NICOLA GINZLER

Senior Graphic Designer
Search
Close this search box.

Fairbanks, Flagstaff, Fresno, Florida, Fairfield, Falmouth, Fayette, Fargo, Fort Worth Font Friday

Andy Murdock is co-founder of The Statesider: “The most interesting US travel stories, delivered directly to your inbox.” Here he writes about the 222 fonts he found with names associated with US places.


The United Fonts of America

Before 1984, I had never encountered the word “font.” Then a Macintosh computer showed up in my house.

A beige block with a too-small black and white screen and a thingy called a “mouse,” the first thing I saw when I turned it on was “Welcome to Macintosh” in what I would soon learn was a font called Chicago. Both the smiley Mac and the Chicago font that greeted anyone booting up a Mac in the mid ’80s were designed by Susan Kare, and they both captured the friendly, accessible new era of computing that made the Mac so revolutionary.

There wasn’t much to do on it right away. I got a text adventure game version of the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy because a clerk at Egghead Software dropped a shelf on my mom’s head and gave it to her as a “please don’t sue us” gift. Otherwise, I had MacPaint and MacWrite where I could draw and type whatever I could think of, and there was a menu of fonts to choose from — not just Chicago, but a list of fonts named for world cities. Monaco, London, San Francisco, Cairo. Words weren’t just words, they could be design, history, geography.

I was hooked. I made newsletters for my classes, typed and printed my reports wondering if I was even allowed to, and, without fail, used as many fonts per page as I could squeeze in. Restraint wasn’t my strength.

The US Font Map

Of course, typography didn’t start with the Mac, and it has hardly stood still since 1984. The friendly curves of Chicago no longer grace my font menu, but as the number of fonts online has grown and grown, it started to seem everywhere in America had its own typeface. Just how many fonts are named for American places?

The US Font Map, featuring 222 typefaces named for American places. Click for larger map. Links to where to find each font below.

The answer is 222. That’s not actually the answer, it’s just where I had to stop, because the more I looked the more I found. What started as a quirky challenge to make a US font map during COVID-19 quarantine days started to edge into obsessive-compulsive territory. I’d wake up in the middle of the night thinking, “Did I check to see if there’s a Boise font?” (I did. There isn’t.) I finally found the limit to how many fonts I could use in one place.

Typography fans will undoubtedly spot ones I missed, or know different fonts with the same name. San Francisco is both a modern font used by Apple and a long-gone font from early Macs designed to look like a ransom note. Some may also know these fonts by alternate names: Californian is also called Berkeley Old Style, Cupertino is clearly a play on Cooper Black, and Tombstone, eerily, was once offered under the name Jim Crow.

Many of these fonts have stories that clearly tie them to a specific time and place. Georgia, one of the more common fonts used today, got its name from a tabloid headline that read “Alien Heads Found in Georgia.” Fayette is based on the handwriting of an accountant who kept detailed records of the now ghost town of the same name on Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Tahoma is one of the pre-European names for Mt. Rainier, as is Tacoma, which is also a font. Others are less clear. Is Huntington named for the city in West Virginia, or the library in Southern California? Is Hiawatha named for the town in Iowa, or does it belong in Minnesota by the shores of Gitche Gumee?

The concentration of fonts on the map largely follows the concentration of people (and designers). California, the Great Lakes region, Texas and New York have more than their fair share. If I had zoomed in on New York City, I could have added Battery ParkBleeckerBronxBushwickCentral ParkFifth AvenueFlatbush BeaneryHarlemLower East SideMurray HillPark SlopeSedgwick AvenueTribecaWashington Heights, probably half a dozen typefaces named “Brooklyn,” and that’s hardly a complete list.

This isn’t to say that America has no more room for fonts, in fact there’s a lot of open country to explore for typographic inspiration. As tempted as I was to use Mothman or Country Roads for West Virginia, the state could use some typographic love. If you’re a typographer or just interested in trying your hand at designing a new American font, I’ll leave you with a list of areas eagerly awaiting a font of their own:

Challenges for Typeface Designers to Fill in the US Font Map

  • Route 66: Nearly all of the cities mentioned in the song “Route 66” have a typeface named after them. We need Gallup and Barstow to complete the set.
  • Territories: The US Territories are sadly overlooked. Some of these names are perfect for a great typeface. Puerto Rico [ed. font added since this list was made]. Viejo San Juan. Vieques. St. Croix. St. Thomas. American Samoa. Pago Pago. Tutuila. Ofu. Guam. Ypao Beach. Tinian. And someone needs to make up for this typographic insult to Saipan.
  • State Gaps: There are still some states that need their own font. Fill in the gaps for your favorite states, including: West Virginia, either Carolina, Maine, either Dakota, Missouri, Rhode Island or New Jersey [ed. all fonts added since this list was made].
  • National Parks: Yes, there is a free font that reproduces the iconic look of National Park Service signs (and you can get the current fonts the Park Service uses across the system), but only a handful of typeface designs have been inspired by individual parks. Could there be more? Undoubtedly.
  • Native American Fonts: There are several fonts for Native American language systems available, (1 2 3 4), but there’s so much opportunity here to provide new design options and help preserve endangered languages.

US Fonts by State

I have included a link below for each typeface included in the US font map, but note that there are often multiple sources for fonts both free and paid. If you love those old Apple fonts, you can get modern replacements for many of them, or get extra geeky with the original fonts and a Mac emulator.


Alabama FontsAlabamaBirminghamMontgomerySelma

Alaska FontsAlaskaAnchorageFairbanksJuneauKodiakPotter AlaskaSitkaWrangell

Arizona Fonts:  ArizoniaFlagstaffKingmanPhoenix,  SedonaTombstoneTucsonWinona

Arkansas Fonts: ArkansasTexarkana

California Fonts:  AlamedaAmboyAnaheimBurlingameCalifornianCupertinoFresnoHollywood HillsJoshua TreeLos AngelesMalibuMenloMillbraeMontereyOaklandSacramentoSan BernardinoSan DiegoSan FranciscoSan JoseSanta Barbara StreetsStocktonYosemite

Colorado Fonts: AspenColoradoDenverDurango WesternPuebloRocky Mountain Beauty

Connecticut Fonts: ConnecticutMilford

Delaware FontsDelaware

Florida Fonts: DaytonaEvergladesFloridaKey WestOld Miami BeachOrlandoTallahassee ChassisTampa

Georgia Fonts: AtlantaGeorgiaSavannah

Hawaii Fonts: HanaleiHawaiiHawaiian Aloha

Idaho Fonts: Coeur d’AleneIdahoPocatello

Illinois Fonts: ChicagoDeerfieldFairfieldIllinoisMidway

Indiana Fonts: Indiana ScriptIndy ItalicKokomo

Iowa Fonts: DavenportIowan Old Style

Kansas Fonts: KansasNew KansasTopekaWichita

Kentucky Fonts: KentuckyfriedLexingtonLouisville Script

Louisiana Fonts: Big EasyLouisianaNew Orleans

Maine Fonts: AcadiaAugustaKennebunkport

Maryland Fonts: Baltimore TypewriterMaryland

Massachusetts Fonts: BostonFalmouthPlymouth

Michigan Fonts: Detroit MetroFayetteGrand RapidsGreat LakesKalamazooMackinacMichigan

Minnesota Fonts: HiawathaMinneapolisMinnesota

Mississippi Fonts: Biloxi ScriptMississippi

Missouri Fonts: JoplinKansas CitySaint Louis

Montana Fonts: BillingsBozemanHelenaMontanaWhitefish

Nebraska Fonts: LincolnNebraskaOmaha

Nevada Fonts: Area 51Las VegasNevadaReno CasinoVegas Caravan

New Hampshire Fonts: New Hampshire , Portsmouth

New Jersey Fonts: Asbury ParkNewarkTrenton

New Mexico Fonts: New MexicoRoswellSanta FeTaos

New York Fonts: BroadwayBuffaloConey IslandElmiraHamptonsKaatskillManhattanNew YorkNyack

North Carolina Fonts: AshevilleCharlotteRaleigh GothicRoanoke

North Dakota Fonts: DakotaFargoGrand Forks

Northern Mariana Islands Fonts: Marianas

Ohio Fonts: CincinnatiCleveland NeonHuronOhioToledo

Oklahoma Fonts: Boomtown DecoOklahomaOklahoma City

Oregon Fonts: AshlandBendCascadia CodeEugeneMazamaOregonPortland

Pennsylvania Fonts: PennsylvaniaPhiladelphiaPittsburgh

Puerto Rico Fonts: Arecibo

Rhode Island Fonts: Providence

South Carolina Fonts: CharlestonSpartanburg

South Dakota Fonts: BadlandsDeadwood

Tennessee Fonts: ChattanoogaMemphisNashvilleTennessee

Texas Fonts: AbileneAmarilloAustinDallasEl PasoFort WorthGalvestonHouston,  LangtryLaredoPecosSan AntonioTexasTexas HeroTexas Tango

US Virgin Islands Fonts: St. John

Utah Fonts: Grand StaircaseMoabOgdenProvoSalt LakeUtahZion

Vermont Fonts: BurlingtonVermont

Virginia Fonts: QuanticoVirginia

Washington Fonts: OlympiaSeattle SansSpokaneTacomaTahoma

Washington, D.C. Fonts: Washington

West Virginia Fonts: Huntington

Wisconsin Fonts: La CrosseMadisonMilwaukee

Wyoming Fonts: CheyenneTetonWyoming Spaghetti

The owner of this website has made a committment to accessibility and inclusion, please report any problems that you encounter using the contact form on this website. This site uses the WP ADA Compliance Check plugin to enhance accessibility.