What’s in a name? For some of America’s most recognizable landmarks, the answer is a lot. From national parks and monuments to skyscrapers and city icons, many of these places nearly carried titles that feel strange, clunky, or just plain wrong today. Some names were lost in translation, others scrapped for marketing appeal, and a few abandoned after politics got in the way.
Click through this gallery to discover the US landmarks that almost had completely different names...
One of America’s greatest engineering feats, the Hoover Dam was once officially called the Boulder Dam. Construction began in the early 1930s under President Herbert Hoover, but after he left office, officials favored Boulder Dam or Boulder Canyon Dam – reportedly due to Interior Secretary Harold Ickes's dislike of Hoover. In 1947, Congress settled the debate by confirming the Hoover name, which endures today.
Although universally known today as the White House, for much of the 19th century America’s presidential residence appeared in official documents as the President’s House or the Executive Mansion. The informal White House nickname, inspired by its painted façade, gained popular usage but remained unofficial until Theodore Roosevelt ordered the term placed on the building’s stationery in 1901.
Before the neon glow and Broadway buzz, Times Square was Longacre Square, a horse-and-carriage district. That changed in 1904 when The New York Times built its new tower and the city renamed the area in its honor. The switch gave the square instant prestige and set the stage for its transformation into the glittering heart of New York nightlife.
When it opened in 1883, the now-iconic suspension bridge that links the New York boroughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn was called the New York and Brooklyn Bridge, or the East River Bridge. It wasn’t until 1915 that the shorter, catchier Brooklyn Bridge became its official name, reflecting the borough’s central role in the structure’s identity.
Philadelphia’s Liberty Bell – cracked but treasured – wasn’t always a patriotic symbol. Originally, it was simply the State House bell, cast in the 1750s for the Pennsylvania State House (now Independence Hall).
Its famous moniker emerged in the 1830s, when abolitionists adopted it as an emblem of freedom in their campaign against slavery. The name stuck, transforming the once-ordinary bell into an enduring symbol of liberty, equality, and civil rights in America.
Cape Canaveral, the launch site of America’s space race, briefly and controversially lost its historic name. Following President John F. Kennedy’s assassination in 1963, President Lyndon Johnson announced the cape would be renamed Cape Kennedy in his honor.
While the Kennedy Space Center retained the designation, many strongly opposed Cape Canaveral losing the original Spanish name, and in 1973, Florida lawmakers officially restored its original name – a big win for local residents.
When plans for the rebuilding of Ground Zero began, the soaring skyscraper was called the Freedom Tower, a name meant to symbolize resilience after the September 11 attacks.
Early markers, including the 2004 cornerstone, carried that title. But by 2009, after extensive discussions and public input, the Port Authority confirmed it would instead bear the name One World Trade Center – a deliberate link to the North Tower of the original World Trade Center complex.
Utah’s dramatic Zion National Park once bore a very different title: Mukuntuweap National Monument, proclaimed by President William Howard Taft in 1909. The word derived from a Southern Paiute term, but officials feared it would be difficult to market to visitors.
In 1918, the site was renamed Zion, echoing the Biblical-inspired term used by early Mormon settlers to describe the valley. In 1919, the area was elevated to national park status, becoming one of America’s most visited parks.
Utah’s red-rock wonder wasn’t always Arches National Park. When President Herbert Hoover established the designation in 1929 to preserve the area’s unique geological formations, it was called Arches National Monument.
More than 40 years later in 1971, Congress upgraded the area to national park status and renamed it Arches National Park, a shift that brought both stronger protections and wider recognition.
Chicago’s Navy Pier, now one of the city’s busiest attractions, was originally christened Municipal Pier when it opened in 1916, because it was a municipally funded facility. Designed as a shipping and recreation facility, it was renamed in 1927 to honor naval veterans of World War I.
The new name helped reshape its identity from industrial infrastructure to a civic gathering space with theaters, rides, and lakefront views.
Home to the Statue of Liberty, Liberty Island was not always so patriotically named. From colonial days through the 19th century, it was known as Bedloe’s Island, after a 17th-century Dutch settler.
As the statue became an important symbol of freedom and immigration, the name seemed increasingly ill-fitting. In 1956, Congress officially renamed it Liberty Island, aligning the location with the monument’s symbolism.
Before it became JFK, New York’s busiest airport cycled through a string of names. Planned in 1943 on the site of the old Idlewild Golf Course, it was first called Idlewild Airport, then briefly renamed Major General Alexander E. Anderson Airport to honor a Civil War officer.
By 1948, it opened to passengers as New York International Airport – though locals stubbornly kept calling it "Idlewild." That nickname stuck until 1963, when the airport was renamed after President John F. Kennedy, cementing an identity now known worldwide.
Walt Disney’s original idea for a theme park wasn’t called Disneyland at all. In the 1940s, he sketched plans for a small "Mickey Mouse Park" to be built next to his Burbank studio, featuring modest attractions for families.
As his ambitions grew, the project outgrew its name and location, transforming into Disneyland in Anaheim, which opened in 1955. The new name gave the park a broader identity, one that encompassed Disney’s entire creative universe rather than a single character.
Long before the presidents were carved, the Lakota Sioux called the granite peak The Six Grandfathers, while settlers used names like Cougar Mountain and Slaughterhouse Rock.
There is much debate around how the mountain was named Mount Rushmore, and historical accounts differ, but the story goes that in 1885, New York lawyer Charles E. Rushmore asked a guide what the mountain was called, and the guide allegedly quipped, “It’s never had one… till now… we’ll call it Rushmore.” The offhand joke stuck, and by the time Gutzon Borglum began his colossal carving in the 1920s, the US government had made Mount Rushmore official.
This imposing monolith was known by various Indigenous names such as Bear Lodge and Tree Rock. However, in 1875, US Army Colonel Richard Dodge misinterpreted local usage as "Bad God’s Tower," which morphed into "Devils Tower" – a moniker that was adopted as the official name by the early 1900s.
Rising above northern Oregon, the peak was long rooted in Native stories and sometimes called Wy’east. In 1792, however, British naval officer William Broughton spotted it while mapping the Columbia River and christened it Mount Hood, in honor of Admiral Samuel Hood – a man with no ties to the mountain or the region. The name stuck, leaving Broughton’s tribute as the one remembered.
Just north of downtown San Diego, what was once blandly dubbed City Park finally got its name in 1910. There were several contenders for the offical name, but as preparations ramped up for the 1915 Panama-California Exposition, park commissioners landed on Balboa Park, honoring the Spanish explorer Vasco Núñez de Balboa – the first European to glimpse the Pacific from the Americas.
The Pentagon was first conceived at Arlington Farms, where a five-sided plot inspired its unusual shape and the working name New War Department Building, or the more informal "pentagonal building."
However, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt moved the project to the former Hoover Airport to preserve cemetery views, the design stuck – it was too costly to change. By 1942, the building was officially christened The Pentagon, a name as distinctive as its form.
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