Peculiar Names: The Buck

Lancaster County has several towns with peculiar names. This series will examine the etymology of these curious community names. Next up: Buck.

Despite its official listing on U.S. Geological Survey maps as simply Buck, this unincorporated community in East Drumore Township is known to most Lancastrians as the Buck.

So how did this little crossroads in southern Lancaster County earn such a curious name? Why is it the Buck and not just Buck? As with many place names in the county, the answer isnโ€™t straightforward.

One widely accepted theory is that the name comes from a 19th-century tavern that once stood on a triangle of land near what is now Route 272, across from the Turkey Hill in East Drumore Township. Called The Buck, this rustic inn reportedly featured a metal sign of a deerโ€™s head hanging out frontโ€”serving as a much-needed landmark in an era when wagon freight rumbled over dusty, poorly marked roads. Over time, the tavernโ€™s name became synonymous with the entire community, and The Buck was born.

Illustration of a historical tavern named 'The Buck' with a sign featuring a deer head, depicting a horse-drawn wagon passing by.

But other stories complicate the tale.

Some locals believe the name derives from the steep hill north of the village (what is today Pennsylvania Route 272) where horses pulling wagons would notoriously buckโ€”resisting the grueling climb. Still others speculate the name honors James Buchanan, the 15th U.S. president and nearby Wheatland resident, who was often called โ€œOld Buck.โ€

Then thereโ€™s the tale of Abner Musser, founder of Musserโ€™s Market, who may have done the most to preserve the โ€œtheโ€ in the Buck. In 1925, Musser opened his store just a stoneโ€™s throw from the old tavern. Beginning in the 1950s, the grocery store launched an advertising campaign with the slogan: โ€œDonโ€™t Pass the Buckโ€”Stop at Musserโ€™s.โ€ It was a clever nod to both President Trumanโ€™s famous phrase and the villageโ€™s quirky moniker. The slogan lived on for decades through roadside signs and billboards, further cementing the communityโ€™s unique name.

A white-tailed deer standing in a grassy field surrounded by trees.

And yet, a deeper story may lie beneath the surface. One tale passed down over generations tells of a Native American hunterโ€”possibly from the Conestoga or Seneca tribesโ€”who killed a mighty stag near this very spot in the 1700s. According to Drumore resident Jack Carter, that event may have inspired the tavernโ€™s name in the first place. While impossible to verify, the idea hints at the areaโ€™s deeper indigenous roots, reminding us that even a name like the Buck may carry echoes of Lancaster Countyโ€™s earliest inhabitants.

Few names are spoken with more local pride than the Buck because for those who live nearby, itโ€™s not just a locationโ€”itโ€™s a legacy.

A historical black and white photo of a man in an apron standing next to a large sign that reads 'THIS IS THE BUCK THE BIGGEST LITTLE TOWN IN THE U.S.A.' The background features a rural landscape with barns and telephone poles.
Abner G. Musser Sr. shows off a sign touting the Buck in front of his family’s store in the town. ๐Ÿ“ท: Scott Musser

Where To Go

You can find the Buck at the intersection of Lancaster Pike and Route 372.

Read about other Lancaster County towns withย peculiar names, such asย Blue Ball,ย Intercourse, andย Paradise.


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