Fleetwood Mac’s iconic song “Silver Springs” has a direct and interesting connection to Silver Spring– right here in Montgomery County, Maryland. While many fans appreciate Stevie Nicks’ music and the song itself, its title often contributes to the common mistake of adding an ‘s’ to the end of the Maryland location’s name.
The inspiration for the song’s title came directly from the town itself. Stevie Nicks later revealed that “Silver Springs” was about the end of her relationship with bandmate Lindsey Buckingham. She explained, “I wrote ‘Silver Springs’ about Lindsey. We were in Maryland somewhere, driving under a freeway sign that said Silver Springs, Maryland. I loved the name… Silver Springs sounded like a pretty fabulous place to me. And ‘You could be my silver springs,’ that’s just a whole symbolic thing of what you could have been to me.” This serendipitous encounter with the freeway sign cemented the enduring link between the famous song and the Maryland community.
Silver Spring, Maryland, gets its name from a unique natural feature– a spring that sparkled with flecks of mica. In 1840, Francis Preston Blair, a prominent journalist and politician, discovered this spring while riding his horse. He was so captivated by the way the mica in the water shimmered like silver that he bought the surrounding land and built his summer home there, naming his estate “Silver Spring.” Adding that extra ‘s’ is a common mispronunciation, particularly by those unfamiliar with the area, and it immediately marks someone as an outsider. For those who grew up here, it’s a small but persistent linguistic pet peeve, often perceived as a sign of not knowing the local geography and history. Something evident by Nicks, as she was just passing through the area…