Sources: All images from NationalEclipse.com, eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov, Google, INEGI, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center. Also: eclipse2024.org.
New Hampshire:
Columbia, Dummer, Errol, Grange, Idlewilde, Lancaster, Lost Nation, Masons, Northumberland, Pittsburg, South Lancaster, Stark, West Milan.
Maine:
A — Abbot, Abbot Village, Acadia, Adams, Amity, Ashland, Bancroft (Old English origins, meaning: “field of beans,” or “dweller near the bean farm”).
B — Barnard (Old French and Old German origin; meaning: “strong as a brave bear”), Barnjum, Bemis (name of an old British noble family; also, Greek meaning “foundation”), Benedicta, Bennett, Berlin, Bigelow, Bishop, Blackstone, Blackwater, Blaine, Brighton, Buffalo.
C — Caratunk (Algonquin: meaning “where the rivers meet” or “crooked stream”), Caribou, Carrabassett (meaning: “one who turns around quickly”), Carrabassett Valley, Carson, Castle Hill, Chesuncook (Native American word meaning “converging bodies of water”).
D — Dallas, Dallas Plantation, Deadwater, Derby, Drew, Dyerville.
E — East Dover, East Madrid, East Winn, Eustis (Greek, meaning: fertile, fruitful, steadfast).
F — Fairmount, Forest, Forest City, Fort Fairfield, Freeman Township.
G — Garfield, Goodrich, Goodwin, Grindstone, Guilford (English habitational name from Guildford in Surrey), Guilford Center.
H — Hamlin, Highland, Hill, Holeb (meaning: a cavity or aperture, such as a bullet hole; an area where something is missing), Houghton (Gaelic: meaning “village” or “ridge”), Hurd.
I & J — Irish Settlement, Island Falls, Jemtland Station (from Old Norse word Jämtland; meaning of Jemtland: “land of hardworking people”), Jordan Mills.
K — Kingfield, Kingman, Kingsbury, Kingsbury Plantation, Knights Landing.
L — Lake Moxie, Lee, Lincoln, Lincoln Center, Little Canada.
M — Madrid, Maine, McCarty, Medford, Middle Dam, Monticello, Moosehead, Moosehorn, Moscow, Mount Chase.
N — Nashville, New City, New Limerick, New Sweden, New Sweden Station, Nixon, North Amity, North East Carry, North Lincoln, North New Portland.
O & P — Old City, Orient, Patten, Pride.
S — Salem, Sangerville, Sharp, Sheridan, Sherman, Sherman Station, Siberia, Smyrna (meaning: bitter, or strong; from the Arabic word “murr” or “myrrh”, which has a sweet bitter smell), Smyrna Center, Smyrna Mills, Soule Mill (Soule meaning: a soul or spirit; an animating force that survives after death; also: a name of occupational origin such as a cobbler), South Arm, South Dover, South Lincoln, Springfield, State Road, Stratton.
T — Tarratine (the name Tarratine means “monsterlike”; it was used by the British referring to Native Americans of the Abenaki and Mi'kmaq tribes, who became allies of the French, who taught them how to use firearms, and converted them to catholicism), Ten Degree, The Forks, The Highlands, Three Streams, Timoney (Gaelic, associated with Irish chieftains who ruled in the southwest of Ireland, during the early part of the Middle Ages), Tomah (Greek Aramaic, meaning: “twin”; French pronunciation of Thomas), Town of Madrid.
U & W — Upper Abbot, Upton, Wade, Walker, Walker Settlement, Webster, Wellington, Williamsburg, Willimantic (derived from an Indian word meaning “land of swift running waters”), Winn.
Canada — Ontario:
A — Abingdon (Anglo-Saxon name), Addison (Old English meaning: “son of Adam”), Adolphustown (Adolphus means: “noble or majestic wolf”), Albert (Old High German word meaning “noble and bright”), Alberton, Albion Falls (Albion is a literary term for Britain; Old English, probably of Celtic origin; ultimately related to Latin albus “white,” in allusion to the white cliffs of Dover), Aldershot (named after a town in southern England, site of a large military camp), Algonquin, Ambassador Beach, Amherstview (Amherst: from Old English, meaning boundary and hill), Ancaster (the original Ancaster is in Lincolnshire, England; named after a military camp from Roman times), Anoma Lea, Archer, Athens, Athol (meaning “new Ireland”), Augusta, Avalon Park, Avon, Avondale, Aylesworth (Old English personal name Ægel + worth, enclosure).
B — Balmoral, Balmoral Park, Baltimore, Bath, Battersea, Bayridge, Bayside, Bethany, Bethel (L&G), Bethel (Niagara), Bethel (Prince Edward), Bethesda (Prince Edward), Bismarck, Boston, Brant, Brantford, Bridge End, Brownsville, Brownsville Station, Bunker Hill, Burgessville, Burlington, Burr.
C — Cainsville, Caintown, Caistor Centre (derived from the Olde English "caester” or “ceaster", meaning: a Roman camp or fort; mentioned in the Domesday Book as Castre), Caistorville, Caledonia, California, Camden East, Camelot Beach, Cardinal, Carrying Place, Cataraqui (Algonquin Mohawk, meaning: impregnable, great meeting place, or the place where one hides, rocks standing in water), Cayuga (smallest tribe of the Iroquois Confederacy), Central, Centre, Centreville, Charing Cross (name of a district of London, in the city of Westminster; Charing is derived from the Old English word “cierring,” referring to a bend in the River Thames; "Cross" refers to the Eleanor cross made by order of King Edward I as a memorial to his wife, Eleanor of Castile), Charleston, Cheapside, Chippawa, Chippewa, Churchill Heights, Codes Corner, Colchester, Comet, Copenhagen, Copetown, Cornell, Cornwall, Cornwall Centre, Culloden (The Battle of Culloden was the final confrontation of the Jacobite rising of 1745; The forces of Prince Charles Edward Stuart, attempting to reclaim the throne for his family, met a British army led by the Duke of Cumberland, son of the Hanoverian King George II. The battle finally settled a contest for the monarchy that had lasted almost 60 years), Curry Hill.
D — Dain City (meaning: “From Denmark), Delhi, Delta, Deseronto (Mohawk origin, meaning “lightning has struck”).
E — Eagle, Eagle Place, East Oakland, Ebenezer (Hastings; meaning: “a commemoration of divine assistance”), Ebenezer (L&G), Echo Place, Eden, Eden Grove (L&G), Elfrida (German. Meaning: Peaceful ruler, elf strength, elf power, magical strength), Elgin (meaning: noble; also, Elgin Cathedral in Scotland), Elginburg, Elizabeth Gardens, Emerald, Empey Hill (Empey: the name of an Anglo Saxon family), Empire Corners, Enterprise, Erie (language of the Native American Iroquoian tribe).
F — Fairfax, Fairfield, Fairground, Fargo, Fenwick, Florida, Fort Erie, Freeland, Freeman, Fulton.
G — Gananoque (a name of Indigenous origin; meanings: town on two rivers, water rising over rocks, and garden of the Great Spirit), Gananoque Junction, Gasline, Glen Becker, Goldsmith.
H — Hamilton, Hamilton Beach, Harlem, Harmony Hall II, Hartford, Hawkes, Hawley, Hemlock, Hemlock Corners, Hemlock Downs, Hilton, Holbrook, Homer, Hopkins Court.
I — Indian Point, Inverary (meaning: harsh discordance of sound; dissonance), Invererie Heights, Iona (Hebrew and Gaelic origins), Iroquois, Ivy Lea.
J — Jacksonburg, Jaffa, Jarvis, Jeannette, Jerseyville, Johnstown (Hastings), Johnstown (L&G), Jordan, Jordan Harbour, Jordan Station, Judgeville.
K — Kent Centre, King Pitt, King's Forest, Kinglake, Kingscourt, Kingsford, Kingsmill, Kingston, Kingston Mills, Kingston Station, Kingsville, Klondyke.
L — La Salle, Lancaster, Leeds, Leeds and the Thousand Islands, Leland, Lincoln, Little Buffalo, Loyalist, Loyalist Park, Lyons.
M — Marburg (old city in West central Germany), Mariatown, Medina Corners, Merlin, Middlemarch, Middleport, Missouri, Mohawk, Montebello, Montrose, Montrose Junction, Moscow, Mount Albion, Mount Carmel (Essex), Mount Carmel (Haldimand-Norfolk), Mount Carmel (Prince Edward), Mount Hope (Hamilton), Mount Pleasant (Brant), Mount Pleasant (L&A), Mount Salem, Mount Vernon (Brant), Mount Vernon (Elgin), Mount Zion (Hastings).
N — New California, New Credit, New Dublin, New Durham, New Glasgow, New Sarum (sarum meaning: relating to the Roman rite as modified in Salisbury and used in England, Wales, and Ireland before the Reformation. Old Sarum is the site of the Oath of Sarum of August 1, 1086), New Scotland, Newburgh, Newport, Niagara, Niagara Falls, Nixon, Norfolk County, Norman, North Augusta, Norwich.
O — Odessa, Onondaga (name and language of the Iroquoian people), Orwell, Outlet.
P — Palmyra (name of an ancient city in the eastern Levant, now in the center of modern Syria), Pelham, Pelham Centre, Pelham Union, Piccadilly, Pittsburgh, Plainfield, Pleasant Valley (Essex), Pleasant Valley, Port Britain, Port Glasgow, Port Hope, Port Royal, Port Royal, Portland, Portsmouth, Prescott, Prince Edward.
Q & R — Queens Acres, Queenston, Queensway Gardens, Royal.
S — Salem (Northumberland), Scotland, Sharpton, Shiloh (Hebrew, meaning “tranquil”; also: the place where Israelites lived before Judah), South Augusta, South Lancaster, South-West Oxford, Sparta, Springfield, Stamford, Stamford Centre, Star Corners, Stop 19, Storms Corners, Summit (Hamilton).
T — The Bush, The Delta, The Gully, The Junction (Oxford), The Outlet, The Sixth, Thorold (Old English, meaning: “He who is under Thor's rule,” or “follower of Thor”), Thorold Park, Thorold South, Thrasher's Corners, Thunder Bay (Niagara), Toledo, Tranquility, Trenton, Trenton Junction, Trinity, Troy, Turin, Turners Corners, Twelve O'Clock Point.
U & V — Union (Elgin), Union (Essex), Union (L&G). Vanessa (Latin meaning "of Venus"), Verona (Italian, meaning “truth”), Victoria, Vienna, Virgil.
W & Z — Wellington, West Hamilton, West Lincoln, Williamsburg, Windfall (Essex), Zion Hill.