An unincorporated community in South Carolina.
An unincorporated community in Missouri; named for Missouri statesman Charles D. Drake.
Francis Drake (1540-1596), English sea captain, pirate, and explorer of the Elizabethan era.
A ward of Plymouth, Devon, England; named for aqueduct Drake's Leat, itself for Francis Drake, Mayor of Plymouth at the time of its construction.
A city in North Dakota; named for early settler Herman Drake.
An English surname transferred from the nickname, originally a byname from Old English draca or Old Norse draki, both meaning “dragon”.
An unincorporated community in Arizona.
An unincorporated community in Colorado.
A male given name transferred from the surname.
A town in New South Wales, Australia.
An unincorporated community in Kentucky.
An unincorporated community in Illinois.
An Irish surname, anglicized from Drach, itself a Hiberno-Norman name English Drake.
A village in Saskatchewan, Canada.
A town in North Carolina.
A town in Mississippi.
A nickname of Confederate general Thomas Jonathan Jackson.
A town in Manitoba, Canada.
A formation in chess (a variation of the Queen's Pawn Game) in which white plays pawns to d4 and several other positions, requiring black to react energetically (see Stonewall Attack).
A town in Louisiana.
An unincorporated community in Texas.
A former gold-mining town in California, in the Cuyamaca Mountains.
A series of riots in 1969 New York City, beginning with the patrons of the gay bar "The Stonewall Inn" resisting police arrest, which marked the beginning of the militant gay rights movement.
A town in Oklahoma.
An unincorporated community in West Virginia.