Village (United States)

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Village (Texas)
)

A Shaker village's main street in Massachusetts.

In the United States, the meaning of

special district or an unincorporated area
. It may or may not be recognized for governmental purposes.

In informal usage, a U.S. village may be simply a relatively small clustered human settlement without formal legal existence. In colonial

town centers. With the advent of the Industrial Revolution, industrial villages also sprang up around water-powered mills, mines, and factories.[1]
Because most New England villages were contained within the boundaries of legally established towns, many such villages were never separately incorporated as municipalities.

A relatively small

hamlet
in New York state, or even a relatively small community within an incorporated city or town, may be termed a village. This informal usage may be found even in states that have villages as incorporated municipalities and is similar to the usage of the term "unincorporated town" in states having town governments.

States that formally recognize villages vary widely in the definition of the term.

special district
or a municipality. As a municipality, a village may

  1. differ from a city or town in terms of population;
  2. differ from a city in terms of dependence on a township; or
  3. be virtually equivalent to a city or town.

By state

Alaska

Under Article 10, Section 2 of the

Alaska Constitution, as well as law enacted pursuant to the constitution, Alaska legally recognizes only cities and boroughs as municipal entities in Alaska.[3] In Alaska, "village" is a colloquial term used to refer to small communities, which are mostly located in the rural areas of the state, often unconnected to the contiguous North American road system. Many of these communities are populated predominantly by Alaska Natives and are federally recognized as villages under the Indian Reorganization Act and/or the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act
. As voting membership in the Alaska Municipal League is on an equal footing, regardless of population, most villages are incorporated as second-class cities. In common usage, however, these communities are thought of more often as villages than as cities.

Connecticut

Village districts are subordinate agencies of municipal governments rather than municipalities in their own right.[2]

Delaware

Municipalities in Delaware are called cities, towns, or villages. There are no differences among them that would affect their classification for census purposes.[2]

Florida

Municipalities in Florida are called cities, towns, or villages.[2] They are not differentiated for census purposes.

Idaho

All municipalities in Idaho are called cities, although the terms "town" and "village" are sometimes used in statutes.[2]

Illinois

A village is a type of

incorporated municipality in Illinois; the other two types are the city and the incorporated town.[2] All incorporated municipalities, regardless of type, are independent of each other, and cannot overlap. Villages can be created by referendum under the general state law or by special state charter. The governing body is a board of six elected trustees and an elected village president, all of whom are usually elected at-large
.

Louisiana

A village in Louisiana is a municipality having a population of 1,000 or fewer.[2]

Maine

In

special districts established in towns for limited purposes.[2]

Maryland