Details, Explanation and Meaning About U.S. Southern states

U.S. Southern states Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The U.S. South
Location in the U.S
Population: 99,664,761
Total Area: 2,384,143 kmē
Largest City (proper): Houston, Texas 2,009,834
Highest Elevation: Guadalupe Peak 2,667 m
Lowest Elevation: New Orleans -2.5 m
Largest State: Texas 696,241 kmē
Smallest State: Delaware 6,452 kmē
Census Bureau Divisions
The U.S. Southern states or The South, also known as Dixie, is perhaps the most distinctive region of the United States, with its own unique historical perspective, customs and cuisine. There is some overlap with The Southwest and the Mid-Atlantic States.

As defined by the Census Bureau, the Southern region of the United States includes 16 states, and is split into three smaller units, or divisions: The South Atlantic States, which are Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia (plus the District of Columbia); the East South Central States of Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee; and the West South Central States of Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas.

The largest city in the region is Houston, Texas. Other important cities include Dallas, San Antonio, New Orleans, Memphis, Nashville, Atlanta, Miami, and Charlotte, North Carolina.

Table of contents
1 Geography
2 History
3 Culture
4 Exceptions and Variations
5 See also

Geography

The region is blessed with plentiful rainfall and a mild to warm climate. Many kinds of crops grow easily in its soils and can be grown without frost for at least six months of the year. The South is blessed with fragrant magnolia trees and jessamine vines and beautiful flowering dogwoods.

History

Like New England, the South was settled by English Protestants. Indeed, the first permanent colony began in Jamestown, Virginia in 1606, fourteen years before the landing at Plymouth, Massachusetts.

The South received the continent's largest population of enslaved Africans from New England traders. In some states, their descendants outnumbered people of European descent in the 19th century. Whereas New Englanders tended to stress their differences from the British, Southern whites tended to emulate them. Even so, Southerners were prominent among the leaders of the American Revolution, and four of America's first five presidents were Virginians. After 1800, however, the interests of the manufacturing North and the agrarian South began to diverge.

Especially in coastal areas, southern settlers grew wealthy by raising and selling rice, indigo, cotton, and tobacco. The most economical way to raise these crops was on large farms, called plantations, which required the work of many laborers. To supply this need, American and British slavers purchased slaves in Africa to plantation owners and slavery spread throughout the South. The slavers bought the slaves with vats of rum made in New England from cane sugar grown in the Caribbean. This exchange of sugar, rum, and slaves is called the "Triangular Trade."

Slavery was the most contentious issue dividing North and South. The vast majority of Southerners never owned slaves; most were independent yeoman farmers just like their counterparts in the North, and slavery was not part of everyday life for ordinary citizens. But that said, the huge slave-run plantations of the Deep South were not to be found anywhere else. Political tensions arose for a number of reasons, especially slavery. Slavery was a moral issue that angered the North, but Southern planters faced total financial ruin if it were abolished, and in 1860, eleven Southern states left the Union and formed a separate nation, the Confederate States of America. War broke out, called in the North, the American Civil War, and called in the South, the "War for Southern Independence," "The War Between the States," and "The War of Northern Agression." The variations are indicative of the differning perceptions of the war in the South. The war was fought mostly on Southern lands which prompted a Southern Belle to quip, "There was nothing civil about it." -- an observation that holds true for intranational conflicts in general. Out-gunned, out-manned, and out-financed, the Confederacy met defeat, and slavery came to an end. During the war, the pro-Union northwestern region of Confederate Virginia seceded to become the new state of West Virginia. The abolition of slavery failed to provide Africans with political or economic equality: Southern towns and cities legalized and refined the practice of racial segregation. For a long period thereafter, well into the twentieth century, the South enforced regional white supremacy through Jim Crow laws, segregation, sharecropping, disenfranchisement and offensive domestic groups such as the Ku Klux Klan.

The American Civil War of 1861 to 1865 devastated the Old South socially and economically. Before the war, the South was the wealthiest part of the United States - bearing much of that wealth in land and slaves. After the war, during the Reconstruction period, the South struggled to rise from poverty and worked to establish a successful economy from the ashes. Richmond, Virginia, the former Capital of the Confederacy, grew quickly mostly due to its Federal Reserve Bank, Railroads, canals, and cutting edge Electric trolley system. Sometime after World War II, the old agrarian Southern economy evolved into the "New South" - a manufacturing region with strong roots in Northern-style financial capitalism. High-rise buildings now crowd the skylines of Atlanta, Charlotte, Houston, Dallas, Nashville, and Little Rock. In the 20th century, the South saw an impressive regional outpouring of literature by, among others, William Faulkner, Thomas Wolfe, Andrew Nelson Lytle, Robert Penn Warren, Katherine Anne Porter, Tennessee Williams, Eudora Welty and Flannery O'Connor.

Culture

As the effects of slavery and racial loyalty disappear, a new regional identity is being carefully crafted under the banner of the aforementioned "New South" through such events as the hip annual Spoleto Music Festival in Charleston, South Carolina, and the 1996 Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia. Although the South as a whole defies stereotyping, it is nonetheless known for entrenched political conservatism, for its Calvinist religious "fundamentalism", and for vestiges of nostalgia toward the old rural South still present in events like Confederate Memorial Day and small intellectual movements such as the revisionist "League of the South" and the Southern Agrarians.

The South is highly religious, and politicians and sociologists often refer to it as the "Bible Belt." The Southern conservative seldom identifies with the Democratic Party any longer, and since the Reagan era most all have switched loyalties to the Republican Party. Unlike its public schools, churches and neighborhoods are still largely segregated voluntarily.

Fights over the old "Rebel Flag" of the defunct Confederacy still occur from time to time, and it and other reminders of the Old South can be seen everywhere on automobile bumper-stickers, on t-shirts, and flown from homes. However, these remnants are slowly fading away, Southern accents are heard ever less often in the larger growing cities, and the South is clearly merging into the greater commercial culture of the whole United States.

Exceptions and Variations

  • Southern Louisiana, having been colonized by France and Spain rather than Great Britain, has a different culture and traditions, especially with the Cajun culture of southwest Louisiana, and the Creole French, Latin American and Caribbean influenced culture of the New Orleans area.

  • Texas was a dependency of New Spain, but was originally claimed for France, became its own "Kingdom of Texas" under the Spanish, then part of Mexico, and lastly the independent Republic of Texas. After being annexed by the United States, it sided with the Confederate States of America in the American Civil War. There have been "six flags" over Texas. In many ways Texas has one foot in the South, and one in the Southwest. The major cities, especially Houston, see a very diverse population, especially that of Hispanic- and Asian-Americans.

  • Florida has had rapid population growth due to retirees from the North and immigrants from Latin America. Miami, Florida has become more a part of the culture of the Caribbean, with a large influx of immigrants from Cuba, and also Puerto Rico, Haiti and other parts of Latin America, as non-Hispanic whites and native-born African Americans have fled north to find higher wages, lower costs of living, and cultures where they feel more comfortable. While southern and central Florida is seen by many as not truly part of the U.S. South in terms of culture, the areas of northeast Florida and the Panhandle still, for the most part, hold Southern traditions and ways-of-life dear.

  • The culture of Northern Kentucky is more Midwestern than Southern; the region is culturally and economically attached to Cincinnati. Conversely, Southern Indiana is more Southern than it is Midwestern, as it is culturally and economically attached to Louisville, Kentucky. Similarly, Southern Illinois (Little Egypt) is more Southern than it is Midwestern; it forms a coherent cultural region with the Missouri Bootheel, northeast Arkansas, Kentucky's Purchase, and West Tennessee.

  • Many do not consider Maryland and Delaware to be culturally Southern states, but the designation is disputed due to their proximity to both North and South. Today, they are sometimes grouped with Southern states for corporate and governmental administrative regions. Baltimore, MD, Wilmington, DE, and Newark, DE, lie along the Northeast Corridor that spans Washington DC, Philadelphia, New York, and Boston, which further separates themselves from the South.

  • Northern Virginia has been largely settled by Northerners attracted to job opportunities resulting from expansion of the federal government since World War II. Still more expansion resulted from the Internet boom around the turn of the 21st century. Economically it is linked to Washington, D.C. Residents of the region tend to consider it part of the North.

  • Prior to its statehood in 1907, Oklahoma was "Indian Territory." The majority of the Native American tribes sided with the Confederacy during the Civil War. Oklahoma is similar to Texas in that it has a southwestern influence. Still it has a strong southern cultural feel as evidenced by dialect, religion, politics, cuisine, etc.

See also


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