the dirt on Podunk

[From Return of the Straight Dope by Cecil Adams (Ballantine Books, 1994), pp. 132-134]

Ugly Tourist

Q. Where is Podunk? -- Thomas G., Dallas, Tex.

A. You're not the first guy to wonder about this, Tomaso. As a matter of fact, the search for Podunk, the archetypal jerkwater town, is one of the great adventures in philology, which, as you can appreciate, is not a field that has great adventures in abundance.

Allow me to quote from a letter to the editors of the Daily National Pilot, Buffalo, New York, 1846: "I hear you ask, 'Where in the world is Podunk?' It is in the world, sir; and more than that, is a little world of itself. It stands 'high up in the big Pigeon [river],' a bright and shining light amid the surrounding darkness." There is a great deal more, all in a satirical vein, indicating that even then Podunk was thought to be a locality which, being imaginary, one might safely have a little fun with.

The idea that Podunk was purely mythical survived a long time. In 1925 philologist G. P. Krapp noted that no Podunk was to be found in the list of American post offices, which he took to be proof of the town's nonexistence -- an alarming conclusion, given current opinions of the post office, but Krapp's was an innocent age. His one concession to the reality of Podunk was that it was an Indian word that had been applied to a few minor geographic features in New England.

In 1933 a Boston Herald columnist was simply restating the common wisdom when he observed that "Podunk, like Atlantis, has no locus." But even as Troy had its Schliemann, so did Podunk have its believers. One E. A. Plimpton promptly wrote to the Herald that there was  a settlement called Podunk, that it might be found near Worcester, Massachusetts, and that he himself had a summer home there.

This was unsettling news, and as often happens with unsettling news, people chose to ignore it. But the truth could not be suppressed forever. A few years later the etymologist Allen Walker Read, who was later to earn everlasting glory for his explication of "OK" (see More of the Straight Dope ) reported that the name "Podunk" had been applied to veritable heaps of places and persons throughout the Northeast: to a brook flowing into the Connecticut River near Hartford, to a meadow near said brook, to a band of Indians living near the meadow, to a different meadow 15 miles southwest of Worcester, to a pond near this latter meadow, and, under different spellings, to ponds, creeks, and meadows throughout New York State. Professor Read opined that Podunk derived from an Algonquin Indian word meaning "a boggy place."

In 1941 word of Read's work apparently found its way to the editors of the Boston Herald. They recalled that they had failed to follow up on a clue regarding Podunk that had appeared in their own pages years earlier. Filled with shame, they decided that something needed to be done. Characteristically, however, they decided that someone else should do it. They nominated the Worcester Telegraph to mount an expedition to establish once and for all whether a town called Podunk existed. The Telegraph accepted the challenge and assigned one William H. Moiles to the job.

"Early on a bright November morning," a later account of the expedition noted, "his safari shoved off from the Telegraph office, and by noon it had forded Seven-Mile River and was headed south into the rain forest along the East Brookfield River." Arriving in East Brookfield without further clues as to Podunk's whereabouts, Moiles demonstrated the resourcefulness of a true journalist: he went into a tavern and asked the bartender. Driving in the indicated direction, he encountered a small boy with his thumb out.

"'Where're we going?' we asked.

"'Up by the old Podunk school,' he replied.

"'Where is Podunk?' we asked, failing entirely to suppress a quiver of anticipation.

"'This is Podunk now,' said the small boy.

"He said it calmly, quietly, almost wearily. But we felt like Balboa."

It was later established that Podunk was an unincorporated area about six square miles in extent, containing about one hundred families. It is located mostly within East Brookfield, a town about 15 miles west of Worcester. Whether there is now a historical marker on the site I do not know, but if not, and the citizens of Massachusetts have any salt in them, they will see to it forthwith.


[I lived in East Brookfield (population under 1500) for 20 years. I didn't live in Podunk, but many of my friends did. I haven't been back there in a couple of years, but I will inquire as to whether there have been any historical markers erected. And of course, the next time I visit, I will take lots of pictures and post them here!]


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