Hooterville was a fictional town rural town that was the setting of the American television sitcoms Petticoat Junction and Green Acres.
Citizens
Hooterville county had a population of 3000 citizens (as of 1963), such as Newt Kiley who
farmed over 80 acres (320,000 m²); Ben Miller, the
apple farmer;
Mr. Haney (first name disputed, Eustace or Charlton), the county con man;
Hank Kimball, the idiotic
county agent;
Sam Drucker, the only shopkeeper in Hooterville; Sarah Hotchkiss Trendell, the
telephone operator; Fred Ziffel, a
pig farm owner; Doris "Ruthie" Ziffel, Fred's loud and nosey wife (the couple also owned an intelligent pig named
Arnold); Charley Pratt and Floyd Smoot, the engineer and conductor respectively on the local
train, the
Hooterville Cannonball; and Eb Dawson, the handyman for the Douglases. "Hot Time In The Old Town Tonight" was the only song that the Hooterville Volunteer Fire Department Marching Band could play--at half speed and somewhat off-key.
Petticoat Junction
Petticoat Junction (1963–70) was set in the Shady Rest Hotel, which was located 25 miles
down the tracks (and apparently the sole business in the area aside from Drucker's). The Shady Rest Hotel was run by widowed Kate Bradley (played by
Bea Benaderet) and her lazy, overweight uncle "Uncle Joe" Carson (
Edgar Buchanan). Kate had three daughters, "boy crazy" Billie Jo, "book worm" Bobbie Jo, and "tomboy" Betty Jo. In addition to his storekeeping duties, Drucker was also the town's
postmaster and publisher of the local weekly
newspaper, the
Hooterville World Guardian. Drucker also operated a
bank, which seemed to consist largely of a cash box located under the counter in his store.
Green Acres
Green Acres (1965–71) was about a wealthy
New York City couple, lawyer
Oliver Wendell Douglas (
Eddie Albert) and his diamond-clad wife,
Lisa (
Eva Gabor), who give up their
Park Avenue penthouse for a run-down farm, the "Haney" place. Hooterville in
Green Acres was a much more wacky, surreal place than the one in
Petticoat Junction, though the shows shared characters, as the humor in
Green Acres was often far broader. In the shows' later years, the major overlap between the two was Sam Drucker and his combination
general store,
post office, and newspaper office. In this series, the town was said to be named after Horace Hooter.
Location
The location of Hooterville was never explicitly stated, but it was implied to be in or very near
Illinois. In numerous episodes it was said that they were close to
Chicago; in one
Green Acres episode, Mr. Haney said Chicago was 300 miles (480 km) away. Another time it was said a nearby town was called Springfield, which is also the name of the capital city of Illinois. Hooterville may also have been in the
Ozarks (which is the location of
Springfield, Missouri,
Missouri's third-largest
city). One of the working titles for
Petticoat Junction had been
Ozark Widow (another had been
Whistle Stop). The cast of another CBS show,
The Beverly Hillbillies, had some connection with the characters in
Petticoat Junction, when Cousin Pearl contacted Granny to deliver Betty Jo Bradley's baby; the Clampetts hail from southern Missouri. The name "Hooterville" is actually first used in episode No. 6 of
The Beverly Hillbillies by supporting character Jasper "Jazzbo" Depew (Phil Gordon).
Towns and Cities Witin 500 Miles
A larger town nearby, although not the
county seat, was called "
Pixley", and there is an ongoing rivalry between the two communities. Pixley was about 50
miles from Hooterville. Other towns in the area were Crabwell Corners (about 5-8 miles away), Stankwell Falls (distance never stated), Bugtussle (about 20-25 miles away), Bleedswell (distance never stated), the county
seat, its name was never said, (about 75 miles away), Springfield (distance never stated), Appleville (300 miles away), Chicago
(300 miles away), and the unnamed state capitol (500 miles away). Most of the above towns are also apparently being near
The Beverly Hillbillies "back home" town of Bugtussle. One place mentioned on
Hillbillies as being near the above places is
Silver Dollar City-apprently on injoke.
Inspiration
It would seem an obvious conclusion that the name "Hooterville" was inspired by the term "hooters" for women's breasts. One of the first images in the opening credits of
Petticoat Junction is that of Kate's three daughters,
skinny-dipping in the train's open-topped water tower, with their petticoats draped over the rim (filmed from ground level, of course). The image is reinforced by the theme song lyric, "Lots of curves, you bet / And even more when you get / To the Junction." However, following the standards of early
1960s television, this was about as sexy as it ever got. Any vague hint of sexuality was always played for laughs.
Further reading
Fictional towns and cities in the United States