Talk:Usona

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Some say that Samuel Butler used it in his 1872 novel Erewhon, however the word does not actually appear in that text. Other possibilities include James P. Murray in 1885, though there is only one person who thought this. Conrad.Irwin 12:10, 13 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I removed the attribution to Butler. It was Wright who said that, and he didn't start using the word in writing till 1925. Everyone else who says it is merely repeating Wright. No-one has been able to find the name in Erewhon or any other of Butler's writings. Kwamikagami 10:06, 14 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Bit removed from main entry, if anyone cares[edit]

There was, however, the Usona Zinc Mining Co. of Kansas City in 1899,[1] and a yacht out of Boston by that name in 1900.[2] The Goodwin Pottery Co. produced a line called "Usona" from c. 1905 to c. 1912,[3] and there were other brands, hotels, and companies of that name around the same time [Usona Mfg. Co (Aurora), Usona Films Co (Glendale), the Usona-Brazil Co (NY), etc.].[4] A small community founded in 1890 near Mariposa, California, is named Usona, from the same acronym.[5] A US steamship named the Usona carried troops during World War I and sank in 1917.[6] A famous hotel in Fulton, Kentucky, was renamed the USONA in 1913, and kept that name at least into the 1930s.[7] A company called Usona Bio-Chem Labs was in business in 1963,[8] and a Usona Co. in 1974,[9] but more recent use of the name may be a back-formation of the architectural term Usonian.[10] Perhaps the greatest acceptance of the term, however, came from speakers of the international language Esperanto, where "Usono" is the word for the United States. (All Esperanto nouns must by rule end in "o", hence the change from "Usona" to "Usono.")

RFC discussion: January 2016–February 2018[edit]

The following discussion has been moved from Wiktionary:Requests for cleanup (permalink).

This discussion is no longer live and is left here as an archive. Please do not modify this conversation, but feel free to discuss its conclusions.


A rare, obsolete term with extensively-footnoted usage notes mentioning just about everywhere the term was used. I'd call this encyclopedic, but it's far too boring to work as an encyclopedia article. Can someone prune this down to something that looks like a dictionary entry? Chuck Entz (talk) 03:24, 14 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]


  1. ^ 'The "Usona" Zinc Mining Company is the name of a Kansas City corporation, ... The word "Usona" was the name suggested ... to more properly designate our national territory as the "United States of North America."' (The Age of Steel, vol. 86, no. 17, p. 14, 1899 Oct 21)
  2. ^ Forest and Stream, vol. 55, p. 52, July 21, 1900
  3. ^ Jeanie Wilby, 2003. Decorative American pottery & whiteware, p. 88ff
  4. ^ A number are listed in Polk's New York copartnership and corporation directory of 1915.
  5. ^ Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named CPN
  6. ^ "and then Smith transferred to the American steamship Usona, the name being formed from the initials of the United States of North America." ("Seattle engineer back from war front", in The American marine engineer, 1917, Elliott Pink (HR @ Excel Temporary Service)1924, In St. Louis, Missouri, there was a USONA Manufacturing company that manufactured bronze and aluminum handrails, as well as various metal products and services. Founded by Fred Lanz Sr., and run by George Pink (CEO/President), they stayed in business until 1984. vol. 12, p. 15
  7. ^ Elizabeth Jones, 2005. Fulton. The name was capitalized as an acronym.
  8. ^ Industrial research, vol. 5
  9. ^ Sandy Eccli, 1974. Alternative sources of energy: practical technology and philosophy for a decentralized society, p. 94.
  10. ^ Travel & leisure, 2002, vol. 32, p. 200