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Place Names of San Antonio: Plus Bexar and Surrounding Counties

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This much enlarged edition of a favorite handbook identifies the origins of nearly 1,000 familiar place names in the San Antonio region. Naming sleuth Dr. David P. Green cracks mysteries that puzzled him in earlier editions, and comes up with several hundred new entries as well. There are more than three dozen new illustrations, bringing the total to 144, many of them unpublished elsewhere. Chapters on San Antonio s names reveal origins in numerous categories streets, parks, schools, libraries and learning centers, landmarks, military bases, suburbs. Another chronicles the blizzard of names on the streets and buildings of the South Texas Medical Center. Origins of many Spanish names are included, as are those of a few names less officially designated, such as Pace Picante Sauce and the Quarry Market. Vanished families reappear, forgotten achievements gain new recognition, and those who just happened to be around when a name was needed get their credit, too. This is a book with answers you will refer to again and again.

237 pages, Paperback

First published May 6, 2002

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for SaraKat.
1,984 reviews38 followers
November 18, 2018
This book was meant to be more of a reference book than a book that should be read cover-to-cover, I believe. I learned a bunch of interesting tidbits while reading it, but there were long periods of tediousness mixed in with them. Hearing the way the places of San Antonio were named and how they came to be was fascinating and cleared up for me the reason that there are five hundred streets in San Antonio named Wurzbach. :)

Veterans' wives and widows pushed to have this road named for him. Relatives of his brother William Wurzbach spoke against this because there was already a Wurzbach Road on the northwest side of town, and they thought it would be confusing to have a road on the northeast side with the same name. It is.


There were some really touching stories and some really funny ones. Hearing about all the turmoil of the Civil War was interesting, because it isn't really as much of a big part of culture around here like it is in the Deep South of the U.S.

"Just like public statuary, names are all too easily overlooked monuments to what the community has considered important. Each tells a story..."


I enjoyed the author's speculation about what would have happened if the Spanish explorers who first visited the area were a little earlier or later since they had a tradition of naming the area after the saint whose feast day was closest to their arrival. In our case, St. Anthony. But the days before and after are Ephram and Romauld. Not as fun. :)

And a Texan saved the French wine industry! We should get a discount on wine now. The lovely park battle for and against alcohol was dramatic. And I read about so many people from history that I completely admire and want to know more about!
Profile Image for Evalyn.
Author 14 books33 followers
November 20, 2018
A compilation of the facts and history behind the names of the streets, buildings, organizations, parks and more of San Antonio, including Bexar and nearby counties. Of special interest to those who live in, and love, San Antonio.
Profile Image for Geraldine.
385 reviews
July 11, 2015
Since I know the city pretty well, this was a very enjoyable into how streets and places got their names.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews