In the 1920s, General Drafting founder Otto G. Lindberg and an assistant, Ernest Alpers, assigned an anagram of their initials to a dirt-road intersection in the Catskill Mountains: NY 206 and Morton Hill Road, north of Roscoe, New York.[2] The town was designed as a "copyright trap" to enable the publishers to detect others copying their maps. Agloe appeared on maps made by General Drafting for Esso.
In 1930, a business named Agloe Lodge Farms was incorporated,[3] which acquired a fishing lodge in the area and renamed it Agloe Lodge.[4] Members of the Nead family, which sold the land to Agloe Lodge Farms, told the Times Herald-Record in 2016 that the land had been sold for $1, and that they suspected the company was actually a front for Rand McNally.[5]
According to cartographer Frank Brown, the town later appeared on a map produced by Rand McNally. When General Drafting approached Rand McNally about the violation of their copyright, Rand McNally representatives said that the information about the town had come from Delaware County records, which showed that a business with the name Agloe existed there. When recounting this story to the Road Map Collectors' Association in 2002, Brown said that the business was a general store.[6] Longtime residents of the area have said that there was never a general store at the site although there was a fishing lodge renamed Agloe Lodge.[5]
Agloe is featured in the 2008 novel Paper Towns by John Green and its 2015 film adaptation. During the film and in the novel, one of the main characters, Margo, runs away from home, leaving personal clues to her friend and neighbor Quentin of where she has gone. He then discovers she is hiding in one of the US's most famous "paper towns": Agloe, New York. The book's name is based on the various ways that Quentin interprets the phrase "paper towns".
^Byrne, Ian (March 19, 2006). "Errors on road maps(2)". Petrol Maps. ianbyrne.free-online.co.uk. Archived from the original on September 28, 2008. Retrieved September 1, 2008.