In another thread, it was mentioned that Virginia is a state in "the south," and it got me to thinking of the various ways I've seen the regions of the U.S. defined, such as in maps like this:
Compare to this:
Southwest and Southeast were removed.
Then there's this one, which separates the Rocky Mountain states from the West Coast states, and keeps AZ and NM in the Southwest with TX and OK.
What would be a good, coherent method of dividing up the regions of the US?
I think my own state of Arizona would be considered "Southwest," and few would argue that point. However, I do recall a newsgroup I used to frequent where someone from California adamantly insisted that Texas was not "Southwest." California could probably be considered "Southwest," since it's both south and west, but it's usually just considered "West." And when people refer to "the South," it mainly refers to the Southeast, although it may also be limited to those states which were formerly part of the Confederacy - although that seems to vary from map to map. Some of the maps include Kentucky, West Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware as "South," possibly because they were slave states even though they remained in the Union. But then again, on the same map, Missouri is considered Midwest. Another map has Kentucky in the Midwest, with both Virginia and West Virginia in the Mid Atlantic States. Is Kentucky in the Midwest or is it South?
Is it even important to identify different regions of the country? Does it have any real relevance or purpose?
I'm just curious about others who live in the US and the region they live in has any meaning. For those outside the US, I'd be interested in how the different regions are divided in your country.
Compare to this:
Southwest and Southeast were removed.
Then there's this one, which separates the Rocky Mountain states from the West Coast states, and keeps AZ and NM in the Southwest with TX and OK.
What would be a good, coherent method of dividing up the regions of the US?
I think my own state of Arizona would be considered "Southwest," and few would argue that point. However, I do recall a newsgroup I used to frequent where someone from California adamantly insisted that Texas was not "Southwest." California could probably be considered "Southwest," since it's both south and west, but it's usually just considered "West." And when people refer to "the South," it mainly refers to the Southeast, although it may also be limited to those states which were formerly part of the Confederacy - although that seems to vary from map to map. Some of the maps include Kentucky, West Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware as "South," possibly because they were slave states even though they remained in the Union. But then again, on the same map, Missouri is considered Midwest. Another map has Kentucky in the Midwest, with both Virginia and West Virginia in the Mid Atlantic States. Is Kentucky in the Midwest or is it South?
Is it even important to identify different regions of the country? Does it have any real relevance or purpose?
I'm just curious about others who live in the US and the region they live in has any meaning. For those outside the US, I'd be interested in how the different regions are divided in your country.