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Americans
often speak of their country as one of several large regions.
These regions are cultural units rather than governmental units -- formed
by history and geography and shaped by the economics, literature and
folkways that all the parts of a region share. What makes one region
different from another? A region's multicultural heritage as well as
distinct demographic characteristics like age and occupation make regions
different and special. Within several regions, language is used differently
and there are strong dialects. There are also differences in outlook
and attitude based on geography. |
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New
England
Connecticut | Maine
| Massachusetts | New
Hampshire
| Rhode Island | Vermont
New
England has played a dominant role in American history. Until well into
the 19th century, New England was the country's cultural and economic
center. The earliest European settlers of New England were English Protestants
who came in search of religious liberty. They gave the region its distinctive
political format -- town meetings (an outgrowth of meetings held
by church elders) in which citizens gathered to discuss issues of the
day. Town meetings still function in many New England communities today
and have been revived as a form of dialogue in the national political
arena. New England is also important for the cultural contribution it
has made to the nation. 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. The cluster of top-ranking universities and
colleges in New England
- including Harvard, Yale, Brown, Dartmouth, Wellesley, Smith, Williams,
Amherst, and Wesleyan - is unequaled by any other region. America's first
college, Harvard, was founded at Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1636. Without,
however, large expanses of rich farmland or a mild climate, generations
of exasperated New England farmers declared that the chief product of
their land was stones. By 1750, many settlers had turned from farming
to other pursuits. In their business dealings, New Englanders gained
a reputation for hard work, shrewdness, thrift, and ingenuity. |
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Mid-Atlantic
Delaware | Maryland
| New Jersey | New York
| Pennsylvania | Washington
D.C.
If
New England provided the brains and dollars for 19th century American
expansion, the Mid-Atlantic states provided the muscle. The region's largest
states, New York and Pennsylvania, became centers of heavy industry (iron,
glass, and steel). The Mid-Atlantic region was settled by a wider range
of people than New England. Into this area of industry, came millions
of Europeans who made of it what became known as the "melting pot."
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. But even today, the
visitor who expects only factories and crowded cities is surprised. In
the Mid-Atlantic, there are more wooded hills than factory chimneys, more
fields than concrete roads, and more farmhouses than office buildings.
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The
South
Alabama | Arkansas
| Florida | Georgia
| Kentucky |
Louisiana | Mississippi
| North Carolina | South
Carolina | Tennessee | Virginia
| West Virginia
The
South is perhaps the most distinctive region of the United States region.
The American Civil War (1861-65) devastated the Old South socially and
economically. Slavery was the issue that divided North and South. To northerners,
it was immoral; to southerners, it was integral to their way of life and
their plantation system of agriculture. The scars left by the war took
decades to heal. The abolition of slavery failed to provide African Americans
with political or economic equality; and it took a long, concerted effort
to end segregation. The "New South" has evolved into a manufacturing
region and high-rise buildings crowd the skylines of such cities as Atlanta
and Little Rock. The region however still has many landscapes to delight
the human sense of poetry and wonder. The region is blessed with plentiful
rainfall and a mild climate. Crops grow easily in its soil and can
be grown without frost for at least six months of the year. Owing
to its mild weather, the South has become a mecca for retirees from other
regions.
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Midwest
Illinois
| Indiana | Iowa
| Kansas | Michigan
| Minnesota | Missouri
| Nebraska | North
Dakota | Ohio
| South Dakota | Wisconsin
The
Midwest is known as the nation's "breadbasket." The fertile
soil of the region makes it possible for farmers to produce abundant harvests
of cereal crops such as wheat, oats, and corn. Corn is the most
important of all American crops, as basic to American agriculture as iron
is to American industry. The annual crop is greater than the nation's
yield of wheat, rice and other grains combined. On hot, still midsummer
nights in the Corn Belt, farmers insist they can hear the corn growing.
Farms are normally located separate from each other, close
to the fields, and often beyond the sight of its neighbors. The
village or town is principally a place where the farm family travels to
buy supplies, to attend church and to go for entertainment or political,
social or business meetings. Midwesterners are praised as being
open, friendly, and straightforward. Their politics tend to be cautious,
but the caution is sometimes peppered with protest. |
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The
Southwest
Arizona
| New Mexico | Oklahoma
| Texas
The Southwest is drier than the adjoining Midwest in weather. The population
is less dense and, with strong Spanish-American and Native-American components,
more ethnically varied than neighboring areas. 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.
The population in the region is growing rapidly. Arizona, for example,
now rivals the southern states as a destination for retired Americans
in search of a warm climate. Since the last third of the 19th century,
the immense stretch of barren American desert has been growing smaller.
In the 1860s, the wasteland extended from the Mississippi Valley almost
to the Pacific Coast. But settlers learned that the prairies could
grow corn and that the grasslands could feed cattle and sheep or yield
wheat. As they continued to cultivate the desert, its size decreased.
Dams on the Colorado and other rivers and aqueducts have brought water
to the once small towns of Las Vegas, Nevada, Phoenix, Arizona, and Albuquerque,
New Mexico, allowing them to become metropolises. |
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The West
Alaska | Colorado
| California | Hawaii
| Idaho | Montana
| Nevada | Oregon
| Utah | Washington
| Wyoming
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. 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 property have come into conflict
with the government agencies, which are charged with keeping land use
within environmentally acceptable limits.
Hawaii is the only state in the union in which Asian Americans
are the largest ethnic group. Beginning in the 1980s, large numbers of
Asians have also settled in California. 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. Perhaps because so many
westerners have moved there from other regions to make a new start, Western
cities are known for their tolerance and a very strong "live-and-let-live"
attitude.
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Texts
are abridged from U.S. State Department IIP
publications and other U.S. government materials. |
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