A city, the county seat of Johnson County, Arkansas.
A town in Virginia; named for founder Clarke Royster.
An unincorporated community in Idaho.
A borough of Pennsylvania.
A city, the county seat of Montgomery County, Tennessee; named for George Rodgers Clark.
A hamlet in New Scotland, New York; named for early settler Adam A. Clark.
A town in Allegheny County, New York; named for Holland Land Company agent S. N. Clark.
A city, the county seat of Red River County, Texas; named for founder James Clark.
A city in Iowa.
A town in Clark County, Indiana; named for explorer William Clark.
A village in Clinton County, Ohio; named for Sarah Clark Hadley, an early settler.
An unincorporated community in Delaware.
An unincorporated community in Hamilton County, Indiana; named for George Rogers Clark.
An unincorporated community in Mercer County, New Jersey.
A city in Missouri, named for William Clark.
A village in Michigan.
A town in New Hampshire; named for the Clark family, who cleared the land for settlement.
A community in Nova Scotia.
An unincorporated community in Oklahoma.
An unincorporated community in Hunterdon County, New Jersey.
An unincorporated community in Maryland; named for William Clark.
An unincorporated community in Illinois.
A ghost town in Defiance County, Ohio; named for proprietor Elisha Clark.
An unincorporated community in California.
An unincorporated community in Perry County, Ohio; named for founder Daniel Clark.
A city in Pulaski County, Arkansas.
A city, the county seat of Johnson County, Georgia, named after John B. Wright.
Synonym of Coxs Corner, Monmouth County, New Jersey.
A borough in York County, Pennsylvania, named after first settler John Wright.
An unincorporated community in Fairfield Township, Madison County, Ohio.
An unincorporated community in Dunklin County, Missouri, named after the Wright brothers, local merchants.
A ghost town in Alma, Jackson County, Wisconsin.
An unincorporated community in Adams County, Ohio.