Ben Lomond (disambiguation)
Ben Lomond is a mountain in Scotland east of Loch Lomond.
Ben Lomond may also refer to several places:
Australia
- Ben Lomond (biogeographic region), a biogeographic region in Tasmania
- Ben Lomond (Tasmania), a mountain located in the biogeographic region
- Ben Lomond National Park, a national park located in the biogeographic region
- Ben Lomond, New South Wales, a town in Australia's New England region
New Zealand
- Ben Lomond (Waikato), a lava dome in Waikato in the North Island of New Zealand
- Ben Lomond (New Zealand), a mountain in the South Island of New Zealand
USA
- Ben Lomond, Arkansas, a town in Sevier County, Arkansas
- Ben Lomond, California, a census-designated place (CDP) in Santa Cruz County, California
- Ben Lomond Mountain AVA, California wine region in Santa Cruz County
- Ben Lomond High School, a secondary school in Ogden, Utah
- Ben Lomond Mountain (Utah), a mountain peak in the Wasatch Range of northern Utah
- Ben Lomond (Colorado), a small mountain in the vicinity of Palmer Lake, Colorado
- Ben Lomond, West Virginia, an unincorporated community in Mason County, West Virginia
- Ben Lomond Plantation, an 1832 plantation near Manassas, Virginia. Used as a hospital during the Civil War
Canada
- Ben Lomond (North Shore Mountains), a mountain in British Columbia, Canada
Other
- S.S. Ben Lomond (1872) a vessel which operated on Lake Wakatipu in New Zealand
- S.S. Ben Lomond, a merchant vessel from the early 20th century which was sunk while transporting supplies for the Allies during World War II
- Ben Lomond, a village in Aberdeen District, in the parish of Saint Elizabeth, Jamaica.
- Ben Lomond Village, A hamlet located in the metropolitan area of San Fernando (the industrial-capital of Trinidad and Tobago). This region is home mainly to the next generation of East-Indian migrant workers who were granted worker contracts for a duration of five years as a measure to save the British Empires sugar and cocoa plantation companies due to the islands first official strike and union-formation, where the local, creole population were demanding a 100% pay-raise. The region is also known for a popular song in the 1960's by Johnny Duncan named Last Train To San Fernando
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