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I mean, there kind of are. One could argue that the various Reservations considered together make up a third subdivision. In South Dakota, the Great Sioux Reservation literally isolated the western part of the state from the eastern part. I don't think this is as pronounced in North Dakota, but it is commonly said that the East halves of the two states have more in common with each other than they do with their own respective western halves.
Lived in North Dakota for a few years, loved it, but 9 months of winter per year was ... unique coming from a southern coastal region which doesn't have snow. Beautiful place but I honestly enjoyed the experience however -30/-40f to 20mph winds is crazy.
Such good math. 2/3 of the population lives in the south. You say less than 1/2 live in the north. Yeah. The math works out to 1/3 of the population lives in the north. 1/3 is less than 1/2. The math works out, the verbiage is weak.
Principal Waxelplax: "Attention, students. Wonderful news! North and South Dakota have finally settled their differences and have agreed to become one big Dakota"
@@matthewpavlantos9132 Let this enter History as the Principle of Waxelplacicity. As Einstein and Goedel truly taught us, in The Secret Annex, Waxelplacicity is everywhere.
Ironically, today the cultural divide is not north/south but east/west. Perhaps less so in North Dakota, but in South Dakota, those cultural and economic ties to the East contrasted with the settlement of the Black Hills via gold rush, which meant the cultural and economic ties were to California. And with the (remnants of) the Great Sioux Reservation (from the Ft. Laramie Treaty of 1868) between them and forbidden to White folk, the two halves--with the Missouri River marking the "boundary"--of the state, "grew up" separated from each other, again, with no rail connections between the two halves. (Not only was there an Indian reservation in the way, but rail crossings of the Missouri River were feats of engineering and construction and therefore expensive.) Added to this, the drier West River area is more suited to livestock while the flatter and wetter East River area is more suited to grains; immigration patterns were more eclectic and integrated in the west as people came to work in the mines from a variety of countries and in the east, immigrants settled in more homogeneous settlements; and population and thus political power concentrated more heavily East River. The state even split east and west with the advent of Standard Time with the western half of the state in Mountain Time and East River in Central Time.
It's quite interesting to see the 100th line of longitude not only splits the wetter east with the arid west of these 2 states, but other states farther south also experience this divide in climate at precisely this line.
But SC is in Iowa, one thought too many to keep with the plot. Sioux City’s airport is coded by the FAA as SUX. The city petitioned for change, but feds refused. I am a proud owner of a t-shirt that proclaims “My home SUX.” I got it at the airport, of course.
Mr. Terry really needs to watch this video. He and other History RUclipsrs like him are the most vocal proponents I can think of what I'm gonna call Dakota Unification.
There was some concern early in the North Dakota/South Dakota war when the North Dakotans opened with a volley of hand grenades. There were some tense moments until the South Dakotans pulled all the pins and threw them back. Okay, that's a joke, but with 20/20 hindsight it would have made more sense to split the territory east and west. As usual, the East River politicians didn't really take their own western half into account when they were splitting things up.
These politicians were so preoccupied with whether or not they could [make two Dakotas] that they didn't stop to think if they should [make two Dakotas].
The people in the Dakota Territory voted to separate the territory in half when the territorial capital was moved from Yankton to Bismarck. After it was separated in half both North and South Dakota applied for statehood and became states.
@@richard1701able Got the joke just felt like putting the answer for people who want the answer without watching the video. Hopefully people like your comment enough to make a difference.
I grew up in the Black Hills and it really was a paradise for kids. Backpacking, downhill skiing, big lakes, rock climbing, spelunking, hot water springs, pheasant and antelope hunting; whatever outdoor sport you wanted we had it and the climate is milder than the surrounding plains. I left at 18 but would like to return for retirement.
@@TheRealBrook1968 Same. I'm not quite ready for retirement per se, but I am back in the Black Hills albeit on the Wyoming side of the line. Though my CA born and bred wife who raised her kids in Texas is less enamored of the place than I am :)
Lived there for my entire childhood. It’s not quite a garden of Eden or a child’s dream. If you go to any city that has a population of over 50k expect it to be ugly and bleak. But on the bright side, almost everyone can drive pretty good. And it’s absolutely stunning in the black hills, especially the spearfish canyon.
Remember Burt Campbell played by Richard Mulligan in the American sitcom Soap. He ran for Sherif and one of his suggestions was to turn North Dakota into one big graveyard if I'm not mistaken 🤣
They are. Winters can be long but thats the only negative. Plenty of space and fresh air. If you like hunting, fishing, kayaking, and other out door stuff like that its heaven on earth.
Lol Chandler is right. I know so many people who move here for 18 months from CA, TX, or FL and then decide they can't take another winter. You have to be tough, hardy, and enjoy the cold to make it up here.
Actually, Western Dakota was not inhabited by Dakota/Sioux, but the 3 Affiliated Tribes (Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikira). It was the Mandan/Hidatsa villages in ND where Lewis and Clark met Sacajawea. In fact, the Mandan and the Sioux were sworn enemies. A common misconception. Coming from a North Dakotan.
It really sucks that people just gloss over the Three Affiliated Tribes. They were an integral part of exploration and then settlement of North Dakota. That all said, the sioux did hold small portions of land in the southern portion of the state west of the missouri. Sans Arc and Hunkpapa for instance in the SW Corner.
@@petelipson3769 because the Sioux controlled most of the land east of the Missouri and therefore by far the most territory in the state. The Three Affiliated Tribes, were mainly confined to the Missouri, and a few of it's tributaries like the Heart and Knife Rivers.
If you work from home, are a remote worker, consider moving to a small town in North or South Dakota. You can buy houses in small towns for the price of a new car.
@@John-bo1sz The real rivalry in South Dakota isn’t even with North Dakota, it’s actually between west river and east river. That tells you all you need to know about which Dakota is better.
I'm living near both Montana and Florida, here in Norway. The Dakota territory was filled up with quite a lot of Norwegians. So many, in fact, that there's about the same population of Norwegian-Americans and Norwegians.
Is it correct to say that the name of North Dakota's capital got its name from the certain Iron Chancellor across the Atlantic Ocean in Germany as a way of honoring him?
Many Germans moved to North Dakota after the Homestead Act. Many came from "Russia", what is now Ukraine and are known as Russian Germans. Catherine the Great opened up Southern Russia (Ukraine) to Europeans in the late 1700s. When Russia started requiring German settlers to conscript in their wars in the late 1800s, many left for America.
James Hill, known as the "Empire Builder,'" built the Great Northern Railroad, and built towns along its path with names like Glasgow, Havre, Bismarck, etc to convince immigrants to move there. He practically gave them the land to farm. Of course, they had to use his railroad to get the crops to market.
As a South Dakota Native 1. Its a beautiful state 2. There's a much bigger divide between the east and west in SD. The Western part of the state has the badlands, black hills, Mt Rushmore, and has much much more wide open spaces. Big ranching country. Its more like Montana and Wyoming. The East side is much more urban with a much larger population and also being a Stones throw away from Omaha, Minneapolis and Kansas City.
I'm a North Dakotan, and I'd like to say Yanton being flooded by a river after a winter is about the most dakotan thing you can do. And I feel kinship with them.
@@Newdivide we doubled up on virginias too in case one wanders off. So we got backups for 3 states: Virginia, Dakota, Carolina. We tried that in Texas but they shot back a lot
1906 Grandpa Paul Westberg and The Swede Boys from Minn homesteaded out in ND south of Dickinson. worked on the railroad and helped local farmer harvest grain. but because of locust and bad weather all returned home and other directions didn't stay. fun fact
the question is would we be asking the question that was posed at the beginning of the video if south dakota was simply renamed dakota upon the split, and north dakota was named something else? same with virginia/west virginia and the carolinas.
5:13 - "About two-thirds of those people lived in the south and less than half as many lived in the north". Such an interesting statement. Noble in its brutal logic and yet... I find it painfully unsatisfying - reminiscent of Bilbo Baggins' birthday speech in which he goes on about "not liking half of you, half-as-much as you deserve". Still, the possibility that there is a netherworld in the Dakotas holding the remainder population between 2/3 and less than 1/3 fills me with delight...
@@samiramin5895 The math checked out? Really? I'm not busting your chops but... one has 2/3 and then less than 1/3. This does not add up to 3/3. But maybe it's just me 🤔
1:05 Slight error here. After being part of the Michigan Territory, the eastern part of the Dakotas was part of the Wisconsin Territory first, then the Iowa Territory and the Minnesota Territory last.
Australia had a similar situation between 1927 and 1931, when the southern part of the Northern Territory (capital in the northern port of Darwin) was split-off along the 20th parallel and called the territory of Central Australia, governed by a Commonwealth Government appointed Administrator in it’s capital, Stuart - unofficially called Alice Springs. Central Australia was re-joined to the Northern Territory in 1931, when the Depression had hit the Commonwealth Government’s Treasury hard. The NT’ Stuart Highway stretches south from Darwin, down to Katherine (320 kms or 180 miles south - at the bottom of the Territory’s Top End), then on to Alice Springs - the capital of the Red Centre - 1,400 0kms or nearly 900 miles from Darwin. Or a 2 hour jet flight. (Kym in Darwin’s kid-brother city - Palmerston - 30 mins south of Darwin (our pop. Is now 40,000 vs Darwin’s 140,000).
Hmmm, the video starts off with narrator saying how dull the Dakotas are then shows three beautiful pictures of buffalos, a lake and some mountains. Doesn't look dull to me.
I am a South Dakotan and the land and cultures are very different between North and South Dakota. Do you really need a North and South Carolina or a New York and New Jersey? p.s. South Dakota was first settled by the French, especially West RIver, and that is why many of the towns and rivers have French names.
I thought I might go take a ride Changed my mind when I looked outside I can't stay, but I can't leave Or get myself away from me I'm in South Dakota I keep on stayin' behind I'm in South Dakota Trouble ain't hard to find
We should combine the Dakotas into one state and make Puerto Rico a state. We wouldn’t need to change the flag. Although having a 49 star flag again would be cool
Watching the names of Native peoples replaced with “such-and-such Territory”, then seeing those territory and state lines redrawn again and again, led me to see the history of how land is divided up as meaningless, arbitrary, and artificial. It’s like listening to someone explain how they arrange their furniture.
What's trippy is that these are the ONLY TWO STATES TO HAVE A "NORTH" AND "SOUTH". THE NEXT CLOSEST IS "WEST" AND REGULAR VIRGINIA! I MEAN THEY COULD HAVE PROBABLY HAD A "NORTH" AND "SOUTH" OREGON, BUT THEY CREATED "WASHINGTON" INSTEAD!😂😂😂🎉❤
Both North and South Dakotas are an underrated state under the Republican Party's ruling and this is a fascinating history of both of these respective states and of course,in future,I would visit these states,good friends!!!Ever lives respectively to North Dakota and South Dakota states,good friends!!!👍
@@TheBandit025Nova thats all in the same state so whats your point? west virgina and virgina are sepearate states like north and south carolina and like north and south dakota
In a way, this is like the situation in eastern Oregon and eastern Washington, being part of the interstate infrastructure of Idaho and sharing economic interests that differ greatly from the western urban areas of Oregon and Washington.
Both Dakotas combined have less population than Idaho but admitted as 2 states they got 4 US Senators. Reason: South Dakota was more urban. 😮🤔 Where might they be talking about, exactly?
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There is North Carolina and South Carolina too.
Just be glad that there aren't three of them.
Actually there’s of them because Montana is considered their brother
@@TheBandit025Novayou mean West Dakota?
@@Sceptonic yes I am mean Best Dakota
I mean, there kind of are. One could argue that the various Reservations considered together make up a third subdivision. In South Dakota, the Great Sioux Reservation literally isolated the western part of the state from the eastern part. I don't think this is as pronounced in North Dakota, but it is commonly said that the East halves of the two states have more in common with each other than they do with their own respective western halves.
I’m from South Dakota and I agree
Just in case we forget one, we’ve got a backup
We are very likely to forget both of them.
Like the Carolinas
😂
Lived in North Dakota for a few years, loved it, but 9 months of winter per year was ... unique coming from a southern coastal region which doesn't have snow.
Beautiful place but I honestly enjoyed the experience however -30/-40f to 20mph winds is crazy.
Such good math. 2/3 of the population lives in the south. You say less than 1/2 live in the north. Yeah. The math works out to 1/3 of the population lives in the north. 1/3 is less than 1/2. The math works out, the verbiage is weak.
@@williamjones7163 Never said such a thing.
@@williamjones7163 what are you talking about? ?_?
12:03 he pulled one of the greatest pranks in history
Principal Waxelplax: "Attention, students. Wonderful news! North and South Dakota have finally settled their differences and have agreed to become one big Dakota"
Still less people than Nebraska!
They'd lose 2 senators.
Hell no! We have no desire to get along with those weirdos in the South! 😅
There's only one way the Dakotas could settle their differences without fighting. FAIRY GODPARENTS!!
@@matthewpavlantos9132
Let this enter History as the Principle of Waxelplacicity.
As Einstein and Goedel truly taught us, in The Secret Annex, Waxelplacicity is everywhere.
Ironically, today the cultural divide is not north/south but east/west. Perhaps less so in North Dakota, but in South Dakota, those cultural and economic ties to the East contrasted with the settlement of the Black Hills via gold rush, which meant the cultural and economic ties were to California. And with the (remnants of) the Great Sioux Reservation (from the Ft. Laramie Treaty of 1868) between them and forbidden to White folk, the two halves--with the Missouri River marking the "boundary"--of the state, "grew up" separated from each other, again, with no rail connections between the two halves. (Not only was there an Indian reservation in the way, but rail crossings of the Missouri River were feats of engineering and construction and therefore expensive.) Added to this, the drier West River area is more suited to livestock while the flatter and wetter East River area is more suited to grains; immigration patterns were more eclectic and integrated in the west as people came to work in the mines from a variety of countries and in the east, immigrants settled in more homogeneous settlements; and population and thus political power concentrated more heavily East River. The state even split east and west with the advent of Standard Time with the western half of the state in Mountain Time and East River in Central Time.
It's quite interesting to see the 100th line of longitude not only splits the wetter east with the arid west of these 2 states, but other states farther south also experience this divide in climate at precisely this line.
Yeah. Describes South Dakota perfectly. I can’t say if it’s the same for North Dakota though.
@@stevencass8849 Yeah, I'm with you on that. I've heard ND has a similar split, but I couldn't swear to it.
I want to hear,learn more about the history of Sturgis
@@stevencass8849 North Dakota is pretty much they same as SD in this. The divide has even grown since the Bakken Oil Boom started in the early 2000's.
The “major” rail hub was actually in Sioux CITY….Not Sioux Falls. It connected directly to Yankton via rail AND RIVER.
But SC is in Iowa, one thought too many to keep with the plot. Sioux City’s airport is coded by the FAA as SUX. The city petitioned for change, but feds refused. I am a proud owner of a t-shirt that proclaims “My home SUX.” I got it at the airport, of course.
And don’t forget that cities like Aberdeen were forgotten
If there were one State of Dakota,it would be the fourth largest in area,slightly larger than Montana.
Mr. Terry really needs to watch this video. He and other History RUclipsrs like him are the most vocal proponents I can think of what I'm gonna call Dakota Unification.
There was some concern early in the North Dakota/South Dakota war when the North Dakotans opened with a volley of hand grenades. There were some tense moments until the South Dakotans pulled all the pins and threw them back.
Okay, that's a joke, but with 20/20 hindsight it would have made more sense to split the territory east and west. As usual, the East River politicians didn't really take their own western half into account when they were splitting things up.
Essentially it’s unconstitutional.
@@Vixtorz Well, it would require both legislatures and Congress to agree. But while possible in theory, you're right, it'll never happen in practice.
These politicians were so preoccupied with whether or not they could [make two Dakotas] that they didn't stop to think if they should [make two Dakotas].
The people in the Dakota Territory voted to separate the territory in half when the territorial capital was moved from Yankton to Bismarck.
After it was separated in half both North and South Dakota applied for statehood and became states.
@@SunsetAssassin congratulations on watching the video. Condemnation for not getting the joke.
@@richard1701able Got the joke just felt like putting the answer for people who want the answer without watching the video.
Hopefully people like your comment enough to make a difference.
“Uninteresting”? As a big city dweller, the Dakotas look like Eden to me.
I grew up in the Black Hills and it really was a paradise for kids. Backpacking, downhill skiing, big lakes, rock climbing, spelunking, hot water springs, pheasant and antelope hunting; whatever outdoor sport you wanted we had it and the climate is milder than the surrounding plains. I left at 18 but would like to return for retirement.
You'll be back after 2 weeks, buddy.
@@TheRealBrook1968 Same. I'm not quite ready for retirement per se, but I am back in the Black Hills albeit on the Wyoming side of the line. Though my CA born and bred wife who raised her kids in Texas is less enamored of the place than I am :)
If you like big, empty spaces that still get two seats in the senate, North Dakota might be the place for you.
Lived there for my entire childhood. It’s not quite a garden of Eden or a child’s dream. If you go to any city that has a population of over 50k expect it to be ugly and bleak. But on the bright side, almost everyone can drive pretty good. And it’s absolutely stunning in the black hills, especially the spearfish canyon.
Remember Burt Campbell played by Richard Mulligan in the American sitcom Soap. He ran for Sherif and one of his suggestions was to turn North Dakota into one big graveyard if I'm not mistaken 🤣
Looking at NY and LA the Dakotas look like peaceful living
They are. Winters can be long but thats the only negative. Plenty of space and fresh air. If you like hunting, fishing, kayaking, and other out door stuff like that its heaven on earth.
Lol Chandler is right. I know so many people who move here for 18 months from CA, TX, or FL and then decide they can't take another winter. You have to be tough, hardy, and enjoy the cold to make it up here.
@@ARandomDonut I live north of the Dakotas in Winnipeg and winter is icy and savage but yes it’s requires toughness resilience and endurance
Actually, Western Dakota was not inhabited by Dakota/Sioux, but the 3 Affiliated Tribes (Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikira). It was the Mandan/Hidatsa villages in ND where Lewis and Clark met Sacajawea. In fact, the Mandan and the Sioux were sworn enemies. A common misconception. Coming from a North Dakotan.
@austinwald2731......why is NDU called the Fighing Sioux then?
@@petelipson3769 They actually changed their name to Fighting Hawks, and that isn't "NDU" its UND. There is no NDU, its NDSU and they are the Bison.
It really sucks that people just gloss over the Three Affiliated Tribes. They were an integral part of exploration and then settlement of North Dakota. That all said, the sioux did hold small portions of land in the southern portion of the state west of the missouri. Sans Arc and Hunkpapa for instance in the SW Corner.
@@petelipson3769 because the Sioux controlled most of the land east of the Missouri and therefore by far the most territory in the state. The Three Affiliated Tribes, were mainly confined to the Missouri, and a few of it's tributaries like the Heart and Knife Rivers.
Yankton
Me: GTA V Prologue takes place in South Dakota
North Dakota. Its based loosely off Fargo
There is also a third Dakota called "Dakota Fanning".
can you do a video on how states have there borders? who designed them ? how did they get there shape for maps?
It seems like usually it's either rivers or rectangles
Uhhhhh. Ok George 😮
If you work from home, are a remote worker, consider moving to a small town in North or South Dakota. You can buy houses in small towns for the price of a new car.
North Kor... Dakota, Best Dakota.
Rapid Citian I think not.
@@TheRealBrook1968right. He starts to call it North Korea but says it's better than SD. Haha. No question SD is better. Always was and will be.
@@John-bo1sz The real rivalry in South Dakota isn’t even with North Dakota, it’s actually between west river and east river. That tells you all you need to know about which Dakota is better.
Yea, South Dakota was so "Urban" in the 1880's.
Well, "more than" isn't a lot by itself, but a comparation. And well, compared to the North, yeah, the South was way more urban
I know right, lol
Mr. Crocker said they could never reunite without fighting.
I’ve only been to South Dakota twice. Using the term “urbanized” never crossed mind
Sioux Falls has a population of approximately 220,000.
@ Which makes up almost 30% of the state.
It’s a very rural state
Town of Pembina was founded in 1794. People have lived here continuously for 10,000 years.
You said there weren’t any rail links between the North and South Dakota, and then there suddenly was one!
Let’s have a petition for one to be renamed Lakota and the other to stay Dakota, boom now the problem is solved.
Your channel deals with questions that probably crossed my mind but I never bothered to look it up..
I'm living near both Montana and Florida, here in Norway. The Dakota territory was filled up with quite a lot of Norwegians. So many, in fact, that there's about the same population of Norwegian-Americans and Norwegians.
Is it correct to say that the name of North Dakota's capital got its name from the certain Iron Chancellor across the Atlantic Ocean in Germany as a way of honoring him?
Yes
Many Germans moved to North Dakota after the Homestead Act. Many came from "Russia", what is now Ukraine and are known as Russian Germans. Catherine the Great opened up Southern Russia (Ukraine) to Europeans in the late 1700s. When Russia started requiring German settlers to conscript in their wars in the late 1800s, many left for America.
It was named to attract German settlers. So, yes, but actually no.
James Hill, known as the "Empire Builder,'" built the Great Northern Railroad, and built towns along its path with names like Glasgow, Havre, Bismarck, etc to convince immigrants to move there. He practically gave them the land to farm. Of course, they had to use his railroad to get the crops to market.
As a South Dakota Native 1. Its a beautiful state 2. There's a much bigger divide between the east and west in SD. The Western part of the state has the badlands, black hills, Mt Rushmore, and has much much more wide open spaces. Big ranching country. Its more like Montana and Wyoming. The East side is much more urban with a much larger population and also being a Stones throw away from Omaha, Minneapolis and Kansas City.
South Dakota: At least we aren't North Dakota. 🤣🤣🤣
North Dakota: At least we aren't South Dakota. 🤣🤣🤣
But no dog is safe in SD with Kristi Noem around.
@@GermanShepherd1983you are so cluless🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I worked at a slaughterhouse in Yankton back in 2022. Let me tell you it was the biggest dump of a place I ever been to.
I'm a North Dakotan, and I'd like to say Yanton being flooded by a river after a winter is about the most dakotan thing you can do. And I feel kinship with them.
Separating the states was a huge mistake. There's nothing there and they would be better off together.
Because one large rectangular Dakota thats taller than its wide would look weird on the map.
That explains Idaho!😅
Don't forget the Carolinas. You forgot to mention them
That’s because this is about Nth and Sth Dakota
Soon
@@Newdivide we doubled up on virginias too in case one wanders off. So we got backups for 3 states: Virginia, Dakota, Carolina. We tried that in Texas but they shot back a lot
Don't wish South Carolina on those in the north
They already have a video explaining North and South Carolina
1906 Grandpa Paul Westberg and The Swede Boys from Minn homesteaded out in ND south of Dickinson. worked on the railroad and helped local farmer harvest grain. but because of locust and bad weather all returned home and other directions didn't stay. fun fact
the question is would we be asking the question that was posed at the beginning of the video if south dakota was simply renamed dakota upon the split, and north dakota was named something else?
same with virginia/west virginia and the carolinas.
Sounds like they split for the same reason Arkansas split from Missouri. Arkansas was largely undeveloped while Missouri was growing rapidly
Teddy Roosevelt even owned land in North Dakota and lived there for a time. He always called it Dakota.
So the Dakotas didn't have a north-south rail link but Ordway took a train from Bismark south to Yankton?
5:13 - "About two-thirds of those people lived in the south and less than half as many lived in the north". Such an interesting statement. Noble in its brutal logic and yet... I find it painfully unsatisfying - reminiscent of Bilbo Baggins' birthday speech in which he goes on about "not liking half of you, half-as-much as you deserve".
Still, the possibility that there is a netherworld in the Dakotas holding the remainder population between 2/3 and less than 1/3 fills me with delight...
right? it took me about one third of a second to realize that the math checked out and more than twice as much to appreciate its accuracy.
@@samiramin5895 The math checked out? Really? I'm not busting your chops but... one has 2/3 and then less than 1/3. This does not add up to 3/3. But maybe it's just me 🤔
@@UserNameWasCensored well, I figured "about" includes exactly 2/3, so equal within some margin.
1:05 Slight error here. After being part of the Michigan Territory, the eastern part of the Dakotas was part of the Wisconsin Territory first, then the Iowa Territory and the Minnesota Territory last.
In addition, if MN had chosen an east-west version of the state, there likely would be no SD.
Good video.
Great video, though the seesawing camera was disorienting
in the Canadian Football League, there were once two Rough Riders teams
Wrong, one Rough Riders and one Roughriders.
Completely different.
Same with north and South Carolina
Often wondered why🤔
Kevin Costner wanted it called Yellowstone
4 out of 100 senators representing a population smaller than that of Phoenix, Arizona
Interesting thanks
Australia had a similar situation between 1927 and 1931, when the southern part of the Northern Territory (capital in the northern port of Darwin) was split-off along the 20th parallel and called the territory of Central Australia, governed by a Commonwealth Government appointed Administrator in it’s capital, Stuart - unofficially called Alice Springs. Central Australia was re-joined to the Northern Territory in 1931, when the Depression had hit the Commonwealth Government’s Treasury hard. The NT’ Stuart Highway stretches south from Darwin, down to Katherine (320 kms or 180 miles south - at the bottom of the Territory’s Top End), then on to Alice Springs - the capital of the Red Centre - 1,400 0kms or nearly 900 miles from Darwin. Or a 2 hour jet flight. (Kym in Darwin’s kid-brother city - Palmerston - 30 mins south of Darwin (our pop. Is now 40,000 vs Darwin’s 140,000).
So next explain the 2 Carolina's 😊
"Saint Louie"?? "Sime-yule-taneously"? Are you a robot?
Hmmm, the video starts off with narrator saying how dull the Dakotas are then shows three beautiful pictures of buffalos, a lake and some mountains. Doesn't look dull to me.
I am a South Dakotan and the land and cultures are very different between North and South Dakota. Do you really need a North and South Carolina or a New York and New Jersey?
p.s. South Dakota was first settled by the French, especially West RIver, and that is why many of the towns and rivers have French names.
Based on geography and population centers it really should be West and East Dakota lol
60k people were too few people to admit a new state.
Hey, yo, you REALLY need to have a New Jersey!! New York doesn't want it anyway, and NJ doesn't want to be part of NY.
Because ND is too cold even for people from SD.
South Dakota is often colder than North Dakota. Depends on the jet stream. 😊
We should combine them and call it Megakota. 😅
I thought I might go take a ride
Changed my mind when I looked outside
I can't stay, but I can't leave
Or get myself away from me
I'm in South Dakota
I keep on stayin' behind
I'm in South Dakota
Trouble ain't hard to find
Thank you very much - for the question and the answer!🙂👍
i propose further division of the large plains and mountain states. eg montana. wyoming. nebraska. bith dakotas. ok. tx. all of them.
We should combine the Dakotas into one state and make Puerto Rico a state. We wouldn’t need to change the flag. Although having a 49 star flag again would be cool
At 9:20 how did they ride the train back and forth if there was no rail service between the south and north?
Yeah wtf
Ummmm...good question.
I live in East kadota.😅
I would have called South Dakota the state of Dakota, and have north Dakota be Lakota
For the same reason there are two Carolina !
What happened to East Dakota and West Dakota. Were they merged into Central Dakota?
I thought there was know train from north to south.
How'd they take the train there???
Uninteresting? Please….if you live on either the left or right coast….please keep thinking that!
Is there anything interesting stories between North Carolina and South Carolina or Virginia and West Virginia?
1:15 why doesn't Wisconsin have that piece of land? an idea for a video
SOUTH DAKOTA: carrying North Dakota since 1889.😂😂😂
I thought it was 50, 000 people. That's what I read and was taught.
What about North and South Carolina?!?
Watching the names of Native peoples replaced with “such-and-such Territory”, then seeing those territory and state lines redrawn again and again, led me to see the history of how land is divided up as meaningless, arbitrary, and artificial. It’s like listening to someone explain how they arrange their furniture.
What's trippy is that these are the ONLY TWO STATES TO HAVE A "NORTH" AND "SOUTH". THE NEXT CLOSEST IS "WEST" AND REGULAR VIRGINIA! I MEAN THEY COULD HAVE PROBABLY HAD A "NORTH" AND "SOUTH" OREGON, BUT THEY CREATED "WASHINGTON" INSTEAD!😂😂😂🎉❤
You forgot about North Carolina and South Carolina
Don't forget North and South Carolina...and Virginia and West Virginia! ;)
new york fan is here😊😊
Both North and South Dakotas are an underrated state under the Republican Party's ruling and this is a fascinating history of both of these respective states and of course,in future,I would visit these states,good friends!!!Ever lives respectively to North Dakota and South Dakota states,good friends!!!👍
It's hole territory better given back to the French.
Im a South Dakotan, and live in best Dakota
I've always wanted to know why there's a West Michigan.
West MI is considered to be Metro Grand Rapids going west to the Lake
virgina and west virgina.
south carolina and north carolina.
@@GARTEN-KATZEN-SACHSENLAND no just the united states of america 😉
These 3 need to reunite.
Nevada, South Nevada and East Nevada
@@TheBandit025Nova thats all in the same state so whats your point? west virgina and virgina are sepearate states like north and south carolina and like north and south dakota
@@a702oo Actually South Nevada is actually that State call Arizona and East Nevada is that state with the cult of Joseph Smith
Wow. Info I didn’t need to know but info I wanted to know. Now I’ve got to get back to videos on Rome.
Seems like we should fix that today.
Why are there to Virginia’s and Carolina’s
In a way, this is like the situation in eastern Oregon and eastern Washington, being part of the interstate infrastructure of Idaho and sharing economic interests that differ greatly from the western urban areas of Oregon and Washington.
Why do any Dakotas exist? They could be reclassified as Terra Incognita.
North Dakota wasn't technically a u.s. state until the 2000's as they overlooked approving something.
Corners?
"DAKOTA" ACTUALLY MEANS "THE PEOPLE"!
2 too many? (I guess talk of emerging is off then.)
No railROADS? Are you Canadian?
We need remerge them again and call it Great Dakota.
Why are there two Dakotas? Because misery loves company.
Both Dakotas combined have less population than Idaho but admitted as 2 states they got 4 US Senators.
Reason: South Dakota was more urban. 😮🤔 Where might they be talking about, exactly?
Omg, that's top chef cooking level.
It's pronounced Saint L-OO-is. ;] Interesting video as usual though. :]
I’m from South Dakota. I’ve dated two women from North Dakota. One of them is now my wife
What is the Dakota Sioux
Southern North Dakota and Northern South Dakota are the same place.
It's terrible here, please stay away and don't move here
Sincerely, everyone in the Dakotas, myself included.