Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
People in Michigan don't think they're in the same region as Nebraska. People in Nebraska don't think they're in the same region as Michigan
100% wrong
Anonymous wrote:Who cares? All of it is flyover country.
Anonymous wrote:Who cares? All of it is flyover country.
Anonymous wrote:
People in Michigan don't think they're in the same region as Nebraska. People in Nebraska don't think they're in the same region as Michigan
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it one region or are the two halves (Great Lakes and Great Plains) fundamentally different?
Great Lakes states (East North Central division): IL, IN, MI, OH, WI
Great Plains states (West North Central division): IA, KS, MN, MO, NE, ND, SD
I have lived in the mid west for many years and never considered the dakotas a part of it.
I did too, but I do consider the Dakotas part of it. South Dakota turns into the West at some point, though.
what is Colorado Or Oklahoma considered?
OK is the Plains.
Most of CO is the Mountain West. Of course 1/3 of the state's area is Plains, but few people care about that part.
Anonymous wrote:Chicago is the center of the region.
People in Michigan don't think they're in the same region as Nebraska. People in Nebraska don't think they're in the same region as Michigan.
But from the Chicago vantage point including both makes sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:good roundup here: https://presidentlincoln.illinois.gov/Blog/Posts/106/Illinois-History/2021/2/What-is-the-Midwest/blog-post/
i'm a gen xer who grew up in illinois. back when i was growing up, conversationally we considered the midwest to be illinois, indiana, ohio, michigan, wisconsin. the rest we considered to be the great plains. this is the map we "lived" by:
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i've also lived in Pittsburgh and by god, NO, that is NOT the midwest.
I grew up in Indiana. The Midwest is the Orange area of the map which was the Northwest Territory, established in 1787, and consisting of Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, and Wisconsin (parts of MN too). The midwest has a lot of common cultural background with significant German settlement in the early 1800s for farming after access expanded with the opening of the Erie canal. There is also a lot of common geography due to glaciation, ancient mountains, and the great lakes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northwest_Territory
Minnesota, Iowa, and Missouri can be considered midwestern in character because a lot of settlement from the Midwest shifted over the Mississippi river and there is still a lot of common geographical and cultural commonality.
North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, and Kansas are not midwestern at all. They are plains states. Very different geography, settlement patterns, and cultural background. It doesn't matter what the census bureau currently defines it to be. The idea of the "middle" of the country kept changing as borders moved westward. Midwest isn't a current geographical description, it's a historical and cultural region.
Anonymous wrote:good roundup here: https://presidentlincoln.illinois.gov/Blog/Posts/106/Illinois-History/2021/2/What-is-the-Midwest/blog-post/
i'm a gen xer who grew up in illinois. back when i was growing up, conversationally we considered the midwest to be illinois, indiana, ohio, michigan, wisconsin. the rest we considered to be the great plains. this is the map we "lived" by:
![]()
i've also lived in Pittsburgh and by god, NO, that is NOT the midwest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The biggest city in PA is definitely mid-Atlantic.
Kansas and Nebraska and the Dakotas are not the midwest.
Kansas and Nebraska are pretty much the definition of the Midwest imo.
No. The definitive Midwest is Ohio/Michigan/Illinois/Indiana.
Sometimes I think of Ohio as being more East Coast. It probably has to do with time zones.
I grew up in Kansas City, MO. The Midwest to most of us was Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, and Nebraska.
We tended to think of ourselves as the Heartland of America.
Fun fact: Kansas City, Missouri is second only to Rome, Italy for number of fountains in the world. We are known as the City of Fountains. The Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, Missouri is modeled after Seville, Spain.
Michigan, Ohio, and most of Indiana are in the same time zone.
Yeah, the *Eastern* time zone! Central time is classic Midwest.
I grew up in KCMO too, and PP above is really showing their street cred bringing out that stat about the fountains. You’re required to bring that up to all visitors to KC. I’ve always considered Kansas City to be the Midwest. Much of my extended family growing up lived in Ohio, Michigan, and the greater Chicago area so I spent good portions of my childhood traveling around the Midwest. Culturally, KC felt very similar to Cleveland or Grand Rapids.
My very nuanced take is that the Midwest includes Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin, Illinois, Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska, and parts of Missouri and Kansas. Kansas City and St. Louis feel very similar to other mid-size Midwest cities. The more rural parts of Missouri, especially in the southern part of the state, starts to feel more culturally Southern, closer to Arkansas or Oklahoma. The parts of Kansas in the greater KCMO metro area feel midwestern, but the western parts of the state start to feel more like the broader Great Plains. I would not view the Dakotas as the Midwest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The biggest city in PA is definitely mid-Atlantic.
Kansas and Nebraska and the Dakotas are not the midwest.
Kansas and Nebraska are pretty much the definition of the Midwest imo.
No. The definitive Midwest is Ohio/Michigan/Illinois/Indiana.
Sometimes I think of Ohio as being more East Coast. It probably has to do with time zones.
I grew up in Kansas City, MO. The Midwest to most of us was Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, and Nebraska.
We tended to think of ourselves as the Heartland of America.
Fun fact: Kansas City, Missouri is second only to Rome, Italy for number of fountains in the world. We are known as the City of Fountains. The Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, Missouri is modeled after Seville, Spain.
Michigan, Ohio, and most of Indiana are in the same time zone.
. I’ve always considered Kansas City to be the Midwest. Much of my extended family growing up lived in Ohio, Michigan, and the greater Chicago area so I spent good portions of my childhood traveling around the Midwest. Culturally, KC felt very similar to Cleveland or Grand Rapids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The biggest city in PA is definitely mid-Atlantic.
Kansas and Nebraska and the Dakotas are not the midwest.
Kansas and Nebraska are pretty much the definition of the Midwest imo.
No. The definitive Midwest is Ohio/Michigan/Illinois/Indiana.
Sometimes I think of Ohio as being more East Coast. It probably has to do with time zones.
I grew up in Kansas City, MO. The Midwest to most of us was Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, and Nebraska.
We tended to think of ourselves as the Heartland of America.
Fun fact: Kansas City, Missouri is second only to Rome, Italy for number of fountains in the world. We are known as the City of Fountains. The Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, Missouri is modeled after Seville, Spain.
Michigan, Ohio, and most of Indiana are in the same time zone.