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Almanac note · History and culture

Dos Palos has a name story locals still care about

Dos Palos traces its name to two trees, then to a farm colony, a nearby Colony Center, and a local pronunciation that lasted for generations.

Dos PalosDos Palos ColonyHenry Miller

Dos Palos is a small Merced County city with a name people can argue about in a friendly way. The old Spanish name points to “two trees” or “two timbers.” A city planning document traces the name to two large poplar trees that became a boundary marker for the Rancho Sanjon de Santa Rita Mexican land grant.

The town story later moved into the farm-colony era. In 1891, Bernhard Marks, a former school principal, worked with Henry Miller to start a nearby settlement called Dos Palos Colony. Marks brought about forty pioneer families west, mostly from Iowa and Nebraska.

That first colony struggled with water. In 1892, after some settlers left, Marks convinced Miller to start another town about two miles away. That second place was called Colony Center. In 1906, the names shifted. Dos Palos Colony became South Dos Palos, and Colony Center became Dos Palos.

One of the best small details is the pronunciation. Miller and Marks came from different European backgrounds. Their accented way of saying Dos Palos sounded like “Dahce Palace.” That local pronunciation stuck around for generations before a newer Spanish-style pronunciation became more common.

The name story keeps Dos Palos from feeling like a dot on a farm map. It shows the mix behind the town: Spanish and Mexican land names, Miller and Lux land, Midwestern settlers, water trouble, local speech, and the steady work of making a town last.

Where to see it

Blossom Street, downtown Dos Palos, South Dos Palos, and the farm country along the west side of Merced County.

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Reviewed July 2, 2026

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