The fictional city of Springfield was intended to represent "Anytown, USA", and not be derived from any specific real-life location. However, the producers acknowledge deriving inspiration from numerous locations, including
The Simpsons creator Matt Groening's hometown of
Portland, Oregon, and Mike Scully's hometown, Springfield, Massachusetts. Springfield was named after Springfield, Oregon, which, as a child, Groening had believed to be the fictitious Springfield featured in the 1950s sitcom
Father Knows Best. Groening did not intend to place the fictional Springfield in Oregon, contrary to a 2012 interview with him in
Smithsonian magazine; he instead adopted the name for the setting of
The Simpsons in the hope that "everyone will think it's their Springfield."
Al Jean explained that the magazine "misinterpreted something I've heard him say for at least 10 or 20 years. He was inspired by growing up in
Portland, but it's really an every town". Groening liked
Second City Television setting of Melonville, a town with a large cast of recurring characters, and used it as inspiration for
The Simpsons. He said, "I also figured out that Springfield was one of the most common names for a city in the U.S. In anticipation of the show's success, I thought, 'This will be cool; everyone will think it's their Springfield.' And they do".
Location Because of the many contradictory statements made regarding Springfield in the show, the town cannot exist in a specific state. In
The Simpsons Movie,
Ned Flanders tells
Bart that the state where Springfield is located is bordered by the states of
Ohio,
Nevada,
Maine, and
Kentucky – only Ohio and Kentucky are neighboring states in reality, and Nevada and Maine are at opposite sides of the US. The fictional city's unknown geography is a
recurring joke in the series; the
Dayton Daily News called it the "riddle wrapped in an enigma that is Springfield's location." Episodes frequently make fun of the fact that Springfield's state is unidentifiable, by adding further conflicting descriptions, obscuring onscreen map representations, and interrupting conversational references.
David Silverman, who directed the movie and various episodes of the series, joked that Springfield is located in the fictional state of "North Takoma". This is substantiated by the state abbreviations NT and TA used within the show. As of
A Tale of Two Springfields (season 12, episode 2), the telephone
area codes for Springfield are
636 (
St. Charles County and Western
St. Louis County, Missouri) and
939 (
Puerto Rico). To promote
The Simpsons Movie, various actual
towns and cities across the U.S. called Springfield competed to hold the
premiere. The promotion was, whichever state sent in the most votes would be the winner and would officially be which state
The Simpsons takes place in. Despite the smaller size of Vermont compared to other states, the town of
Springfield, Vermont was chosen. In 2016, a
New York Times study of the 50 TV shows with the most
Facebook Likes found that "of all the Springfields in America, [
The Simpsons] is most popular in Springfields in
Virginia,
Minnesota and
New Jersey, and least popular in Springfields in
Louisiana,
Arkansas and
Georgia".
Fictional history The episode "
Lisa the Iconoclast" revealed that Springfield was founded by a group led by
Jebediah Springfield (a cover identity for notorious pirate Hans Sprungfeld) who, after misinterpreting a passage in the Bible, left Maryland trying to find "New
Sodom". After he refuses to found a town where
men are free to marry their cousins, half of the group leave. The dissenters found the nearby town of
Shelbyville, named after fellow pioneer Shelbyville Manhattan, and the two cities have remained rivals ever since. Springfield reached its pinnacle in the mid-20th century when it became the home of the world's first
Aquacar factory; one-half of the U.S. was said to wear Springfield galoshes, and the city's streets were literally paved with gold. However, the town's prosperity was short-lived. In a 1992 episode, a fictional
Time cover story on Springfield is titled "America's Worst City", and in a 1996 episode,
Newsweek called the town "America's Crud Bucket".
Topography Springfield's fictional geography is shown to be comically varied and includes
forests,
meadows,
mountain ranges, a
desert, a
glacier,
beaches,
badlands,
canyons,
swamps, a
harbor,
waterholes, and
waterways. Major named geographical features include the Springfield Gorge, Springfield National Forest, the volcanic Mt. Springfield, the West Springfield Desert, which is claimed to be "three times the size of
Texas", the Springfield Badlands, the gigantic Murderhorn Mountain, Springfield Glacier, Mt. Useful National Park, Springfield Mesa, Springfield Monument Park, and Springfield National Park. The town's climate is usually depicted as dry and sunny, with a bright blue sky. However, in various episodes, it has been subject to many natural disasters, including heatwaves, blizzards, avalanches, earthquakes,
acid rain, floods, hurricanes, lightning strikes, tornadoes, and volcanic eruptions. Springfield's environment is shown as unusually polluted. Overflowing garbage forces the whole town – population and structures — to move away from the massive dump that the old town of Springfield had become. Springfield is also home to the state's largest self-sustaining
tire fire, which has been burning continuously for many decades. Lake Springfield's
pollution almost leads to the town's destruction by an
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) bomb in
The Simpsons Movie, and pollution from the
nuclear power plant has mutated the fish in the river, causing some to grow an extra eye. Its atmosphere is so polluted that, in one 1995 episode, it reduces a
comet, that was large enough that it was assumed that it would completely destroy the town, to a rock the size of a
chihuahua's head in just a few seconds. Springfield is shown to feature a large numbered
grid plan, ranging from streets at least as low as 3rd Street and at least as high as 257th Street.
Politics The fictional mayor of Springfield is
Joe Quimby, a
Democrat. In the episode "
Sideshow Bob Roberts",
Sideshow Bob runs for mayor as a
Republican and defeats Quimby, but Bob is later discovered to have committed
electoral fraud. During the episode "
The Old Blue Mayor She Ain't What She Used to Be",
Marge Simpson becomes the mayor of the city for a short period.
Krusty the Clown represents Springfield in Congress as a Republican. Previous representatives include Horace Wilcox, who dies of a heart attack while in office in "
Mr. Spritz Goes to Washington", and Bob Arnold, who is forced to resign after Lisa exposes his corruption in "
Mr. Lisa Goes to Washington".
Mary Bailey is the fictional governor of Springfield's state. the Springfield Atoms
football team at Springfield Stadium; the
NBA's Springfield Excitement (formerly the Austin Celtics); and the Springfield Ice-O-Topes
hockey team. Springfield resident
Homer Simpson is also the owner of the
Denver Broncos. ==Businesses ==