An unincorporated community in Arkansas.
A river in Indiana, United States; flowing 80 km from near Eckerty into the Ohio at Troy.
A town in Lauderdale County, Alabama; named for local gristmill operator Samuel Anderson.
A town in Iron County, Wisconsin.
An unincorporated community in Rock County, Wisconsin.
A locality in Victoria, Australia; named for early settlers Samuel, Hugh and Thomas Anderson.
A Scottish surname originating as a patronymic.
An unincorporated community in Cass County, Illinois.
A city in Alaska; named for homesteader Arthur Anderson.
An unincorporated community in Ohio.
An unincorporated community in Etowah County, Alabama.
A small village and civil parish (served by Lower Winterborne Parish Council) in Dorset, England (OS grid ref SY8797).
A census-designated place in New Jersey.
A town in Burnett County, Wisconsin.
A river in British Columbia, Canada; flowing from near the Coquihalla Pass into the Fraser River near Boston Bar; named for fur trader James Anderson.
A city in Shasta County, California; named for landowner Elias Anderson.
An unincorporated community in Macoupin County, Illinois.
A former settlement in Mendocino County, California; named for early settler Walter Anderson.
A river in the Northwest Territories, Canada; flowing 692 km from Colville Lake into the Beaufort Sea, probably named for fur trader Alexander Caulfield Anderson.
A male given name
A city, the county seat of Madison County, Indiana; named for Lenape Chief William Anderson.
A city in Missouri; named for local merchant Robert Anderson.
A city, the county seat of Anderson County, South Carolina; named for Revolutionary War officer Robert Anderson.
A town, the county seat of Grimes County, Texas; named for Kenneth Lewis Anderson, 4th Vice President of the Republic of Texas.
A city in Arkansas.
A male given name transferred from the surname.
A city, the county seat of Lake County, South Dakota; named for Madison, Wisconsin.
A city, the county seat of Madison County, Florida.
A borough in Pennsylvania.
A village in Ohio; named for either James Madison or Madison, Connecticut.
A town in Maine.
A city in Kansas.
A number of townships in the United States, listed under Madison Township.
A city in Mississippi.
A city, the county seat of Lac qui Parle County, Minnesota; named for Madison, Wisconsin.
A town in North Carolina.
A female given name transferred from the surname, popular since 1984 when it appeared as the name of a mermaid in the film Splash.
A city in Missouri.
A town in Wisconsin, adjacent to the city of Madison (listed above).
An English surname originating as a matronymic; (US politics) used specifically of James Madison (1751–1836), a Founding Father and fourth president of the United States.
A city in Illinois.
A borough in Morris County, New Jersey.
A city, the county seat of Jefferson County, Indiana.
A town in Connecticut.
A city, the county seat of Morgan County, Georgia.
The capital city of Wisconsin, United States, and the county seat of Dane County.
A town, the county seat of Madison County, Virginia; named for the landowning Madison family, of which James Madison is a descendant.
A town in New Hampshire.
A city, the county seat of Madison County, Nebraska; named for its county, itself for James Madison.
A town in New York and a village within that town.
A city, the county seat of Boone County, West Virginia.
A river in Wyoming and Montana, United States; named for James Madison.
A census-designated place in Yolo County, California; named for Madison, Wisconsin.
A city in Alabama.
A particular line dance commonly danced to the Ike & Tina Turner song Nutbush City Limits.