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Tag: Regions

  • Hype for the Future 100H: What is the High Country of North Carolina?

    Overview

    The High Country of the State of North Carolina refers to the relatively higher elevations in the mountainous portions of the State of North Carolina. The State of North Carolina is home to the numerous communities at higher elevations within the region, and the cities at higher elevation that are also somewhat larger often define the cultural boundaries of the High Country, culturally distinct from Asheville and more influenced by the Tri-Cities to the west and even Roanoke to the north. Today, communities such as Boone and Blowing Rock are hydrologically related to the New River Valley, which typically defines the region known as the High Country. Based on the New River definition of the High Country, the region specifically refers to the areas around the City of Boone in Watauga County and in a number of surrounding counties within the State.

    Fediverse Reactions
  • Hype for the Future 75L: The Overseas of the European Union by Flag and Status

    Introduction

    Within the following list attached to the post on overseas territories related to the European Union, the fully-integrated Outermost Regions will be in bold, while the Overseas Countries and Territories will be recorded in regular font and Special Cases will be recorded in italic:

    Territories

    • Portugal 🇵🇹
      • Azores Islands
      • Madeira
    • Spain 🇪🇸
      • Canary Islands 🇮🇨
      • Ceuta
      • Melilla
    • France 🇫🇷
      • French Guiana 🇬🇫
      • Martinique 🇲🇶
      • Guadeloupe 🇬🇵
      • Réunion 🇷🇪
      • Mayotte 🇾🇹
      • Saint Martin
      • Saint Pierre and Miquelon 🇵🇲
      • Saint Barthélemy 🇧🇱
      • New Caledonia 🇳🇨
      • French Polynesia 🇵🇫
      • Wallis and Futuna 🇼🇫
      • French Southern and Antarctic Lands
    • Denmark 🇩🇰
      • Greenland 🇬🇱
      • Faroe Islands 🇫🇴
    • Netherlands 🇳🇱
      • Aruba 🇦🇼
      • Curaçao 🇨🇼
      • Bonaire 🇧🇶
      • Sint Maarten 🇸🇽
      • Sint Eustatius
      • Saba
    • Germany 🇩🇪
      • Heligoland
      • Büsingen am Hochrhein
    • Italy 🇮🇹
      • Campione d’Italia
      • Livigno
    • Greece 🇬🇷
      • Mount Athos
    • Cyprus 🇨🇾
      • United Nations 🇺🇳 Buffer Zone in Cyprus
    • Finland 🇫🇮
      • Åland Islands 🇦🇽
  • Hype for the Future 73B: European Subdivisions, Nation by Nation, with the United Kingdom Split (Part 1)

    Introduction

    The contents of this post intend specifically to represent the subdivisions of each European state, including the split countries of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Historic counties are to be preferred, if and when possible, but especially in the case of the British Isles.

    Ireland 🇮🇪

    • Munster
      • Kerry
      • Cork
      • Tipperary
      • Limerick
      • Waterford
      • Clare
    • Leinster
      • Kilkenny
      • Wexford
      • Carlow
      • Wicklow
      • Offaly
      • Laois
      • Kildare
      • Dublin
      • Longford
      • Westmeath
      • Meath
    • Connacht (Connaught)
      • Galway
      • Mayo
      • Sligo
      • Roscommon
      • Leitrim
    • Ulster
      • Donegal
      • Cavan
      • Monaghan

    Northern Ireland 🇬🇧

    • Armagh
    • Antrim
    • Down
    • Fermanagh
    • Londonderry
    • Tyrone

    Wales 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 🇬🇧

    • Anglesey
    • Caernarfonshire
    • Denbighshire
    • Flintshire
    • Merioneth
    • Montgomeryshire
    • Cardiganshire (Ceredigion)
    • Radnorshire
    • Pembrokeshire
    • Carmarthenshire
    • Brecknockshire
    • Glamorgan
    • Monmouthshire (Gwent)

    England 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇬🇧

    • Cornwall
    • Devon
    • Somerset
    • Dorset
    • Wiltshire
    • Hampshire
    • Surrey
    • Kent
    • Sussex
    • Gloucestershire
    • Oxfordshire
    • Berkshire
    • Buckinghamshire
    • Bedfordshire
    • Hertfordshire
    • Middlesex
    • Essex
    • Suffolk
    • Norfolk
    • Herefordshire
    • Worcestershire
    • Warwickshire
    • Northamptonshire
    • Huntingdonshire
    • Cambridgeshire
    • Rutland
    • Shropshire
    • Cheshire
    • Staffordshire
    • Derbyshire
    • Nottinghamshire
    • Leicestershire
    • Lincolnshire
    • Cheshire
    • Lancashire
    • Yorkshire
    • Westmorland
    • Durham
    • Cumberland
    • Northumberland

    Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 🇬🇧

    • Wigtownshire
    • Kirkcudbrightshire
    • Dumfries-shire
    • Ayrshire
    • Renfrewshire
    • Lanarkshire
    • Roxburghshire
    • Berwickshire
    • Selkirkshire
    • Peeblesshire
    • West Lothian (Linlithgowshire)
    • Midlothian
    • East Lothian (Haddingtonshire)
    • Buteshire
    • Argyllshire
    • Dumbarton
    • Stirlingshire
    • Clackmannanshire
    • Kinross-shire
    • Perthshire
    • Fife
    • Angus
    • Kincardineshire
    • Aberdeenshire
    • Inverness-shire
    • Nairnshire
    • Morayshire
    • Banffshire
    • Ross-shire and Cromartyshire
    • Sutherland
    • Caithness
    • Orkney
    • Shetland

    Other British 🇬🇧

    • Jersey
    • Guernsey
    • Mann (Isle of Man)

    Portugal 🇵🇹

    • Faro
    • Beja
    • Setúbal
    • Évora
    • Lisboa
    • Santarém
    • Portalegre
    • Leiria
    • Coimbra
    • Castelo Branco
    • Aveiro
    • Viseu
    • Guarda
    • Porto
    • Braga
    • Viana do Castelo
    • Vila Real
    • Bragança
    • Azores
    • Madeira

    Spain 🇪🇸

    • Galicia
    • Principado de Asturias
    • Castilla y León
    • Cantabria
    • País Vasco
    • La Rioja
    • Comunidad Foral de Navarra
    • Aragón
    • Cataluña
    • Comunidad Valenciana
    • Islas Baleares
    • Comunidad de Madrid
    • Castilla-La Mancha
    • Extremadura
    • Andalucía
    • Región de Murcia
    • Ceuta
    • Melilla

    France 🇫🇷

    • Occitanie
    • Nouvelle-Aquitaine
    • Pays de la Loire
    • Bretagne
    • Normandy
    • Centre-Val de Loire
    • Île-de-France
    • Hauts-de-France
    • Grand Est
    • Bourgogne-Franche-Comté
    • Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes
    • Provence-Alpes-Côte-d’Azur
    • Corsica

    Italy 🇮🇹

    • Sardegna
    • Liguria
    • Piemonte (Piedmont)
    • Valle d’Aosta
    • Lombardia
    • Trentino-Alto Adige
    • Veneto
    • Friuli-Venezia Giulia
    • Emilia-Romagna
    • Toscana
    • Umbria
    • Marche
    • Lazio
    • Abruzzo
    • Molise
    • Campania
    • Apulia
    • Basilicata
    • Calabria
    • Sicily

    Romania 🇷🇴

    • Constanța
    • Tulcea
    • Călărași
    • Ialomița
    • București (Bucharest)
    • Ilfov
    • Giurgiu
    • Teleorman
    • Olt
    • Dolj
    • Mehedinți
    • Caraș-Severin
    • Timiș
    • Arad
    • Bihor
    • Satu Mare
    • Sălaj
    • Cluj
    • Maramureș
    • Bistrița-Năsăud
    • Mureș
    • Harghita
    • Suceava
    • Botoșani
    • Neamț
    • Iași
    • Bacău
    • Vaslui
    • Galați
    • Brăila
    • Buzău
    • Vrancea
    • Prahova
    • Dâmbovița
    • Covasna
    • Brașov
    • Argeș
    • Sibiu
    • Vâlcea
    • Gorj
    • Hunedoara
    • Alba
  • Hype for the Future 20C: Decoding Geographic Names

    New England

    Within the New England region is Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. Northern New England is Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont, while Southern New England is Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. “The County” in Maine may refer to Aroostook County, and the portions of New England closest to the Québec border are often associated with an enhanced sense of rurality. Further away from the international border is Mount Katahdin, the highest peak in Maine, Mount Washington, highest in New Hampshire, and Mount Mansfield, highest in Vermont. The primary mountain ranges in the region include the White Mountains in New Hampshire and the Green Mountains in Vermont. The Connecticut River separates the States of Vermont and New Hampshire, bisects the State of Connecticut, and splits approximately the western third of Massachusetts from the eastern two-thirds of the Commonwealth. Aquidneck Island refers to the island officially named Rhode Island, containing Newport, Portsmouth, and surrounding communities within the island. Providence, formerly Providence Plantations, refers to the vast majority of the mainland region of the State of Rhode Island. Within the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the Berkshires are at the western end, the Pioneer Valley along the Connecticut River (with the Knowledge Corridor including the region plus Greater Hartford in Connecticut), the Quabbin Reservoir separating Western and Central Massachusetts, and the remainder of Massachusetts being even more distinctly identified. Salem is notable for the Salem Witch Trials, Lowell for the textile industry, Cambridge for Harvard and MIT (plus Tufts in nearby Somerville and Medford), Boston for the Puritans, Plymouth for the Pilgrims, Lexington and Concord for Minute Man, and Worcester, Leominster, and Fitchburg for artistic identity and expression. The SouthCoast refers to much of Bristol County, in which New Bedford in particular is notable for the whaling industry (and Attleboro for jewelry manufacturing). Within the Pioneer Valley, Springfield is home to the birthplace of basketball, while Holyoke is home to the birthplace of volleyball. Further north is the Five Colleges, a consortium of Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke, Smith, and UMass Amherst. Additional colleges and universities also exist in the nearby areas, such as Westfield State University in Westfield, west of Springfield and West Springfield, and Bay Path University, located in Longmeadow, immediately to the south of Springfield along the Connecticut state line. Between the Cities of Springfield and Holyoke is Chicopee, home to Elms College, officially known as the College of Our Lady of the Elms. Within the State of Connecticut, the Gold Coast refers to an assortment of cities and towns predominantly in the south of Fairfield County, south of (but not typically including) Danbury. The Quiet Corner of Connecticut refers to the northeastern corner of Connecticut, while the Northeast Kingdom refers to the northeastern corner of Vermont along the upper reaches of the Connecticut River. The Down East refers to the upper portion of the Atlantic coast of Maine, while the Aroostook Valley is largely determined by the eastern portion of Aroostook County. Referring back to the Knowledge Corridor, or perhaps the Intelligence Corridor, Connecticut is also home to UConn, located approximately twenty miles east of Hartford in Storrs, as well as Willimantic, home to Eastern Connecticut State University.

    Mid-Atlantic

    The Mid-Atlantic region is not a well-defined region, but most sources include New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. States like Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia may also be included, and the District of Columbia is often included with the definition of the Northeast Megalopolis as well. Within the State of New York, distinct regions include Western New York, the Finger Lakes region, the Mohawk Valley, the Hudson Valley, the Capital District, the Catskills, the Adirondacks, the North Country, Long Island, and New York. While the present-day boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens are located on Long Island, Manhattan and Staten Island (formerly known as Richmond) are located on separate islands and the Bronx is located on the mainland of the State. Even within the distinct regions, a more granular examination of the State of New York would reveal the Thousand Islands along the Saint Lawrence River and the Canadian border, as well as numerous smaller indigenous reservations, such as the Seneca in Western New York and the Akewsasne in the North Country and into Ontario and Québec in Canada. Notable sites of historical interest within the upper State may include the Roosevelt historical sites in and around Hyde Park, along the Hudson in Dutchess County, women’s rights exhibits in Seneca Falls, baseball history in Cooperstown, boxing history in Canastota, and numerous additional attractions scattered throughout the State. Within the State of New Jersey, the population is often divided into “North,” “South,” and sometimes “Central,” Jersey, dropping the word “New” from the state name entirely. Although the most densely populated of the United States, the State is also home to dramatically rural areas, in particular the pine barrens ecosystem of South Jersey (the ecosystems of eastern Long Island in New York may also be fairly similar). Apart from the very rural pine barrens, the State is also home to a portion of the Appalachian Mountains in the northwest hindering significant urban development within the region, most notably moderating the population of Sussex County (which is also New Jersey’s northernmost county). The North Jersey region is often associated with Newark, Jersey City, Paterson, Elizabeth, Hackensack, Morristown, and New Brunswick, as well as numerous smaller communities associated with the satellite cities and occasional suburbs of such cities and New York. Sometimes included are communities in Monmouth County, such as Freehold and Asbury Park, the latter of which is directly coastal and opposite New York’s city limits. On the western side of the State is communities such as Trenton (the state capital) and Princeton to the northeast, both in Mercer County. South Jersey, as a region, often consists of the areas in fairly close proximity to Philadelphia, particularly Camden, as well as coastal cities such as Atlantic City and Ocean City. Cape May County is located at the extreme southern end of the State of New Jersey, wherein a peninsula nearly connects the State to Delaware to the south opposite the Delaware Bay.

    While the States of New York and New Jersey provide general insights into community values in either state, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania also contains nearly the same level of prestige, with the Greater Philadelphia area in particular being notable as a symbol of American independence and freedom from British rule, particularly as a former national capital with the Liberty Bell centrally located within the city. Away from the inner city limits, the region is also notable for such localities as Bryn Mawr, Swarthmore, and nearby institutions. Since the region is largely flatter than most other portions of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the general southeast region is more densely populated, even at great distances from Philadelphia city limits. The third-largest city in Pennsylvania after Philadelphia and Pittsburgh is Allentown, which itself is directly adjacent to Bethlehem and within proximity to Easton toward the Delaware River. Additional cities of statewide importance include Lancaster, which is surrounded by the Amish and Mennonite communities (of which the city itself is not Amish nor Mennonite), York, Gettysburg (maintaining the historical sites from the Civil War), Kennett Square, Chadds Ford, Reading, Chambersburg, Shippensburg, Carlisle, Harrisburg (the state capital), Hershey, and Lebanon. The northeastern corner of the Commonwealth is, by contrast, significantly more sparsely populated than the southeast, with settlements largely interrupted by the Poconos, located directly to the south and southwest of the Catskills of New York. Although Wilkes-Barre, Scranton, and to a lesser extent, Hazleton are fairly significant independently from the more major metropolitan areas further south, the areas even further to the north may often be very sparsely settled, a stark contrast from the Connecticut that much of the region had previously belonged to. Although cities have already been mentioned on both sides of the Susquehanna River, the true Susquehanna Valley experience is specifically unique to Union, Snyder, Northumberland, Montour, and Columbia Counties. While the region may be celebrated for covered bridges, particularly in the case of Union County, Columbia County is unfortunately home to the Centralia Mine Fire. Even further west is the true Pennsylvania Wilds, containing such counties as Forest, Elk, and Cameron—all with unique personalities, quirks, and styles. Forest County is home to Tionesta, while Elk County is home to Ridgway and Cameron County is home to Emporium. Communities in the surrounding areas also include Franklin and Oil City in Venango County, Mount Jewett (renowned for Swedish heritage) in McKean County, and the communities nearer Lake Erie. While the only significant Pennsylvania communities along the lake are Erie and the Borough of North East, the nearby area to the south is also home to Corry, Union City, Conneaut Lake, Meadville, Titusville, and more. The Greater Pittsburgh area is home to more than just the Pittsburgh urban and suburban areas—the region also extends toward Butler, Washington, Connellsville, Greensburg, Uniontown, Waynesburg, Ellwood City, New Castle, Mercer, Beaver, Ohiopyle, and even in the direction of the communities of “Pennsyltucky,” a T-shaped region where most of the Commonwealth’s population does not live. Such Central Pennsylvania communities may include Johnstown, Altoona, State College, Bellefonte, Williamsport, Jersey Shore, Lock Haven, Muncy, Somerset, Bedford, Indiana, Brookville, Punxsutawney, and numerous smaller communities, including possibly cities, boroughs, and townships, influenced by the aforementioned.

    If New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania are exceptionally difficult to decode, the State of Delaware may be significantly simpler to decode. Only three (3) counties exist within the State of Delaware: New Castle, Kent, and Sussex. The county seats are located at Wilmington, Dover, and Georgetown, respectively, with each city providing a unique opportunity to discover an authentically Delawarean experience for locals and visitors alike. While Wilmington is the largest city in the State of Delaware, the city is also largely influenced by proximity to Philadelphia, which also impacts the nearby communities across the Delaware into New Jersey. Dover is centrally located within the State and is the capital city of the State, thus providing the city primarily with government resources that serve Delaware as a state. While Wilmington is where corporate friendliness is often celebrated, Dover is where the State of Delaware is honored independently from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania that the “Lower Counties” were formerly included within. At the southern end of the State is Sussex County, home not just to Georgetown, but also to Milford and numerous smaller cities, towns, and communities along the Atlantic Ocean and further inland—all within close proximity to the Maryland state line, as with all of Delaware.

  • Hype for the Future 19B: New England Decoded

    Maine

    Located at the northeastern extreme of the New England, the Northeast, and the contiguous United States (CONUS) as a whole, the State of Maine is the most sparsely populated state of the New England region. Particularly along the border with Québec, Canada, the State is renowned for logging, timber, and related industries that may unfortunately trigger increasing environmental concerns. Along the border with New Brunswick, Canada, cultural traits associated with Acadia from New France are largely honored with historical societies throughout the region and with agricultural regions in the surrounding areas. More centrally located within Maine is the Millinocket area, in which Baxter State Park, including the highest peak at Mount Katahdin, is located nearby. Even further to the south is the Atlantic coastline within the State, north beyond the northern terminus of the coastal plain and, as such, the sole East Coast state where mountains continue into the ocean. With the hostile terrain of the mountains up to the coastline, the vast majority of the state population must live within the extreme southern portion of the State. For some individuals, the Portland area is the northern end of the Northeast Megalopolis; Augusta and Bangor are significantly smaller cities located further inland.

    New Hampshire

    To the west and southwest of the State of Maine is the State of New Hampshire, largely renowned for natural beauty but also notable for the state motto, “Live Free or Die,” with a centuries-old historical context. While the northern part of New Hampshire is nearly as sparsely populated as portions of west-central Maine (i.e. Oxford County, ME), the central and southern parts of New Hampshire exist within a clearly distinct cultural context, unlikely to be associated with any other New England state. Central New Hampshire is home to Lake Winnipesaukee and numerous smaller lakes within the Lakes Region of Belknap and surrounding counties at the foothills of the White Mountains. Laconia, the county seat of Belknap County, is located on or near Lake Winnipesaukee. Even further south is Concord, the capital city of the State of New Hampshire, with a carriage-making history and a relatively small population relative to other state capital cities. Beyond Concord is Manchester, the largest city within the State, with around triple to quadruple the population size of Concord; Nashua, along the Massachusetts state line; Portsmouth, the coastal center of the State; Keene, the population center around Mount Monadnock, and numerous smaller cities, towns, and villages.

    Vermont

    While New Hampshire can boast about the White Mountains, Vermont can boast about the Green Mountains. Unlike New Hampshire, however, the State of Vermont actually is named for the French name for the principal mountain range of the State. The State of Vermont overall is also renowned for progressive policies, renewable energy (particularly on or around certain corridors), and producing nearly half of the national supply of maple syrup. Although the City of Burlington is the largest city in the State with under fifty thousand people, making it the smallest largest city of any state in the nation, the City of Montpelier, the capital city of the State of Vermont, holds a population of merely around eight thousand people, making it the smallest capital city of any state in the nation. Apart from the minor urban centers (since Vermont is a very, very, very rural state), the State of Vermont is renowned for a consistent flow of scenic rural beauty and natural surroundings. Even under the modern-day constraints of capitalism, the State of Vermont also offers a glimpse into what a post-capitalist, post-Marxist, degrowth society could resemble in the future. Sprawl is heavily regulated within the State, as per Act 250, to ensure that outward sprawl is minimized and to make sure that the urban footprint is contained within reason.

    The State of Vermont is also notable for having a fairly low population density, with the State ranking 31st out of the 50 states in the United States of America. In comparison, Maine is ranked 38th, and New Hampshire is ranked 21st (which is fairly close to the global average). In terms of the overall state population, however, only Wyoming is smaller than Vermont, although the latter is significantly smaller, larger than only five other states: New Hampshire, New Jersey, Connecticut, Delaware, and Rhode Island. Because of the low-profile nature of the State of Vermont, individuals should expect lower traffic volumes and possibly fewer traffic backups as well. Even in spite of the inevitable nature of modern-day car dependency in the more modern developments that may exist within the State, particularly within the outer edges of the contained Burlington area, drivers throughout the State are often more courteous than drivers from outside the State (and especially from outside New England).

    Massachusetts

    If Northern New England is connected to rustic life and natural scenery, then Southern New England is connected to cosmopolitan life and futuristic thought. The contrast between the northern and southern parts of New England is just as obvious when individuals travel south from Pownal as when individuals travel south from Seabrook–or from any other Vermont or New Hampshire town in between. Even internally within the Commonwealth of Massachusetts is a cross-section of what to expect within New England as a region: Mountains to the west, the seacoast to the east, and islands at the edge of the Commonwealth, as well as rolling hills in between. Of the fourteen counties in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Berkshire County stands out for the Taconic and Berkshire Mountains, while Franklin, Hampshire, and Hampden share cultural traits as part of the Pioneer Valley region. Franklin County is located within approximately the northern third of Pioneer Valley along the Vermont line and the Connecticut River, containing such locales as Greenfield and Deerfield. Hampshire County is located within approximately the central third of Pioneer Valley, containing Northampton, Amherst, Hadley, and numerous related communities, as well as the Five Colleges (Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke, Smith, and UMass Amherst). Hampden County, in the southern third of the Pioneer Valley along the Connecticut line, is home to historical exhibits associated chiefly with volleyball, basketball, and Dr. Seuss within Holyoke and Springfield. Numerous smaller communities also exist within Hampden County, including Longmeadow (home to Bay Path University), Westfield (home to Westfield State University), Chicopee (home to Elms University), Agawam, and more. Today, the Quabbin Reservoir is the primary source of the water supply for the City of Boston as well as for numerous cities, towns, and villages further west, largely to the east of the reservoir, potentially including Worcester, Leominster, and Fitchburg. Worcester, Leominster, and Fitchburg are each interconnected municipalities, with Worcester and Fitchburg in particular having distinct universities and art museums. Apart from the aforementioned three communities, Worcester County is also home to Oxford, the birthplace of Clara Barton of the American Red Cross, as well as such communities as Athol, Winchendon, and locales otherwise positioned between New Hampshire to the north and Connecticut and Rhode Island to the south (Berkshire County also borders three other states: Vermont, New York, and Connecticut). East of Worcester County is where the vast majority of the action associated with the Commonwealth of Massachusetts occurs, including juxtapositions of numerous historical and modern sites to create a clearly distinct yet authentically New England environment.

    Middlesex County, the largest county in Massachusetts and New England as a whole, is renowned as home to Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and Tufts University, just to name a few. Even outside such towns as Cambridge, Somerville, and Medford, the County of Middlesex continues to charm with numerous historical sites and a plethora of modern cities and towns originally founded within the Puritan context of the seventeenth (17th) century. While such towns certainly include Chelmsford and Billerica, historical sites also exist in such communities as Lexington, Concord, and Lowell–all within Middlesex County. Minute Man historical sites exist in the area to honor the Battles of Lexington and Concord from the American Revolutionary War. On the northern edge of Middlesex is Lowell, renowned in history for its textile mills in the nineteenth (19th) century.

    Essex County is very similar in nature to Middlesex County, traditionally also with a dual county seat arrangement. While Lowell and Cambridge each serve Middlesex County, Lawrence and Salem each serve Essex County, with the Salem area honoring the Salem Witch Trials of 1692 throughout city limits. Gloucester is located further north, along Cape Ann, featuring locales of coastal interest such as lighthouses, as well as castles and historical architecture in the nearby area.

    While Middlesex is renowned for prestigious institutions and textile mills and Essex is renowned for the history of witchcraft and the seacoast, Suffolk is actually a clearly distinct county within the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, wherein Fenway Park serves the Boston Red Sox, Faneuil Hall serves history, the Old South Meeting House celebrates the Boston Tea Party (on December 16 to remember 1773), the Boston Common provides an urban park setting, and numerous city amenities provide extended cultural vibrancy regardless of the specific location within the city. Apart from Boston, Suffolk is also home to Chelsea, Revere, and Winthrop nearby.

    Within the remaining six counties of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, all located within the southeastern portion of the Commonwealth where county governments have not been abolished in any way, are such historical interests as Maria Mitchell in Nantucket, the whaling community in New Bedford (including the Portuguese-American heritage of Bristol County, Massachusetts and Bristol County, Rhode Island), the jewelry heritage of Attleboro, the Pilgrim heritage of Plymouth (including Plymouth Rock), and yes, even the numerous localities of interest along Cape Cod, such as Wellfleet, Truro, and Provincetown (all Barnstable County).

    Rhode Island

    While Rhode Island is not technically an island, the name “Rhode Island” officially also refers specifically to Aquidneck Island, home to Newport, Portsmouth, and numerous smaller communities associated with Newport County. The mainland area, formerly known as Providence Plantations, is home to locales including Providence, Westerly, and Warwick, while to the south of Westerly is an island off the Long Island coast known as Block Island (home of New Shoreham). Only five counties have traditionally existed within the State: Providence, Kent, Washington, Newport, and Bristol. Within Bristol County, there are only three towns: Barrington, Warren, and Bristol. Although Massachusetts maintains a small coastline along the Narragansett Bay, the vast majority of the bay is associated with Rhode Island for historical reasons. Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson, two notable historical figures for the region, were each associated with settling the Providence area more specifically. In modern-day Rhode Island, however, the religious purpose of the State is no longer nearly as relevant as even Massachusetts maintains more similar freedoms today.

    Connecticut

    Located at the southwestern corner of New England and midway through the Northeastern United States as a whole is the State of Connecticut, highly renowned for extreme wealth in the Gold Coast of the southwestern corner of the State while also being renowned for prestige with Yale in New Haven, the Mystic Seaport in Mystic, UConn in Storrs, the Wadsworth Athenaeum in Hartford, and numerous other elements of cultural vibrancy within the State. To the south lies the Long Island Sound, with New York to the west, Rhode Island to the east, and Massachusetts to the north. The Hartford area is highly connected to the Springfield area of Massachusetts, particularly since the Big E of 2000, under the nickname “Knowledge Corridor,” referring largely to the Five Colleges on the Massachusetts side as well as to institutions within New Britain and surrounding communities on the Connecticut side. Meriden is another notable community within the State, located in New Haven County about halfway between Hartford and New Haven, thus resulting in a fairly central location within the State.

  • The Northeastern United States: Different Interesting Quirks about the Nine States of the Region

    Maine

    The State of Maine is beyond the northern terminus of the coastal plain along the Atlantic Ocean, resulting in a unique East Coast experience, more typical of the West Coast, where mountains continue smoothly into the ocean. Also of interest are the numerous art colonies in the State, particularly around Ogunquit and Kennebunkport, and Aroostook County, where potato farming is surprisingly prevalent in the east and where the timber industry is largely identified in the extremely rural and largely unincorporated west.

    New Hampshire

    Uniquely associated with the White Mountains, the State of New Hampshire offers a unique experience with Mount Washington, the highest elevation in the State, offering what is often branded as the “worst” weather worldwide. While the weather claim may in fact be a marketing slogan, the summit of the mountain has largely been the subject of infamy for extremely high winds, wind speeds, and wind gusts. Unlike Mount Katahdin in Maine, however, the height of New Hampshire is not nearly as famous for hiking, especially as the former, within Maine’s Baxter State Park, serves as the northernmost terminus of the famous Appalachian Trail. Also in New Hampshire, the population and density alike decrease to the north and increase to the south, and the southwest of the State, around Keene, is largely renowned for Mount Monadnock, a relatively isolated mountain in the larger Appalachian region.

    Vermont

    The State of Vermont is an interesting state because, while the State is often compared to New Hampshire in scenic natural beauty, the administration of Vermont is often more similar to the State of Maine in terms of environmental protections and heightened environmental standards. Also, unlike New Hampshire or even Maine, the State of Vermont is often highly overboard with progressive policies, renewable energy, and of course, maple syrup. The Green Mountains are the chief mountain range that the State of Vermont is named for by the French, while the State is also bounded by Lake Champlain, the Poultney River, and the Connecticut River on the western and eastern edges in different places.

    Massachusetts

    The General Henry Knox Cannon Trail is of historical importance throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts from west to east, while the Commonwealth also maintains substantially different subcultures depending on specific regions located within. The Berkshires are essentially comparable to a southward extension of Vermont and a northward extension of the Taconic Mountains, while Pioneer Valley is a showcase of vibrant communities including the Five Colleges and the surprising birthplaces of volleyball and basketball. Further east, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts becomes more highly associated with vibrant city and town life and relatively flatter topography while also becoming increasingly influenced by the City of Boston and, in turn, decreasingly influenced by New York City. While Cape Cod, the Elizabeth Islands, Martha’s Vineyard, and Nantucket Island contain cultural traits clearly distinct from the remainder of Eastern Massachusetts centered around Boston, the Greater Boston area tends to focus on diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives and is often, but not necessarily always, at the forefront in LGBTQIA+ advocacy rights and in freedom of identity and expression. Anticapitalist groups, as may exist in occasional spaces throughout much of Vermont, are also expected portions of the cultural fabric of the Berkshires.

    Rhode Island

    Although Providence may appear relatively close to Boston on a map, the two cities are clearly distinct and Providence is not appropriately referred to as subordinate to Boston in any meaningful way, shape, or form. However, the City of Providence is the capital city of the State of Rhode Island, and as such is comparable to the state capital of Massachusetts, Boston. In fact, the state capitals of Massachusetts and Rhode Island are heuristically the closest pair of state capitals. While Rhode Island may be minuscule in form, the compact nature of the State does not underscore the importance in American history to have a state founded by Roger Williams and associated with the principles of Williams and Anne Hutchinson. Apart from the Greater Providence area, however, the communities at Charlestown, Westerly, and even New Shoreham on Block Island are also of particular importance.

    Connecticut

    While Massachusetts and Rhode Island are often interconnected in parts, especially with the SouthCoast area of the former being connected particularly to the communities in Rhode Island, the State of Connecticut is actually quite an interesting—and complicated—state and entity. While Connecticut contains rural areas predominantly toward the northeast corner of the State often known as the Quiet Corner, the State is also predominantly associated with Hartford and New Haven. Historically, the most significant portions of the State of Connecticut had also been the portions of the State nearest the Long Island Sound, particularly in the cases of New Haven and Saybrook. Today, however, the traditional area of Fairfield County is often associated with New York and not with New England to nearly the same extent.

    New York

    Unlike the New England states, New York is a relatively diverse state, whether in area, population, demographics, or even landscapes. Ten identifiable regions exist within the State of New York, where Downstate refers to New York City and remaining portions of both Long Island and suburban areas slightly to the north. The Hudson Valley is the northward continuation of the geographical region that is Downstate, while the Capital District refers specifically to the region surrounding Albany. The Thousand Islands, the Adirondack Park, and intermediate areas combined form the North Country of the State, while the entire region west of the Finger Lakes is most appropriately—and aptly—named “Western New York.” Even while the Finger Lakes form a distinct region within the State, the regions further east include Central New York, the Mohawk Valley, and the Catskills, while the southern portion of the “Upstate” region along the Pennsylvania line is often referred to as the “Southern Tier.” Although numerous place names exist within the State with clearly distinct etymologies, whether Dutch, English, Indigenous, mixed, or otherwise, the State of New York remains extremely interesting as a state with multiple competing identities dependent on location within.

    New Jersey

    The State of New Jersey, though often overshadowed by neighboring states New York and Pennsylvania, is surprisingly highly valued internally when focusing only on the State. While no significant cities exist with a population count particularly above 200,000, the State of New Jersey remains the nation’s most densely populated state, even in spite of containing expansive rural areas in the “South Jersey” region and, to a lesser extent, in Sussex County as well. Interestingly enough, novaTopFlex identifies the State of New Jersey as nationally the most productive and potentially amongst the nation’s most undervalued as well.

    Pennsylvania

    Unlike the states further to the north and east, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania continues to exist as a bridge between regions, with the land area ranging from Yankeedom in the north to the Mid-Atlantic in the south and from the Eastern United States in the east to the Midwest in the west. The Keystone State moniker may no longer be physically accurate to the Commonwealth, but the cultural characteristics that define a crossroads region continue to exist into the modern day. While Amish, Mennonite, and to a significantly lesser extent, Quaker communities continue to exist well into the modern day, the Commonwealth continues to serve the entire population, regardless of how extensively individuals and communities maintain conformity to traditional social roles and constructs or preserve unique cultural characteristics, customs, or heritage.

  • The Iron Range → The Heart of Northern Minnesota’s Mining Industry

    Centered around Virginia, Minnesota, and continuing throughout much of central St. Louis County and adjacent counties predominantly further to the west, the mining industry of Northern Minnesota has traditionally been of particularly extreme importance not just for the State of Minnesota, but also for the United States of America as a whole. Even the southwestern Upper Peninsula of Michigan and portions of Northern Wisconsin well to the north of Wausau and Rhinelander and nearer Lake Superior are not close to the level of Northern Minnesota’s Mesabi Range and nearby iron ranges.

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