Portrait of the USA
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Chapter
Two
FROM SEA TO SHINING SEA
Geography and regional characteristics
The French anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss has written of the "mental click" he feels when arriving in the United States: an adjustment to the enormous landscapes and skylines. The so-called lower 48 states (all but Alaska and Hawaii) sprawl across 4,500 kilometers and four time zones. A car trip from coast to coast
typically takes a minimum of five days -- and that's with almost no stops to look around. It is not unusual for the gap between the warmest and coldest high temperatures on a given day in the United States to reach 70 degrees Fahrenheit (about 40 degrees Celsius).
The United States owes much of its national character -- and its wealth -- to its good fortune in having such a large and varied landmass to inhabit and cultivate. Yet the country still exhibits marks of regional identity, and one way Americans cope with the size of their country is to think of themselves as linked geographically by certain traits, such as New England self-reliance, southern hospitality, midwestern wholesomeness, western mellowness.
This chapter examines American geography, history, and customs through the filters of six main regions:
- New England, made up of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont,
Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island.
- The Middle Atlantic, comprising New York, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland.
- The South, which runs from Virginia south to Florida
and west as far as central Texas. This region also includes West
Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, Louisiana, and parts of
Missouri and Oklahoma.
- The Midwest, a broad collection of states sweeping
westward from Ohio to Nebraska and including Michigan, Indiana,
Wisconsin, Illinois, Minnesota, Iowa, parts of Missouri, North
Dakota, South Dakota, Kansas, and eastern Colorado.
- The Southwest, made up of western Texas, portions of
Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, and the southern interior
part of California.
- The West, comprising Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, Utah,
California, Nevada, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, Alaska, and
Hawaii.
Note that there is nothing official about these regions;
many other lineups are possible. These groupings are offered
simply as a way to begin the otherwise daunting task of getting
acquainted with the United States.
REGIONAL VARIETY
How much sense does it make to talk about American regions
when practically all Americans can watch the same television
shows and go to the same fast-food restaurants for dinner? One
way to answer the question is by giving examples of lingering
regional differences.
Consider the food Americans eat. Most of it is standard
wherever you go. A person can buy packages of frozen peas bearing
the same label in Idaho, Missouri, and Virginia. Cereals, candy
bars, and many other items also come in identical packages from
Alaska to Florida. Generally, the quality of fresh fruits and
vegetables does not vary much from one state to the next. On the
other hand, it would be unusual to be served hush puppies (a kind
of fried dough) or grits (boiled and ground corn prepared in a
variety of ways) in Massachusetts or Illinois, but normal to get
them in Georgia. Other regions have similar favorites that are
hard to find elsewhere.
While American English is generally standard, American
speech often differs according to what part of the country
you are in. Southerners tend to speak slowly, in what is referred to
as a "Southern drawl." Midwesterners use "flat" a's (as in "bad"
or "cat"), and the New York City patois features a number of
Yiddish words ("schlepp," "nosh," "nebbish") contributed by the
city's large Jewish population.
Regional differences also make themselves felt in less
tangible ways, such as attitudes and outlooks. An example is the
attention paid to foreign events in newspapers. In the East,
where people look out across the Atlantic Ocean, papers tend to
show greatest concern with what is happening in Europe, the
Middle East, Africa, and western Asia. On the West Coast, news
editors give more attention to events in East Asia and Australia.
To understand regional differences more fully, let's take a
closer look at the regions themselves.
NEW ENGLAND
The smallest region, New England has not been blessed with
large expanses of rich farmland or a mild climate. Yet it played
a dominant role in American development. From the 17th century
until well into the 19th, New England was the country's cultural
and economic center.
The earliest European settlers of New England were English
Protestants of firm and settled doctrine. Many of them came in
search of religious liberty. They gave the region its distinctive
political format -- the town meeting (an outgrowth of meetings
held by church elders) in which citizens gathered to discuss
issues of the day. Only men of property could vote. Nonetheless,
town meetings afforded New Englanders an unusually high level of
participation in government. Such meetings still function in many
New England communities today.
New Englanders found it difficult to farm the land in large
lots, as was common in the South. By 1750, many settlers had
turned to other pursuits. The mainstays of the region became
shipbuilding, fishing, and trade. In their business dealings, New
Englanders gained a reputation for hard work, shrewdness, thrift,
and ingenuity.
These traits came in handy as the Industrial Revolution
reached America in the first half of the 19th century. In
Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island, new factories
sprang up to manufacture such goods as clothing, rifles, and
clocks. Most of the money to run these businesses came from
Boston, which was the financial heart of the nation.
New England also supported a vibrant cultural life. The
critic Van Wyck Brooks called the creation of a distinctive
American literature in the first half of the 19th century "the
flowering of New England." Education is another of the region's
strongest legacies. Its cluster of top-ranking universities and
colleges -- including Harvard, Yale, Brown, Dartmouth, Wellesley,
Smith, Mt. Holyoke, Williams, Amherst, and Wesleyan -- is
unequaled by any other region.
As some of the original New England settlers migrated
westward, immigrants from Canada, Ireland, Italy, and eastern
Europe moved into the region. Despite a changing population, much
of the original spirit of New England remains. It can be seen in
the simple, woodframe houses and white church steeples that are
features of many small towns, and in the traditional lighthouses
that dot the Atlantic coast.
In the 20th century, most of New England's traditional
industries have relocated to states or foreign countries where
goods can be made more cheaply. In more than a few factory towns,
skilled workers have been left without jobs. The gap has been
partly filled by the microelectronics and computer industries.
MIDDLE ATLANTIC
If New England provided the brains and dollars for 19th-century American expansion, the Middle Atlantic states provided the muscle. The region's largest states, New York and
Pennsylvania, became centers of heavy industry (iron, glass, and steel).
The Middle Atlantic region was settled by a wider range of
people than New England. Dutch immigrants moved into the lower
Hudson River Valley in what is now New York State. Swedes went to
Delaware. English Catholics founded Maryland, and an English
Protestant sect, the Friends (Quakers), settled Pennsylvania. In
time, all these settlements fell under English control, but the
region continued to be a magnet for people of diverse
nationalities.
Early settlers were mostly farmers and traders, and the
region served as a bridge between North and South. Philadelphia,
in Pennsylvania, midway between the northern and southern
colonies, was home to the Continental Congress, the convention of
delegates from the original colonies that organized the American
Revolution. The same city was the birthplace of the Declaration
of Independence in 1776 and the U.S. Constitution in 1787.
As heavy industry spread throughout the region, rivers such
as the Hudson and Delaware were transformed into vital shipping
lanes. Cities on waterways -- New York on the Hudson,
Philadelphia on the Delaware, Baltimore on Chesapeake Bay -- grew
dramatically. New York is still the nation's largest city, its
financial hub, and its cultural center.
Like New England, the Middle Atlantic region has seen much
of its heavy industry relocate elsewhere. Other industries, such
as drug manufacturing and communications, have taken up the
slack.
THE SOUTH
The South is perhaps the most distinctive and colorful
American region. The American Civil War (1861-65) devastated the
South socially and economically. Nevertheless, it retained its
unmistakable identity.
Like New England, the South was first settled by English
Protestants. But whereas New Englanders tended to stress their
differences from the old country, Southerners tended to emulate
the English. 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 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,
plantation owners relied on slaves brought from Africa, and
slavery spread throughout the South.
Slavery was the most contentious issue dividing North and
South. To northerners it was immoral; to southerners it was
integral to their way of life. In 1860, 11 southern states left
the Union intending to form a separate nation, the Confederate
States of America. This rupture led to the Civil War, the
Confederacy's defeat, and the end of slavery. (For more on the
Civil War, see chapter 3.) The scars left by the war took decades
to heal. The abolition of slavery failed to provide African
Americans with political or economic equality: Southern towns and
cities legalized and refined the practice of racial segregation.
It took a long, concerted effort by African Americans and
their supporters to end segregation. In the meantime, however,
the South could point with pride to a 20th-century regional
outpouring of literature by, among others, William Faulkner,
Thomas Wolfe, Robert Penn Warren, Katherine Anne Porter,
Tennessee Williams, Eudora Welty, and Flannery O'Connor.
As southerners, black and white, shook off the effects of
slavery and racial division, a new regional pride expressed
itself under the banner of "the New South" and in such events as
the annual Spoleto Music Festival in Charleston, South Carolina,
and the 1996 summer Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia. Today the
South has evolved into a manufacturing region, and high-rise
buildings crowd the skylines of such cities as Atlanta and Little
Rock, Arkansas. Owing to its mild weather, the South has become a
mecca for retirees from other U.S. regions and from Canada.
THE MIDWEST
The Midwest is a cultural crossroads. Starting in the early
1800s easterners moved there in search of better farmland, and
soon Europeans bypassed the East Coast to migrate directly to the
interior: Germans to eastern Missouri, Swedes and Norwegians to
Wisconsin and Minnesota. The region's fertile soil made it
possible for farmers to produce abundant harvests of cereal crops
such as wheat, oats, and corn. The region was soon known as the
nation's "breadbasket."
Most of the Midwest is flat. The Mississippi River has acted
as a regional lifeline, moving settlers to new homes and
foodstuffs to market. The river inspired two classic American
books, both written by a native Missourian, Samuel Clemens, who
took the pseudonym Mark Twain: Life on the Mississippi and
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.
Midwesterners are praised as being open, friendly, and
straightforward. Their politics tend to be cautious, but the
caution is sometimes peppered with protest. The Midwest gave
birth to one of America's two major political parties, the
Republican Party, which was formed in the 1850s to oppose the
spread of slavery into new states. At the turn of the century,
the region also spawned the Progressive Movement, which largely
consisted of farmers and merchants intent on making government
less corrupt and more receptive to the will of the people.
Perhaps because of their geographic location, many midwesterners
have been strong adherents of isolationism, the belief that
Americans should not concern themselves with foreign wars and
problems.
The region's hub is Chicago, Illinois, the nation's third
largest city. This major Great Lakes port is a connecting point
for rail lines and air traffic to far-flung parts of the nation
and the world. At its heart stands the Sears Tower, at 447
meters, the world's tallest building.
THE SOUTHWEST
The Southwest differs from the adjoining Midwest in weather (drier), population (less dense), and ethnicity (strong Spanish-American and Native-American components). Outside the cities, the region is a land of open spaces, much of which is desert. The magnificent Grand Canyon is located in this region, as is Monument Valley, the starkly beautiful backdrop for many western movies. Monument Valley is within the Navajo Reservation, home of the most populous American Indian tribe. To the south and east lie dozens of other Indian reservations, including those of the Hopi, Zuni, and Apache tribes.
Parts of the Southwest once belonged to Mexico. The United
States obtained this land following the Mexican-American War of
1846-48. Its Mexican heritage continues to exert a strong
influence on the region, which is a convenient place to settle
for immigrants (legal or illegal) from farther south. The
regional population is growing rapidly, with Arizona in
particular rivaling the southern states as a destination for
retired Americans in search of a warm climate.
Population growth in the hot, arid Southwest has depended on
two human artifacts: the dam and the air conditioner. Dams on the
Colorado and other rivers and aqueducts such as those of the
Central Arizona Project have brought water to once-small towns
such as Las Vegas, Nevada; Phoenix, Arizona; and Albuquerque, New
Mexico, allowing them to become metropolises. Las Vegas is
renowned as one of the world's centers for gambling, while Santa
Fe, New Mexico, is famous as a center for the arts, especially
painting, sculpture, and opera. Another system of dams and
irrigation projects waters the Central Valley of California,
which is noted for producing large harvests of fruits and
vegetables.
THE WEST
Americans have long regarded the West as the last frontier.
Yet California has a history of European settlement older than
that of most midwestern states. Spanish priests founded missions
along the California coast a few years before the outbreak of the
American Revolution. In the 19th century, California and Oregon
entered the Union ahead of many states to the east.
The West is a region of scenic beauty on a grand scale. All
of its 11 states are partly mountainous, and the ranges are the
sources of startling contrasts. To the west of the peaks, winds
from the Pacific Ocean carry enough moisture to keep the land
well-watered. To the east, however, the land is very dry. Parts
of western Washington State, for example, receive 20 times the
amount of rain that falls on the eastern side of the state's
Cascade Range.
In much of the West the population is sparse, and the
federal government owns and manages millions of hectares of
undeveloped land. Americans use these areas for recreational and
commercial activities, such as fishing, camping, hiking, boating,
grazing, lumbering, and mining. In recent years some local
residents who earn their livelihoods on federal land have come
into conflict with the land's managers, who are required to keep
land use within environmentally acceptable limits.
Alaska, the northernmost state in the Union, is a vast land
of few, but hardy, people and great stretches of wilderness,
protected in national parks and wildlife refuges. Hawaii is the
only state in the union in which Asian Americans outnumber
residents of European stock. Beginning in the 1980s large numbers
of Asians have also settled in California, mainly around Los
Angeles.
Los Angeles -- and Southern California as a whole -- bears
the stamp of its large Mexican-American population. Now the
second largest city in the nation, Los Angeles is best known as
the home of the Hollywood film industry. Fueled by the growth of
Los Angeles and the "Silicon Valley" area near San Jose,
California has become the most populous of all the states.
Western cities are known for their tolerance. Perhaps
because so many westerners have moved there from other regions to
make a new start, as a rule interpersonal relations are marked by
a live-and-let-live attitude. The western economy is varied.
California, for example, is both an agricultural state and a
high-technology manufacturing state.
THE FRONTIER SPIRIT
One final American region deserves mention. It is not a
fixed place but a moving zone, as well as a state of mind: the
border between settlements and wilderness known as the frontier.
Writing in the 1890s, historian Frederick Jackson Turner claimed
that the availability of vacant land throughout much of the
nation's history has shaped American attitudes and institutions.
"This perennial rebirth," he wrote, "this expansion westward with
its new opportunities, its continuous touch with the simplicity
of primitive society, furnish the forces dominating American
character."
Numerous present-day American values and attitudes can be
traced to the frontier past: self-reliance, resourcefulness,
comradeship, a strong sense of equality. After the Civil War a
large number of black Americans moved west in search of equal
opportunities, and many of them gained some fame and fortune as
cowboys, miners, and prairie settlers. In 1869 the western
territory of Wyoming became the first place that allowed women to
vote and to hold elected office.
Because the resources of the West seemed limitless, people
developed wasteful attitudes and practices. The great herds of
buffalo (American bison) were slaughtered until only fragments
remained, and many other species were driven to the brink of
extinction. Rivers were dammed and their natural communities
disrupted. Forests were destroyed by excess logging, and
landscapes were scarred by careless mining.
A counterweight to the abuse of natural resources took form
in the American conservation movement, which owes much of its
success to Americans' reluctance to see frontier conditions
disappear entirely from the landscape. Conservationists were
instrumental in establishing the first national park,
Yellowstone, in 1872, and the first national forests in the
1890s. More recently, the Endangered Species Act has helped stem
the tide of extinctions.
Environmental programs can be controversial; for example,
some critics believe that the Endangered Species Act hampers
economic progress. But, overall, the movement to preserve
America's natural endowment continues to gain strength. Its
replication in many other countries around the world is a tribute
to the lasting influence of the American frontier.