The now widespread name Lincoln originated in a city in eastern England. Its name is a contraction of the Latin Lindum Colonia, which was the name of a colony for veteran Roman soldiers. When the English counties (they were then called shires) were established in around the eleventh century, Lincoln became the principal town of Lincolnshire.
Lincoln’s name was later taken as a surname. The most widely known person with the surname Lincoln was Abraham Lincoln, sixteenth president of the United States of America. Various municipalities in the Commonwealth of Nations are named in honor of Lincoln, Lincolnshire, and a plethora of municipalities, geographic features, institutions, and public infrastructures in the United States are named primarily in honor of the former U.S. president.
People
Municipalities
In Argentina
In Australia
In Canada
In the United Kingdom
In New Zealand
In the United States
Named Lincoln
- Lincoln, Alabama
- Lincoln, Arkansas
- Lincoln, California
- Lincoln, Sussex County, Delaware
- Lincoln, Illinois
- Lincoln, Iowa
- Lincoln, Maine
- Lincoln, Massachusetts
- Lincoln, Michigan
- Lincoln, Missouri
- Lincoln, Montana
- Lincoln, Nebraska, the state capital of Nebraska
- Lincoln, New Hampshire
- Lincoln, New York
- Lincoln, North Dakota
- Lincoln, Pennsylvania
- Lincoln, Rhode Island
- Lincoln, Vermont
- Lincoln, Loudoun County, Virginia
- Lincoln, Wisconsin (12)
- Lincoln, a proposed U.S. state, to be named in honor of President Lincoln, would have merged the Idaho Panhandle and Eastern Washington in 1901.
With Lincoln in the name
Geographic features
There are five mountains in the United States called Mount Lincoln. There's one in:
Educational institutions
Buildings and roads
Culture
Automotive
Ships
Miscellanea