The Name The USA Wants To Forget

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 28. 03. 2024
  • Check out the ​⁠‪@iammrbeat‬ video all about the Mason-Dixon Line
    • What is the Mason-Dixo...
    HELP SUPPORT NAME EXPLAIN ON PATREON: / nameexplain
    INSTAGRAM: / nameexplainyt
    FACEBOOK GROUP: / 248812236869988
    THREADS: www.threads.net/@nameexplainyt
    BOOK: bit.ly/originofnames
    MERCH: teespring.com/stores/name-exp...
    Thank you to all my Patrons for supporting the channel!
    SOURCES & FURTHER READING
    Nicknames For America: ginsengenglish.com/blog/nickn...
    Dixie: www.britannica.com/place/Dixi...
    Dixie OED: www.oed.com/dictionary/dixie_...
    What Dixie Really Means: www.theatlantic.com/culture/a...
    Which Part Of the USA Is Dixie?: www.worldatlas.com/articles/w...
    Dixie Etymology Ideas: www.google.co.uk/books/editio...
    The Dix: www.atlantafed.org/about/tour...
    Mason-Dixon Line: www.risingsunmd.org/departmen...
    Reconsider Dixie Land: syncopatedtimes.com/reconside...
    Why the Chicks Dropped Their Dixie: www.newyorker.com/magazine/20...
    Mason-Dixon Line footage from Shannon & Matt Beat

Komentáře • 602

  • @iammrbeat
    @iammrbeat Před 2 měsíci +522

    Not only did I make a video about the Mason-Dixon line, but I stepped all over it!

    • @fanwatcherwatcher
      @fanwatcherwatcher Před 2 měsíci +20

      Mistor Beast.

    • @davea6314
      @davea6314 Před 2 měsíci +14

      Ask Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam about the Mason-Dixon Line. 😜 Lol

    • @davea6314
      @davea6314 Před 2 měsíci +25

      ​@@fanwatcherwatcherMr. Beat and Mr. Beast are two very different CZcamsrs. That letter "s" makes a big difference.

    • @fanwatcherwatcher
      @fanwatcherwatcher Před 2 měsíci +7

      @@davea6314 Mistor Beast!

    • @sammarks9146
      @sammarks9146 Před 2 měsíci +2

      What a nice surprise to see you here! Hope there are more collabs in the future :)

  • @The_Proud_Texan
    @The_Proud_Texan Před 2 měsíci +151

    As someone from Texan with a lot of family in "Dixieland" I'll say I rarely hear someone call it that. Just calling it the south is much more common. When I do people use dixie its always dixie and not dixieland. For me I don't really have a negative or positive connotation with the word. It evokes a kinda romanticized version of the south and makes me think of Duke's of Hazard.

    • @jeremyfisher8512
      @jeremyfisher8512 Před 2 měsíci +7

      Technically texas is a part of dixie but it kinda feels like a cousin of the south rather than a sibling. People from one state over stick out like a sore thumb, and when I go over there I probably stick out just as much.

    • @Tbone1492
      @Tbone1492 Před 2 měsíci +4

      Dukes of Hazard was a phenomenal show!

    • @roverworld7218
      @roverworld7218 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Loved that show! It was a hit in Mexico too! I watched it as a kid as reruns dubbed to Spanish.

    • @mickeyrube6623
      @mickeyrube6623 Před 2 měsíci +4

      Texan, born and raised, and I've NEVER heard anyone here call it Dixie.
      Just hearing people call it "the South" makes me vomit.
      Texas is part of...Texas. It's just Texas. It's its own country. There is Texas and Not-Texas. That's it really.

    • @jpvoodoo5522
      @jpvoodoo5522 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@mickeyrube6623, so is the United States part of Texas?

  • @eazydee5757
    @eazydee5757 Před 2 měsíci +102

    “He’s Alabama bound with a load of bananas, headin’ south across the --“

  • @ChristoAbrie
    @ChristoAbrie Před 2 měsíci +37

    Not an American, but when i hear the term "dixie", i think of farmlands, the Mississippi Riverboats and warm Southern Hospitality.

    • @beaujac311
      @beaujac311 Před 2 měsíci

      You don't think of lynchings, the KKK and whites only signs.

    • @trevor_reid72
      @trevor_reid72 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Yeah, but there is also cities like Nashville, Richmond, Charlotte, Jackson, Montgomery, Austin, Tallahassee, Baton Rouge and Atlanta

  • @bonecanoe86
    @bonecanoe86 Před 2 měsíci +174

    I'm American but I'm not from the south. Here the term Dixie evokes not just the south as a region but an idealized version of the classic agrarian southern lifestyle. It's a highly romantic ideal that's been deconstructed to hell and back over the last 60 years or so, but I don't think it's necessarily bad and there certainly is a lot of charm to it. It's also an expression of culture and identity for southerners, particularly in the deep south, kind of like "Yankee" for people in the deep north.

    • @ouijaclown
      @ouijaclown Před 2 měsíci +12

      i agree!!! i’m also northern and this is pretty much exactly what Dixie makes me think of

    • @DixieLand1107
      @DixieLand1107 Před 2 měsíci +6

      I'm from Alabama and I whole heartedly agree with this

    • @guanoApe
      @guanoApe Před 2 měsíci +2

      dixie is only south love for me from nebraska. dollie and elvis. u have our support my friend

    • @beaujac311
      @beaujac311 Před 2 měsíci +10

      bonecanoe86:. I find it odd that when people say southerners they only mean white people. They seem to exclude black people every time. I'm a southerner and when I hear the word Dixie or hear that song, I think of oppression, lynchings and people being reminded of "their place" and not to step outside of it.

    • @Timotimo101
      @Timotimo101 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@beaujac311 "Dixieland Jazz" cannot possibly only refer to white Southerners so I think it's a matter of focus and perspective. It's quite possible for all these things to be true at the same time ... the good, the bad, the ugly, the reality.

  • @vincent412l7
    @vincent412l7 Před 2 měsíci +51

    In (international) aviation, a standard phonetic alphabet is used. "D" is spoken as "delta", except in Atlanta. Atlanta is a major Delta Air Lines hub, and to avoid confusion, instead of delta for D, dixie is used for D.

    • @andrewpinedo1883
      @andrewpinedo1883 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I'm an aviation enthusiast and I have never heard that before. Interesting.

    • @coleyf7021
      @coleyf7021 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I work for a competitor and I always use the phonetic alphabet when talking about gates unless it’s a D gate 🙃 lol now I will use Dixie too

    • @rand479m5
      @rand479m5 Před 2 měsíci +1

      They it changed to David.

    • @andrewpinedo1883
      @andrewpinedo1883 Před 2 měsíci

      @@rand479m5 Aw.

    • @doublepoet7852
      @doublepoet7852 Před 2 měsíci

      @@rand479m5people are soft

  • @davea6314
    @davea6314 Před 2 měsíci +133

    Ask Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam about the Mason-Dixon Line. 😜 Lol

    • @herschelwright4663
      @herschelwright4663 Před 2 měsíci +22

      Gotta burn my boots. They touched yankee soil!😂

    • @davea6314
      @davea6314 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@herschelwright4663 Lol

    • @Liansuo_Lv
      @Liansuo_Lv Před 2 měsíci +6

      I can hear Bugs sing💀

    • @brianedwards7142
      @brianedwards7142 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@herschelwright4663 I was going to say that!

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 Před 2 měsíci +1

      It was a lot easier for the Warner Brothers animators to draw it than for Mason and Dixon to plot it.

  • @jackalnerf6230
    @jackalnerf6230 Před 2 měsíci +16

    As a southerner I was surprised that my friends from Austin thought of Dixie as having a negative, confederate connotation. I found this out when I joked about opening a “Dixie Candle” next to the Yankee Candle and selling southern scented candles. To me, Dixie is just a name for the south, and I never thought of it as being tied to the confederacy anymore than anything else regarding the south.

    • @powersresurrected354
      @powersresurrected354 Před 2 měsíci +1

      We always advance the flag of Dixie

    • @texasaggie8449
      @texasaggie8449 Před měsícem

      Anyone from Austin is a damn yankee. Native rural Texan here

    • @jackalnerf6230
      @jackalnerf6230 Před měsícem +1

      @@texasaggie8449 amen. That’s why I’ve fled to Stephenville.

  • @GavinLepley
    @GavinLepley Před 2 měsíci +46

    Kentucky was on the side of the Union in the Civil War, so I wouldn’t put it under the Confederate flag in the thumbnail.

    • @jamesbednar8625
      @jamesbednar8625 Před 2 měsíci +22

      Kentucky & Missouri both declared NEUTRALITY but supplied troops/materials to BOTH sides and many battles were fought on their respective soil. The Confederacy was hoping that Kentucky & Missouri would join the Confederacy, thus the 13 STARS on their Battle Flag, when in actuality there were officially 11 Confederate States.

    • @EnigmaticLucas
      @EnigmaticLucas Před 2 měsíci +12

      @@jamesbednar8625Neutrality was Union by default because there was no secession

    • @scottbivins4758
      @scottbivins4758 Před 2 měsíci +12

      Still part of the south buddy.

    • @otsoko66
      @otsoko66 Před 2 měsíci +17

      @@jamesbednar8625This is just plain false. Neither state declared 'neutrality'. Both were Union states that never left the union. Neither state 'supplied' troops or materiel to the confederacy - only to the union. Some individuals from union states did join the confederate army (but not that many), but they were not supplied by the state.

    • @bigtex4864
      @bigtex4864 Před 2 měsíci +9

      Kentucky is a part of Dixieland even if it never rebelled.

  • @bonecanoe86
    @bonecanoe86 Před 2 měsíci +97

    Maryland was historically a southern state and some of southern Maryland still has a southern character. Pennsylvania was considered the border state. (Hence the Keystone State nickname)

    • @yosephbuitrago897
      @yosephbuitrago897 Před 2 měsíci +10

      I thought Maryland was considered a northern state, that’s why DC was placed between Maryland and Virginia, since it was supposed to be a sort of symbolic placing of the capital as being a joining between the north and south

    • @tc2334
      @tc2334 Před 2 měsíci +6

      As someone from the Deep South, it's always weird to me to hear that Maryland is the South. I think for most of us, Virginia and West Virginia are the cut-off. haha

    • @balaam_7087
      @balaam_7087 Před 2 měsíci +6

      You may want to read up on why Pennsylvania is referred to as the Keystone State

    • @boxsterman77
      @boxsterman77 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Maybe there were remnants of a southern feel, oh, about 60 years ago, but I don’t get that feeling anymore. I live in DC. Much of Maryland is a part of that Baltimore, Annapolis, DC Megapolis. Hardly sleepy south.

    • @vipermad358
      @vipermad358 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@yosephbuitrago897Nope. None of what you wrote is true.

  • @balaam_7087
    @balaam_7087 Před 2 měsíci +64

    *Way down yonder in the land of cotton,
    Etymologies are not forgotten,
    Look away! Look away! Look away! Name Explain!*

    • @coorbin
      @coorbin Před 2 měsíci

      Do you associate this song with StarCraft 2 like I do? Lol

    • @plunktun2384
      @plunktun2384 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Way down south in the land of traitors

  • @bilburns1313
    @bilburns1313 Před 2 měsíci +12

    They taught us in the US Public Schools back in the 1970's that it's named for the Mason/Dixon Line - for what that's worth...

    • @davidweihe6052
      @davidweihe6052 Před 2 měsíci

      The US has no public schools; schools are controlled and organized by each state. That Pennsylvania taught me that in no way implies that Alabama would teach that factoid the same way, or that any theory taught was necessarily correct (decimals were taught to be pronounced as a fraction with the numerator the power of ten, so 23.5 was supposed to be “twenty three and 5 tenths” as opposed to “point five” the way that God and NASA intended, to use the phrase that I used on my 6th grade student teacher trying to teach Science).

    • @alessandrorossi1294
      @alessandrorossi1294 Před 2 měsíci

      @@davidweihe6052it’s even more local than that. States set standards but what really gets taught is decided at a more local level. Still, standardized exams like AP have a huge influence on what gets taught

  • @JDthegamer209
    @JDthegamer209 Před 2 měsíci +37

    As an American from a northern state, the word "Dixieland" just makes me imagine the rural South. I don't have any negative reaction to it, though I'm sure some people probably don't like the word because of some of the connotations that come from it. I've visited the region commonly known as "Dixieland" many times (most recently I went to Texas). It's a region with a lot of very kind ordinary people who know how to make some delicious food, and it's a nice place to go for a Winter vacation. The region has its share of issues, like poverty, drug use, and violence (all of which are more of a problem in specific areas rather than throughout the entire region), but generally it's not a very bad place.

    • @Apple-om5mr
      @Apple-om5mr Před 2 měsíci +3

      As a southerner this is very interesting to hear, as I feel most people who use the term “Dixie” down here are either older folk or racist lost causers

    • @mckinneym.2743
      @mckinneym.2743 Před 2 měsíci +3

      ​@@Apple-om5mr yeah as a southerner I associate both with the north vs south mentalities alot of folks hold onto, much older folks who don't get out much (no-judgment just clearly not up with the times), people who are looking for a southern identity or sense of pride (which can range from well-meaning to nationalistic), or the perhaps over emphasized and simplified but no less real racists "wanting the good ol days." That later combos commonly with the rest.
      I get people trying to spin it nice, but for me I'd rather use a different term (that isn't so painful for alot of folks here) to describe the area/ cultural pride.

    • @beaujac311
      @beaujac311 Před 2 měsíci

      @@mckinneym.2743 I second that emotion.

    • @captainoofmerica2478
      @captainoofmerica2478 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Apple-om5mr As a guy from Alabama I personally haven’t had that experience, most people I know are willing to use the term Dixie as a synonym for the South without thinking twice about it, I mean I just graduated high school two years ago and we used that term all the time in school. I wonder if it varies by region

  • @withlessAsbestos
    @withlessAsbestos Před 2 měsíci +54

    Dixie Land realty extends into Missouri, Oklahoma, West Virginia, and definitely Maryland. The understanding in the video is based largely on the CSA, which did not contain all of Dixie.

    • @AlexeiLjanej
      @AlexeiLjanej Před 2 měsíci +2

      Interesting perspective.

    • @DashRiprock513
      @DashRiprock513 Před 2 měsíci +4

      Interesting but very wrong

    • @withlessAsbestos
      @withlessAsbestos Před 2 měsíci

      @@DashRiprock513 Explain?

    • @jeremyfisher8512
      @jeremyfisher8512 Před 2 měsíci +1

      If there was any "south" that resides in Oklahoma it's probably been blown away by the tornados already. Oklahoma and any term that refers to the south should not be put in the same sentence.

    • @withlessAsbestos
      @withlessAsbestos Před 2 měsíci

      @@jeremyfisher8512 Ah yeah, because the Former Slave Territory, Populated by southern Indian Tribes, and known for its rednecks and ranchers isn’t southern…
      It’s the worst one, but nobody else’LL take them.

  • @familygash7500
    @familygash7500 Před 2 měsíci +14

    I'm sure that this video won't spark any strong opinions from anyone(!)

  • @3Midlo
    @3Midlo Před 2 měsíci +38

    Now that is a pronunciation of "Maryland" that I wasnt expecting, but understand. Also this jazz section explains to me why The South is being called "Dixieland" so much here

    • @indigop38
      @indigop38 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Mary-Land (as he pronounces it), is is clearly the originally intended and CORRECT pronunciation or the name. Anything else is simply ignorant and/or lazy.

    • @3Midlo
      @3Midlo Před 2 měsíci

      Quite unfortunate news for Texas then ​@@indigop38

    • @jordan1151
      @jordan1151 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I’m sure you’re not wrong, but I think that it is a bit different from how Americans pronounce the state’s name.

    • @kiterkun1606
      @kiterkun1606 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Is something wrong with it?
      Like
      I would pronounce it the same way 100%. And kinda do not see a reason not to

    • @3Midlo
      @3Midlo Před 2 měsíci +6

      @@kiterkun1606 the em-pha-sis is on the wrong syll-ab-le, as my grandfather would say. He's not really saying it wrong, but he's got too much stress. In my experience, either the Y is stressed (like he did) and the "land" syllable is unstressed, or the "Y" is unstressed (sounding like a soft I) and the "land" stressed. He's over-pronouncing it to my ears, like how an American saying "York-Shire" might sound to an Englishman

  • @paulinaruiz928
    @paulinaruiz928 Před 2 měsíci +2

    The collaboration I didn’t know I needed 😂 Love your channel Name Explain! Keep up the good work 📣🙏🏼

  • @XOguitargurlOX
    @XOguitargurlOX Před 2 měsíci +5

    here from Mr. Beats channel, I like the collab!

  • @timsimmons5190
    @timsimmons5190 Před 2 měsíci +15

    Didn't Biden say he was the last Dixiecrate 😂😂 Delaware

    • @davidweihe6052
      @davidweihe6052 Před 2 měsíci +1

      He wasn’t one, though. Strom Thurmond was, and the rest switched or started in the Republican Party, although Thurmond started as a New Dealer.

    • @Wadiyatalkinabeet_
      @Wadiyatalkinabeet_ Před 2 měsíci

      @@davidweihe6052 That’s bullshit and you know it, you’re conveniently forgetting about Robert Byrd

  • @turdferguson2874
    @turdferguson2874 Před měsícem +1

    "You gonna pull those pistols or whistle dixie?"
    -The Outlaw, Josey Wales

  • @andrewrussack8647
    @andrewrussack8647 Před 2 měsíci +6

    “You get a shiver in the dark
    “It's a raining in the park but meantime-
    “South of the river you stop and you hold everything
    “A band is blowing Dixie, double four time
    “You feel alright when you hear the music ring”
    Dire Straits, Sultans of Swing

    • @HeavyTopspin
      @HeavyTopspin Před 2 měsíci

      "By the hand, take me by the hand pretty mama
      "Come and dance with your daddy all night long
      "I'd like to hear some funky Dixieland
      "Pretty mama come and take me by the hand
      - The Doobie Brothers, Black Water

  • @pantone369c
    @pantone369c Před 2 měsíci +7

    The crossover event I didn't know I needed.

  • @christopherbentley7289
    @christopherbentley7289 Před 2 měsíci +8

    Now that The Dixie Chicks have dropped the 'Dixie' will the 1960s girl group, The Dixie Cups now have to be simply The Cups? Interestingly enough it wasn't until I obtained a copy of their 1964 album 'Chapel Of Love', named after their smash-hit single of that year, that it occurred to me that their name was a sort of play on words, originating in the South (New Orleans) as they did, the front cover showing the disposable cups of the Dixie brand, which I note is still in production, making me wonder if there may be pressure exerted to change that name.

    • @romad357
      @romad357 Před 2 měsíci

      Or maybe they could just be "The D Cups"? I couldn't stand the "Dixie Chicks" and I still abhor them no matter what they call themselves.

    • @LarryRobinsonintothefog
      @LarryRobinsonintothefog Před měsícem

      Not really offended by the name Dixie Chicks or the paper cups with the Dixie name, but waving a Confederate flag invokes racism not southern pride.

  • @icewink7100
    @icewink7100 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I’m from Tennessee, and you would be surprised how little I have heard people use the word “Dixie”. Like, there are some roads and businesses with Dixie in their names, but other than that, the word isn’t used very much.

  • @tkgsingsct
    @tkgsingsct Před 2 měsíci +4

    Here in my home state of Missouri, there's "Little Dixie," a 13- to 17-county region along the Missouri River in central Missouri, USA.

  • @jkarnold100
    @jkarnold100 Před 2 měsíci +10

    I live in a town (Lake Jackson) named after a large plantation owner, Abner Jackson. Two of the main roads that run though are ‘Plantation’ and ‘Dixie.’ I don’t think the names are necessarily ‘bad,’ but it’s definitely something you realize eventually like ‘oh… yeah.’

    • @Wadiyatalkinabeet_
      @Wadiyatalkinabeet_ Před 2 měsíci +1

      Based af.

    • @beaujac311
      @beaujac311 Před 2 měsíci

      jkarnold100:. They aren't just bad they are terrible. When they use those names as place names they know what they are implying.

    • @jkarnold100
      @jkarnold100 Před 2 měsíci

      @@beaujac311 exactly, that’s what I mean by ‘bad’ lol

    • @beaujac311
      @beaujac311 Před 2 měsíci

      @@jkarnold100 Okay.

    • @jkarnold100
      @jkarnold100 Před 2 měsíci

      @@beaujac311 ? No disrespect was intended in that sentence. I’m agreeing with you lol

  • @HayTatsuko
    @HayTatsuko Před 2 měsíci +3

    Since 1955, Alabama has included "Heart of Dixie" on their vehicle licence plates, sometimes just in plain text, and sometimes as part of a design within a cartoon-style heart. It's still on the current base licence plates, as required by law, but many collegiate and other distinctive (aka organizational) plates now omit the slogan entirely after a 1997 law allowed such omissions, and even the base plate's imagery has relegated the HoD logo to the Least Significant Corner -- that is, the lower-right -- of the plate, in a size so small one would have stand close to even notice it.

  • @akarayan
    @akarayan Před měsícem +1

    Here in Michigan there is one of the old pike roads that led from northern Michigan all the way to Georgia. We still call it the Dixie Highway.

  • @AttackChefDennis
    @AttackChefDennis Před 2 měsíci +2

    There is a Dixie highway running through South Florida. It starts all the way up in Detroit, Michigan where the automobile industry was primarily located when Dixie highway was built-in the 30's, it was to motivate people to move down here to the way South, south Florida. The classic band Journey has a song called The Dixie Highway. Good song!!

    • @jeremiahallyn4603
      @jeremiahallyn4603 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Louisville also has a Dixie Highway. Even though I would never consider Kentucky a part of this "Dixieland."

    • @AttackChefDennis
      @AttackChefDennis Před 2 měsíci

      Pp]pp]]]ppp]p]]]ppp]pp]ppp]]]pppppppp]p]]pppppppppp]p]ppp]]p

  • @morningstarcollective4671
    @morningstarcollective4671 Před 2 měsíci +4

    speaking as a US southerner, I've noticed that it doesn't matter what you call the south, a lot of folks don't really disconnect it from the confederacy (seen plenty of dumbasses with the flag in the north too). I think the folks who do a big stink of changing dixie things to other names do it more as a performance, so that they can be seen doing something without actually needing to help anyone.

    • @Wadiyatalkinabeet_
      @Wadiyatalkinabeet_ Před 2 měsíci

      Shut your liberal having ass up. Most southerners righteously and proudly still associate it with Dixie and the CSA and we still proudly fly our stars and bars too, no matter how much you try and downplay it. You’re the type that gets bullied down here constantly. I’m sure as the gold old locals have told you, go move to California bro.

    • @SOULAANI_
      @SOULAANI_ Před 2 měsíci

      @@Wadiyatalkinabeet_being against the confederacy doesn’t make you a liberal you dipshit, great to know you lot are so proud in your loss in the only war you’ve been in

  • @StarsBarsAndCheese
    @StarsBarsAndCheese Před měsícem +2

    Here from Dixieland! (Virginia)

  • @jescis0
    @jescis0 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I just finished Mr. beats video that mentioned your video and my name is Jeremiah Norris and I love that Jeremiah Dixon was his name!! 😁😁

  • @AndrewRusherLDS
    @AndrewRusherLDS Před 2 měsíci +3

    Dixie is all the States under the Mason-Dixon Line. Maryland & Delaware were likely to join the Confederacy, but the State governments couldn't vote, so they remained in the Union. West Virginia only exists because Unionists in Western Virginia appointed themselves as the Government of Virginia & gave themselves permission to leave Virginia then the Government of the new State rejected the name the people picked which is how we got West Virginia.

  • @Illumisepoolist
    @Illumisepoolist Před 2 měsíci

    You've colabed with Mr. Beat? That's a surprise! Love his videos!

  • @sherricoffman
    @sherricoffman Před 2 měsíci

    ThankYou4Sharing!!! ❤ 🕊 MuchLove

  • @kajunsblerdeye9325
    @kajunsblerdeye9325 Před 2 měsíci

    I'm subscribed to both of you already 😂

  • @meekrob29
    @meekrob29 Před 2 měsíci +1

    In the section about popularization of the term "Dixie", you should've emphasized the song Dixie from 1859. It was very popular at the time and is an enduring, if controversial, symbol of the South. While it's perhaps most associated with the Confederacy now, it's worth noting it's more general popularity at the time and since. President Lincoln himself was a noted fan of the song who had it played at rallies and other public events, including the announcement of General Lee's surrender.

  • @CheepGuava
    @CheepGuava Před 2 měsíci +60

    Born and raised in North Carolina, lived here my whole life. I don’t know of a single person who calls it “Dixie” instead of just “the South.” There’s always been a few things with “Dixie” in their name but many of them are being changed. And not by Yanks coming and “messing up” our heritage, but by us Southerners who think our “heritage” needs to be viewed more critically, to be learned from and healed from rather than uncritically celebrated and romanticized. I knew an old Black pastor who used to refer to the local “Dixie Classic Fair” as “the Third Reich Classic” to emphasize how offensive he felt the name was to Black Southerners (and Black people in general). Can’t say he was all that wrong.

    • @Zepellin
      @Zepellin Před 2 měsíci +14

      Idk if North Carolina is different but my state of Alabama uses Dixie regularly it’s even on our license plates as our official nickname is “Heart of Dixie”

    • @luisfilipe2023
      @luisfilipe2023 Před 2 měsíci

      It’s so sad how white Americans and westerners more general think our entire history revolves around slavery and genocide when we were the ones who abolished slavery and genocide to begin with. Make you feel bad historiography is what I call and it started precisely in 1940s Germany through victors rewriting history. And unfortunately most people try to export it around the white western world

    • @Apple-om5mr
      @Apple-om5mr Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@Zepellinthat’s Alabama for ya, hell you guys had the flag of a enemy state on your state flag for a long time

    • @Zepellin
      @Zepellin Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@Apple-om5mr what, no? You’re just wrong.

    • @Apple-om5mr
      @Apple-om5mr Před 2 měsíci

      @@Zepellinyea my b was thinking of Mississippi, idk why I get those two states confused

  • @fjdpaco
    @fjdpaco Před 2 měsíci +6

    Would that make the North Masieland?

  • @RealWarnerus
    @RealWarnerus Před 2 měsíci +4

    As a southerner, I'll say that Kentucky, Oklahoma, West Virginia, and the lower half of Missouri are part of the geographic south, but Maryland isn't. To me, the south ends at the Potomac river.

    • @danielsobczak
      @danielsobczak Před 2 měsíci +3

      I always say the way you know you're no longer in the South if you don't have to specify if you want your tea unsweet.

    • @Compucles
      @Compucles Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@danielsobczak Or if tea isn't on the menu at all, then you're in Utah.

    • @Wadiyatalkinabeet_
      @Wadiyatalkinabeet_ Před 2 měsíci +1

      The Eastern Shore of Maryland is unequivocally more southern in nature than the places you just listed, which are definitely more midwestern in nature.

    • @LarryRobinsonintothefog
      @LarryRobinsonintothefog Před měsícem

      Oklahoma wasn't a state a the time of the civil war I don't know about the other states. Several native American tribes in what later became OK supported the south and paid for it later.

  • @electra424
    @electra424 Před 2 měsíci +3

    I'm from Maryland and it's so annoying how everyone from the north thinks we're in the south and everyone in the south thinks we're in the north. We are officially a *southern* state because we are below the Mason-Dixon Lane but in reality we are a bit of both, and a bit of neither!

    • @user-ds8no1ro2q
      @user-ds8no1ro2q Před 2 měsíci

      Dear Electra, Interesting. I guess what you're describing is what happens when your state was a slave state that didn't secede. West Virginia and Delaware are sometimes seen as Southern and at other times Northern. Kentucky and Missouri are sometimes seen as Southern and at other times seemed to be mid-Western. Probably, this is because all five of you are Border States. Thank you.

    • @Wadiyatalkinabeet_
      @Wadiyatalkinabeet_ Před 2 měsíci

      Maryland is still a southern state. At least the Eastern Shore is. You’ll reliably find Confederate Flag’s flying during county fairs here.

    • @ea42455
      @ea42455 Před měsícem

      ​​@@user-ds8no1ro2qYes, Kentucky was a border state. Cities along the Ohio River... especially extreme northern Kentucky near Cincinnati... might be more akin to the Midwest. But the rest of Kentucky? Nooo! We're southerners. Most of us trace our lineage back to Virginia. And nobody considers Virginia a midwestern state... although the Virginia area around D.C. has all the character and feel of the most cold-shoulder northern city.

  • @spddiesel
    @spddiesel Před 2 měsíci +11

    As an Illinois native, you can definitely include southern Illinois and Indiana, and the Missouri boot heel in Dixieland.

    • @jamesbednar8625
      @jamesbednar8625 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Basically, in Missouri anything south of I-44 could be placed in that category for lots of the communities do have the "Southern" flair. Anything north of I-70 has more of that "Northern" flair. Anything between I-70 & I-44 could really go either way. Been living out in the region for over 30-years and that is just my dumb interpretation of what I see.

    • @doomsdayrabbit4398
      @doomsdayrabbit4398 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Illinois outside of Assenisipia.

    • @Compucles
      @Compucles Před 2 měsíci

      @@jamesbednar8625 I'd specify that anything technically south but still close to I-70 still counts as part of the North (or Midwest). For example, the Interstate cuts through the cities of St. Louis and Kansas City, and I don't think anyone considers any part of those major urban areas as part of the South.

  • @ronniesouthern7829
    @ronniesouthern7829 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I can vouch for the name, Dixie being scrubbed clean. We have a annual fair in Winston-Salem North Carolina that was referred to as the Dixie classic fair from 1952 through 2019 The city council voted in October 2019 to change the name because it’s offensive and renamed it the Carolina classic fair which went into affect in 2021 as there was no fair in 2020

    • @cynsi7604
      @cynsi7604 Před měsícem

      🙋🏻‍♀️ from WNC, Burke Co. 😎 ✌🏻

  • @austinandcasseymccutcheon3590
    @austinandcasseymccutcheon3590 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Hank said if heaven ain’t like Dixie then he don’t want to go

  • @GravelordNito150
    @GravelordNito150 Před 2 měsíci +8

    I feel like the phrase "Dixie" and "Dixieland" is more attributable to the song "Dixie" (the Civil War song enjoyed by The Dukes of Hazard") than with the proliferation of Jazz later into the 20th Century. Honestly kind of surprised you didn't bring it up. It's what people mean when they talk about "whistling dixie" and the like.

  • @brianarbenz1329
    @brianarbenz1329 Před 2 měsíci

    Louisville, right on the line, for years had an international track and field event held here called the Mason-Dixon Games. It lasted until about the early 1980s. We also had a radio newscaster on top 40 station WAKY who went by the name Mason Dixon. Considering it was the '60s and a pop station - pronounced "wacky," no less - who knows whether that was his actual name.

  • @joshclark756
    @joshclark756 Před 2 měsíci +1

    as someone from mississippi we love dixie

  • @MrQdiddy85
    @MrQdiddy85 Před 2 měsíci +11

    I hate the phrase of “nice slave owner”

    • @coleyf7021
      @coleyf7021 Před 2 měsíci

      oxymoron

    • @Sparx632
      @Sparx632 Před 2 měsíci

      Slave owner is a slave owner, no two ways about it

  • @laroderickdexter5597
    @laroderickdexter5597 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I luv it when other tubers I follow show up in other stellar educational content....😅

  • @wendychavez5348
    @wendychavez5348 Před měsícem

    My partner does mapping with GIS, mostly for adjusting political districts in New Mexico, & part of his job is to make recommendations based on well established lines, like roads, rivers, mountain ranges, or the Mason-Dixon Line. Yeah, it's odd that an imaginary line can have as much power as a highway or a river, though it's a definable boundary so I guess it works. Unless someone chooses to build a house right on top of it, in which case some hard decisions have to be made. I don't understand this fully, though I appreciate this video as much as any other.

  • @curtis4109
    @curtis4109 Před měsícem

    My grandmothers name was Dixie. That name has been with me for my entire 66 years and will be for eternity. Virginia native. Live in GA

  • @beargreen1
    @beargreen1 Před 2 měsíci +2

    When you still remember from old Southern books

  • @user-bu7js6ez9p
    @user-bu7js6ez9p Před 2 měsíci

    I’ve grown up in “Dixieland” and I’ve never heard that term till now and I’m 35

  • @seanchadwick9036
    @seanchadwick9036 Před 2 měsíci

    Dixie Alley has been subject to numerous tornado outbreaks throughout history, including very intense outbreaks and those of very large spatial and temporal extent. Notorious outbreaks affecting the region include: the Great Natchez Tornado, the 1884 Enigma tornado outbreak, the April 1924 tornado outbreak, the 1932 Deep South tornado outbreak, the 1936 Tupelo-Gainesville tornado outbreak, the April 1957 Southeastern tornado outbreak, the 1984 Carolinas tornado outbreak, and the November 1992 tornado outbreak. The 1974 Super Outbreak also hit the area very hard, producing multiple F5 tornadoes in Alabama, and F4 tornadoes in North Georgia and the Appalachian southwest of North Carolina. More recently the region was hit by the 2008 Super Tuesday tornado outbreak followed by the tornado outbreak of April 14-16, 2011, the deadliest since the 2008 outbreak. Two weeks after the April 14-16 event, Dixie Alley was the epicenter of the 2011 Super Outbreak, which was the largest tornado outbreak ever recorded, as well as the fourth-deadliest outbreak in United States history, with over 300 people dead. The Easter 2020 Tornado Outbreak also happened in Dixie Alley. It spawned over 100 tornadoes and has a spot in the top most tornadoes in 24 hours in an outbreak.

  • @matthewlayne5151
    @matthewlayne5151 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Dixieland is just the south, it’s about it know adays heck they still use it in shops business and there is a them park with that name

  • @skyden24195
    @skyden24195 Před 2 měsíci

    The word "Dixie" immediately made me think of the end song of the Laurel and Hardy film, "Way Out West," the song being "Going Down to Dixie."

  • @raresdumitras3291
    @raresdumitras3291 Před 2 měsíci

    I was singing the Looney tunes version of "I wish I was in Dixie" all through your video, lol

  • @tomarmadiyer2698
    @tomarmadiyer2698 Před 2 měsíci +1

    John Brown's body lies a mouldering in the grave.

  • @beargreen1
    @beargreen1 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Hey, P.S. Winn Dixie gives you an idea where Dixie's land is but there's a 1909 map that only includes the states below Walker's Line, excluding Texas. So the states part of Dixie is Tennessee, Arkansas, Missouri, Mississippi, North Carolina, and below. Also to let you know, Tennessee along with a few southern states are part of Dixie Alley. Hope that helps

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 Před 2 měsíci

      Indiana had a few Winn-Dixie's in the store's heyday, across from Louisville, Ky. We used to get our groceries from a W-D in New Albany, Ind.

  • @beargreen1
    @beargreen1 Před 2 měsíci +3

    I think many remember from Winn Dixie

  • @HeavyTopspin
    @HeavyTopspin Před 2 měsíci

    Have to say the only times I've heard it referenced in the last 20+ years is referring to Dixieland music, the former Dixie Chicks who were already a forgotten afterthought when they dropped it from their name, and Winn-Dixie grocery stores. But I'm also not actually in that area, so there may be some existing usage of it by actual southerners.

  • @hancocki
    @hancocki Před 2 měsíci

    Your guest collaborator never misses a Beat.

  • @hannahk1306
    @hannahk1306 Před 2 měsíci

    I was only familiar with the term Dixieland in relation to music and didn't realise that it related to an actual geographical region.

  • @budelmore6286
    @budelmore6286 Před měsícem +1

    If heaven ain’t a lot like Dixie, I don’t want to go

  • @brianpack369
    @brianpack369 Před 2 měsíci

    Hi, I’m American (not from the south). Dixie is understood to be a poetic term for the south, but people mainly say it in reference to a song called Dixie. The melody from that song is played by the horn of the car in The Dukes of Hazard which has a Confederate flag painted on it. It’s also used in an idiom. When you entertain unrealistic fantasies, you’re said to be whistling Dixie.

  • @judithweger7693
    @judithweger7693 Před měsícem

    One of our computer programmers set up the southern bosses name so if he typed his name in I Wish I was in the land of cotton etc. would pop up. He rethought this and took it done. Before he was caught. Good idea

  • @bigtex4864
    @bigtex4864 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I like the name Dixieland just since it avoids confusion with South America and it sounds cool.

  • @KCKingdomCreateGreatTrekAgain

    Missouri and Kentucky were border states. They had confederates in them and a confederate government and a union government so it was messy. The confederates didn’t really control enough of either state to truly say it was part of the confederacy BUT both were represented on the battlefield flag (the most people and familiar with).

  • @shalifi7774
    @shalifi7774 Před 2 měsíci

    The song. I Wish I Was in Dixie.
    I still here the chorus in my head.
    "Then I wish I was in Dixie! Hooray! Hooray!
    In Dixie's Land I'll take my stand, to live and die in Dixie!
    Away! Away! Away down South in Dixie!
    Away! Away! Away down South in Dixie!"

  • @boxsterman77
    @boxsterman77 Před 2 měsíci +1

    The dubious Midwest? The suspicious, doubtful Midwest. No one, but no one calls it that and is indeed the Midwest.

  • @Kook-a-mal
    @Kook-a-mal Před 2 měsíci

    Old cowboy told me in the 70’s the one about the ten/dix note as it was “good” far and wide, due to its reliable value. So, the area that these notes were in circulation was better in this way as well as other paper money was often short-lived (even in bigger eastern cities) in those years.
    Or so I recall, anyway…

  • @oldfrittenfett1276
    @oldfrittenfett1276 Před 2 měsíci +2

    In germany, "Dixie" is the name of a big port-a-potty company and became kind of generic.

    • @doomsdayrabbit4398
      @doomsdayrabbit4398 Před 2 měsíci +2

      So very similar to the US.

    • @kiterkun1606
      @kiterkun1606 Před 2 měsíci

      Oh yeah, but it is more "Dixi" if I remember it correctly.
      like "Dixiklo" at least what me and my pals are calling it

    • @coleyf7021
      @coleyf7021 Před 2 měsíci

      dixie cups !

  • @auldfouter8661
    @auldfouter8661 Před 2 měsíci

    Little Feat ( best ever band ) sang in Dixie Chicken -
    If you'll be my Dixie Chicken , I'll be your Tennessee lamb ,
    And we can walk together down in Dixieland.
    ( fab song )

  • @jayburn00
    @jayburn00 Před 2 měsíci

    There is an amusement park in Georgia called Dixieland. It has no other references to antebellum south or confederacy though. I haven't been there since i was in elementary school and i am surprised it was never renamed (i looked it up and it is surprisingly still around under the same name).

  • @NBK1122
    @NBK1122 Před 2 měsíci

    We also have Dixie brand paper plates and cups

  • @UniversalistSon9
    @UniversalistSon9 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Dixie isn’t as controversial as you’d think. Many call the south Dixie, there’s even the Dixie mafia lol.

  • @rexblade504
    @rexblade504 Před 2 měsíci +16

    I think most Americans don't mind the name, especially those from the South. Dixie is just the name for that region of the country. It may have a controversial origin, but a lot of things do, you can't forget history because it offends you. Its like the Confederate flag, it's meaning has evolved with time to be representive of the south and rural living at large.

    • @dguy0386
      @dguy0386 Před 2 měsíci +3

      i wish it was that simple, but it's also been used by people protesting integration in the 50s, and more recently by some racist groups against basically all non white races, i think the flag would be lovely to have around for heritage purposes but the opinions of neighbors need to be considered too, that's a northerner with confederate ancestry's thoughts on it anyway

    • @rexblade504
      @rexblade504 Před 2 měsíci +5

      @@dguy0386 frankly, only the person who owns the flag opinion matters. It's their right to fly it regardless of how others feel. Personally I don't fly it, but I don't judge people who do because they don't mean it in a racist way. Anything can be used as a symbol of hate.

    • @SewolHoONCE
      @SewolHoONCE Před 2 měsíci +4

      At the end of the Civil War, President Lincoln asked the band to play, “Dixie.” “With malice toward none.”

    • @Compucles
      @Compucles Před 2 měsíci

      @@rexblade504 So you'd allow a neighbor to fly a Nazi flag if they meant it in a purely historical manner? Sorry, but that logic doesn't fly (unless it gets pulled down shortly afterwards). Others' opinions about the Confederate flag *absolutely* matter!
      Besides, how is someone supposed to determine just by looking at a flown Confederate flag that it's one of the rare cases when it is not being used in a racist manner?

    • @rexblade504
      @rexblade504 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@Compucles It's his right as an American to fly what ever flag he pleases, I can't do anything to stop him. I may not like it, but it's not hurting anyone. And if a Confederate flag isn't being used in a racist manner, who cares what the owners personal beliefs are then?

  • @stefanoraz27
    @stefanoraz27 Před 2 měsíci

    Omggg its mr beattt

  • @prion42
    @prion42 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Dixieland just makes me think of banjos and twangy voices.
    Also I'm not from the South, but i feel like Florida is its own thing.

  • @mirzaahmed6589
    @mirzaahmed6589 Před 2 měsíci

    You really should have mentioned the supermarket chain Winn-Dixie.

  • @traviswork7143
    @traviswork7143 Před 2 měsíci +4

    lol @ Mary-land

  • @stischer47
    @stischer47 Před 28 dny

    The story I have always heard was that it was the "dix" note of New Orleans, called a "dixie" by non-French speakers. Why are we trying to "forget" it?

  • @sparkieT88
    @sparkieT88 Před 2 měsíci +1

    as a person that lives in Dixie and is proud of my homeland, if you find it offensive, GFY

  • @brucecook502
    @brucecook502 Před 2 měsíci

    I have never heard this explanation before but all I can say is I do remember when I was a kid watching cartoons I do remember Bugs Bunny singing "I wish I was in dixie hurray hurray" but didn't know what it meant. Not even sure if it is relevant to this topic.

  • @ItsJOHNMayne
    @ItsJOHNMayne Před 2 měsíci

    Im from Maryland,PG County right outside of DC. You would never know it today,but in the old days PG County was horse and tobacco country. The neighborhood I grew up in was built around one of the last plantation style houses still standing in the county. I think a lot of the older generation would probably include PG County as apart of Dixieland,even though it really isn’t

  • @charlespierce3647
    @charlespierce3647 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Well Dixie is where I live and if the word DIXIE offends you, then you have real problems.

  • @petertrudelljr
    @petertrudelljr Před 2 měsíci +7

    I wouldn't consider Texas to be part of Dixieland. At least for most Texans, Dixie stops at Louisiana... we're Texas, don't need any other name attached. But seriously, I've always assumed Dixie was the Deep South, the Carolinas, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana. (No Tennessee, no Kentucky, no Arkansas, no Florida, no Texas).

    • @danielkaiser8971
      @danielkaiser8971 Před 2 měsíci +1

      That's actually what I was thinking too. I'm from Oklahoma.

  • @Bakarost
    @Bakarost Před 2 měsíci +2

    i wish i was in dixie
    in dixieland ill make my stand
    to live and die in dixie

  • @boyfromboston2469
    @boyfromboston2469 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Dixie is basically just an allegory for the DEEP south (bama, Georgia, MS, Louisiana, northern Florida) but it really isn’t used anymore

    • @Jones-pj2jk
      @Jones-pj2jk Před měsícem

      Yep. Chiming in from Texas which isn't considered a part of Dixie. I think the second explanation is the most likely due to how associated it is with the deep south from Louisiana to northern Florida.

  • @leechjim8023
    @leechjim8023 Před měsícem +1

    Dixie has NOTHING to do with the confederacy!!! It is a nice alternate name for the south!😀 Dixieland is usually used in the context of jazz music.

  • @onemanarmy2electricboogalo687
    @onemanarmy2electricboogalo687 Před 2 měsíci +2

    No we dont want to forget it we want it remained

  • @jeremyfisher8512
    @jeremyfisher8512 Před 2 měsíci

    Somebody is gonna say something about Oklahoma being southern and start an argument. I'm calling it now

  • @splashmanej3
    @splashmanej3 Před měsícem

    Winn-Dixie my favorite store thingy or whatever it is... ☠️☠️☠️

  • @HazardousEnvironments
    @HazardousEnvironments Před 2 měsíci

    YeAHHH he talked about tornados for a bit WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!

  • @CourtlandMiller1994
    @CourtlandMiller1994 Před 2 měsíci

    Greetings from Dixie

  • @Silverado138
    @Silverado138 Před 2 měsíci +1

    🤔 I worked for several companies that used Dixie in their business name. But I do live in the Heart of Dixie. Heritage not hate is the new battle cry when people say it's racist

  • @carsonianthegreat4672
    @carsonianthegreat4672 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Maryland, Delaware, and West Virginia are also part of the South.

  • @cynsi7604
    @cynsi7604 Před měsícem

    As I’m getting ready to listen to this video… “LYNYRD SKYNYRD” comes on the radio. Sorry, dude you’re gonna have to wait until “SKYNYRD” is done playing!! ✌🏻

  • @georgesheffield1580
    @georgesheffield1580 Před 2 měsíci

    The pic left out Oklahoma territory for part of the confederate states of america ( dixie land )

  • @nicholasharvey9117
    @nicholasharvey9117 Před 2 měsíci

    Among jazz musician circles, they really don't like it when you refer to the traditional New Orleans style of jazz as "Dixieland jazz". They prefer "trad jazz". One of the guitar professors at my school always corrects when somebody says that lol