Oak Ridge

Oak Ridge or Oakridge is the name of many places:

In the United Kingdom:

  • Oakridge, Gloucestershire, England
  • Oakridge, Hampshire, England

In the United States of America:

  • Oak Ridge (California), a ridge in Santa Clara County
  • Oak Ridge, Florida, in Orange County
  • Oak Ridge, Louisiana
  • Oak Ridge, Missouri
  • Oak Ridge, New York, a hamlet south of the village of Charleston, New York
  • Oak Ridge, New Jersey, a town
  • Oak Ridge, North Carolina, a town in Guilford County
    • Oak Ridge Military Academy, a military college-preparatory school
  • Oak Ridge, Stokes County, North Carolina
  • Oakridge, Oregon
  • Oak Ridge, a northward extension of Seminary Ridge on the Gettysburg Battlefield in Pennsylvania
  • Oak Ridge, Tennessee, a city in East Tennessee
    • Oak Ridge Associated Universities
    • K-25, the Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant
    • Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education
    • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
    • ORACLE (computer) (Oak Ridge Automatic Computer and Logical Engine)
  • Oakridge, Tennessee, an unincorporated place in Montgomery County
  • Oak Ridge, Cooke County, Texas
  • Oak Ridge, Kaufman County, Texas
  • Oak Ridge North, Texas (Montgomery County, Texas)
  • Oakridge, Wisconsin, an unincorporated community

In Canada:

  • Oakridge, Calgary, Alberta, a neighbourhood
  • Oakridge, Vancouver, British Columbia, a neighbourhood
  • Oakridge, Toronto, Ontario, a neighbourhood
  • Oak Ridges (disambiguation) may refer to a number of places in Canada

Read more about Oak Ridge:  Other

Famous quotes containing the words oak and/or ridge:

    Alas for America as I must so often say, the ungirt, the diffuse, the profuse, procumbent, one wide ground juniper, out of which no cedar, no oak will rear up a mast to the clouds! It all runs to leaves, to suckers, to tendrils, to miscellany. The air is loaded with poppy, with imbecility, with dispersion, & sloth.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    The light passes
    from ridge to ridge,
    from flower to flower.
    Hilda Doolittle (1886–1961)