The Missouri compromise allowed the US to claim Alaska as our 57th state.
Woah, I must have missed something. We did we get 7 more states?

The Missouri compromise allowed the US to claim Alaska as our 57th state.
I usually cal them the eastern seaboard.I always puzzle when reading my "Southern Living" magazine, which includes Maryland and Washington, D.C. as part of the South. I don't consider them to be part of the South.
AFAIC it's part of the mid-west. Not the south.
We don't claim it down here...
Ok, but the talk with a southern "drawl" it's the south--well, I suppose pretty much everything is "south' from here![]()
Now now. You Minn-uh-sooo-tans have an accent to you know.![]()
Floride isn't "the South" either. At least nothing south of Jacksonville.
That's actually not true, where I live it's definitely "the south". Natives even have strong southern accents.
That's actually not true, where I live it's definitely "the south". Natives even have strong southern accents.
Missouri is definitely not part of the south! A better question would be, is Miami part of the south????
Ok, but the talk with a southern "drawl" it's the south--well, I suppose pretty much everything is "south' from here![]()
I personally have never known anyone from Florida who considered themselves to be in the South.
Of course, I have not met everyone who lives there.But I do have family in Orlando, Tampa, and Port Orange, and my mom lived in Miami for 3 years.
Well if we're going by accents, every state has a bit of California in them, because that accent has spread like wildfire. I remember being in Spartanburg at a bar, listening to a group of LOCAL college students who were at a Grateful Dead cover band show, with this CA accent, deadhead/stoner "accent", with South Carolina spread through it....possibly the strangest way of speaking I've ever heard, and that includes the South African accent!![]()
Not even a little. To me "the south" is like, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, etc.
I've never thought of Missouri as southern. I think of it more like Kansas and Iowa.
I'm not arguing with you, but Missouri and Kentucky are mostly at the same latitude.
It's always puzzled me, though, how Ohio can seem so northern, but just to the south of it is Kentucky. And Kentucky seems so southern. But I've never actually been to Kentucky, and only to Ohio once.
Woah, I must have missed something. We did we get 7 more states?![]()