RoadsideThoughts
A Gazetteer for the United States and Canada
Home >> State of North Carolina >> Mecklenburg County >> Mount SeerSitemap...

Do you know of Mount Seer ???

This page is an orphan - a placeholder until we can discover more about Mount Seer. When we encounter a name that is new to us, we add it to our Gazetteer with the hope that we'll discover more information in the future. Such is the case with Mount Seer.<1>

We found mention of Mount Seer as a post office (see Mentions and References below), but can't determine its location - other than being located somewhere in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina.

It's common that the post office is named the same as the community in which it's located (although that's not always case). In this case, we can't match this post office to any of the existing communities in our gazetteer.<2>

Miscellaneous References and Mentions for Mount Seer ...

We've created the following list to keep track of the sources that proved useful in adding to our knowledge about Mount Seer:

U.S. Post Offices (Oct. 1846)
Published by John T. Towers

More Orphans in  Mecklenburg County ...

Can you help?

As we explained above, when we encounter a name that might be a community or a post office we add it to our Gazetteer. If we have little information to go with the name, we call them Orphans. Below are Orphans that we believe to be located in Mecklenburg County.

Air Line JunctionLovelady
Alexanders Store 
AlexandrianaMadge
Amity GardensMallard
ArrowoodMarko
AtandoMecklenburg
 Minnie
Barmac 
BristowNations Village
BrooklynNevin
 Nimrod
Chadwick 
Charlotte JunctionObserver
Clearcreek 
ClusterQuery's
  
DavenportRandolph
Davidson CollegeRankin
  
East CharlotteSago
EastwaySandifer
ExactSeversville
 Shamrock
FennimoreSharon
First UnionSheva
FisherSloansville
FreedomSpurrier
 Steele Creek
GarrisonSurveyorsville
Griffith 
 Tampa
HahnThrift
Hoods CrossroadsTuckasaga
Hornet 
 Uncas
JeffersonvilleUnity
Jordansville 
JuneauWailes
 Wolfs
KentWorth
KirksvilleWriston
  
LansdowneYorkmont Park
Lodo 

Footnotes ...

<1>This entry could have originated in error. It might be that a source had a misprint, was simply wrong or we made a transcription error while referencing it. Many of the documents we reference are from the 1800s and the early 1900s, with some easier to read than others.
<2>Part of the difficulty in identifying whether a name is a post office or a community lies with how Post Offices were named. We've prepared an article with our understanding of how post offices were named: Naming of Post Offices.