Places
- in Australia
- Woodville, New South Wales
- Woodville, South Australia, a suburb of Adelaide
- Woodville railway station, Adelaide
- in Canada
- Woodville, Ontario
- Woodville, Nova Scotia
- in New Zealand
- Woodville, New Zealand
- in the United Kingdom
- Woodville, Derbyshire, England
- in the United States
- Woodville, Alabama
- Woodville, California
- Dogtown, Marin County, California, formerly Woodville
- Woodleaf, Yuba County, California, formerly Woodville
- Woodville, Florida Largest municipality with this name
- Woodville, Georgia
- Woodville (Milledgeville, Georgia), listed on the NRHP in Georgia
- Woodville (Winfield, Georgia), listed on the NRHP in Georgia
- Woodville, Maine
- Woodville Township, Minnesota
- Woodville, Mississippi
- Woodville Historic District (Woodville, Mississippi), listed on the NRHP in Mississippi
- Woodville, North Carolina (disambiguation)
- Woodville, Bertie County, North Carolina
- Woodville, Cherokee County, North Carolina
- Woodville, Perquimans County, North Carolina
- Woodville, Surry County, North Carolina
- Lewiston Woodville, North Carolina
- Woodville Historic District (Lewiston-Woodville, North Carolina), listed on the NRHP in North Carolina
- Woodville, Ohio
- Woodville, Oklahoma
- Woodville (Heidelberg, Pennsylvania), a house that is a National Historic Landmark
- Woodville, Texas
- Woodville, Virginia
- Woodville, Wisconsin, in St. Croix County, Wisconsin
- Woodville, Calumet County, Wisconsin
Read more about this topic: Woodville
Famous quotes containing the word places:
“Whence thou returnst, and whither wentst, I know;
For God is also in sleep; and dreams advise,
Which he hath sent propitious, some great good
Presaging, since, with sorrow and hearts distress,
Wearied I fell asleep: but now lead on;
In me is no delay; without thee here to stay,
Is to go hence unwilling; thou to me
Art all things under Heaven, all places thou,”
—John Milton (16081674)
“People who live in quiet, remote places are apt to give good dinners. They are the oft-recurring excitement of an otherwise unemotional, dull existence. They linger, each of these dinners, in our palimpsest memories, each recorded clearly, so that it does not blot out the others.”
—M. E. W. Sherwood (18261903)
“In many places the road was in that condition called repaired, having just been whittled into the required semicylindrical form with the shovel and scraper, with all the softest inequalities in the middle, like a hogs back with the bristles up.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)