stairway climbs completed to date
Identified below are this blog author’s favorite outdoor stairway climbs that have been completed to date. Each has its own individual attributes and aesthetics, whether it be the surrounding landscapes and scenery, a vast view at the top, or the narrowness of the climbing corridor. For purposes of this post, the terms stairs, stairways, and steps are used interchangeably. As more are completed, the post will be updated accordingly.
“A glorious vista is more enriching when it takes effort to get there.”
– panethos.wordpress.com
Peace!
The reward at the top of the Scalinata Salita CastelloScalinata Salita Castello = 541 steps in Taormina, Italia (see the two images just below)
High Tower/Rockledge Stairs = 161 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
High Tower Steps – to the left of the towerParamount Stairway = 220 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
Sky Steps = 529 steps in Durango, Colorado
Scalinata di Trinità dei Monti a.k.a. “The Spanish Steps” (1725) = 135 steps in Roma, Italia
Scala dell’Arce Capitolina (1348) = 124 steps in Roma, Italia
View from the Scala dell’Arce CapitolinaDevil’s Head Lookout Station Stairway = 143 steps near Sedalia, Colorado
Seven Falls Stairway = 224 steps in Colorado Springs, Colorado
Stairs are hard to see against the stone backdrop at Seven FallsIronman Stairs = 155 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
View from atop the Ironman Stairs in BisbeeThe Alcove House Climb ~ 220 wooden ladder and stone steps in Bandolier National Monument, New Mexico
Climb to the Alcove HouseWhitley Terrace Steps = 159 steps in Los Angeles (Whitley Heights), California
Whitley Terrace StepsWashington Street Steps = 252 steps in Galena, Illinois
Rose Stairs = 151 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Mayfield Stairs = 181 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
La Presa Steps = 181 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
Walnut Creek Canyon Stairway = 237 steps in Flagstaff, Arizona
Theatre Stairs = 127 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Laundry Stairs = 98 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Mount Tom Dune Stairs = 101 steps in Indiana Dunes National Park
Mount Tom Dune StairsFirst Avenue Steps = ? steps in Jerome, Arizona
JeromeCardiff Hill/Twain Lighthouse Stairway = 244 steps in Hannibal, Missouri
Twain Lighthouse StepsGila Cliff Dwellings Stairs = 288 in Glia Cliff Dwellings National Monument, New Mexico
Hilarious sign at Gila Cliff DwellingsPerley Stairs = 96 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Hurley Park Stairways = 152 steps in Albuquerque, New Mexico
Avalanche Hill Steps = 392 steps in Boyne City, Michigan
Baldwin Hills Stairs = 282 steps in Los Angeles (Baldwin Hills), California
Baldwin Hills StepsBand Shell Stairs = 73 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Spalding Stairs = 78 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Walsh Stairs = 98 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Jetty Stairway = 55 steps in Redondo Beach, California
Challenge Hill Stair Climb = 200 steps in Denver (Castle Rock), Colorado
Challenge HillMonks Mound Stairway = 155 steps in Cahokia Mounds State Park, Illinois
Twain Avenue to N. Fifth Street Stairs ~ 35 steps in Hannibal, Missouri
#cities #climbing #climbs #fun #geography #hiking #history #landUse #outdoor #stairs #stairways #stats #steps #tourism #transportation #travel #treks #views #vistas #walking -
Favorite outdoor stairway climbs completed to date
Identified below are this blog author’s favorite outdoor stairway climbs that have been completed to date. Each has its own individual attributes and aesthetics, whether it be the surrounding landscapes and scenery, a vast view at the top, or the narrowness of the climbing corridor. For purposes of this post, the terms stairs, stairways, and steps are used interchangeably. As more are completed, the post will be updated accordingly.
“A glorious vista is more enriching when it takes effort to get there.”
– panethos.wordpress.com
Peace!
The reward at the top of the Scalinata Salita CastelloScalinata Salita Castello = 541 steps in Taormina, Italia (see the two images just below)
High Tower/Rockledge Stairs = 161 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
High Tower Steps – to the left of the towerParamount Stairway = 220 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
Sky Steps = 529 steps in Durango, Colorado
Scalinata di Trinità dei Monti a.k.a. “The Spanish Steps” (1725) = 135 steps in Roma, Italia
Scala dell’Arce Capitolina (1348) = 124 steps in Roma, Italia
View from the Scala dell’Arce CapitolinaDevil’s Head Lookout Station Stairway = 143 steps near Sedalia, Colorado
Seven Falls Stairway = 224 steps in Colorado Springs, Colorado
Stairs are hard to see against the stone backdrop at Seven FallsIronman Stairs = 155 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
View from atop the Ironman Stairs in BisbeeThe Alcove House Climb ~ 220 wooden ladder and stone steps in Bandolier National Monument, New Mexico
Climb to the Alcove HouseWhitley Terrace Steps = 159 steps in Los Angeles (Whitley Heights), California
Whitley Terrace StepsWashington Street Steps = 252 steps in Galena, Illinois
Rose Stairs = 151 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Mayfield Stairs = 181 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
La Presa Steps = 181 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
Walnut Creek Canyon Stairway = 237 steps in Flagstaff, Arizona
Theatre Stairs = 127 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Laundry Stairs = 98 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Mount Tom Dune Stairs = 101 steps in Indiana Dunes National Park
Mount Tom Dune StairsFirst Avenue Steps = ? steps in Jerome, Arizona
JeromeCardiff Hill/Twain Lighthouse Stairway = 244 steps in Hannibal, Missouri
Twain Lighthouse StepsGila Cliff Dwellings Stairs = 288 in Glia Cliff Dwellings National Monument, New Mexico
Hilarious sign at Gila Cliff DwellingsPerley Stairs = 96 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Hurley Park Stairways = 152 steps in Albuquerque, New Mexico
Avalanche Hill Steps = 392 steps in Boyne City, Michigan
Baldwin Hills Stairs = 282 steps in Los Angeles (Baldwin Hills), California
Baldwin Hills StepsBand Shell Stairs = 73 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Spalding Stairs = 78 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Walsh Stairs = 98 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Jetty Stairway = 55 steps in Redondo Beach, California
Challenge Hill Stair Climb = 200 steps in Denver (Castle Rock), Colorado
Challenge HillMonks Mound Stairway = 155 steps in Cahokia Mounds State Park, Illinois
Twain Avenue to N. Fifth Street Stairs ~ 35 steps in Hannibal, Missouri
#cities #climbing #climbs #fun #geography #hiking #history #landUse #outdoor #stairs #stairways #stats #steps #tourism #transportation #travel #treks #views #vistas #walking -
Favorite outdoor stairway climbs completed to date
Identified below are this blog author’s favorite outdoor stairway climbs that have been completed to date. Each has its own individual attributes and aesthetics, whether it be the surrounding landscapes and scenery, a vast view at the top, or the narrowness of the climbing corridor. For purposes of this post, the terms stairs, stairways, and steps are used interchangeably. As more are completed, the post will be updated accordingly.
“A glorious vista is more enriching when it takes effort to get there.”
– panethos.wordpress.com
Peace!
The reward at the top of the Scalinata Salita CastelloScalinata Salita Castello = 541 steps in Taormina, Italia (see the two images just below)
High Tower/Rockledge Stairs = 161 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
High Tower Steps – to the left of the towerParamount Stairway = 220 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
Sky Steps = 529 steps in Durango, Colorado
Scalinata di Trinità dei Monti a.k.a. “The Spanish Steps” (1725) = 135 steps in Roma, Italia
Scala dell’Arce Capitolina (1348) = 124 steps in Roma, Italia
View from the Scala dell’Arce CapitolinaDevil’s Head Lookout Station Stairway = 143 steps near Sedalia, Colorado
Seven Falls Stairway = 224 steps in Colorado Springs, Colorado
Stairs are hard to see against the stone backdrop at Seven FallsIronman Stairs = 155 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
View from atop the Ironman Stairs in BisbeeThe Alcove House Climb ~ 220 wooden ladder and stone steps in Bandolier National Monument, New Mexico
Climb to the Alcove HouseWhitley Terrace Steps = 159 steps in Los Angeles (Whitley Heights), California
Whitley Terrace StepsWashington Street Steps = 252 steps in Galena, Illinois
Rose Stairs = 151 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Mayfield Stairs = 181 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
La Presa Steps = 181 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
Walnut Creek Canyon Stairway = 237 steps in Flagstaff, Arizona
Theatre Stairs = 127 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Laundry Stairs = 98 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Mount Tom Dune Stairs = 101 steps in Indiana Dunes National Park
Mount Tom Dune StairsFirst Avenue Steps = ? steps in Jerome, Arizona
JeromeCardiff Hill/Twain Lighthouse Stairway = 244 steps in Hannibal, Missouri
Twain Lighthouse StepsGila Cliff Dwellings Stairs = 288 in Glia Cliff Dwellings National Monument, New Mexico
Hilarious sign at Gila Cliff DwellingsPerley Stairs = 96 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Hurley Park Stairways = 152 steps in Albuquerque, New Mexico
Avalanche Hill Steps = 392 steps in Boyne City, Michigan
Baldwin Hills Stairs = 282 steps in Los Angeles (Baldwin Hills), California
Baldwin Hills StepsBand Shell Stairs = 73 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Spalding Stairs = 78 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Walsh Stairs = 98 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Jetty Stairway = 55 steps in Redondo Beach, California
Challenge Hill Stair Climb = 200 steps in Denver (Castle Rock), Colorado
Challenge HillMonks Mound Stairway = 155 steps in Cahokia Mounds State Park, Illinois
Twain Avenue to N. Fifth Street Stairs ~ 35 steps in Hannibal, Missouri
#cities #climbing #climbs #fun #geography #hiking #history #landUse #outdoor #stairs #stairways #stats #steps #tourism #transportation #travel #treks #views #vistas #walking -
Favorite outdoor stairway climbs completed to date
Identified below are this blog author’s favorite outdoor stairway climbs that have been completed to date. Each has its own individual attributes and aesthetics, whether it be the surrounding landscapes and scenery, a vast view at the top, or the narrowness of the climbing corridor. For purposes of this post, the terms stairs, stairways, and steps are used interchangeably. As more are completed, the post will be updated accordingly.
“A glorious vista is more enriching when it takes effort to get there.”
– panethos.wordpress.com
Peace!
The reward at the top of the Scalinata Salita CastelloScalinata Salita Castello = 541 steps in Taormina, Italia (see the two images just below)
High Tower/Rockledge Stairs = 161 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
High Tower Steps – to the left of the towerParamount Stairway = 220 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
Sky Steps = 529 steps in Durango, Colorado
Scalinata di Trinità dei Monti a.k.a. “The Spanish Steps” (1725) = 135 steps in Roma, Italia
Scala dell’Arce Capitolina (1348) = 124 steps in Roma, Italia
View from the Scala dell’Arce CapitolinaDevil’s Head Lookout Station Stairway = 143 steps near Sedalia, Colorado
Seven Falls Stairway = 224 steps in Colorado Springs, Colorado
Stairs are hard to see against the stone backdrop at Seven FallsIronman Stairs = 155 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
View from atop the Ironman Stairs in BisbeeThe Alcove House Climb ~ 220 wooden ladder and stone steps in Bandolier National Monument, New Mexico
Climb to the Alcove HouseWhitley Terrace Steps = 159 steps in Los Angeles (Whitley Heights), California
Whitley Terrace StepsWashington Street Steps = 252 steps in Galena, Illinois
Rose Stairs = 151 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Mayfield Stairs = 181 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
La Presa Steps = 181 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
Walnut Creek Canyon Stairway = 237 steps in Flagstaff, Arizona
Theatre Stairs = 127 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Laundry Stairs = 98 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Mount Tom Dune Stairs = 101 steps in Indiana Dunes National Park
Mount Tom Dune StairsFirst Avenue Steps = ? steps in Jerome, Arizona
JeromeCardiff Hill/Twain Lighthouse Stairway = 244 steps in Hannibal, Missouri
Twain Lighthouse StepsGila Cliff Dwellings Stairs = 288 in Glia Cliff Dwellings National Monument, New Mexico
Hilarious sign at Gila Cliff DwellingsPerley Stairs = 96 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Hurley Park Stairways = 152 steps in Albuquerque, New Mexico
Avalanche Hill Steps = 392 steps in Boyne City, Michigan
Baldwin Hills Stairs = 282 steps in Los Angeles (Baldwin Hills), California
Baldwin Hills StepsBand Shell Stairs = 73 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Spalding Stairs = 78 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Walsh Stairs = 98 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Jetty Stairway = 55 steps in Redondo Beach, California
Challenge Hill Stair Climb = 200 steps in Denver (Castle Rock), Colorado
Challenge HillMonks Mound Stairway = 155 steps in Cahokia Mounds State Park, Illinois
Twain Avenue to N. Fifth Street Stairs ~ 35 steps in Hannibal, Missouri
#cities #climbing #climbs #fun #geography #hiking #history #landUse #outdoor #stairs #stairways #stats #steps #tourism #transportation #travel #treks #views #vistas #walking -
Favorite outdoor stairway climbs completed to date
Identified below are this blog author’s favorite outdoor stairway climbs that have been completed to date. Each has its own individual attributes and aesthetics, whether it be the surrounding landscapes and scenery, a vast view at the top, or the narrowness of the climbing corridor. For purposes of this post, the terms stairs, stairways, and steps are used interchangeably. As more are completed, the post will be updated accordingly.
“A glorious vista is more enriching when it takes effort to get there.”
– panethos.wordpress.com
Peace!
The reward at the top of the Scalinata Salita CastelloScalinata Salita Castello = 541 steps in Taormina, Italia (see the two images just below)
High Tower/Rockledge Stairs = 161 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
High Tower Steps – to the left of the towerParamount Stairway = 220 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
Sky Steps = 529 steps in Durango, Colorado
Scalinata di Trinità dei Monti a.k.a. “The Spanish Steps” (1725) = 135 steps in Roma, Italia
Scala dell’Arce Capitolina (1348) = 124 steps in Roma, Italia
View from the Scala dell’Arce CapitolinaDevil’s Head Lookout Station Stairway = 143 steps near Sedalia, Colorado
Seven Falls Stairway = 224 steps in Colorado Springs, Colorado
Stairs are hard to see against the stone backdrop at Seven FallsIronman Stairs = 155 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
View from atop the Ironman Stairs in BisbeeThe Alcove House Climb ~ 220 wooden ladder and stone steps in Bandolier National Monument, New Mexico
Climb to the Alcove HouseWhitley Terrace Steps = 159 steps in Los Angeles (Whitley Heights), California
Whitley Terrace StepsWashington Street Steps = 252 steps in Galena, Illinois
Rose Stairs = 151 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Mayfield Stairs = 181 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
La Presa Steps = 181 steps in Los Angeles (Hollywood Heights), California
Walnut Creek Canyon Stairway = 237 steps in Flagstaff, Arizona
Theatre Stairs = 127 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Laundry Stairs = 98 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Mount Tom Dune Stairs = 101 steps in Indiana Dunes National Park
Mount Tom Dune StairsFirst Avenue Steps = ? steps in Jerome, Arizona
JeromeCardiff Hill/Twain Lighthouse Stairway = 244 steps in Hannibal, Missouri
Twain Lighthouse StepsGila Cliff Dwellings Stairs = 288 in Glia Cliff Dwellings National Monument, New Mexico
Hilarious sign at Gila Cliff DwellingsPerley Stairs = 96 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Hurley Park Stairways = 152 steps in Albuquerque, New Mexico
Avalanche Hill Steps = 392 steps in Boyne City, Michigan
Baldwin Hills Stairs = 282 steps in Los Angeles (Baldwin Hills), California
Baldwin Hills StepsBand Shell Stairs = 73 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Spalding Stairs = 78 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Walsh Stairs = 98 steps in Bisbee, Arizona
Jetty Stairway = 55 steps in Redondo Beach, California
Challenge Hill Stair Climb = 200 steps in Denver (Castle Rock), Colorado
Challenge HillMonks Mound Stairway = 155 steps in Cahokia Mounds State Park, Illinois
Twain Avenue to N. Fifth Street Stairs ~ 35 steps in Hannibal, Missouri
#cities #climbing #climbs #fun #geography #hiking #history #landUse #outdoor #stairs #stairways #stats #steps #tourism #transportation #travel #treks #views #vistas #walking -
Crown Lands – Apocalypse Review By OwlswaldRush is my all-time favorite band, so their 2015 hiatus, brought on by Neil Peart’s declining health hit me hard. Peart’s passing in 2020 made it permanent, slamming the door on the Rush I grew up loving. That’s why stumbling across Crown Lands’ 2023 sophomore album Fearless—courtesy of this very blog—felt like a hemispherian void had been filled. The dynamic duo from Oshawa, Ontario, tapped into the essence of prime ’70s Rush better than anyone I’ve heard, much like Greta Van Fleet’s revival of the mighty Led Zeppelin. Naturally, when I learned their third LP, Apocalypse, was on the way, I rushed to the promo sump to claim dibs faster than you can say 2112.
Apocalypse expands the Fearless Chronology that began with “The Oracle” from 2022’s White Buffalo with the same sonic and aesthetic bombast longtime fans expect, while stretching Crown Lands’ sound into territory occupied by other classic rock titans. Taking place a century before the events of Fearless and once again rooted in the spirit of Rush’s “Cygnus X-1” series, Apocalypse often feels like a natural progression of its predecessor even if it doesn’t quite reach the same heights. Through straightforward, radio-friendly anthems, as well as the mammoth self-titled closer, the album’s narrative charts a manipulative, oppressive force that weaponizes fear (“Foot Soldiers of the Syndicate”), then spirals outward into dragons, warriors and interstellar tyrants plunging the world into chaos (“Blackstar”). Amid the destruction, more intimate threads of loss and longing surface in crestfallen ballads (“The Revenant,” “Through the Looking Glass”). Where Fearless opened with its longest track, Apocalypse flips the script, saving its epic for the finale. The 19-minute cut matches the ambition and scope of “The Oracle” and “Starlifter: Fearless Pt. II,” though the record’s bottom-heavy makeup leaves less to uncover in the tracks leading up to it.
It’s unusual to devote an entire paragraph to a single track, but “Apocalypse” earns the word count as its reach accounts for nearly half of the record’s runtime. The piece opens in classic Rush fashion as celestial synths, cascading tom rolls, and shifting syncopation give way to shimmering arpeggios and warm, fluid vocal lines. At first, the track feels poised to deliver on its promise, and as it unfolds, Crown Lands weaves in a myriad of compelling touches, including Pink Floyd’s patented stoner-rock solos and a gorgeous arpeggiated, space-drifting movement with a flute-laden motif that nods to the duo’s Indigenous roots. But the track’s momentum falters at several points, and the songwriting begins to feel choppy as the track progresses. The choral bridge at the six-minute mark is a great idea, yet it’s followed by an overly hectic section where Crown Lands’ instrumental prowess shines but the vocals grate, undercutting what could have become a more transcendent phase. Similarly, the astral section at eleven minutes, with its galactic, vocal harmonies and tribal tom flourishes, is another moment that is abrasive. Although it ends on a high note, “Apocalypse” feels like it needed more time to bake to fully come together.
The unevenness of the self-titled epic would be forgivable if Apocalypse’s remaining tracks consistently picked up the slack. But they don’t. Stronger songs like “Through the Looking Glass” and “The Revenant” rely on Led Zeppelin-esque refrains to cohere into some of their best material to date, while Bowles’ vocal approach primarily hampers “Foot Soldiers of the Syndicate”, “Blackstar,” and “The Fall.” Bowles’ high-register singing—which will no doubt remain as divisive as Geddy Lee’s—can feel forced or strained at times, pulling me out of the otherwise strong songwriting rather than deepening the immersion. Across several key moments, Bowles doesn’t feel fully locked in, leaning instead on playful, almost taunting huffs and puffs (“The Fall”) or siren-like shrills (“Apocalypse”) that never quite find their place. Still, while Crown Lands’ execution isn’t as consistently sharp as Fearless, Apocalypse still offers plenty of quality material for fans to latch onto.
I’ve enjoyed my time with Apocalypse, yet I can’t help but feel somewhat disappointed. Maybe it speaks to the consistency and appeal of Fearless, but this record simply doesn’t resonate in the same way its predecessor did. To their credit, Crown Lands takes risks and pushes into some new territory here, and some of those choices pay off. Nevertheless, Apocalypse lacks the cohesion to keep me coming back, outside of a couple tracks that have burrowed their way into my psyche. It’s a letdown, but one I’m inclined to chalk up to growing pains for now.
Rating: Good
#2026 #30 #Apocalypse #CanadianMetal #CrownLands #GretaVanFleet #InsideOutMusic #LedZeppelin #May26 #PinkFloyd #ProgressiveRock #Review #Reviews #Rock #Rush
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: InsideOut Music
Websites: crownlands.bandcamp.com | crownlandsmusic.com | facebook.com/crownlandsmusic
Releases Worldwide: May 15th, 2026 -
Crown Lands – Apocalypse Review By OwlswaldRush is my all-time favorite band, so their 2015 hiatus, brought on by Neil Peart’s declining health hit me hard. Peart’s passing in 2020 made it permanent, slamming the door on the Rush I grew up loving. That’s why stumbling across Crown Lands’ 2023 sophomore album Fearless—courtesy of this very blog—felt like a hemispherian void had been filled. The dynamic duo from Oshawa, Ontario, tapped into the essence of prime ’70s Rush better than anyone I’ve heard, much like Greta Van Fleet’s revival of the mighty Led Zeppelin. Naturally, when I learned their third LP, Apocalypse, was on the way, I rushed to the promo sump to claim dibs faster than you can say 2112.
Apocalypse expands the Fearless Chronology that began with “The Oracle” from 2022’s White Buffalo with the same sonic and aesthetic bombast longtime fans expect, while stretching Crown Lands’ sound into territory occupied by other classic rock titans. Taking place a century before the events of Fearless and once again rooted in the spirit of Rush’s “Cygnus X-1” series, Apocalypse often feels like a natural progression of its predecessor even if it doesn’t quite reach the same heights. Through straightforward, radio-friendly anthems, as well as the mammoth self-titled closer, the album’s narrative charts a manipulative, oppressive force that weaponizes fear (“Foot Soldiers of the Syndicate”), then spirals outward into dragons, warriors and interstellar tyrants plunging the world into chaos (“Blackstar”). Amid the destruction, more intimate threads of loss and longing surface in crestfallen ballads (“The Revenant,” “Through the Looking Glass”). Where Fearless opened with its longest track, Apocalypse flips the script, saving its epic for the finale. The 19-minute cut matches the ambition and scope of “The Oracle” and “Starlifter: Fearless Pt. II,” though the record’s bottom-heavy makeup leaves less to uncover in the tracks leading up to it.
It’s unusual to devote an entire paragraph to a single track, but “Apocalypse” earns the word count as its reach accounts for nearly half of the record’s runtime. The piece opens in classic Rush fashion as celestial synths, cascading tom rolls, and shifting syncopation give way to shimmering arpeggios and warm, fluid vocal lines. At first, the track feels poised to deliver on its promise, and as it unfolds, Crown Lands weaves in a myriad of compelling touches, including Pink Floyd’s patented stoner-rock solos and a gorgeous arpeggiated, space-drifting movement with a flute-laden motif that nods to the duo’s Indigenous roots. But the track’s momentum falters at several points, and the songwriting begins to feel choppy as the track progresses. The choral bridge at the six-minute mark is a great idea, yet it’s followed by an overly hectic section where Crown Lands’ instrumental prowess shines but the vocals grate, undercutting what could have become a more transcendent phase. Similarly, the astral section at eleven minutes, with its galactic, vocal harmonies and tribal tom flourishes, is another moment that is abrasive. Although it ends on a high note, “Apocalypse” feels like it needed more time to bake to fully come together.
The unevenness of the self-titled epic would be forgivable if Apocalypse’s remaining tracks consistently picked up the slack. But they don’t. Stronger songs like “Through the Looking Glass” and “The Revenant” rely on Led Zeppelin-esque refrains to cohere into some of their best material to date, while Bowles’ vocal approach primarily hampers “Foot Soldiers of the Syndicate”, “Blackstar,” and “The Fall.” Bowles’ high-register singing—which will no doubt remain as divisive as Geddy Lee’s—can feel forced or strained at times, pulling me out of the otherwise strong songwriting rather than deepening the immersion. Across several key moments, Bowles doesn’t feel fully locked in, leaning instead on playful, almost taunting huffs and puffs (“The Fall”) or siren-like shrills (“Apocalypse”) that never quite find their place. Still, while Crown Lands’ execution isn’t as consistently sharp as Fearless, Apocalypse still offers plenty of quality material for fans to latch onto.
I’ve enjoyed my time with Apocalypse, yet I can’t help but feel somewhat disappointed. Maybe it speaks to the consistency and appeal of Fearless, but this record simply doesn’t resonate in the same way its predecessor did. To their credit, Crown Lands takes risks and pushes into some new territory here, and some of those choices pay off. Nevertheless, Apocalypse lacks the cohesion to keep me coming back, outside of a couple tracks that have burrowed their way into my psyche. It’s a letdown, but one I’m inclined to chalk up to growing pains for now.
Rating: Good
#2026 #30 #Apocalypse #CanadianMetal #CrownLands #GretaVanFleet #InsideOutMusic #LedZeppelin #May26 #PinkFloyd #ProgressiveRock #Review #Reviews #Rock #Rush
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: InsideOut Music
Websites: crownlands.bandcamp.com | crownlandsmusic.com | facebook.com/crownlandsmusic
Releases Worldwide: May 15th, 2026 -
Crown Lands – Apocalypse Review By OwlswaldRush is my all-time favorite band, so their 2015 hiatus, brought on by Neil Peart’s declining health hit me hard. Peart’s passing in 2020 made it permanent, slamming the door on the Rush I grew up loving. That’s why stumbling across Crown Lands’ 2023 sophomore album Fearless—courtesy of this very blog—felt like a hemispherian void had been filled. The dynamic duo from Oshawa, Ontario, tapped into the essence of prime ’70s Rush better than anyone I’ve heard, much like Greta Van Fleet’s revival of the mighty Led Zeppelin. Naturally, when I learned their third LP, Apocalypse, was on the way, I rushed to the promo sump to claim dibs faster than you can say 2112.
Apocalypse expands the Fearless Chronology that began with “The Oracle” from 2022’s White Buffalo with the same sonic and aesthetic bombast longtime fans expect, while stretching Crown Lands’ sound into territory occupied by other classic rock titans. Taking place a century before the events of Fearless and once again rooted in the spirit of Rush’s “Cygnus X-1” series, Apocalypse often feels like a natural progression of its predecessor even if it doesn’t quite reach the same heights. Through straightforward, radio-friendly anthems, as well as the mammoth self-titled closer, the album’s narrative charts a manipulative, oppressive force that weaponizes fear (“Foot Soldiers of the Syndicate”), then spirals outward into dragons, warriors and interstellar tyrants plunging the world into chaos (“Blackstar”). Amid the destruction, more intimate threads of loss and longing surface in crestfallen ballads (“The Revenant,” “Through the Looking Glass”). Where Fearless opened with its longest track, Apocalypse flips the script, saving its epic for the finale. The 19-minute cut matches the ambition and scope of “The Oracle” and “Starlifter: Fearless Pt. II,” though the record’s bottom-heavy makeup leaves less to uncover in the tracks leading up to it.
It’s unusual to devote an entire paragraph to a single track, but “Apocalypse” earns the word count as its reach accounts for nearly half of the record’s runtime. The piece opens in classic Rush fashion as celestial synths, cascading tom rolls, and shifting syncopation give way to shimmering arpeggios and warm, fluid vocal lines. At first, the track feels poised to deliver on its promise, and as it unfolds, Crown Lands weaves in a myriad of compelling touches, including Pink Floyd’s patented stoner-rock solos and a gorgeous arpeggiated, space-drifting movement with a flute-laden motif that nods to the duo’s Indigenous roots. But the track’s momentum falters at several points, and the songwriting begins to feel choppy as the track progresses. The choral bridge at the six-minute mark is a great idea, yet it’s followed by an overly hectic section where Crown Lands’ instrumental prowess shines but the vocals grate, undercutting what could have become a more transcendent phase. Similarly, the astral section at eleven minutes, with its galactic, vocal harmonies and tribal tom flourishes, is another moment that is abrasive. Although it ends on a high note, “Apocalypse” feels like it needed more time to bake to fully come together.
The unevenness of the self-titled epic would be forgivable if Apocalypse’s remaining tracks consistently picked up the slack. But they don’t. Stronger songs like “Through the Looking Glass” and “The Revenant” rely on Led Zeppelin-esque refrains to cohere into some of their best material to date, while Bowles’ vocal approach primarily hampers “Foot Soldiers of the Syndicate”, “Blackstar,” and “The Fall.” Bowles’ high-register singing—which will no doubt remain as divisive as Geddy Lee’s—can feel forced or strained at times, pulling me out of the otherwise strong songwriting rather than deepening the immersion. Across several key moments, Bowles doesn’t feel fully locked in, leaning instead on playful, almost taunting huffs and puffs (“The Fall”) or siren-like shrills (“Apocalypse”) that never quite find their place. Still, while Crown Lands’ execution isn’t as consistently sharp as Fearless, Apocalypse still offers plenty of quality material for fans to latch onto.
I’ve enjoyed my time with Apocalypse, yet I can’t help but feel somewhat disappointed. Maybe it speaks to the consistency and appeal of Fearless, but this record simply doesn’t resonate in the same way its predecessor did. To their credit, Crown Lands takes risks and pushes into some new territory here, and some of those choices pay off. Nevertheless, Apocalypse lacks the cohesion to keep me coming back, outside of a couple tracks that have burrowed their way into my psyche. It’s a letdown, but one I’m inclined to chalk up to growing pains for now.
Rating: Good
#2026 #30 #Apocalypse #CanadianMetal #CrownLands #GretaVanFleet #InsideOutMusic #LedZeppelin #May26 #PinkFloyd #ProgressiveRock #Review #Reviews #Rock #Rush
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: InsideOut Music
Websites: crownlands.bandcamp.com | crownlandsmusic.com | facebook.com/crownlandsmusic
Releases Worldwide: May 15th, 2026 -
Crown Lands – Apocalypse Review By OwlswaldRush is my all-time favorite band, so their 2015 hiatus, brought on by Neil Peart’s declining health hit me hard. Peart’s passing in 2020 made it permanent, slamming the door on the Rush I grew up loving. That’s why stumbling across Crown Lands’ 2023 sophomore album Fearless—courtesy of this very blog—felt like a hemispherian void had been filled. The dynamic duo from Oshawa, Ontario, tapped into the essence of prime ’70s Rush better than anyone I’ve heard, much like Greta Van Fleet’s revival of the mighty Led Zeppelin. Naturally, when I learned their third LP, Apocalypse, was on the way, I rushed to the promo sump to claim dibs faster than you can say 2112.
Apocalypse expands the Fearless Chronology that began with “The Oracle” from 2022’s White Buffalo with the same sonic and aesthetic bombast longtime fans expect, while stretching Crown Lands’ sound into territory occupied by other classic rock titans. Taking place a century before the events of Fearless and once again rooted in the spirit of Rush’s “Cygnus X-1” series, Apocalypse often feels like a natural progression of its predecessor even if it doesn’t quite reach the same heights. Through straightforward, radio-friendly anthems, as well as the mammoth self-titled closer, the album’s narrative charts a manipulative, oppressive force that weaponizes fear (“Foot Soldiers of the Syndicate”), then spirals outward into dragons, warriors and interstellar tyrants plunging the world into chaos (“Blackstar”). Amid the destruction, more intimate threads of loss and longing surface in crestfallen ballads (“The Revenant,” “Through the Looking Glass”). Where Fearless opened with its longest track, Apocalypse flips the script, saving its epic for the finale. The 19-minute cut matches the ambition and scope of “The Oracle” and “Starlifter: Fearless Pt. II,” though the record’s bottom-heavy makeup leaves less to uncover in the tracks leading up to it.
It’s unusual to devote an entire paragraph to a single track, but “Apocalypse” earns the word count as its reach accounts for nearly half of the record’s runtime. The piece opens in classic Rush fashion as celestial synths, cascading tom rolls, and shifting syncopation give way to shimmering arpeggios and warm, fluid vocal lines. At first, the track feels poised to deliver on its promise, and as it unfolds, Crown Lands weaves in a myriad of compelling touches, including Pink Floyd’s patented stoner-rock solos and a gorgeous arpeggiated, space-drifting movement with a flute-laden motif that nods to the duo’s Indigenous roots. But the track’s momentum falters at several points, and the songwriting begins to feel choppy as the track progresses. The choral bridge at the six-minute mark is a great idea, yet it’s followed by an overly hectic section where Crown Lands’ instrumental prowess shines but the vocals grate, undercutting what could have become a more transcendent phase. Similarly, the astral section at eleven minutes, with its galactic, vocal harmonies and tribal tom flourishes, is another moment that is abrasive. Although it ends on a high note, “Apocalypse” feels like it needed more time to bake to fully come together.
The unevenness of the self-titled epic would be forgivable if Apocalypse’s remaining tracks consistently picked up the slack. But they don’t. Stronger songs like “Through the Looking Glass” and “The Revenant” rely on Led Zeppelin-esque refrains to cohere into some of their best material to date, while Bowles’ vocal approach primarily hampers “Foot Soldiers of the Syndicate”, “Blackstar,” and “The Fall.” Bowles’ high-register singing—which will no doubt remain as divisive as Geddy Lee’s—can feel forced or strained at times, pulling me out of the otherwise strong songwriting rather than deepening the immersion. Across several key moments, Bowles doesn’t feel fully locked in, leaning instead on playful, almost taunting huffs and puffs (“The Fall”) or siren-like shrills (“Apocalypse”) that never quite find their place. Still, while Crown Lands’ execution isn’t as consistently sharp as Fearless, Apocalypse still offers plenty of quality material for fans to latch onto.
I’ve enjoyed my time with Apocalypse, yet I can’t help but feel somewhat disappointed. Maybe it speaks to the consistency and appeal of Fearless, but this record simply doesn’t resonate in the same way its predecessor did. To their credit, Crown Lands takes risks and pushes into some new territory here, and some of those choices pay off. Nevertheless, Apocalypse lacks the cohesion to keep me coming back, outside of a couple tracks that have burrowed their way into my psyche. It’s a letdown, but one I’m inclined to chalk up to growing pains for now.
Rating: Good
#2026 #30 #Apocalypse #CanadianMetal #CrownLands #GretaVanFleet #InsideOutMusic #LedZeppelin #May26 #PinkFloyd #ProgressiveRock #Review #Reviews #Rock #Rush
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: InsideOut Music
Websites: crownlands.bandcamp.com | crownlandsmusic.com | facebook.com/crownlandsmusic
Releases Worldwide: May 15th, 2026 -
Crown Lands – Apocalypse Review By OwlswaldRush is my all-time favorite band, so their 2015 hiatus, brought on by Neil Peart’s declining health hit me hard. Peart’s passing in 2020 made it permanent, slamming the door on the Rush I grew up loving. That’s why stumbling across Crown Lands’ 2023 sophomore album Fearless—courtesy of this very blog—felt like a hemispherian void had been filled. The dynamic duo from Oshawa, Ontario, tapped into the essence of prime ’70s Rush better than anyone I’ve heard, much like Greta Van Fleet’s revival of the mighty Led Zeppelin. Naturally, when I learned their third LP, Apocalypse, was on the way, I rushed to the promo sump to claim dibs faster than you can say 2112.
Apocalypse expands the Fearless Chronology that began with “The Oracle” from 2022’s White Buffalo with the same sonic and aesthetic bombast longtime fans expect, while stretching Crown Lands’ sound into territory occupied by other classic rock titans. Taking place a century before the events of Fearless and once again rooted in the spirit of Rush’s “Cygnus X-1” series, Apocalypse often feels like a natural progression of its predecessor even if it doesn’t quite reach the same heights. Through straightforward, radio-friendly anthems, as well as the mammoth self-titled closer, the album’s narrative charts a manipulative, oppressive force that weaponizes fear (“Foot Soldiers of the Syndicate”), then spirals outward into dragons, warriors and interstellar tyrants plunging the world into chaos (“Blackstar”). Amid the destruction, more intimate threads of loss and longing surface in crestfallen ballads (“The Revenant,” “Through the Looking Glass”). Where Fearless opened with its longest track, Apocalypse flips the script, saving its epic for the finale. The 19-minute cut matches the ambition and scope of “The Oracle” and “Starlifter: Fearless Pt. II,” though the record’s bottom-heavy makeup leaves less to uncover in the tracks leading up to it.
It’s unusual to devote an entire paragraph to a single track, but “Apocalypse” earns the word count as its reach accounts for nearly half of the record’s runtime. The piece opens in classic Rush fashion as celestial synths, cascading tom rolls, and shifting syncopation give way to shimmering arpeggios and warm, fluid vocal lines. At first, the track feels poised to deliver on its promise, and as it unfolds, Crown Lands weaves in a myriad of compelling touches, including Pink Floyd’s patented stoner-rock solos and a gorgeous arpeggiated, space-drifting movement with a flute-laden motif that nods to the duo’s Indigenous roots. But the track’s momentum falters at several points, and the songwriting begins to feel choppy as the track progresses. The choral bridge at the six-minute mark is a great idea, yet it’s followed by an overly hectic section where Crown Lands’ instrumental prowess shines but the vocals grate, undercutting what could have become a more transcendent phase. Similarly, the astral section at eleven minutes, with its galactic, vocal harmonies and tribal tom flourishes, is another moment that is abrasive. Although it ends on a high note, “Apocalypse” feels like it needed more time to bake to fully come together.
The unevenness of the self-titled epic would be forgivable if Apocalypse’s remaining tracks consistently picked up the slack. But they don’t. Stronger songs like “Through the Looking Glass” and “The Revenant” rely on Led Zeppelin-esque refrains to cohere into some of their best material to date, while Bowles’ vocal approach primarily hampers “Foot Soldiers of the Syndicate”, “Blackstar,” and “The Fall.” Bowles’ high-register singing—which will no doubt remain as divisive as Geddy Lee’s—can feel forced or strained at times, pulling me out of the otherwise strong songwriting rather than deepening the immersion. Across several key moments, Bowles doesn’t feel fully locked in, leaning instead on playful, almost taunting huffs and puffs (“The Fall”) or siren-like shrills (“Apocalypse”) that never quite find their place. Still, while Crown Lands’ execution isn’t as consistently sharp as Fearless, Apocalypse still offers plenty of quality material for fans to latch onto.
I’ve enjoyed my time with Apocalypse, yet I can’t help but feel somewhat disappointed. Maybe it speaks to the consistency and appeal of Fearless, but this record simply doesn’t resonate in the same way its predecessor did. To their credit, Crown Lands takes risks and pushes into some new territory here, and some of those choices pay off. Nevertheless, Apocalypse lacks the cohesion to keep me coming back, outside of a couple tracks that have burrowed their way into my psyche. It’s a letdown, but one I’m inclined to chalk up to growing pains for now.
Rating: Good
#2026 #30 #Apocalypse #CanadianMetal #CrownLands #GretaVanFleet #InsideOutMusic #LedZeppelin #May26 #PinkFloyd #ProgressiveRock #Review #Reviews #Rock #Rush
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: InsideOut Music
Websites: crownlands.bandcamp.com | crownlandsmusic.com | facebook.com/crownlandsmusic
Releases Worldwide: May 15th, 2026 -
https://www.cyclingeu.com/872065/bikers-heaven%f0%9f%9b%b5%f0%9f%9a%a0%f0%9f%8f%8d%ef%b8%8f-heights-of-abraham-matlock-peakdistrict-derbyshire-england/ Biker’s Heaven🛵🚠🏍️ Heights of Abraham | Matlock | Peakdistrict #derbyshire #england ##Matlok ##peakdistrict ##Shaazkidunya ##VisitEngland #Bicycling #BicyclingUK #BicyclingUnitedKingdom #Biker'sHeaven #Biking #BikingUK #BikingUnitedKingdom #CableCar #Cycling #CyclingLoughboroughUK #CyclingUk #CyclingUnitedKingdom #derbyshire #england #HeightsOfAbraham #MATLOCK #PeakDistrict #UK #UnitedKingdom
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Salisbury Cathedral
Oh yes, I really had to work hard to earn this ‘medal’!The Tower Tour of Salisbury Cathedral’s tower isn’t for people with a fear of heights, like me – but it’s absolutely worth it!
And to be honest: you never talk about #fear – only about #heroic deeds! ;-)May 2018
#Salisbury #SalisburyCathedral #England #Wiltshire #UK #GB #GothicArchitecture #TowerTour #Gothic #monochrome #blackandwhite #photography #church #Gotik #monochrom #SchwarzWeiss #Fotografie #Kirche
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An Oakland Party Experiments with Equalizing Guests’ Heights Using Custom Platform Shoes
📰 Original title: At this party, everyone is the same height
🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️#cu...
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Improve Your Online Presence with TYPO3 SEO Services
Are you ready to boost your TYPO3 website's visibility and drive organic traffic? Our specialized TYPO3 SEO Services are designed to propel your digital presence to new heights, ensuring that your website not only ranks higher but also engages and converts visitors effectively.
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Artificial intelligence is revolutionizing industries by automating complex tasks 🚀 and improving decision-making⏳ . Learn how artificial intelligence is optimizing workflows and boosting efficiency, empowering industries to reach new heights. ✨
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Artificial intelligence is revolutionizing industries by automating complex tasks 🚀 and improving decision-making⏳ . Learn how artificial intelligence is optimizing workflows and boosting efficiency, empowering industries to reach new heights. ✨
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Artificial intelligence is revolutionizing industries by automating complex tasks 🚀 and improving decision-making⏳ . Learn how artificial intelligence is optimizing workflows and boosting efficiency, empowering industries to reach new heights. ✨
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Artificial intelligence is revolutionizing industries by automating complex tasks 🚀 and improving decision-making⏳ . Learn how artificial intelligence is optimizing workflows and boosting efficiency, empowering industries to reach new heights. ✨
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T-Shirt: Awkward Heart Hands
As someone who writes and roleplays in a fantasy superhero universe where there are characters of wildly different physiogonomies, and the time of generations has been smeared together by twenty-five years of nonstop engagement with the same significant space, I think about romantic gestures being done by people with wildly different heights and scales a normal amount. I think.
In My Dress Up […]
https://press.invincible.ink/t-shirt-awkward-heart-hands/ #shirts -
T-Shirt: Awkward Heart Hands
As someone who writes and roleplays in a fantasy superhero universe where there are characters of wildly different physiogonomies, and the time of generations has been smeared together by twenty-five years of nonstop engagement with the same significant space, I think about romantic gestures being done by people with wildly different heights and scales a normal amount. I think.
In My Dress Up […]
https://press.invincible.ink/t-shirt-awkward-heart-hands/ #shirts -
@ChrisMayLA6 The authoritarian instincts of this administration marry up very nicely with the brutal far-right instints of the #Met
Imagine what terror would unleashed under an even less progressive government. -
Tampa Bay 28:
"TAMPA, Fla. (WFTS) — A new mural planned North East Seminole Heights is being described as both a celebration of LGBTQ+ history in Tampa and a response to what community leaders call an ongoing erasure of LGBTQ+ visibility across the state."The project, led by PFLAG Tampa and local artist Cam Parker, will be painted on the wall of the Corner Club, a local business offering what organizers describe as “a huge wall that is publicly facing along a major thoroughfare.”
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https://38d.gs/xz09
I wonder if #Ofcom will find it’s teeth or will KGBeebies just feel the impotent gums on it’s fat arse? -
https://38d.gs/xz09
I wonder if #Ofcom will find it’s teeth or will KGBeebies just feel the impotent gums on it’s fat arse? -
https://38d.gs/xz09
I wonder if #Ofcom will find it’s teeth or will KGBeebies just feel the impotent gums on it’s fat arse? -
https://38d.gs/xz09
I wonder if #Ofcom will find it’s teeth or will KGBeebies just feel the impotent gums on it’s fat arse? -
🚫🎰 NO CASINO IN OUR COMMUNITY! 🎰🚫
This Sunday, neighbors from Flushing, Corona, Jackson Heights, East Elmhurst, Elmhurst and beyond are coming together to say LOUD AND CLEAR:
Public land is for the PEOPLE — not for billionaire casinos.
We refuse to gamble away our:
✅ Parks
✅ Housing
✅ Transit access
✅ Local small businesses
✅ FutureA casino will not bring “opportunity.” It will bring traffic, addiction, displacement, and harm to working-class immigrant neighborhoods that already carry more than our share.
📢 Join us in the streets!
🗓 Sunday October 5 at 1pm
📍 Corona Plaza
🚶♀️ Marching to the Unisphere in Flushing Meadows Corona ParkBring your friends, your kids, your drums, your signs, your VOICE.
This is our home and we’re fighting for it.RSVP: tinyurl.com/NoCasinoMarch
Queens for the people, not for profit!
#QueensNY
#NoCasino
#Corona
#JacksonHeights
#Flushing
#EastElmhurst
#Elmhurst
#NYC