This is a list of places which are located all around the world named or renamed in honor of American poet, writer and literary critic Joyce Kilmer (1886-1918).
Joyce Kilmer School in West Roxbury (Boston), Massachusetts. This K-8 school has two buildings ("Lower", K-3 and "Upper" 4–8) located less than 2 miles from each other.[4]
Joyce Kilmer Memorial Fireplace (built 1936) in Como Park in St. Paul, MN[5] Kilmer was honored by St. Paul Parks Superintendent W. Lamont Kauffman, who was a charter member of the Joyce Kilmer post of the American Legion.
Kilmer Library on the Livingston Campus of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey (created out of part of the former Camp Kilmer).[6] On February 8, 2017, the Board of Governors voted to name the library in honor of James Dickson Carr, Rutgers’ first African American graduate.[7]
Joyce Kilmer Elementary School, opened in 1966, in Buffalo Grove, Illinois is part of Community Consolidated School District No. 21 (Wheeling Township, Illinois)[12]
The Philolexian Society of Columbia University, a collegiate literary society of which Kilmer was vice president, holds the annual Alfred Joyce Kilmer Memorial Bad Poetry Contest in his honor.[14]
Nobody's Inn, a bar and grill at 150 Franklin Turnpike in Mahwah (next to the Erie-Lackawanna railroad tracks about 0.7 miles from the border of Suffern, New York), which closed in 2002, was widely believed to occupy the house that inspired Kilmer's poem, "The House with Nobody In It." The poem begins, "Whenever I walk to Suffern along the Erie track / I go by a poor old farmhouse with its shingles broken and black."
The Joyce Kilmer Memorial Tree, located in New York City's Central Park near Center Drive and 67th Street.[15][16]
^As of April 27, 2022, no information about this square can be found on the web, and this square is not listed on Google Maps even though the sign with its name appears on the Google street photo.
^The Philolexian SocietyArchived 2012-07-17 at the Wayback Machine at the Philolexian Foundation website. Published by the Philolexian Foundation (no further authorship information available). Retrieved 13 January 2007.