From Santa Claus to Mistletoe: 20 Towns With Festive Names
Every Day Is a Holiday
There are a select few towns scattered across America for which the holiday season never really ends, thanks to names that capture the holiday spirit and an embrace of the season in which most host festivities year-round and up their efforts around December. Looking for spots around the U.S. bursting with holiday spirit? Pay these towns a visit before the holiday season slips away.
Related: 15 Classic Destinations for an Old-Fashioned Christmas
Santa Claus, Indiana
Founded in 1854 as Santa Fe, the name was changed two years later to avoid confusion with another Indiana town of the same name. The post office is now the only one bearing the name Santa Claus and gets thousands of letters to Santa each year. The town also boasts streets named for the Christmas season, a 40-ton Santa statue, and themed attractions open year-round including Frosty's Fun Center, Santa's Stables, and Santa's Candy Castle.
Related: Historic and Unusual Post Offices Across America
Santa Claus, Georgia
This Santa Claus is too small for a post office with only 165 residents, but it still has Candy Cane Street and December Drive to fit the seasonal theme. The small area is dotted with themed business and decorated with garlands and other holiday iconography year-round.
Santa Claus, Arizona
Though a ghost town today, the town that was Santa Claus still has festive buildings that can be spotted by tourists driving between Phoenix and Las Vegas. California realtor Nina Talbot founded the town in 1937, which attracted attention for its holiday-themed businesses such as the Santa Claus Inn and a children's train called Old 1225. Its popularity soon declined, and the last operating business closed in 1995.
Related: Once Popular Tourist Hotspots That Are Now Totally Abandoned
Santa, Idaho
This unincorporated community in northern Idaho took its name from the nearby Santa Anna Creek. In 2005, however, the town changed its name to SecretSanta.com and erected signs promoting the gift exchange website in return for about $20,000. Only the post office — one that fields numerous letters to Santa each year — was allowed to keep its original name, though the rest of the town reverted to its original title after one year.
Related: Cool Secret Santa Gifts You’d Buy for Yourself
Hallelujah Junction, California
Hallelujah Junction is an unincorporated community straddling the high-elevation border between northern California and Nevada. More of a truck stop than a town, it's known almost solely for its memorably festive name. Composer John Adams owned a cabin near Hallelujah Junction and named a short composition after the community.
Related: The Most Beautiful Cabin in Every State
Christmas, Michigan
In 1938, Julius Thurson started a holiday-themed toy factory he called "Christmas" along the shores of Lake Superior. The factory was destroyed by a fire only two years later, but the town of same name he developed around it remains. With a current population of 400, Christmas is now known as a popular resort area for snowmobilers or cross-country skiers.
Related: Eerie Abandoned Factories Across America
Christmas, Florida
Every December, thousands flock to the festively decorated post office so their holiday mail can be emblazoned with the town's special Christmas postmark. The unincorporated area east of Orlando takes its name from Fort Christmas, which was established near Christmas Creek during the second Seminole War. Today it serves as a historical park and hosts a free "Cracker Christmas" celebration each year featuring pioneer demonstrations and a whole lot of home-cooked barbecue.
Christmas Valley, Oregon
Christmas Valley in central Oregon was named after nearby Christmas Lake, which was in turn named after pioneer Peter Christman. The non-festive origin of the town name didn't stop developer M. Penn Phillips from giving the streets names such as Comet Lane and Snowman Road in the 1960s.
Christmas Cove, Maine
Christmas Cove is both a body of water and a fishing village within the town of South Bristol populated by fewer than 900 year-round residents. It was supposedly named by Captain John Smith when he anchored in the protected harbor on Christmas day during his 1614 voyage. Despite its festive name, the town is actually a yachting destination, and welcomes far more visitors in summer.
Related: 40 Under-The-Radar Boating Destinations Across the Country
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
Bethlehem was founded in 1741 on Christmas Eve and nicknamed "Christmas City, USA" in 1937, the same year the town erected its first Christmas star atop nearby South Mountain. The current eight-pronged star is 91 feet high and remains lit every day of the year. In December, the rest of Bethlehem is lit up with 5,500 strands, or two miles' worth, of Christmas lights.
Related: 50 Best Christmas Light Displays in America
Nazareth, Pennsylvania
Like Bethlehem and several other nearby towns — Emmaus, Egypt, Jordan Creek — Nazareth was named for a Biblical location. The borough in Northampton County was founded in 1740 by German missionaries, and a Moravian Historical Society has long paid tribute to its heritage with a "Christmas in Nazareth" event, featuring an artisans' village, museum visits, and a local ice-carver.
Bethlehem, North Carolina
The locals of this Bethlehem celebrate the anniversary of the nativity by acting it out at their Christmas in Bethlehem Drive-Thru. Each year thousands of guests drive or walk through the town to see interactive nativity scenes organized by the townspeople, featuring a cast of roughly 100 biblical characters.
Joy, Illinois
A village of 400 residents processes more than 12,800 cards each December sent by people around the world who want the town's latest, custom-designed postmark stamp. The Joy postmark has been designed by students and residents every year since 1985, except when it was eliminated due to budget cuts one year in 2013.
Rudolph, Wisconsin
The ubiquitous holiday tale of Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer didn't exist until 1939, nearly a century after this Wisconsin village was named for young resident Rudolph Hecox. Still, the town embraced the reindeer version, putting images of the famous reindeer on all of its street signs. Thousands of holiday cards are sent to the Rudolph post office to get a special Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer postmark.
Snowflake, Arizona
There's little snow to be seen no matter the time of year in Snowflake, which was actually named for its Mormon founders Erastus Snow and William Jordan Flake. The town holds an annual Christmas festival with many free events, including nativity displays, a tree lighting, and a Christmas market.
North Pole, Alaska
Dahl & Gaske Development bought a settlement outside Fairbanks in 1952 and named it after the mythical home of St. Nick in hopes of attracting toy manufacturers. That scheme failed, but the town still embraces its kitschy name with candy cane-striped light poles and Christmas decorations that stay up year-round.
Related: The Most Christmas-y Towns in All 50 States
North Pole, New York
This hamlet at the base of the Adirondack Mountains in New York is almost guaranteed to enjoy a white Christmas each year. Even when the snow isn't falling, however, tourists flock to Santa's Workshop, a holiday theme park established in 1949 (making it one of the nation's very first).
Garland, Texas
Though the town has no clear relation to the decorative holiday wreath, Garland has no shortage of annual Christmas time traditions. The season begins with the tree-lighting ceremony Christmas on the Square, then continues with a procession of arts events going on throughout December — often free screenings of classic Christmas films and sometimes seasonal productions put on by local theater groups.
Mistletoe, Kentucky
Mistletoe is an unincorporated town that grew from a stop on the Kentucky Union Railway. Mistletoe was named by the railroad for a pervasive native plant — the same vibrant mistletoe used as a holiday decoration encouraging couples to kiss.
Related: The Most Romantic Place in Every State
Noel, Missouri
Noel was a town named for prominent early citizens C.W. and W.J. Noel, but soon capitalized on the seasonal implication of its name. The Noel Post Office gets tens of thousands of Christmas cards each December that are postmarked with a town stamp that includes the slogan "The Christmas City in the Ozark Vacation Land."
Related: 50 Best Small Towns to Visit in Winter
More from Cheapism
Like Cheapism's content? Be sure to follow us.