The Mile High City has an awful lot of street names whose pronunciations get butchered on the regular, but they actually make total sense when you realize they stem from English, Spanish, French, and Native American origins. Our diverse population (and Siri) may not be able to properly pronounce all of our city’s place names, but we can rest in the fact that the right answer is just a Google away. Here are the 10 craziest street names in Denver and how they came to be.
In the late 1800s, a man named William McGaa helped speculators obtain the land near Cherry Creek from the native Arapahoe and Cheyenne tribes, and Wewatta was the name of McGaa's Oglala Sioux wife...
Kalamath Street was reportedly named in honor of the Klamath Indians of the Pacific Northwest; however, when they made the street sign the fine folks apparently misspelled the word, and Kalamath Street was born.
While some say that Galapago was named after the famed islands, others claim that it means tortoise in Spanish and is pronounced gal-uh-PAY-go, rather than the Spanish pronunciation, gah-LAH-pa-go. Things that make you go, hmmmmmm?