Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've truly never known anyone who considered D.C. , "the south". When we are back home, people refer to D.C. as "up north" and ask us how much longer we'll be living in "yankee land". As a southerner, let me clear up the concept of "deep south". I am from the deep south ~ Mississippi. My DH is from the deep south ~ Georgia. Alabama and Louisiana are the deep south. South Carolina is the deep south. NORTH Florida is the deep south. Tennessee, Arkansas, North Carolina, Kentucky, and maybe parts of Virginia, Richmond and down (and that is suspect) is just "the south". D.C. and "the south" shouldn't even be mentioned in the same sentence. Unless you are from Canada and referring to the entire U.S.
I don't mean that as a slam against D.C. at all. D.C., Northern Virginia, Maryland.... Mid-Atlantic maybe? But not the south. Not geographically, and sure as hell not culturally. I'm sure most of you are happy that we see it that way.
OP here. Right, only Northerners (but not me) consider DC the south. I will always maintain that it is not.
Anonymous wrote:I've truly never known anyone who considered D.C. , "the south". When we are back home, people refer to D.C. as "up north" and ask us how much longer we'll be living in "yankee land". As a southerner, let me clear up the concept of "deep south". I am from the deep south ~ Mississippi. My DH is from the deep south ~ Georgia. Alabama and Louisiana are the deep south. South Carolina is the deep south. NORTH Florida is the deep south. Tennessee, Arkansas, North Carolina, Kentucky, and maybe parts of Virginia, Richmond and down (and that is suspect) is just "the south". D.C. and "the south" shouldn't even be mentioned in the same sentence. Unless you are from Canada and referring to the entire U.S.
I don't mean that as a slam against D.C. at all. D.C., Northern Virginia, Maryland.... Mid-Atlantic maybe? But not the south. Not geographically, and sure as hell not culturally. I'm sure most of you are happy that we see it that way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm from upstate NY, and when I moved to DC twenty years ago I never thought I was moving to the "south." The south to me is Dixie... the Carolinas, Georgia, etc. DC to me (even before I moved here) was always the Mid-Atlantic and kind of set apart. But I always see people on DCUM stating that DC is the south. It's not the south, geographically or culturally. And remember, DC was the capital of the Union during the civil war.
Why do you think it's the south, northerners?
And until the advent of air conditioning, everyone used to leave town in August because of the heat. Nothing happened in August. That would only happen in a southern town.
Also, I've lived here for 25 years and can count on one hand the number of blizzards we've had.
Yep, it's the south.
Anonymous wrote:Didn't Lincoln call it a city of Southern efficiency & Northern charm?
Anonymous wrote:I'm from upstate NY, and when I moved to DC twenty years ago I never thought I was moving to the "south." The south to me is Dixie... the Carolinas, Georgia, etc. DC to me (even before I moved here) was always the Mid-Atlantic and kind of set apart. But I always see people on DCUM stating that DC is the south. It's not the south, geographically or culturally. And remember, DC was the capital of the Union during the civil war.
Why do you think it's the south, northerners?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm from upstate NY, and when I moved to DC twenty years ago I never thought I was moving to the "south." The south to me is Dixie... the Carolinas, Georgia, etc. DC to me (even before I moved here) was always the Mid-Atlantic and kind of set apart. But I always see people on DCUM stating that DC is the south. It's not the south, geographically or culturally. And remember, DC was the capital of the Union during the civil war.
Why do you think it's the south, northerners?
DC is sandwiched between Virginia (absolutely the south) and Maryland, whose state song calls for Maryland to fight against the Union and refers to Abraham Lincoln as a tyrant and a despot and which spiritually was part of the confederacy even if not in actuality. Both states are south of the Maxon-Dixon line.
So yes, the south.
And yet, it was the capital of the UNION during the Civil War. Imagine that. You're negating the very District itself in deference to the states around it... but that's par for the course.
Richmond was the capital of the Confederacy.
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/articles/45368/is-the-district-of-columbia-in-or-part-of-the/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm from upstate NY, and when I moved to DC twenty years ago I never thought I was moving to the "south." The south to me is Dixie... the Carolinas, Georgia, etc. DC to me (even before I moved here) was always the Mid-Atlantic and kind of set apart. But I always see people on DCUM stating that DC is the south. It's not the south, geographically or culturally. And remember, DC was the capital of the Union during the civil war.
Why do you think it's the south, northerners?
DC is sandwiched between Virginia (absolutely the south) and Maryland, whose state song calls for Maryland to fight against the Union and refers to Abraham Lincoln as a tyrant and a despot and which spiritually was part of the confederacy even if not in actuality. Both states are south of the Maxon-Dixon line.
So yes, the south.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm from upstate NY, and when I moved to DC twenty years ago I never thought I was moving to the "south." The south to me is Dixie... the Carolinas, Georgia, etc. DC to me (even before I moved here) was always the Mid-Atlantic and kind of set apart. But I always see people on DCUM stating that DC is the south. It's not the south, geographically or culturally. And remember, DC was the capital of the Union during the civil war.
Why do you think it's the south, northerners?
DC is sandwiched between Virginia (absolutely the south) and Maryland, whose state song calls for Maryland to fight against the Union and refers to Abraham Lincoln as a tyrant and a despot and which spiritually was part of the confederacy even if not in actuality. Both states are south of the Maxon-Dixon line.
So yes, the south.
Anonymous wrote:I'm from upstate NY, and when I moved to DC twenty years ago I never thought I was moving to the "south." The south to me is Dixie... the Carolinas, Georgia, etc. DC to me (even before I moved here) was always the Mid-Atlantic and kind of set apart. But I always see people on DCUM stating that DC is the south. It's not the south, geographically or culturally. And remember, DC was the capital of the Union during the civil war.
Why do you think it's the south, northerners?