The Midwest Makes No Sense

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  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @NameExplain
    @NameExplain  11 месяцев назад +935

    Who’s watching from the Midwest?

    • @United_Free_States_Of_America
      @United_Free_States_Of_America 11 месяцев назад +19

      Uhm, sort of. 🤔 But in a way it makes sense because it is west of the original 13 colonies and kind of smack in the middle ^.. I will be sharing this with our subscribers (:
      Cheers

    • @jaydflay4809
      @jaydflay4809 11 месяцев назад +34

      I am! I’m from Indiana!

    • @davea6314
      @davea6314 11 месяцев назад +24

      I am from a western suburb of Chicago, Illinois called Lombard.

    • @carschmn
      @carschmn 11 месяцев назад +20

      Minnesota.
      Oklahoma and Tennessee are the South. I’d argue Ohio is part of the Northeast.

    • @davea6314
      @davea6314 11 месяцев назад +8

      It's very amusing that there are a few flat suburbs of Chicago with deceptively not flat names including: Arlington Heights (with no heights), Vernon Hills (with no hills), and Glendale Heights (with no heights). 😜 Lol
      It's my understanding that the deceptive names were to try to lure people to settle in their communities.

  • @JackDecker63
    @JackDecker63 11 месяцев назад +1274

    Speaking as a Midwesterner, I think you missed an important fact in this video: Mississippi River. When Americans say American West, they mean west of the Mississippi. The Mississippi being the largest river in the USA and its importance cannot be emphasized enough. Likewise, American East (though rarely used) means east of the Mississippi. Now do you see how the Mid-West came about? The states near the Mississippi on either side are the "Mid" part. And the "West" part comes from the same reason why Americans commonly say American West and not American East. It is viewed more west than east thus Mid-West.

    • @charleslippert2021
      @charleslippert2021 11 месяцев назад +39

      The North West Ordinance that regulated the North West Territory was so named because it was north and west of Virginia which administered the territory. Virginia then have now become Virginia, West Virginia, and Kentucky. The North West Territory became portion of Minnesota east of the Mississippi River, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, AND Illinois. The North West Ordinance specified what today is the Pennsylvania-Ohio border as it's Prime Meridian, and drew 4 Parallel Meridians across the territory. Consequently, land was surveyed under the Public Land Survey System and divided into squares referencing those meridians. This PLSS survey and land division method was expanded west with the Louisiana Purchase, with new additional parallel meridians. This PLSS pattern was again replicated as the US expanded west, which is how we ended up with square, rectangular, and blocky shaped western states.

    • @bandana_girl6507
      @bandana_girl6507 11 месяцев назад +55

      And before reaching the Mississippi, it was west of the Appalachians. Anywhere west of those mountains has at one point been considered "the West"

    • @lesterstone8595
      @lesterstone8595 11 месяцев назад +6

      well said

    • @mike.antkowiak
      @mike.antkowiak 11 месяцев назад +39

      Missouri River is the longest River in the US. But you are correct in saying the “West” was considered everything west of the Mississippi. St. Louis is often referred to as the Gateway to the West.

    • @MuriKakari
      @MuriKakari 11 месяцев назад +14

      @@bandana_girl6507 Exactly, the Midwest is West of the Appalachians, East of the Rockies, and North of the 36th Parallel. Oklahoma's panhandle is north of that border, so they can argue either way. Generally, they get included if the conversation is really about the Heartland and disincluded if the conversation is about accents or cheese curds. The Upper midwest is the states that touch the Lakes or Canada, or really, anything above the Northern Cities shift line, which is about the 42nd parallel- that way South Dakota is included and the in-state divisions are accounted for.

  • @jarednock2551
    @jarednock2551 11 месяцев назад +165

    I think it’s also important to note that for much of americas history the push further west was extremely prevalent in our culture. We started as east and grew west. The mid west is almost like a middle point on a timeline of westward continuation and resulting nomenclature.

    • @arnaldoenriquez6191
      @arnaldoenriquez6191 10 месяцев назад +6

      Exactly yes, the Great Lakes side was the original Northwest Territory
      Then Louisiana Territory, making up the Great Plains section push the Northwest border further
      And then again Oregon Territory to the now current " Pacific " Northwest

    • @roxaskinghearts
      @roxaskinghearts 10 месяцев назад +1

      mississippie finally stopped selling babies to muslim nations you can at least sit at the dinner table but any sister making out and your banned from my states our medical system has enough problems to add inbreds into the equation o nude beaches bad but but but sister fers good you people are a riot mississippie is the biggest joke in all of America and ive seen California and florida o sorry was my big data scientifically proven facts to much for these soy boys and set christen catholic red as heck states or evangelicals by how they act

  • @MaineCoonMama18
    @MaineCoonMama18 10 месяцев назад +149

    I think when you're from the U.S. and know our history of westward expansion, you don't really question the name Midwest. I didn't.

    • @TomWeikert
      @TomWeikert 10 месяцев назад +4

      100%

    • @daynieboy7401
      @daynieboy7401 10 месяцев назад

      i never do as i live in wisconsin it makes sense to me when he brought it up i was like i guess but no its still midwest whats wrong about it and if your going to give it a name like he did at 2:55 like who would ever say that like miller park changing to american family field nope we're not saying that miller park is what it always will be thats a stuiped weird long name and he thinks thats fine

    • @crash.override
      @crash.override 9 месяцев назад +3

      As a west-coaster, we definitely do.

    • @Dodo-ds7yk
      @Dodo-ds7yk 7 месяцев назад

      @@crash.overrideas an Englishman I was intrigued lol

    • @MyBelch
      @MyBelch 3 месяца назад

      @@Dodo-ds7yk It was the Brits wot coined the phrase "Midwest." In their small-mindedness, it WAS the west. They simply couldn't fathom how much farther it went.

  • @JezzaWest
    @JezzaWest 11 месяцев назад +181

    Fun fact: the midwest's longitude is actually partially in the middle of the western hemisphaere

    • @mpetersen6
      @mpetersen6 11 месяцев назад +8

      Marathon County in Wisconsin. Pretty much dead on top of Wausau. Now pronounce it.

    • @Sampdelu
      @Sampdelu 11 месяцев назад

      @@mpetersen6 Waus is like was as in wasp. Then The sau is like the ow is Moscow just with an s in front

    • @blueptconvertible
      @blueptconvertible 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@mpetersen6 What? Poniatowski? I've been there, drank at the bar and signed the 45/90 log. Pon-e-a-tau-ski

    • @jaimerosado3896
      @jaimerosado3896 10 месяцев назад +1

      I still can’t believe how many seemingly “intelligent” people haven’t picked up on this. It’s called a globe. Use it.

    • @thehuscarl4835
      @thehuscarl4835 10 месяцев назад +2

      The 45th Parallel runs through Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota and South Dakota. It's the halfway (middle) line between the equator and the north pole.

  • @Twinkiepower420
    @Twinkiepower420 11 месяцев назад +162

    The “Old Northwest” is still a nickname for the Midwest, pretty common in business names and other similar stuff but most people don’t use it colloquially

    • @Steveofthejungle8
      @Steveofthejungle8 11 месяцев назад +24

      Northwestern University is the most prominent example

    • @jamespyle777
      @jamespyle777 11 месяцев назад +15

      Northwestern Mutual Insurance based in Milwaukee.

    • @mpetersen6
      @mpetersen6 11 месяцев назад +8

      Northwest Territory, Northwest Ordinance. What would become Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin and the northeast corner on Minnesota.

    • @AslanKyoya1776
      @AslanKyoya1776 11 месяцев назад +3

      The Pacific Northwest was actually settled by people from the Midwest, mostly the Upper Midwest, which explains why some people here pronounce bag as "bayg".

    • @jamesslick4790
      @jamesslick4790 10 месяцев назад +2

      YEP!@@Steveofthejungle8

  • @annekeener4119
    @annekeener4119 11 месяцев назад +139

    Illinois was also part of the original Northwest territory, but you forgot them. There is actually a clear remnant name in one of Illinois’ big universities, Northwestern University.

    • @arch4ngel
      @arch4ngel 10 месяцев назад +3

      1:42 (wish i could timestamp half seconds haha)

    • @isidromartinez4368
      @isidromartinez4368 10 месяцев назад +2

      I think 7:08 is what they were referring to. Illinois was left

    • @ryanescobar6660
      @ryanescobar6660 10 месяцев назад +5

      I KNOW. Idk why he leaves Illinois out. It’s literally the best thing to come out of the nw territory 😭

    • @foodlord1
      @foodlord1 10 месяцев назад

      The transition between 4:36 and 4:37

    • @rudewalrus5636
      @rudewalrus5636 10 месяцев назад

      @@ryanescobar6660 Nah; the best thing to come out of the NW territory is definitely Michigan. 🙂

  • @onewholovesvenison5335
    @onewholovesvenison5335 10 месяцев назад +103

    It’s ironic that the Midwest has an association with being rural farmland, since several of the nations biggest cities are within the region (eg Chicago, Indianapolis, etc).

    • @LosPalms
      @LosPalms 10 месяцев назад +24

      Tbh, only Chicago holds ‘big’ city status, but I can see the Great Lakes region being a more ideal relocation place in the next years!

    • @KidRivera1115
      @KidRivera1115 10 месяцев назад +21

      @@LosPalms Same with Minneapolis-St Paul & Detroit but most of the Midwest is Mid Size city’s like Milwaukee, Indianapolis,Cleveland etc.

    • @jaywalkallstar
      @jaywalkallstar 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@KidRivera1115Columbus and Indianapolis each have 2.5 times the population of Cleveland

    • @briancallaway1690
      @briancallaway1690 10 месяцев назад +4

      Indianapolis is the 16th largest city in the country. It's a pretty big city. Not over 1 million people, but only the top 10 cities are over 1 million.

    • @Double_Jae
      @Double_Jae 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@LosPalms the Great Lakes region is (mostly) the best place in the country. We just like to ignore Chicago and Detroit…

  • @thepatriarchy819
    @thepatriarchy819 11 месяцев назад +193

    As an Italian born, and raised in Detroit. I have always felt like I accidentally spawned into a server way above my level.

    • @wordytoed9887
      @wordytoed9887 11 месяцев назад +12

      Mitten gang represent.

    • @salamander5865
      @salamander5865 10 месяцев назад +18

      @@wordytoed9887RUclips allows me to translate this comment to English lol

    • @ZeroDim
      @ZeroDim 10 месяцев назад +4

      I mean that goes for everyone born in Detroit m8

    • @JohnDoe-gy5dr
      @JohnDoe-gy5dr 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@wordytoed9887 The land of Lions and Tigers.

    • @EmeraldEyesEsoteric
      @EmeraldEyesEsoteric 10 месяцев назад +2

      Michigan is NOT the mid-west. Nope, it's the east, I refuse to acknowledge it!

  • @shad6644
    @shad6644 11 месяцев назад +85

    From a geography class I had in college the origin was explained…the confusion of the ‘Midwest’ comes from false classification and leftover terminology. It’s 1800 and you’re in Washington DC, Michigan is to the Northwest (as mentioned), Tennessee is to the Southwest and Ohio is Midwest. Same as Virginia and Maryland are Mid-Atlantic. This is why Northwestern University is in Chicago. As the country expanded to have the East Coast and West Coast the idea of the Midwest changed-basically meaning anything that wasn’t the South, the Great Plains, the ‘West’ so yeah, it’s poorly named.

    • @effix9097
      @effix9097 10 месяцев назад +4

      So Americans just gradually and subconsciously blended Ohio in with a region twelve times its size? Funny!

    • @SeasideDetective2
      @SeasideDetective2 10 месяцев назад +3

      I'd call the region the "Mideast" if that name weren't already taken by Southwest Asia.

    • @ELDASY56
      @ELDASY56 10 месяцев назад +3

      Northwestern is in Evanston

    • @Randomjackass135
      @Randomjackass135 10 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah no shit, I’m sorely upset that people don’t automatically register this, it’s a sign of how little Americans know or consider history.

  • @spddiesel
    @spddiesel 11 месяцев назад +13

    The Midwest begins when you start hearing the word "ope."

  • @senor-achopijo3841
    @senor-achopijo3841 11 месяцев назад +142

    Fun trivia time: You know how the US has certain stereotypes regarding the South and the people who live there? That they're hillbillies, they're sometimes unintelligible, etc. We have similar stereotypes in Spain also regarding the southern part of Spain, which is where I'm from, btw. In fact, Cletus and his relatives, from the Simpsons, speak with a deep southern Spanish accent in the Castillian Spanish dub (as in Spainsh from Spain) and it works. I just think it's interesting that we share similar experiences with certain parts of our own countries.

    • @waynegreen87
      @waynegreen87 11 месяцев назад +4

      Very interesting !

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh 10 месяцев назад +3

      My wife and I (US Americans) just got back from two weeks of your wonderful country. We can't wait to go back! Even though I was surprised how extremely hot Andalusia was in October. The long pants and shirts went unused, Even in Madrid and Barcelona though in Barca I wore long pants to visit the Sagrada Familia and found myself to be one of the few people who did, lol.

    • @misspat7555
      @misspat7555 10 месяцев назад +4

      When my brother went to Spain as a foreign exchange student, he was hosted by a family in the south of the country and was later informed that the fluent Spanish he had acquired during the experience had a “Catalan” (sp?) accent, i.e. a “hillbilly” accent! I’m sure this has been much reduced in the intervening years of his mostly speaking Spanish with those of Mexican origin, but we found this information pretty funny at the time! 🤣

    • @senor-achopijo3841
      @senor-achopijo3841 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@misspat7555 I see, though the Catalan accent is not from the south, and is not nconsidered to be nearly as "hillbilly" as the southern accents. Maybe there was some confusion on the matter?

    • @daryanguy
      @daryanguy 10 месяцев назад +1

      Turns out a lot of countries have a north-south divide like that, sometimes it's just flipped.

  • @carsonianthegreat4672
    @carsonianthegreat4672 10 месяцев назад +15

    American football was called “Gridiron Football” not “American Rugby Football.” The adjective “American” was tacked on to distinguish it from Canadian Football when the two codes adopted different rules on the number of downs. It’s not the name we gave it internally. Both Canadian Football and American Football are types of Gridiron Football, which is the actual name for the sport.

  • @davidburrow5895
    @davidburrow5895 11 месяцев назад +31

    I've just always thought the Midwest was in the MIDdle of the country and it was WEST of the original settlement. The Midwest isn't firmly defined. Some Easterners even consider parts of western New York and Pennsylvania as Midwestern (basically they'll say anything west of the mountains), and others will divide it into the Great Lakes states and the Great Plains.

    • @BadgerCheese94
      @BadgerCheese94 11 месяцев назад +6

      I think its people OUTSIDE the Midwest, that have trouble defining it. Most Midwesterners have no issue. Its 12 states. Not hard to remember.

    • @ilovecakecanihaveapiece
      @ilovecakecanihaveapiece 11 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@BadgerCheese94Ageed, as a Michigander.

    • @jakeaurod
      @jakeaurod 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@BadgerCheese94 More like 6, maybe 7 if you include Iowa. Not sure Missouri should be included, given their role in the Civil War. the rest of them are Great Plains.

    • @BadgerCheese94
      @BadgerCheese94 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@jakeaurod Iowa is as Midwest as it gets lol Not including Iowa as Midwest is akin to not including Alabama as the South. MO was a border state in the Civil War. It stayed with the Union. Most of the GP states are Midwest. GP is a region in the sense thar Great Lakes is a region, but its not separate from Midwest

    • @stoutyyyy
      @stoutyyyy 10 месяцев назад

      @@BadgerCheese94Buffalo or Erie PA are closer to Cleveland or Toledo culturally and geographically than they are to NYC or Philly.

  • @GavinLepley
    @GavinLepley 11 месяцев назад +21

    The United States didn't obtain the Northwest Territory in 1787, but gained it from the Kingdom of Great Britain with the Treaty of Paris (1783), due to the fact that it would be difficult to administer colonies in an area blocked by the U.S. 1787 was the year that the Territory became organized rather than as extensions of other states.

    • @mpetersen6
      @mpetersen6 11 месяцев назад +1

      The claims by Eastern states was chaotic

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@mpetersen6they are hilarious to look back on, they all just claimed the entire continent west of themselves so that Mega Virginia would stretch from sea to shining sea.

    • @briancallaway1690
      @briancallaway1690 10 месяцев назад

      ​@jasonreed7522 I think the Carolinas did that too at one point. Before it was split north and south.

  • @danharder1706
    @danharder1706 11 месяцев назад +81

    You got the map of the OG USA wrong. You used the current borders of the states. Kentucky and West Virginia used to be part of Virginia, Maine was part of Massachusetts back then, Vermont was claimed by both New York and New Hampshire. Basically everything East of the Mississippi was the USA after the revolution, including half of the present day “Midwest”

    • @Illumisepoolist
      @Illumisepoolist 11 месяцев назад +12

      Except Florida. Also Tennessee was part of North Carolina. and Mississippi and Alabama was part of Georgia.

    • @pjmburg
      @pjmburg 10 месяцев назад +1

      Also was there anything really west of Albany in NY at that point? I know all the lake cities in NY are relatively newer compared to NYC.

    • @LeakyTrees
      @LeakyTrees 10 месяцев назад +2

      Until it joined the union Vermont governed itself as an independent country

  • @ComradeTomcat
    @ComradeTomcat 11 месяцев назад +24

    A remnant of the name of the North West is found in Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. Also why we specify PACIFIC North West. To make sure you don't think of the original North West region.

    • @davemiller6055
      @davemiller6055 10 месяцев назад +2

      People say Northwest all the time in reference to the Pacific Northwest. Nobody outside of Illinois thinks of Illinois when they hear "Northwest". They think of Washington and Oregon.

  • @TheInvisibleCanadia
    @TheInvisibleCanadia 11 месяцев назад +77

    It's the midwest because rather than being far west, it was only kind-of in the west. It was semi-west, or mid-west.

    • @SeasideDetective2
      @SeasideDetective2 10 месяцев назад +6

      But most of it is in the east!

    • @TheInvisibleCanadia
      @TheInvisibleCanadia 10 месяцев назад +6

      East of where?
      It's semi-west compared to the capital and original 13 colonies.
      And definitely compared to prime meridian, the divider between the east and west hemisphere.

    • @TheRayzerBandit
      @TheRayzerBandit 10 месяцев назад +9

      @@SeasideDetective2 The naming convention is with an east coast persons point of view. Anything passed the Appalachian Mountains up until the end of the 19th century was considered "The west". Then as the population spread further west post civil war, the line moved to the Mississippi (The original "Midwest" when the name became popularized) which spread to the Rocky Mountains with the plain states that didn't associate with "the South" being included.

    • @SeasideDetective2
      @SeasideDetective2 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@TheRayzerBandit Right. But now we've moved so far west that the midpoint is well past the Appalachians. Now it's in Kansas. Anything east of Kansas should be "the East."

    • @eddieh9248
      @eddieh9248 10 месяцев назад +4

      I always considered it midway to the west which is why it was called midwest

  • @jbejaran
    @jbejaran 11 месяцев назад +56

    I only think the "Midwest" makes sense as related to the "Far West" which includes the states further west than the "Midwest". It's still a very East-Coast-centric naming perspective, but given that that's where the country started, that's understandable. As to why the "Midwest" doesn't include the states a bit to the south of it like Oklahoma and Texas, A) often they're just considered part of the "South", and B) once in a while, I actually do hear them included in a greater conception of the "Midwest".

    • @rmdodsonbills
      @rmdodsonbills 11 месяцев назад +8

      If you consider "the Midwest" to be defined more culturally and economically than geographically, then Oklahoma would probably qualify. East Texas is in The South and West Texas is in The West.

    • @BadgerCheese94
      @BadgerCheese94 11 месяцев назад +8

      I have NEVER heard TEXAS considered Midwest. Oklahoma is wrong but at least they border Kansas and Missouri

    • @MuriKakari
      @MuriKakari 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@BadgerCheese94 Oklahomans who don't necessarily consider themselves Southerners are the ones who usually start the argument. Their argument is that they are actually geographically the middle of the West. And yes, Texas is never, ever included. I sometimes think the Oklahomans are just trying to make sure they aren't in the same group as Texas.

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 11 месяцев назад +1

      The east coat centric naming is definitely related to historical population distributions, it took a long time for the center of population to get west of the Appalachians, and by then the Midwest was already named. (And obviously this is due to the nation's origin as a European colony that broke off, and then continued to attract European immigrants)

    • @highway2heaven91
      @highway2heaven91 10 месяцев назад +7

      @@MuriKakariThat is true, Oklahomans tend to call themselves Midwestern but most people in the actual Midwest don’t consider them Midwestern.

  • @brianarbenz1329
    @brianarbenz1329 11 месяцев назад +67

    I think of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota as the _Great Lakes States._
    The states west of there I consider the _Great Plains States._
    The Great Lakes region has great cities and vast energy. It’s coastal, with the cosmopolitan air of Chicago, Detroit, Minneapolis-St. Paul resulting from lots of immigration from many parts of the world.
    The Great Plains region has traditionally been more insular.
    They are two distinct regions.

    • @perfectallycromulent
      @perfectallycromulent 11 месяцев назад +4

      the problem there is people in the southern parts of OH, IL, and IN don't think they're near the Great Lakes, but reckon they are near the Ohio and/or Mississippi Rivers

    • @BadgerCheese94
      @BadgerCheese94 11 месяцев назад +5

      Its like any region, there are miniregions within there or cross regions. Great Lakes also includes PA and NY as well as Canadian province of Ontario. You can also divide us by upper and lower. Some states, like Missouri and Iowa, are neither Great Lakes nor Great Plains

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 11 месяцев назад +4

      I agree with both comments on my post. But this video went by state lines - all or none of a state being included. I’d put the western parts of Nebraska and the Dakotas in the West, not the Midwest.
      And Western Pennsylvania and NY State from Buffalo and westward in the Great Lakes.

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 11 месяцев назад +2

      ^ in the Great Lakes _region,_ that is. I wouldn’t put them in the lakes. 🫢

    • @perfectallycromulent
      @perfectallycromulent 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@brianarbenz1329 well, there's the problem. we have people pretending that state lines are what's relevant here, when these geographic terms are precisely those that historically do not reflect state lines. the fact that Cleveland is on a lake doesn't make Cincinnati part of the Great Lakes region anymore than Marseilles being on the Med makes Calais a Mediterranean city.

  • @jakeaurod
    @jakeaurod 11 месяцев назад +56

    For those of us who live in the Old Northwest, including Illinois, this is the actual Midwest. Anything west of the Mississippi is the Great Plains region.
    You want an example of confusion? Lots of people talk about the "Old West" outlaws who did shootouts, stagecoach and train robberies. You know that most famous outlaw from the "Old West" named Jesse James? He operated in Missouri.

    • @robertlarson7224
      @robertlarson7224 10 месяцев назад +5

      Yes! The Midwest is such a loosely defined place. I’d not consider anything West of Minnesota to be one of us.

    • @napalm_lipbalm86
      @napalm_lipbalm86 10 месяцев назад +1

      I am a distant relative of Jesse James. My grandmother who raised me was penpals with his granddaughter Bernice.

    • @rogerbumfizz4796
      @rogerbumfizz4796 10 месяцев назад +2

      @napalm_lipbalm86: Your statement as written makes no sense: "I am a distant relative of Jesse James. My grandmother who raised me was penpals with his granddaughter Bernice."
      Just because I work in the same building as the grand-nephew of Ernest Hemingway (I do), does not make me a distant relative of Ernest Hemingway.

    • @MatthewMKF
      @MatthewMKF 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@robertlarson7224even border cities like Fargo?

    • @larrylaffer3246
      @larrylaffer3246 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@robertlarson7224Not even the 2 Dakotas?

  • @qwertyuiopgarth
    @qwertyuiopgarth 11 месяцев назад +7

    100th Meridian is generally considered to be where "The West" begins.

  • @t_ylr
    @t_ylr 11 месяцев назад +24

    In my opinion if you draw a semicircle from Fargo to Buffalo, that's the Midwest.

    • @kbrewski1
      @kbrewski1 10 месяцев назад +1

      Wrong. Buffalo is a NE Rust Belt city.

    • @stoutyyyy
      @stoutyyyy 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@kbrewski1the rust belt *is* the urban Midwest. Cleveland, Detroit, Flint, Milwaukee are all undeniably Midwestern and Buffalo sits on the same lake as two of them.

    • @kbrewski1
      @kbrewski1 10 месяцев назад

      @stephenm.stouter2238
      Lmfao. NYC and Miami are both on the Atlantic Ocean. That doesn't mean NYC is in the South. 🤪🤪🤪
      Pittsburgh and Erie are part of the Rust Belt. They aren't in the Midwest.
      Obviously you were in detention during grade school geography.

    • @leftovermike4663
      @leftovermike4663 8 месяцев назад

      There’s steel mills in Allentown, Scranton, Philly, New Jersey! Does not make anything midwestern. Anything in upstate New York and western pa is clearly in the east coast and far to hilly to be midwest.

    • @stoutyyyy
      @stoutyyyy 8 месяцев назад

      @@leftovermike4663 you think Buffalo is hilly?

  • @drewblank
    @drewblank 11 месяцев назад +25

    I used to work as a lifeguard trainer and swim instructor for the YMCA of the USA, and they had the state of Kentucky classified as Midwest, which always confused us. As I see it, if Kentucky belongs to any group of states, it should be Appalachia, with Pennsylvania, West Virginia and maybe Tennessee.

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh 10 месяцев назад +5

      Kentucky is traditionally considered the South or Southeast but it could be argued as being the Midwest, It was a slave state like the South but didn't join the Confederacy which somewhat makes it Midwest. The same argument could be made for Missouri which I never hear called part of the South.

    • @pjmburg
      @pjmburg 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@timmmahhhh Missouri is kinda hard to pin down. St Louis almost feels like a southern city even though it's the "gateway to the west.' Even some of the smaller river towns north of STL like Hannibal feel kinda southern just because they're on the Mississippi. KC is pure midwestern though.

    • @Double_Jae
      @Double_Jae 10 месяцев назад +2

      I’d put Tennessee as Deep South more than Appalachia, again it’s more of the mindset thing. But either way I really hope nobody actually thinks Kentucky is Midwest

    • @timmmahhhh
      @timmmahhhh 10 месяцев назад

      @@pjmburg yeah I can see that, I was surprised how much twang I heard in STL. I'm from the Chicago area and I've been to STL but not KC yet.

    • @TheNinjaDC
      @TheNinjaDC 10 месяцев назад +3

      Kentucky is where regions meet. There is fundamentally three regions: Bluegrass, Southern, and Appalachian.
      -Bluegrass (the northern hump) includes Northern KY (southern Cincinnati), Louisville, and Lexington. This region is very midwestern and where a majority of the state's economy & population live. This is where the cities, bourbon, and horses are.
      -The southern strip is very similar to Tennessee. Southern, but not deep southern. This is the cave area of the state (Mammoth cave).
      -Eastern Kentucky is part of Appalachia's core, but is the least populated and poorest part of the state. Extremely similar to west Virginia. This is where the coal mining is, and images of poverty & failing education systems come from.
      That is why it is hard to place Kentucky. Most of the land is in the southern region. Most of the population is in the blue grass region which has more in common with Ohio & Indiana than Tennessee. And most media focuses on the Appalachian area.

  • @dmnemaine
    @dmnemaine 10 месяцев назад +7

    The "west" part is because at one time, everything west of the Appalachians was considered "The West".

  • @MagsonDare
    @MagsonDare 10 месяцев назад +15

    I grew up in Illinois as a "Child of the 80's." When I was in "American Geography" class, we were taught that All the 13 original colonies/states had undefined western borders and the Virigina more or less tried to claim everything west of the Appalachian mountains. As a result, the "Northwest Territory" was so named as it was the northwestern part of what Virginia claimed for itself. It was explicitly defined as the area that now comprises the 5 states of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin, though up north where nobody (at the time) knew exactly where the Mississippi River was it got a little fuzzy still. This is also why Northwestern University sits on the shores of Lake Michigan just to the north of Chicago.
    After the lands to the west of the Mississippi were obtained from France in the early 1800's the new areas became known more as "The West" (there's even an area in Missouri that was named "Far West" in the 1830's and retains that name still), the "northwest" moniker didn't work so well anymore, and thus as you speculate, "northwest" became "midwest."
    FWIW, in the 80's all the states west of the Mississippi (including Minnesota) that are now so often included in "the Midwest" were called "The Plains States." I's only been in the last 20 years or so that I've noticed that "Plains" moniker dropping off and the whole kit-n-kaboodle being collectively lumped as "the Midwest" anymore.

    • @SvdSinner
      @SvdSinner 10 месяцев назад

      Growing up in Omaha in the '80s, Nebraska's common motto was "Gateway to the West" and if someone claimed it was in the Midwest, they would be corrected and told the Midwest was East of the Missouri River.

    • @davemiller6055
      @davemiller6055 10 месяцев назад +1

      I'm from Washington state. I was taught that the same about the plains states. They weren't the midwest.

    • @joshhowsam5578
      @joshhowsam5578 10 месяцев назад

      Indiana born and raised in the 80s & 90s. The Midwest should only include what they call the Great Lakes Region (MI, IN, OH, IL, WI). I give a grudging pass to MN to be included as a Midwest state on most days. When I start hearing Iowa, Missouri, Kansas... nah. That's the Great Plains states.

    • @BadgerCheese94
      @BadgerCheese94 4 дня назад

      Thats insane cuz Minnesota has more in common with Michigan than the Dakotas

    • @BadgerCheese94
      @BadgerCheese94 4 дня назад

      ​@@joshhowsam5578 It seems to me you must not have travelled much. Iowa is not Great Plains at all and resembles more Indiana and Illinois than most of Nebraska or Kansas.

  • @davea6314
    @davea6314 11 месяцев назад +14

    It's very amusing that there are a few flat suburbs of Chicago, Illinois with deceptively not flat names including: Arlington Heights (with no heights), Vernon Hills (with no hills), and Glendale Heights (with no heights). 😜 Lol
    It's my understanding that the deceptive names were to try to lure people to settle in their communities.
    I live in Lombard which is a short drive from the suburbs I just mentioned.

    • @CortexNewsService
      @CortexNewsService 11 месяцев назад +4

      Don't forget Mount Greenwood neighborhood in Chicago itself. Which is barely on a hill.

    • @davea6314
      @davea6314 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@CortexNewsServiceYes, that too. 😜 lol

    • @davea6314
      @davea6314 11 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@CortexNewsServicealso Mount Prospect (with no mountain)
      Lol

    • @JMM33RanMA
      @JMM33RanMA 11 месяцев назад +1

      Are/were there any Lombards [Latin: Longobardi], or immigrants from the Lombardy region of Italy there?

    • @mpetersen6
      @mpetersen6 11 месяцев назад +1

      Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin. The FIBs don't have a lock on this.

  • @00Mandy00
    @00Mandy00 11 месяцев назад +18

    It’s more a history and population thing. What is now called the West was, and mostly still is, much more sparsely populated. I once had an atlas that was published in the UK that included Utah in the Midwest, probably for the reasons you have outlined. I found it odd because I’ve heard plenty of people with the various European accents, including English, visiting Utah and reveling in the vast open scenery and cowboyishness. You know what the West is all about.
    Picking apart calling those states The Midwest is like telling a dark haired woman named Flavia to change her name, not that I don’t get it.

    • @TheSpecialJ11
      @TheSpecialJ11 10 месяцев назад +2

      Petition to force all Flavio's and Flavia's to dye their hair flaxen blonde.

    • @marknovak2413
      @marknovak2413 10 месяцев назад +2

      Utah really isn't in any region but it is in the middle of the West. There are companies here named Mid-West.

  • @TimEric4d3d3d3
    @TimEric4d3d3d3 10 месяцев назад +6

    Ohio, Indiana, MIchigan, Wisconsin, Illinois & Minnesota are often referred to as "The Great Lakes States"
    Iowa, Nebraska, Missouri, Kansas (and Oklahoma too) are often referred to as "The Great Plains"

    • @shempunderwood9029
      @shempunderwood9029 10 месяцев назад +1

      Great Lakes should be a separate region from Midwest, but no way it could include all of Illinois, and maybe not all of Minnesota.

  • @CatholicSamurai
    @CatholicSamurai 10 месяцев назад +7

    Born and raised in rural Wisconsin, now live in Minnesota. Being from the upper Midwest, I admit that I’m a purist for defining the region. I consider the entirety of Ohio not part of the midwest, nor Detroit/SE Michigan. Western edges of the Dakotas, Kansas, and Nebraska, as well as the lower 1/4 of Indiana and Illinois get the boot too. Only the northernmost portion of Missouri stays. Basically, you can’t draw the midwest entirely following state lines. The geographic and cultural differences are too distinct.
    Edit: the UP belongs by right to Wisconsin. We just need to invade and claim annexation already 😤

    • @notenoughmemes1847
      @notenoughmemes1847 10 месяцев назад +1

      You’ll have to pry it from our cold dead hands, and we’ll have already glued it to our cold dead hands

    • @briancallaway1690
      @briancallaway1690 10 месяцев назад +1

      It really should be part of Wisconsin. Makes no sense having Michigan split like that.

    • @kbrewski1
      @kbrewski1 10 месяцев назад

      Ridiculous. St Louis is an old Eastern type heavily Italian, German and Irish Catholic city. You think its a "southern city"?? Its pure Midwest, ie the Gateway to the West. At least the top half of Missouri is midwest. I admit the Bootheel (where you see cotton growing) and the Ozarks have a more Southern feel. But St Louis and above the Missouri River is Midwest. Flat, corn etc.

    • @SteveCarras
      @SteveCarras 10 месяцев назад

      My late parents were from Kansas/Missouri area. Similar situation as the thread starter.

  • @samneis128
    @samneis128 11 месяцев назад +5

    In America the East is really only the part between the Appalachians and the Sea. Its important to remember that the Colonies started around 1600, and until the Revolution, the British had treaties with the French (until the Seven Years War) and then several Native tribal groups. They actually discouraged their colonists from crossing the Appalachians. So for more than 150 years, the English speaking perspective of America was just those Colonies. The French were in what is now the Midwest, and they called it the Pays D'en Haute (the Upper Land, or the Land on Top). This name made a lot of sense at the time, because they traveled almost exclusively by canoe and the Great Lakes are upstream from the St Lawrence River and Montreal. But that whole time, to English-speakers, all of that was just the West. Right after the Revolution, Americans poured into the whole Ohio River Valley, so that was the West, and then there was the Louisiana Purchase, and that just added more West. The East stayed the East, but the West just got bigger and bigger. So the Middle West is just the part of the West that is closer to the East. Its just like how the Middle East isn't really the middle of Asia. Its just the closest place that Europeans considered "Eastern." For some reason in English terminology for geography "middle" seems to mean "close". But anyway, in America, the East was the East for over a century and a half that we often gloss over, with just Pilgrims... then, yay George Washington! And then, only 70 years after the Revolution, California was a State. So we got from the Appalachians to the Pacific in less than half the time we spent stuck on the Eastern Seaboard, and we did most of it with steamboats and trains instead of horses and canoes. And that really shows in names for regions and the size of the states from one side of the Appalachians to the other. The South is the South because of the Civil War, but everything has to be some kind of West. So Middle West it is.

    • @TheSpecialJ11
      @TheSpecialJ11 10 месяцев назад +1

      Not only does "middle" have a sense of closeness to it, but the Middle East used to be what was between the "Near East" (Byzantine Empire followed by the Ottoman Empire), and "Far East" (India, China, and Japan). We lost "Near East" at some point, and "Far East" became "South Asian" and "East Asian", probably as Westerners figured out the geography and cultures of Asia better.

    • @samneis128
      @samneis128 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@TheSpecialJ11 I've never been sure exactly what the difference was between the terms "Middle East" and "Near East". Thanks!

  • @route2070
    @route2070 11 месяцев назад +24

    The center of the mainland US is in Kansas, the center of the American population is in Missouri, and the geographic center with the tug of Alaska (and slight nudge of Hawaii) is in South Dakota. Making the center of the US in every sence is in the western part of the Midwest.

    • @jakeaurod
      @jakeaurod 11 месяцев назад +2

      Middle and Center are not synonyms, in the same was as Mode, Median, and Mean are similar but different.

  • @cpMetis
    @cpMetis 10 месяцев назад +5

    One thing you kinda miss is that people from the Midwest wouldnt really consider western Dakotas and such as midwest.
    The midwest is very tied to the idea of farming, the water system, and being decently settled. In the midwest, you dont expect to drive ling without cominf across a small settlement. There are few bif cities, but gazillions of small villages.
    Once you hit rhe Great Plains, that all changes.
    The Great Plains, Rockies, and southwest, with the much more spread out population, cattle based economy, and less pervasive water systems feels very different to someone from the midwest. Those are the things that defined "the West".
    And the west coast isnt part of the West. Its seen as its own area.
    Another way to think of it is to imagine the heights of the Rockies as the coast. The Rockies arent along the west coast as some people often seem to imagien them, they are way far inland.
    The rockies are the "coast" of settlement, and the West is the area leading up to it that features starkly different terrain and lifestyles.
    By that point youve moved the meter a lot, right? Now calling it "Midwest" makes sense. Its clearly distinct from the West (Great Plains), the Southwest (desert), and the coast of settlement (Rockies), and obviously not the West Coast.
    This whole idea of the coast of settlement is also why the border of Midwest seems to gradually move west over time into places like the Dakotas as they become less sparsely populated, though as you get further into the different terrain areas become more and more resistant to gaining the label.

  • @LeChaunce
    @LeChaunce 11 месяцев назад +6

    The Dakotas, Nebraska and Kansas aren't the Midwest, they're the Great Plains states (along with Oklahoma).

    • @caffeinatedlinux
      @caffeinatedlinux 11 месяцев назад +3

      Those states are defined as midwestern by Census maps. The midwest is also split into, or more accurately overlaps with The Great Plains and The Great Lake states. The other thing to consider with the states you listed are where their population centers are located. Think Grand Forks, Fargo, Sioux Falls, Sioux City, Omaha, and the Kansas side of the Kansas City Metro. With the exception of Sioux Falls all those cities fall exactly on state lines with states that are most definitely midwestern.

    • @BadgerCheese94
      @BadgerCheese94 11 месяцев назад

      There is no overall region called "Great Plains." The Great Plains region includes part of the Midwest, South and West.

  • @kevinzurek3431
    @kevinzurek3431 11 месяцев назад +8

    Minnesota resident here! Love your content!
    But yeah haha, doubtful we'd ever change from being the "Midwest"
    We take a lot of pride in our unique name.

    • @chuckdavis1323
      @chuckdavis1323 Месяц назад +1

      Hi. I'm Minnesota Also. I have always called it the NORTH.

    • @chuckdavis1323
      @chuckdavis1323 Месяц назад

      I never liked the words midwest. It's like saying halfway to california.

    • @OliverKraus-q6s
      @OliverKraus-q6s 23 дня назад +1

      Wow, can really tell you guys are from Minnesota.
      Iowan here.

  • @angelofthedead5589
    @angelofthedead5589 10 месяцев назад +5

    Personally, I’ve always seen the ‘Midwest’ as not a location term, but a historically accurate one. People during the gold rush and the Oregon Trail and such would consider anywhere past the Mississippi River west. Then making all this land, the middle of the country but the start of the journey west. For example a nickname for Nebraska is the ‘Gateway to the West’

  • @johnnguyen6159
    @johnnguyen6159 11 месяцев назад +3

    Midwest known as being more rural and slower pace; meanwhile there is Chicago being the 3rd largest city by population and 5th by population density in the US.

    • @deepfried_stupidity
      @deepfried_stupidity 10 месяцев назад

      what can we say. they're our outliers

    • @jackalenterprisesofohio
      @jackalenterprisesofohio 10 месяцев назад +2

      We [MidWesterners] do talk about Chicago [ or Detroit ] as they are to my knowledge _"crime-holes"_ (patent pending)

  • @danharder1706
    @danharder1706 11 месяцев назад +7

    I always thought it was like a global reference, like how China is the Far East and then the Middle East. Dearborn Michigan has many people who immigrated from the Middle East to the Midwest

  • @SantomPh
    @SantomPh 11 месяцев назад +4

    America is not divided straight down the middle, the Mississippi carves the country into a densely populated eastern part and a relatively sparsely populated West. In the Civil War the "western theater" was Illinois and everything south of it. The states in the middle now were all territories and not quite "USA". The Rockies also separate the Pacific coast from the rest of the USA, making them their own region more or less

  • @scygnius
    @scygnius 10 месяцев назад +4

    The name makes a lot of sense when you consider how America expanded. From the east coast, they looked west. Early on, they knew what the true “west” was. The Rockies. The desert. The Pacific. Thus, everything “on the way there” was considered midway-to-the-west. Think of the Oregon trail. The destination was mining country, firmly in the “west” category.
    Same goes for Middle East (occasionally referred to as “mid-East). From the European perspective, India and China are the “East,” and the Arab/Persian/Turkish world is what happens to be in between them and the “East.”
    Also wanna point out that your maps of the northwest territory are incorrect. Illinois was part of the northwest territory. There’s even a storied university just north of Chicago named “Northwestern,” for hopefully obvious reasons.

  • @Kamikazekims
    @Kamikazekims 10 месяцев назад +10

    as a Midwesterner i've always thought the "Midwest" was Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, North and south Dakota, Nebraska, Wisconsin and Kansas. i've never seen Ohio or Indian or Michigan as midwestern i've always saw them as Eastern states.

    • @djbrouwer7712
      @djbrouwer7712 10 месяцев назад +2

      I grew up in Nebraska, and was told we were not Midwest, but great plains. Some people would go to great lengths to note the difference.

    • @shempunderwood9029
      @shempunderwood9029 10 месяцев назад

      Agree, 100%

    • @popcorn9818
      @popcorn9818 10 месяцев назад +1

      I would include Michigan.

    • @kbrewski1
      @kbrewski1 10 месяцев назад +1

      Indiana is certainly NOT an eastern state. Michigan seems more of an Eastern state because of Detroit and its a "Rust Belt" state. Same with Ohio with Cleveland. Those states that border the Great Lakes could be grouped as Mid East or Midwest, but not really eastern.

    • @ansatsusha8660
      @ansatsusha8660 10 месяцев назад +1

      As someone from Indiana, I usually call Ohio, Michigan, Indiana Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, and Missouri midwest, sometimes also including the Great plains states of the Dakotas, Nebraska, and Kansas

  • @Nordicjumper
    @Nordicjumper 10 месяцев назад +6

    In South Dakota, anywhere west of the Missouri River is pretty much the West rather than the Midwest. The Midwest is typically associated with flat lands and the Great Plain. Once you go west of the Missouri River in South Dakota, you will see canyons and mountains that are more similar to the Mountain West. I personally define the Heartland differently. For me, the Heartland includes all Midwestern states, but I also include Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Idaho, Utah, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and West Virginia.

    • @kbrewski1
      @kbrewski1 10 месяцев назад

      That's daffy.

  • @OwlGreene
    @OwlGreene 10 месяцев назад +6

    I'm from albany, New York, and I visited the cities of Buffalo and Niagara Falls. These are Midwestern cities in culture. Anyone who was raised in let's just say the Northeast megalopolis look at Western New York, Western Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois as far to the west. And most of us who haven't been to California really can't fathom how far west it really is; us calling those places Midwestern makes more sense than anything on Earth.

    • @TheRayzerBandit
      @TheRayzerBandit 10 месяцев назад +1

      Really gonna name off all the states around Indiana and not include them when talking about the Midwest 😢lol (We are used to it at this point)

    • @arnaldoenriquez6191
      @arnaldoenriquez6191 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@TheRayzerBandit" fly over country " lol

    • @TheMePercent
      @TheMePercent 10 месяцев назад +2

      Buffalo is definitely the Midwest.

    • @kbrewski1
      @kbrewski1 10 месяцев назад

      Buffalo is NOT a Midwestern city, that's laughable. Its an Eastern Rust Belt city.

    • @stoutyyyy
      @stoutyyyy 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@kbrewski1what is an eastern rust belt city and what makes it different from a midwestern one?

  • @therongjr
    @therongjr 11 месяцев назад +11

    If they grow corn or soybeans, they're the MidWest. The western boundary where they grow wheat or are a prairie is the Great Plains; the eastern boundary is the Appalachian mountains.

    • @courtneyraymer6586
      @courtneyraymer6586 10 месяцев назад +5

      Most Midwesterners know that farmers don’t grow corn OR soybeans, but corn AND soybeans. The fields are alternated year by year to save the soil. Corn depletes nitrogen in the soil and soybeans replace the nitrogen. I know that seems to be a trivial point, but a great deal of the world food supply depends on that triviality.

    • @richdobbs6595
      @richdobbs6595 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@courtneyraymer6586 Actually, there are a lot of farms that stick with one or the other over long term, using synthetic nitrogen and other fertilizers instead of crop rotation. Driving through South Dakota summer before last, there were whole districts planted in only corn, where if they were doing crop rotation you'd expect that the fields would be intermixed. Here in Colorado, you see growing winter wheat fields alternating in a regular pattern with fallow fields.

    • @kbrewski1
      @kbrewski1 10 месяцев назад

      Wheat isn't grown east of the Mississippi anywhere close to the Appalachians. That's ridiculous. You need to get out more.

  • @tssn1611
    @tssn1611 11 месяцев назад +2

    There's some irony in a British dude calling out Americans for having vestiges of old names that make no sense.

  • @JMM33RanMA
    @JMM33RanMA 11 месяцев назад +6

    It's funny that there was a statement about the old north west, because I actually heard or read in elementary school that it was actually called "The Old Northwest." This was, of course in US History classes, and was necessitated by the need to explain US expansion chronologically. The way people on the East Coast and West Coast refer to the country differently as explained. As a New Englander, I only use "Yankee" to describe New Englanders, and almost always refer to New England, rather than "The Northeast," when communicating with other Americans.
    This is another very interesting and data rich Name Explain Video!

    • @rmdodsonbills
      @rmdodsonbills 11 месяцев назад +2

      When I moved to Texas, my in-laws patiently explained that a "Yankee" was anyone from north of the Red River. They probably would have defined it as anyone from outside of Texas, but it was hard to defend calling Georgians or Alabamians "Yankees."

    • @mpetersen6
      @mpetersen6 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@rmdodsonbills
      Remember the three main products of Texas are oil, beef and bullshit.

    • @falcon_arkaig
      @falcon_arkaig 10 месяцев назад +1

      I'm a Midwesterner and I call the area "New England" too. I associate those states with "England" more than other states (minus maybe Washington). I get kind of offended when non-Americans call us "Yankee", but if an American does it I'm suddenly okay with it. Weird.

    • @adamperdue3178
      @adamperdue3178 10 месяцев назад

      I live in Virginia and for us, anybody who is North of the Mason Dixon line is a Yankee- so NE + NJ, NY, and PA. Maybe Ohio, but not really. Also most of the people who live in NOVA are Yankees, but that's because of immigration not geography.

  • @kbrewski1
    @kbrewski1 10 месяцев назад +2

    As someone who was born in Sioux Falls, SD, grew up in Minnesota, lived in the Chicago, IL area, and have lived in St Louis, MO for decades, I can confidently say ALL THOSE STATES ARE IN THE MIDWEST. I AM A MIDWESTERNER!!
    Those states are ALL smack dab in the middle of the country. Its known as the Midwest because when the Nation was originally the 13 colonies and later expanded a little more past the Appalachians, the area to the North and West was most of what is now the Midwest. Its also the Great Lakes states and the northern central plains. But Midwest is just easier to keep as a reference. The Southwest is still known as Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma, Arizona etc. Not that confusing to Americans.

  • @alvexok5523
    @alvexok5523 10 месяцев назад +3

    1:00 - The Midwest is not all rural, such as Chicago, St. Louis, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Tulsa

  • @eaglescout1984
    @eaglescout1984 10 месяцев назад +1

    As an East Coaster, the term Midwest makes perfect sense. It's the middle of the country and it's west. And seeing as how the largest city and the US capitol are also in the east, it makes sense to them too.
    And here's my test if something is in the Midwest: if they say "pop" to refer to a carbonated beverage.

  • @SeasideDetective2
    @SeasideDetective2 10 месяцев назад +2

    I've been waiting for someone to say this! I've long resented the name "Midwest," not only because every place in America on the opposite side of Lebanon, Kansas, is in the continental EAST, but because Americans of both major political persuasions use the term knowing full well it carries stereotypical connotations - and those stereotypes are highly inaccurate. There are plenty of counterexamples to most of those states being "normal" or "boring" or whatever. Chicago, Illinois, was once the second-largest city in the whole country, hence its nickname of "Second City." Ohio was one of the most ethnically diverse states before nonwhite immigration became common, since Cleveland was a magnet for immigrants from nearly every country in Europe. Protestant Christianity is also more diverse in the region than elsewhere, especially in the western half where Roman Catholics are often in the minority. And, contrary to the popular tropes, states such as Wisconsin, Minnesota, Nebraska, and Kansas have a prominent history of liberal and even socialist political activity.

  • @Atoll-ok1zm
    @Atoll-ok1zm 10 месяцев назад +2

    Well if you're looking for a cool small town I might recommend Stone City Iowa and it is properly tiny.
    One of the things nobody considers about iowa is that we have tons of limestone quarries, and famously pure white limestone at that. Stone City has tons of very beautiful old limestone buildings, and like one restaurant. Try some local favorites. Iowa style tenderloin, sweet corn, fried morrels if they're in season, barbecue, hot cider, the works.

  • @kayleighgroenendal8473
    @kayleighgroenendal8473 10 месяцев назад +3

    People from the Midwest LOVE to explain the Midwest.

    • @minngael
      @minngael Месяц назад

      Yeah I think Midwest & Southerners are both proud because the people on coasts call us " flyover country" so if they come visit or move over to our parts of the country we're determined to show it off. In an understated way.

  • @pre-debutera6941
    @pre-debutera6941 11 месяцев назад +2

    1894 was 110 years after the northwest ordinance. By that time, California had been a state for almost 40 years.

    • @joshgreen2164
      @joshgreen2164 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yet it isn't today. Speaking from Kentucky it hasn't been part of America since the 60's.

  • @djbrouwer7712
    @djbrouwer7712 10 месяцев назад +3

    Growing up in Nebraska, some people would make a distinction between the Midwest, and the great plains states, with the latter being the flatter states to the west, including parts of Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, and texas.

  • @sfranz5413
    @sfranz5413 11 месяцев назад +2

    @nameexplain Good video overall, but your map of "the OG USA" at 3:46 is incorrect. The states were not shaped like that in 1783. For instance, Virginia was humongous - even unwieldy back then.

  • @Steveofthejungle8
    @Steveofthejungle8 11 месяцев назад +4

    Home sweet home! I’ve had a lot of people say that my state (Indiana) and Michigan and Ohio shouldn’t be in the Midwest because we’re (mostly) on eastern time. They don’t know the history!

    • @CortexNewsService
      @CortexNewsService 11 месяцев назад +3

      Native Hoosier here too. Always grew up thinking it was the Midwest. Though I have occasionally heard it referred to as the northernmost Southern state. Probably because of politics.

    • @daveharrison84
      @daveharrison84 11 месяцев назад

      Indiana, Michigan and half of Ohio should be in the central time zone.

    • @randrothify
      @randrothify 11 месяцев назад

      From a cultural point of view Michigan and Ohio are actually probably closer to Western and Central New York and Pennsylvania. And they were settled predominantly by New Englanders and New Yorkers so it’s probably more accurate to label those two states as Mideast.

  • @samuelmorales2344
    @samuelmorales2344 10 месяцев назад +2

    Before June of 1984, the Midwestern United States was called the North Central states. I think name change reflects the history of the US much how the Southern United States is defined by their Civil War affiliations by the US Census Bureau.

  • @montecorbit8280
    @montecorbit8280 11 месяцев назад +3

    At 4:09
    Maine....
    You forgot to color in Maine. Technically, it was also part of the original 13 states....it was a part of Massachusetts at the time.

  • @raney150
    @raney150 10 месяцев назад +1

    “Midwest is more rural”
    As I sit in a census tract in the Midwest with a density of like 60k per square mile.
    I truly don’t know how we got that association because we have a fair amount of cities. The Midwest even had like 3 of the top 5 largest cities in the country at one point.

  • @blackwolves6925
    @blackwolves6925 11 месяцев назад +3

    I live in Missouri, 2 hours south of St. Louis, a lot of folks on the southern side of Missouri are pretty southern even act like it but everyone still call us midwest, even when growing up I learn to call it the midwest and heartlands. I guess it just depends place in time 😅

    • @TheRayzerBandit
      @TheRayzerBandit 10 месяцев назад +3

      I have family friends that live in Springfield, MO (I'm from northern Indiana) and we both agreed on the same thing. the line from St. Louis to Kansas City is about as far south you can go before it starts to become "Southerners".
      However it does play off the origins of the state, similar to Kansas. Missouri from its origin claimed more ties to the south and Kansas declared more ties to the north, both causing major contention leading up to the civil war. So it makes sense that the culture around these areas may have stayed grounded all this time leading to this present case. Knowing that the vast majority of Kansas claims to be connected to the Midwest.

  • @RevolverRabbit
    @RevolverRabbit 10 месяцев назад +1

    As someone from the Midwest. Nothing west of Texas is really America. So we are just the north west.

  • @austinmozer4638
    @austinmozer4638 11 месяцев назад +3

    It's the middle of the Western Hemisphere.

  • @spoookley
    @spoookley 10 месяцев назад +1

    as a midwesterner, can confirm that the midwest is entirely a mindset.
    i’ve always pictured the midwest as the foil to the middle east, since it’s the middle of the western & eastern continental landmasses respectively
    although i very much do like the sound of ‘the midnorth’

  • @madnessarcade7447
    @madnessarcade7447 11 месяцев назад +5

    Perhaps it’s not called the Midwest because it’s the Midwest of the US maybe it’s called Midwest because it’s Midwest of the globe because it’s intended to be parallel to the Middle East
    And US is considered the west by other nations

    • @sergicb1533
      @sergicb1533 11 месяцев назад +1

      Not sure what English say, in many European languages we often call the Middle East as "Near East". Middle East mathces better with the American point of view

    • @madnessarcade7447
      @madnessarcade7447 10 месяцев назад

      @@sergicb1533ah lol

  • @OL_WUZ_HEER
    @OL_WUZ_HEER 10 месяцев назад +1

    as a pacific northwesterner, there’s many northwests. the pacific northwest - western washington, western oregon, and southern alaska. inland/mountain northwest - eastern washington, eastern oregon, idaho, montana, and wyoming. northwest - pacific and inland/mountain northwests, and arctic alaska combined. arctic northwest - northern/arctic alaska. cascadian northwest - washington, oregon, idaho, and southeastern alaska. and last yet not least, columbia basin northwest - eastern washington, eastern oregon, and idaho.

  • @nreid440
    @nreid440 11 месяцев назад +3

    Cleveland, Ohio checking in!

  • @CamoJan
    @CamoJan 10 месяцев назад +2

    I'm from Minnesota & I never say Midwest. I refer to the states of MN, N & S Dakota, Wisconsin & the Upper Peninsula of Michigan as "The North". Not sure how I'd refer to the other states mentioned.

  • @brawnbenson552
    @brawnbenson552 10 месяцев назад +3

    I’ve always wondered why there were so many “North’s” in the Midwest. Northwest Airlines, Northwestern University, NorWest Bank etc. Interesting 😊

    • @TheRayzerBandit
      @TheRayzerBandit 10 месяцев назад

      The term "Midwest" wasn't popularized until the 1880's. These companies usually have ties to their origin being before this time (Northwestern Uni. being founded in 1851) or just going off the "Old Northwest" sub-name the region uses.

    • @pjmburg
      @pjmburg 10 месяцев назад

      Also the old Northwestern Bell phone company. Still a prominent communications hub in Minneapolis in a former Northwestern Bell building, although a quick look on street view looks like they took off any old Northwestern Bell signage. We have a smaller old Northwestern Bell building in Des Moines that still has the Bell signage and plaques all over it.

  • @josephottavi-perez8203
    @josephottavi-perez8203 11 месяцев назад +2

    Yeah that name is more general idea - settling on territory between the great mountain ranges - Appalachian & Rockies. North of the Mason Dixon line.
    As European Americans began invading the Great Plains and displacing Indigenous populations… the early 1830s, … a great portion of the current American West belonged to Mexico & Indigenous Nations. America would annex the entire Southwest up to the current borders in the Mexican-American War in the 1840s.

  • @mike.antkowiak
    @mike.antkowiak 11 месяцев назад +4

    I would argue ND, SD, NB, KS, and OK could be considered a region called the Plains States. You could include Montana and Wyoming and Colorado in that too. More than 1/2 of MT is plains, ⅓ in WY and about 1/6 in CO. The plains actually stretch from Canada all the way to Texas. Some say OK s more a southwest state in culture though.

    • @soonerproud
      @soonerproud 10 месяцев назад +2

      We have three distinct cultural regions in Oklahoma. Central, Northeast and Southeast Oklahoma is culturally Appalachian south, North Central and the Panhandle are Midwest, and west central/southwest are Southwestern.

    • @kenthefley2226
      @kenthefley2226 10 месяцев назад

      The plains are geological feature, not a region. Oklahoma has a completely different culture than the Dakotas. The plains encompass only a portion of Oklahoma.

    • @soonerproud
      @soonerproud 10 месяцев назад

      @@kenthefley2226 Oklahoma is 3/4 plains. I don't know where you get the idea that it's only a "portion" when it's nearly the entire state.

    • @kenthefley2226
      @kenthefley2226 10 месяцев назад

      @@soonerproud Not even close bro. Okies like you need to study geography. The actual great plains end around Woodward in the northwest. You can verify that with a satellite image. You then transition into "rose bed" plain; which is a mixture of woods, plain and prairie. Central Oklahoma is where the cross timbers begin and almost the entire eastern and southern half of Oklahoma is forested and mountainous.
      The extreme southeast is swampland. Learn it, know it, live it.

    • @kenthefley2226
      @kenthefley2226 10 месяцев назад

      @@soonerproud Southeast Oklahoma is not "appalachian south." It is a genetic mixture of deep and upland southern. The entire state is culturally southern to some degree.

  • @Jefff72
    @Jefff72 10 месяцев назад +2

    As a native of Minnesota, I always just called us the "North."

  • @United_Free_States_Of_America
    @United_Free_States_Of_America 11 месяцев назад +6

    Uhm, sort of. 🤔 But in a way it makes sense because it is west of the original 13 colonies and kind of smack in the middle ^.. I will be sharing this with our subscribers (:

  • @Loliolla
    @Loliolla 3 месяца назад +1

    Another sub region of the midwest is called Great Lake states (Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Minnesota). Technically the Great Lake States also include Pennsylvania and New York, which are not midwestern at all. States like north and South Dakota, Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska, Oklahoma are often referred to as the Great Plains states.

  • @TheSpiralProgression
    @TheSpiralProgression 10 месяцев назад +2

    I had always learned that it was called the Midwest bc of the Great Lakes. The MidEast being below the Mediterranean, the Midwest being below the Great Lakes. Essentially referring to the western hemisphere and how the Great Lakes are the closest thing to the Mediterranean in the western hemisphere.

    • @psilocybemusashi
      @psilocybemusashi 10 месяцев назад

      wow who taught you that.... certainly wasn't a professor of american history ... god help us otherwise.

    • @TheSpiralProgression
      @TheSpiralProgression 10 месяцев назад

      @@psilocybemusashi high school history teacher. Logic wise, it does make sense though. The Great Lakes are certainly the closest thing to the Mediterranean in the Western Hemisphere or even really anywhere else in the world.

  • @user-stickstuffff
    @user-stickstuffff 10 месяцев назад +2

    The reason why it is called the mid west is because they probably established that region before the USA gained their western states

  • @monikabaumann6050
    @monikabaumann6050 11 месяцев назад +3

    I'm from the Midwest, and I, too, don't like how it's called the Midwest even though theyre really the north central states of America. I guess "Midwest" is more snappy than "North Central" as far as ordinary nicknames go.

    • @TheRayzerBandit
      @TheRayzerBandit 10 месяцев назад

      Its moreso a historical and cultural keepsake from times before the migration to the west after the civil war. Passed the Appalachians was "the west" but there was a divide between the far west and near west. Most people collectively referred to the land passed the Missouri river or even the Rockies as "The west" thus the land between the Appalachian and Rocky Mountains came to be known as the "Midwest"

  • @jesuschristmas420
    @jesuschristmas420 10 месяцев назад +1

    As someone who lives in South Dakota, I've always prefered the title of the Great Plains to describe where I live. The Great Plains basically go into North Dakota down to Texas and that would be a good way to describe the Dakotas, Kansas and Nebraska.

  • @JakeKoenig
    @JakeKoenig 10 месяцев назад +3

    Geographically accurate regions:
    The Midwest - Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah
    The Mid-Atlantic - Maryland, Delaware, Virginia, North Carolina, New Jersey
    The South - New Mexico, Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma (maybe Mississippi)
    The Southeast - Alabama, Georgia, and Florida, South Carolina (maybe Mississippi)
    The Pacific Northwest - Washington, Oregon (maybe the northern third of California)
    The Southwest - Arizona, Nevada, California (or the lower 2/3 of California)
    The Northeast - Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massechusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York
    The Appalachian States - Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky
    The Mideast or Great Lake States - Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin, Illinois (maybe Minnesota)
    The Central States - North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, Missouri (maybe Minnesota)

  • @robertgarcia7782
    @robertgarcia7782 11 месяцев назад +1

    As comedian Charlie Behrens says “the Midwest is everything that’s not east, north, or south.”

  • @billgross3579
    @billgross3579 11 месяцев назад +4

    Hello from Wisconsin in the Midwest! What you said about the Midwest being more an idea or concept than a geographical area is probably right.
    The name you suggested, "The Old Northwest" would never be recognized by an American. You'd have to explain it. Then they'd say, "oh, you mean the Midwest!"

  • @imfknradio9978
    @imfknradio9978 10 месяцев назад +1

    The easiest explanation is when the Midwest was settled in the 1790s-1830s, "west" meant "west of the Appalachian Mountains". By that time Jefferson also made the Louisiana Purchase which opened up the 'Far West' making the lands inbetween the 'Far West' and 'West of Appalachia' the 'Midwest'.

  • @Vega.Wrestling
    @Vega.Wrestling 11 месяцев назад +5

    All I know is that everything in the mid west is mid

  • @V.is.for.Vae.Victus
    @V.is.for.Vae.Victus 10 месяцев назад +1

    Missouri is precisely midwest, the middle state from north to south (MN, IA, MO, AR, LA), and just west of the Mississippi River, which divides east from west here. We're not called the gateway to the west for nothing. All eastern states are east of us, fully western states west of us, fully southern states south of us, fully northern states north of us.

  • @cjthebeesknees
    @cjthebeesknees 11 месяцев назад +3

    Makes plenty of sense to us, we freeze half the year call all carbonated drinks pop and last to fall when SHTF, that rural town and scattered city livin is where it’s at gentlemen, burn rubber, raise hell and praise Dale.

  • @lexiespihlmann3151
    @lexiespihlmann3151 10 месяцев назад +1

    Also people back then considered the "west" as anything west of the Mississippi River. Which is why St. Louis's Arch is known as "the gateway to the west."

  • @aspentr33
    @aspentr33 11 месяцев назад +5

    Born and raised Minnesotan, and I can pretty confidently say that not much happens in the Midwest. It's slow and small; even our cities aren't that large relatively speaking.. I will also add that Minnesota has its own subculture. We're very often referred to as "basically southern Canadian", and I know this because I just moved outside of the Midwest lol
    edit: also as a proud Midwesterner/Minnesotan, some of those states on that map have no business being included lol

    • @BadgerCheese94
      @BadgerCheese94 11 месяцев назад +3

      Minneapolis is not that small. Twin Cities is 3rd largest metro in the region and will likely pass Detroit sometime this decade. We may not be California, Texas or Florida in size (And thank God for that) but we arent North Dakota either.

  • @twylanaythias
    @twylanaythias 11 месяцев назад +2

    You have to look at this from a historic context:
    For the longest time, the Appalachian Mountains were the western-most boundary of the US - not dissimilar from how the Ural and Caucasus Mountains define the eastern boundary of Europe. Everything along the Appalachians was "The Frontier", while everything beyond was simply "The West". Again paralleling how Europe separated the huge continent of Asia into "The Middle East" and "Far East", the US distinguished the flatter agrarian basin from the distant hilly/mountainous region as "The Middle West" and "The Far West".
    Over the years, "The Far West" became further compartmentalized into "The Pacific Northwest", "The Southwest", and so on. Meanwhile, "The Middle West" (lacking divisive geological features) remained homogeneous and the identifier gradually truncated into "The Midwest".

    • @adamperdue3178
      @adamperdue3178 10 месяцев назад

      The Appalachian Mountains were never the western-most boundary of the US. While it was still a collection of colonies, kinda. But the USA's original borders included just about everything up to the Mississippi.

    • @twylanaythias
      @twylanaythias 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@adamperdue3178 Geographically, not politically. (Though somewhat politically due to geography.) Even after the Cumberland Road (built 1811-1834), access to the Midwest from the east coast was quite difficult - most westward settlement came via New Orleans and the Mississippi River.
      Given that New York, Philadelphia, and (eventually) Washington DC all served as the US Capitol - all of which are solidly *east* of the Appalachians - 'the people writing the history books' considered the Appalachian Mountains the boundary of 'civilized society'.

  • @LoriH2O
    @LoriH2O 11 месяцев назад +2

    As someone who has lived on the western north american coast for a large portion of my life and having recently moved to the "mid west", I like to give the locals a hard time for calling themselves the mid west :)

    • @rogerhuggettjr.7675
      @rogerhuggettjr.7675 3 месяца назад

      It should be the Excellent North. Nothing Mid about it.

  • @me0101001000
    @me0101001000 11 месяцев назад +2

    Ope, looks like a video on the Midwest! Cheers from an Asian American Midwesterner living in Germany!

  • @gallantascent6692
    @gallantascent6692 10 месяцев назад +1

    As a Midwesterner, in general nothing we do makes any sense and we're kind of weird lol. (It makes more sense what it means to be in the Midwest when from there, but time spent in Urban Eastern Texas has taught me that people outside the Midwest struggle to fully make sense of any of it. Part of it has to do with people being so spread out yet especially in the Western Portions of the Midwest where I am from, where populations tend to be much smaller)

  • @flpndrox
    @flpndrox 10 месяцев назад +1

    4:13. No. Just no. The 1783 borders stretched to the Mississippi River to the West, South to the Florida-Georgia line, and north to the Great Lakes and somewhere between Maine (then part of Massachusetts) and Quebec, but no one was sure where.
    Settlement over the Appalachian Mountains was a big driver of the American Revolution since the Limies banned it

  • @jamiecinder9412
    @jamiecinder9412 10 месяцев назад +1

    Don't forget about the Midwest's manufacturing history. It's not all just farmland.

  • @jamesslick4790
    @jamesslick4790 10 месяцев назад +1

    Pittsburgh, PA was once the "Gateway to the West" (Hence "Gateway Center" downtown). We ceded that title to St. Louis, MO (Hence the "Gateway Arch"). Also Pittsburgh's "Kennywood" (amusement park) was once known as "The roller coaster capital of the world", Again we ceded THAT title to the Midwest too, It's now "Cedar Point" in Sandusky, Oh. 😜

  • @jet3302
    @jet3302 10 месяцев назад +1

    Being from Arkansas, we call it the Mid-South. The college in my hometown is even called “ASU Mid-South”

  • @nickharmon2157
    @nickharmon2157 10 месяцев назад +1

    From the perspective of colonial Americans it made perfect sense. It’s west of the east coast but not “the west”.

  • @Brinelious
    @Brinelious 10 месяцев назад +1

    As a Minnesotan the term Midwest is actually pretty simple and accurate both historically and geographically. Also, if you think about the "Middle East" it makes just as much if not more sense than that vague geographical area of the world.

  • @blueptconvertible
    @blueptconvertible 11 месяцев назад +2

    I'm watching from Wisconsin. Names no one uses except the government are East North Central and West North Central. Normal people will say Great Lake States and Great Plain States.

    • @BadgerCheese94
      @BadgerCheese94 11 месяцев назад +1

      Or Upper Midwest AKA Youbetchaland

  • @user-fv6cb7iy7j
    @user-fv6cb7iy7j 10 месяцев назад +1

    I think its more political than geographical. Having lived in multiple states there is a very different vibe here. Much slower and very polite. Not for everyone but living here for over a decade I love it. The winters are pretty rough.

  • @m.e.5482
    @m.e.5482 10 месяцев назад +1

    Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri. That's da midwest, plain n simple

  • @gmg9010
    @gmg9010 11 месяцев назад +2

    I might accept Kansas as Midwest and that’s a big might but putting Missouri in the Midwest will not stand.

    • @caffeinatedlinux
      @caffeinatedlinux 11 месяцев назад +4

      Missouri is split, and I'd argue i70 is the split. Both St. Louis and KC are considered midwestern, and anything north of them would be. But after a certain point south of i70 you might as well be in Arkansas.