The ancient name for places in England associated with salt/brine production end with wich. There are 13 English towns and 1 city (bold) that end with this;
Bloxwich, Droitwich, Dunwich, Fordwich, Harwich, Horwich, Ipswich, Middlewich, Nantwich, Northwich, Norwich, Prestwich, Sandwich, West Bromwich.
berwhich
Bromley
None but a lot of them end in -Shire (like Worcestershire and Gloucestershire) but not -Nish.
James town
London.
Cricklade, Lechlade
fintheath jangaheath and liniheath
Perranporth in Cornwall.
MaidstoneFolkestone
it is me and im coming to find you
"ton" is old English for town. Kingston = King's town and so on.
I know that Westward Ho! in Devon, England has an exclamation point in its name (what a worthless bit of knowledge) but when I looked in Wikipedia for how the town got its name, there is also mention of a town in Canada, Saint-Louis-du-Ha! Ha!, which has two exclamation points in its name. More to the point, both town names end in an exclamation point. Better change the question.
Wansbeck - a district of Newcastle-upon-tyne.