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New England
*** Shopping-Tip: New England
:''This article is about the region in the United States of America. For other uses, see
New England (disambiguation).''
Image:US map-New England.PNG thumb|300px|The states of New England are Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Together, they form the northeasternmost point of the United States.
The '''New England''' region of the
United States is located in the northeastern corner of the country.
Boston, Massachusetts Boston is its business and cultural center and its most populous city. The region is made up of the following states:
*
Connecticut
*
Maine
*
Massachusetts
*
New Hampshire
*
Rhode Island
*
Vermont
New England is perhaps the most well-defined (and smallest) region of the United States, with more uniformity and more shared heritage than other regions of the country. But, while there is cultural and historical uniformity throughout the whole region, Northern and Southern New England differ in the fact that the former is more rural whereas the latter is very urban. This difference has always existed, however, even when the region was young, and thus does not imply a growing or changing trend, but rather the result of historical population patterns. Western and Eastern New England share similar differences, with the western region usually lacking the
Boston accent that typifies the region in the eyes of outsiders. While some parts of Southwestern New England closely border (and in the extreme southwestern portion are technically part of) metropolitan
New York City, they are still historically, and, for the most part, culturally part of New England.
Together, the
Mid-Atlantic States Mid-Atlantic and New England regions are generally referred to as the
U.S. Northeast Northeastern region of the United States.
History
The indigenous peoples of New England
New England has long been inhabited by
Algonquian-speaking
Native Americans in the United States native peoples, including the
Abenaki, the
Penobscot, the
Wampanoag, and many others. During the
15th century 15th and
16th century 16th centuries, Europeans such as
Giovanni Verrazano,
Jacques Cartier and
John Cabot (known as Giovanni Caboto before being based in England) charted the New England coast. They referred to the region as
Norumbega, named for a fabulous native city that was supposed to exist there.
See also:
List of place names in New England of aboriginal origin.
Early European settlement (1610s-1630s)
Image:Map-Novi Belgii Novæque Angliæ (Amsterdam, 1685).jpg Cape Cod.html" title="Meaning of 275px 275px|thumb|right|A seventeenth century map shows New England as a costal enclave extending from [[Cape Cod to ''
New France'' while its interior is rendered ''
New Belgium'', ''
New Netherland'' and ''
Irocoisia''.html" title="Meaning of thumb|right|A seventeenth century map shows New England as a costal enclave extending from [[Cape Cod">275px|thumb|right|A seventeenth century map shows New England as a costal enclave extending from [[Cape Cod to ''
New France'' while its interior is rendered ''
New Belgium'', ''
New Netherland'' and ''
Irocoisia''">thumb|right|A seventeenth century map shows New England as a costal enclave extending from [[Cape Cod">275px|thumb|right|A seventeenth century map shows New England as a costal enclave extending from [[Cape Cod to ''
New France'' while its interior is rendered ''
New Belgium'', ''
New Netherland'' and ''
Irocoisia''
'''''NOTE:''''' For the early history of the Connecticut Colony, see
New Netherland.
On
April 10,
1606,
King James I of England chartered two Virginia Companies, headquartered in different cities, to establish colonies along the coast of North America, including islands within 100 miles and, by implication, extending inland 100 miles: '''The Virginia Company of London''', assigned coast between '''34 degrees and 41 degrees north Latitude''' (between Columbia, South Carolina and Greenwich, Connecticut); and '''the Virginia Company of Plymouth''', assigned coast between '''38 degrees and 45 degrees north Latitude''' (between Fredericksburg, Virginia and Montreal, Quebec). Colonies of the two companies were to be at least 100 miles apart, even where the grants overlapped. The former charter granted what today are
Virginia,
North Carolina, and
South Carolina, while the latter granted what today are the Northeastern States north of that point, and eastern
Canada. This included New England.
The Dutch East India Company established the beginnings of
New Netherland in
1613, when they established trading posts on the
Hudson River, and claimed all territory between the
Connecticut River (72 Degrees, 41 Minutes East Longitude) and the
Delaware River (38 Degrees, 46 Minutes, north Latitude). They claimed as far north and east as they could hold, and so they never really expected to go father west/south than the Delaware, or north of what today is the Canadian border. This meant that they claimed what today are western
Connecticut,
New York,
New Jersey, southeast
Pennsylvania, and
Delaware, and placed them in conflict with both Virginia Companies. That the English did not immediately move in and extinguish New Netherland was a mark of fear based on the fact that the Dutch were militarily superior to the English at the time, and the two powers were in competition elsewhere on the planet. England was militarily over-extended for the time being.
In 1616,
John Smith of Jamestown Captain John Smith described the area in a pamphlet "New England." The name was officially sanctioned, on
November 3,
1620, when the charter of the '''Virginia Company of Plymouth''' was replaced by a charter for the
Plymouth Council for New England "...to establish colonies in a region between '''40 Degrees and 48 Degrees north Latitude''' and extending from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean, including present New York." (Swindler, 5:16-26) The region was subsequently divided through further grants, including the 1624 formal establishment of the Dutch colony of
New Netherland, which included Fort Orange (today's
Albany, New York), and followed in two years by the establishment of
New Amsterdam (today's New York City). Conflict over this establishment included the over-running of the Dutch portion of Connecticut, and Suffolk County on Long Island; the
March 4,
1628 charter of the '''Massachusetts Bay Company''' "...to establish a colony in the region streching from 3 miles south of the
Charles River, and extending westward from the Atlantic coast to the Pacific Ocean, including present central New York" (Swindler, 5:32-42; Andrews, 1:359); the 1629 royal grant of "
Province of New Hampshire Hampshire" which was issued for ''"makeing a Plantation & establishing of a Colony or Colonyes in the Countrey called or knowen by ye name of New England in America."''
The New England Confederation (1630s-1650s)
On
March 3,
1636, the Connecticut Colony established its own government, which establishment left Vermont and Maine the only New England colonies left to be formed.
Following the
Pequot War, in 1637, the colonies of
Massachusetts Bay Colony Massachusetts Bay,
Plymouth Colony Plymouth,
New Haven Colony New Haven, and
Connecticut Colony Connecticut joined together in a loose compact called the
New England Confederation. The confederation was designed largely to coordinate mutual defense against the
Netherlands Dutch in the
New Netherland colony to the south and the
France French in
New France to the north, as well as to enforce the return of runaway
slavery slaves. The confederation had a council comprising two delegates from each of the four colonies, but it had no formal enforcement powers and relied on the individual colonies to voluntarily follow council decisions. The confederation disintegrated, in the 1650s, when the powerful Massachusetts Bay Colony refused to follow decisions of the confederation council regarding the conflict with the Dutch.
King Philip's War (1675-1676), the bloodiest
Indian Wars Indian war of the early colonial period, had a devastating effect on the colonies of southern New England, but effectively ended the power and influence of the
Native Americans in the United States Native Americans in the region.
On
March 12,
1663,
King Charles II granted the Duke of York a charter for all territory between the
Connecticut River and the
Delaware River,
Long Island;
Martha's Vinyard;
Nantucket; and the area between the
Kennebec River and the
St. Croix River, extending inland from the Atlantic coast to the
St. Lawrence River. This grant not only directly confronted the
New Netherland colony, but also included most of present-day
Maine, and part of
Quebec.
The Dominion of New England (1686-1689)
In 1686,
James II of England King James II, concerned about the increasingly independent ways of the colonies, in particular their open flouting of the
Navigation Acts, decreed the
Dominion of New England, an administrative union comprising all the New England colonies. Two years later, the provinces of
Province of New York New York and
Province of New Jersey New Jersey, which had been acquired from the Dutch, were added. The union, imposed from the outside, was highly unpopular among the colonists. In 1687, when the Connecticut Colony refused to follow a decision of the dominion governor
Edmund Andros, he sent an armed contigent to seize the colony's charter, which the colonists, according to popular legend, hid inside the
Charter Oak tree. Andros' efforts to unify the colonial defenses met little success and the dominion ceased after only three years, after the removal of King James II in the
Glorious Revolution in 1689.
Modern New England (1689-present)
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The colonies were not formally united again until
1776, when they became part of the
United States; however, especially in the
18th century and the early
19th century, New England was still considered to be a very distinct region of the country, as it is today. During the
War of 1812, there was talk of secession from the Union, as New England merchants opposed the war with
Great Britain.
Aside from the Canadian province of
Nova Scotia, or "New
Scotland", New England is the only
North American region to inherit the name of a kingdom in the
British Isles. New England has largely preserved its regional character, especially in its historic sites. Its name is a reminder of the past, as many of the original English-Americans have migrated further west.
Politics
The early European settlers of New England were
England English Protestantism Protestants fleeing religious persecution. This, however, did not prevent them from establishing colonies where religion was legislated to an extreme, and where those who deviated from the established doctrine were persecuted greatly.
Town meetings in New England
A derivative of meetings held by church elders,
town meetings were an integral part of governance and remain so today in towns across New England. At such meetings, any citizen of the town may discuss issues of the day with other members of the community, and vote on them. This is the most
direct democracy in the United States today, and the form of dialogue has been adopted under certain circumstances elsewhere, most strongly in the states closest to the region, such as
New York,
New Jersey and
Pennsylvania. Such a strong democratic tradition was even apparent in the early
19th century, when
Alexis de Tocqueville wrote in ''
Democracy in America'' that:
''In New England, where education and liberty are the daughters of morality and religion, where society has acquired age and stability enough to enable it to form principles and hold fixed habits, the common people are accustomed to respect intellectual and moral superiority and to submit to it without complaint, although they set at naught all those privileges which wealth and birth have introduced among mankind. In New England, consequently, the democracy makes a more judicious choice than it does elsewhere.''
New England and political thought
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revolution revolutionary spirit that, in many ways, is still alive and well in New England today.">thumb|right|[[Samuel Adams">275px|thumb|right|[[Samuel Adams embodied the
revolution revolutionary spirit that, in many ways, is still alive and well in New England today.
In the colonial period and the early time of the republic, New England leaders like
John Hancock,
John Adams, and
Samuel Adams joined those in Philadelphia and Virginia to direct the country. At the time of the
American Civil War, New England, the mid-Atlantic, and the Midwest combined against slavery, eventually ending the practice in the United States.
Henry David Thoreau, one of New England's most iconic thinkers, made the case for
civil disobedience,
libertarianism, and even had some
anarchist tendencies; this spirit is still alive in the
Free State Project and occasional discussions of secession. New England led the rest of the country in abolishing the
death penalty for crimes like robbery and burglary in the
19th century. In the
20th century, the region remained a source of political thought and intellectual ferment in the nation, eventually becoming the forefront of the
civil rights issue of
same sex marriage, with Vermont being the first state to allow
civil unions between same sex couples, and Massachusetts being the first state to allow
marriage between same sex couples. In 2005,
Connecticut also began to allow civil unions.
While well known for its liberal tendencies, the region still has a history similar to the rest of the country. Puritan New England was highly intolerant of any deviation from the strict social norms. Arguments against slavery, at first, were not moral, but economic, since owning slaves was expensive and not very useful in the northern climate. During the civil rights era, Boston brewed with tension over school busing to end ''de facto'' segregation of its public schools. Despite these examples, the region is still known as one of the more liberal regions of the United States.
Contemporary New England politics
Today, the dominant party in New England is the
Democratic Party (United States) Democratic Party, though most states have a significant
Republican Party (United States) Republican electorate, especially
New Hampshire and
Maine which are both represented in the
U.S. Senate by two Republicans. As of the 2004 state elections, Maine is the only state that has its executive and legislative branches controlled by the same party (the Democrats). In the
U.S. presidential election, 2000 2000 presidential election, Democratic candidate
Al Gore carried all of the New England states except for
New Hampshire, and in
U.S. presidential election, 2004 2004,
John Kerry, a New Englander himself, won all six New England states.
New Hampshire and Connecticut are the only New England states that allow
capital punishment, although New Hampshire currently has no
death row inmates and has not held an execution since
1939. Connecticut held an execution in 2005, the first in New England in forty-five years.
The change in predominant political party affiliation is probably more attributable to the fact that the parties have in essence exchanged party platforms than any real change in political timbre of the region. As a whole, New England has remained true to the ideals of the
federalist party, namely a strong centralized federal government, a loose construction of the
Constitution allowing subsequent interpretation, progressivism towards women and minorities, an emphasis on education, the promotion of free trade, and fiscal responsibility (albeit sometimes based upon higher taxes).
Education
Higher education
Image:Dartmouth-hall.jpg Ivy League.html" title="Meaning of 275px 275px|thumb|right|New England contains four of the eight [[Ivy League universities. Pictured here is Dartmouth Hall on the campus of
Dartmouth College..html" title="Meaning of thumb|right|New England contains four of the eight [[Ivy League">275px|thumb|right|New England contains four of the eight [[Ivy League universities. Pictured here is Dartmouth Hall on the campus of
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Dartmouth College.
New England contains some of the oldest and most renowned institutions of higher learning in the United States. The first such institution,
Harvard, was founded at
Cambridge, Massachusetts, in
1636. According to
US News and World Report, 8 of the nation's top-50
university universities and 13 of its top-50
liberal arts colleges are located in New England. These include the four out of the eight universities in the
Ivy League,
Boston University,
Bowdoin College, the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Tufts University,
Wesleyan University, and others. A number of the graduates settle in the region after school, providing the area with a well-educated population and one of its most valuable resources.
Culture and education
New England is the national and world leader in higher education, with numerous world-class universities, and many high-prestige undergraduate colleges. Boston alone has over 30 colleges and universities, plus more in the suburbs. As a result, the region is a world leader in science, engineering, medicine, law, business research, humanities and social sciences, as well as in libraries and research centers. The higher learning sector is a major factor in the region's economy, attracting students, scholars, researchers and grants from around the world. Closely related are the many orchestras, art institutes, art schools, music schools and museums that make the region the cultural center of the nation.
At the pre-college level, New England is home to a majority of the most prominent American
independent schools (also known as
private schools), such as
Deerfield Academy,
Northfield Mount Hermon School and
Phillips Academy in Massachusetts,
St. Paul's School and
Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire, and
Hotchkiss School,
Loomis Chaffee, and
Canterbury School in Connecticut. The concept of the elite "New England prep school" and the "
preppy" lifestyle is an iconic part of the region's image.
In terms of public higher education, New England states seldom boast of their quality in comparison to other regions. However the K-12 school systems, usually locally funded, are well regarded. A recent government-funded survey of the 50 states ranked Connecticut as number one in public education. The renowned
Boston Latin School is the oldest public high school in America.
Culturally, education is considered to be very important, especially in southern New England.
Population
In
1910, 6,552,681 people lived in New England. Today, the total population of New England is 13,922,517. If New England were one state, the population would rank 5th in the nation, behind
Florida. The total area in this scenario (181,440 sq km) would rank 20th behind
North Dakota.
Regional population layout
Image:NewEngland-rural.jpg Hanover, New Hampshire.html" title="Meaning of 275px 275px|thumb|right|Occum Pond in [[Hanover, New Hampshire. Northern and western New England are very rural, especially when compared to the urban southern and eastern coast..html" title="Meaning of thumb|right|Occum Pond in [[Hanover, New Hampshire">275px|thumb|right|Occum Pond in [[Hanover, New Hampshire. Northern and western New England are very rural, especially when compared to the urban southern and eastern coast.">thumb|right|Occum Pond in [[Hanover, New Hampshire">275px|thumb|right|Occum Pond in [[Hanover, New Hampshire. Northern and western New England are very rural, especially when compared to the urban southern and eastern coast.
As some of the original English New England settlers migrated westward, immigrants from
Canada,
Ireland,
Italy, and
eastern Europe moved into the region. Massachusetts, in particular, has the highest concentration of persons of
Ireland Irish heritage in the country. Rhode Island has the highest concentration of Italians (percentage-wise). Today, although the region has attracted quite a few Jewish and Asian-American residents (though Boston, Providence and urban portions of Connecticut have had Jewish communities from the beginning of colonization), its northern half remains one of the least diverse parts of the nation and has a smaller proportion of African-Americans and Hispanic Americans than most of the rest of the US. Connecticut (which is adjacent to
New York City), Massachusetts (which has Boston), and Rhode Island (which has Providence) have minority populations comparable to the rest of the United States, while Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine are largely populated with people of European descent. New England still retains a large English population, especially in the more rural areas. The region has remained consistently openminded towards other backgrounds, however, a tradition which has continued from the
abolitionism abolitionist days of
William Lloyd Garrison and
Charles Sumner.
Southern New England
The bulk of the region's population is concentrated in southern New England, which comprises Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The most populous state is Massachusetts, with the population centered mostly around its political and cultural capital, Boston.
Western Massachusetts is less densely populated. The resulting effect is a minor cultural divide between urban New Englanders, from Boston and the smaller cities, including
Hartford, Connecticut, and rural New Englanders living in western Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine.
Connecticut is more of a cultural paradox compared to the other states in the region. The southwestern part of the state (which contains about 1/2 the state's population and can roughly be drawn as everything south and west of an imaginary line from just north of
Danbury to
New Haven, Connecticut New Haven) are essentially suburbs of the
New York metropolitan area. This area has grown rapidly in population since 1970, as many corporations formerly headquartered in
Manhattan moved to nearby
Fairfield County to take advantage of lower taxes while still staying within the general region, bringing jobs and "New York transplants". Therefore, culturally, this region of the state is more like that of neighboring
New York than the rest of the New England region. The remainder of the state (and other half of its population) is very similar culturally to that of the neighboring states of
Massachusetts and
Rhode Island. The wealth in western Connecticut, the Hartford and New Haven suburbs and the shoreline all contribute to the state having the state's highest per capita income of any in the United States.
An example of this cultural
dichotomy can be found in residents' allegiance to sports teams. Western Connecticut residents may root for either
Boston sports Boston or
List of New York City Sports Teams New York teams, unlike other New England residents who tend to be staunchly loyal to Boston teams. Television broadcasts in Hartford and New Haven typically give equal coverage to sports teams in both Boston and New York.
Coastal New England
The coastline is more urban than western New England, which is typically rural, even in urban states like Massachusetts. These characteristics of the region's population are due mainly to historical factors; the original colonists settled mostly on the coastline of
Massachusetts Bay. The only state without access to the
Atlantic Ocean, Vermont, is also the least-populated. After nearly 400 years, the region still maintains, for the most part, its historical population layout.
New England's coast is dotted with urban centers, such as
Portland, Maine Portland,
Portsmouth, New Hampshire Portsmouth,
Boston, Massachusetts Boston,
New Bedford, Massachusetts New Bedford,
Fall River, Massachusetts Fall River,
Providence, Rhode Island Providence,
New Haven, Connecticut New Haven, and
Bridgeport, Connecticut Bridgeport, as well as smaller cities, like
Newburyport, Massachusetts Newburyport,
Gloucester, Massachusetts Gloucester,
Biddeford, Maine Biddeford,
Bath, Maine Bath, and
New London, Connecticut New London. The smaller fishing towns, like Gloucester, are popular tourist attractions, as they tend to retain their historical character, and often have colorful pasts.
Cape Cod, also a popular tourist attraction, is lined with sandy beaches and dotted with
bed and breakfast tourist lodgings. The picturesque and rugged coast of Maine is best known for its beauty and for
American lobster lobster. New Hampshire, which has the smallest coastline of all of the coastal New England states, is home to
Hampton Beach, New Hampshire Hampton Beach, also frequented by visitors to the region.
Urban New England
Image:Boston Back Bay.jpg Boston,_Massachusetts 350px|thumb|right|[[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston is considered to be the cultural and historical capital of New England. Above is an aerial photo of Boston's
Back Bay, Boston Back Bay neighborhood, with
Cambridge, Massachusetts Cambridge on the northern bank of the
Charles River..html" title="Meaning of Boston.html" title="Meaning of 350px|thumb|right|[[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston">350px|thumb|right|[[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston is considered to be the cultural and historical capital of New England. Above is an aerial photo of Boston's
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Cambridge, Massachusetts Cambridge on the northern bank of the
Charles River.">Boston.html" title="Meaning of 350px|thumb|right|[[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston">350px|thumb|right|[[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston is considered to be the cultural and historical capital of New England. Above is an aerial photo of Boston's
Back Bay, Boston Back Bay neighborhood, with
Cambridge, Massachusetts Cambridge on the northern bank of the
Charles River.
Image:Providence skyline.jpg Providence,_RI 350px|thumb|right|[[Providence, RI|Providence is the second-largest city in New England and claims the largest contiguous area of National Historic Society-designated buildings in the U.S. .html" title="Meaning of Providence.html" title="Meaning of 350px|thumb|right|[[Providence, RI|Providence">350px|thumb|right|[[Providence, RI|Providence is the second-largest city in New England and claims the largest contiguous area of National Historic Society-designated buildings in the U.S. ">Providence.html" title="Meaning of 350px|thumb|right|[[Providence, RI|Providence">350px|thumb|right|[[Providence, RI|Providence is the second-largest city in New England and claims the largest contiguous area of National Historic Society-designated buildings in the U.S.
Image:Worcester,MA,FranklinAndMain-June7,2004.jpg Worcester,_Massachusetts 350px|thumb|right|[[Worcester, Massachusetts|Worcester is the third-largest city in New England and by far the largest urban area in the more rural mid- to northwestern part of the region..html" title="Meaning of Worcester.html" title="Meaning of 350px|thumb|right|[[Worcester, Massachusetts|Worcester">350px|thumb|right|[[Worcester, Massachusetts|Worcester is the third-largest city in New England and by far the largest urban area in the more rural mid- to northwestern part of the region.">Worcester.html" title="Meaning of 350px|thumb|right|[[Worcester, Massachusetts|Worcester">350px|thumb|right|[[Worcester, Massachusetts|Worcester is the third-largest city in New England and by far the largest urban area in the more rural mid- to northwestern part of the region.
Three of the four most densely populated states in the United States are in New England. In order, the four most densely populated states are: New Jersey, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and Connecticut. Indeed, southern New England forms an integral part of the
BosWash megalopolis, a conglomeration of urban centers that spans from Boston to
Washington, D.C.
The
Greater Boston metropolitan area has a total population of approximately 5.8 million. Within this region are the following cities in decreasing order of population size:
*
Boston, Massachusetts: 589,141
*
Cambridge, Massachusetts: 101,355
*
Lynn, Massachusetts: 88,050
*
Quincy, Massachusetts: 88,025
*
Newton, Massachusetts: 83,829
*
Somerville, Massachusetts: 77,478
*
Brookline, Massachusetts: 57,107
The largest cities by population in New England are:
#
Boston, Massachusetts: 589,141
#
Providence, Rhode Island: 173,618
#
Worcester, Massachusetts: 172,648
#
Springfield, Massachusetts: 152,082
#
Hartford, Connecticut: 141,578
#
Bridgeport, Connecticut: 139,529
#
New Haven New Haven, Connecticut: 123,626
#
Stamford, Connecticut: 117,083
#
Waterbury, Connecticut: 107,271
#
Manchester, New Hampshire: 107,006
#
Lowell, Massachusetts: 105,167
Regional nomenclature
A person from New England is known as a ''New Englander''. Sometimes, New Englanders may also be referred to as ''
Yankees'', although this term has grown to refer to the people of the greater region of the northeastern United States.
Culture
''See
Cuisine of New England''
Historico-cultural roots
The first European colonists of New England were focused on
maritime affairs such as
whaling and
fishing, rather than more
continental inclinations such as
economic surplus surplus farming.
As the oldest of the American regions, New England has developed a distinct
New England cuisine cuisine,
Eastern New England English dialect, architecture, and government. New England cuisine is known for its emphasis on seafood and dairy; clam chowder, lobster, and other products of the sea are among some of the region's most popular foods.
New England's unique culture
Despite a changing population, much of the original spirit of the region remains. It can be seen in the simple, woodframe houses and quaint white church steeples that are features of many small towns, and in the traditional lighthouses that dot the Atlantic coast. New England is also well known for its mercurial weather and its crisp chill. (
Mark Twain is quoted as saying "If you don't like the weather in New England, just wait a few minutes.") For its vibrant colored foliage in autumn, the region is a popular tourist destination. As a whole, New England tends to be
progressivism progressive in its politics, although somewhat
Puritan in its personal mores. Due to the fact that so many recent European immigrants live in the region and due to the influence of the many universities, the region often shows a greater receptivity to European ideas and culture than the rest of the country.
The region has remained consistently openminded towards other backgrounds, a tradition which has continued from the
abolitionism abolitionist days of
William Lloyd Garrison and
Charles Sumner to the region's recent controversial legal battle in regarding relationships between
homosexual couples. As of 2005, Massachusetts permits
same sex marriages, and Vermont and Connecticut allow for
civil unions between gay couples. Although New England has always been one of the more socially progressive regions of the United States, its internal cultural and social battles have always been somewhat
paradoxical. Its fervent abolitionism, for instance, was often met with intense
racism on the part of the recently-immigrated Irish segment of its population, which resented the control of native born Protestants over the region, and often competed economically with African-Americans. It was
Alexis de Tocqueville who noted, in
1835, that New England was the only region of the United States at the time to have properly separated
religion from its government, an ironic mixture of the region's heavy Puritan heritage and strong tradition of
direct democracy.
Social life in New England
Bar (establishment) Bars and
pubs, especially those with Irish themes, are popular social venues. Closer to Boston,
musicians from
Ireland often tour pubs, playing
traditional Irish
folk music, usually with a singer, a
fiddler, and a
guitarist.
In much of rural New England, particularly Maine, Acadian & Quebecois culture also dominate the region's music and dance. "Contra Dancing" is popular and common community activity similar to square-dancing that is usually backed by irish, acadian, or 'old time' folk music.
Knitting,
quilting and
Traditional Rug Hooking rug hooking circles are also a common activity in much of rural New England, as well as the more typical activities such as
church,
sports, and
town meeting town government.
The continuing European influence
The overall feeling of the region can be described as decidedly
European, with the region's
colonial past still alive and thriving through
tourism, the hundreds of historic sites that dot the region, and the rich cultural traditions that have endured and developed over centuries. Long-time and native residents are typically knowledgeable of the history of the region, and proud of it, as well. The often-
parody parodied dialect of the region is most commonly known as the
Boston accent and
Boston English, although, in reality, this
Accent (linguistics) accent is reserved mostly for the coasts of Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and Maine. It is the result of an incomplete transition from
17th century British English, which the standard American dialect imitates, and modern British English. There are also other regional accents as well, such as the
Boston Brahmin accent, said to be typical of the
Boston Brahmin artistocracy. This accent is also often heavily parodied.
Economy
In the twentieth century, most of New England's traditional industries have relocated to states or foreign countries where goods can be made more cheaply. In more than a few factory towns, skilled workers have been left without jobs. Largely around
Boston, Massachusetts Boston in the ring of
Massachusetts State Highway 128 Route 128, the gap has been partly filled by high technology industries, in particular software and biotech. Education, high technology, financial services, tourism, and medicine, continue to drive the local economy.
In the southwestern Connecticut counties of Fairfield and New Haven the economy is more closely associated with
New York City, and the economy is more often viewed as an extension of the
New York Metropolitan Area. For years many residents of southwestern Connecticut have crossed the state line each day to work in Manhattan. More recently, New Yorkers have begun to travel into Connecticut as part of a
reverse commute to many of the job centers developed in the suburbs.
In rural New England the economy still revolves around fishing, farming and forestry, as well as small hometown businesses that serve the rural populations. Much of the landscape of New England is comprised of small, family farms: typically dairy, fiber, and diversified market vegetable farms which are sold at the many small farmers markets throughout the region. There is a growing movement toward organic farming, particularly in Vermont and Maine.
Forestry is primarily a large-scale operation in the northernmost regions of New England. Nearly 25% of the land mass of Maine is privately held by paper companies. Logging this land and processing the timber are an important piece of this regions economy, with many paper mills along major rivers in the region.
In coastal New England, fishing comes primarily in the form of lobstering, with groundfishing, and shellfish digging also being important contributors to the fishing economy. Aquaculture is a growing industry. Herring seining (baitfish for lobstering) is also important.
The GDP of New England is approximately $649 billion; per capita it is $45,786
Literature
New England has always received a great deal of attention from American writers like
Henry David Thoreau,
Nathaniel Hawthorne,
Edgar Allan Poe,
John Updike,
John Irving and
Arthur Miller. Largely on the strength of local writers like Thoreau,
Boston, Massachusetts was for some years the center of the U.S. publishing industry, before being overtaken by
New York, New York New York in the middle of the
nineteenth century. Boston remains the home of publishers
Houghton Mifflin and
Pearson Education, among others, as well as (until recently) the literary magazine
The Atlantic Monthly.
New England is also the setting for most of the
gothic novel gothic horror stories of
H.P. Lovecraft, most probably because he lived his life in
Providence, Rhode Island. Real New England towns such as
Ipswich, Massachusetts Ipswich,
Newburyport, Massachusetts Newburyport,
Rowley, Massachusetts Rowley, and
Marblehead, Massachusetts Marblehead are given fictional names such as Dunwich, Arkham, Innsmouth, Kingsport, and Miskatonic and then featured quite often in his stories.
More recently, author
Stephen King has also used the small towns of the New England state of Maine as the setting for much of his horror fiction, with much of the action taking place in or near the fictional town of Castle Rock.
Modern author
Rick Moody has set many of his works in southern New England, focusing on wealthy families of suburban Connecticut's
Gold Coast, Connecticut Gold Coast and their battles with addiction and anomie.
The novel
Ethan Frome was written in
1911 by
Edith Wharton. It is set in turn-of-the-century New England, in the fictitious town of Starkfield, Massachusetts. Like much literature of the region, it plays off themes of isolation and
hopelessness.
Notable New Englanders
All of the following people were born in New England or spent a significant portion of their life in New England, making them a well-known figure in the region. Some of them, like
Robert Frost, who was actually born in
California,
emigration emigrated to New England and are now considered to be icons of the region. All of them exemplify some aspect of the region in one way or another.
*
Adam Sandler
*
Aerosmith Some members of ''Aerosmith''
*
Aimee Mann
*
Alan Shepard Alan B. Shepard, Jr.
*
Alicia Witt
*
Amar Bose
*
Amos Bronson Alcott
*
Amy Poehler
*
Anne Sexton
*
Anthony Michael Hall
*
Barbara Tarantino
*
Barbara Walters
*
Benjamin Franklin
*
Bill Belichick
*
Billy Bulger William "Billy" Bulger
*
Bobby Brown
*
Bobby Farrelly
*
Buckminster Fuller Richard Buckminster Fuller
*
Calvin Coolidge
*
Carly Simon
*
Charles Bulfinch
*
Charles Ives
*
Clara Barton
*
Claus von Bülow
*
Conan O'Brien
*
Cotton Mather
*
Crispus Attucks
*
Dan Brown
*
Dane Cook
*
Daniel Shays
*
Daniel Webster
*
David Byrne (musician) David Byrne
*
Denis Leary
*
Dick Dale
*
Donna Summer
*
Doug Flutie
*
E.E. Cummings
*
Edgar Allan Poe
*
Edward Brooke
*
Edward Gorey
*
Edward Norton
*
Eli Whitney
*
Elizabeth Hasselbeck
*
Emily Dickinson
*
Ephraim Morse
*
Ethel Kennedy
*
Franklin Pierce
*
Frederick Douglass
*
H.P. Lovecraft
*
Harriet Beecher Stowe
*
Henry David Thoreau
*
Howard Dean
*
Jack Kerouac
*
James J. Bulger James J. "Whitey" Bulger
*
James Naismith
*
James Taylor
*
James Woods
*
Jay Leno
*
Joe Perry (musician) Joe Perry
*
John Adams
*
John Cena
*
John F. Kennedy
*
John Ford
*
John Greenleaf Whittier
*
John Hancock
*
John Irving
*
John Kerry
*
John Quincy Adams
*
John Singleton Copley
*
John Steinbeck
*
John Updike
*
Jonathan Edwards
*
Jonathan Richman
*
Joseph Grew
*
Joseph Lieberman
*
Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr.
*
Josiah Quincy
*
Junius Morgan
*
Katharine Hepburn
*
Katharine Lee Bates
*
Ken Olsen
*
Kevin Eastman
*
Leonard Bernstein
*
Leonard Nimoy
*
Lilla Cabot Perry
*
Lizzie Borden
*
Longfellow Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
*
Louis Sullivan
*
Louisa May Alcott
*
Mandy Moore
*
Mark Wahlberg
*
Mary Dyer
*
Massasoit
*
Metacomet King Philip
*
Michael Dukakis
*
Nathaniel Hawthorne
*
NKOTB New Kids On The Block
*
Norm Crosby
*
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Oliver Wendell Holmes
*
Olympia Snowe
*
Patrick Ewing
*
Patrick J. Kennedy
*
Paul Revere
*
Paul Tsongas
*
Peter Farrelly
*
Peter Laird
*
Peter Wolf
*
Rachel Dratch
*
Ralph Waldo Emerson
*
Ric Ocasek
*
Richard Cardinal Cushing
*
Robert Frost
*
Robert Goulet
*
Robert Kennedy
*
Robert Lowell
*
Roger Williams (theologian)
*
Ronnie James Dio
*
Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy
*
Rosemary Kennedy
*
Rowland Hussey Macy
*
Samuel Adams
*
Samuel Slater
*
Sarah Silverman
*
Seth MacFarlane
*
Seth Meyers
*
Spalding Gray
*
Squanto
*
Stephen King
*
Steve Carell
*
Steven Tyler
*
Sumner Redstone
*
Sunny von Bülow
*
Susan B. Anthony
*
Sylvia Plath
*
Ted Kennedy Edward "Ted" Kennedy
*
Theo Epstein
*
Theodore Parker
*
Tip O'Neill
*
Trey Anastasio
*
Will McDonough
*
William James Sidis
*
William Weld William "Bill" Weld
*
Winslow Homer
{{listdev}}
Major Professional Sports Teams
Informal polling, along with a general consensus among the sports media, indicates that
baseball is the most-watched sport in New England, with the
Boston Red Sox being the region's most popular sports franchise and the region's focal point of conversation throughout the summer. Even Red Sox players have noted the feeling of affection and ownership the entire New England region has towards the team. Nearly every major town in the region carries the Red Sox through the town radio station. The 2004 World Series victory by the Red Sox, the first since 1918, inspired widespread euphoria throughout the region, and three million people attended the team's victory parade in Boston. The recent success of the
New England Patriots, a team that has won three of the past five
Super Bowls, has sparked a renewed interest in
football.
It should be noted that in the parts of southwestern Connecticut that are close to
New York City, there are an abundance of
New York Yankees and
New York Mets fans, who are often self-identified as suburban New Yorkers. Additionally, until the team relocated to Washington for the start of the 2005 season, the
Montreal Expos received some fan support in northern New England.
Up until
13 April 1997, Hartford also had its own major hockey team, the
Hartford Whalers. Originally known as the New England Whalers, they changed their name to the Hartford Whalers in 1979 after leaving the
WHA for the
NHL, hoping to carve a niche market in Hartford.
In 1997 the Whalers left Hartford for Raleigh, North Carolina (amid much controversy), where they became the Hurricanes.
In
1999, the
New England Patriots also flirted with the idea of moving to Hartford, in exchange for what three
NFL franchise owners called "the greatest financial deal any NFL owner has ever received". The package, announced by then Connecticut Governer
John Rowland, included, according to the Boston Globe: total costs of building a new stadium, training facility and highways; $175 million to owner Robert Kraft if he failed to sell out premium seats as well as $200 million or more over 30 years for stadium improvements and renovations. The state further offered to waive property taxes on the stadium and adjacent hotel and entertainment pavilion, which Kraft would have built.
The deal fell through after Massachusetts offered a far less generous offer of $70 million for infrastructure work. Many in Connecticut felt this was a deliberate ploy on the part of Mr. Kraft, a ruse to find public funds in Massachusetts, enabling the Patriots to remain in
Foxboro. Below is a list of the major professional sports teams in New England:
*Baseball:
Boston Red Sox
*Football:
New England Patriots
*Basketball:
Boston Celtics
*Hockey:
Boston Bruins
*Soccer:
New England Revolution
See also
*
Extreme points of New England
*
Beaches of New England
-
The New England Islands Family Discussion List Homepage
-
The First Ships Discussion List Homepage
These were other colonial dominions of the same scale and influence in the
U.S. Northeast:
*
New Netherland and
New Sweden before New England and
Pennsylvania ascended.
References
-
Adams, James Truslow. ''The Founding of New England'' (1921)
-
Adams, James Truslow. ''Revolutionary New England, 1691-1776'' (1923)
-
Adams, James Truslow. ''New England in the Republic, 1776-1850'' (1926)
-
Andrews, Charles M. ''The Fathers of New England: A Chronicle of the Puritan Commonwealths'' (1919) short survey by leading scholar.
-
Axtell, James, ed. ''The American People in Colonial New England'' (1973), new social history
-
Black, John D. ''The rural economy of New England: a regional study'' (1950
-
Brewer, Daniel Chauncey. ''Conquest of New England by the Immigrant (1926).
-
Conforti, Joseph A. ''Imagining New England: Explorations of Regional Identity from the Pilgrims to the Mid-Twentieth Century'' (2001)
* Dwight, Timothy. ''Travels Through New England and New York'' (circa 1800) 4 vol. (1969) Online at: [http://www-gdz.sub.uni-goettingen.de/cgi-bin/digbib.cgi?PPN244525439 vol 1]; [http://dz-srv1.sub.uni-goettingen.de/sub/digbib/loader?did=D6116 vol 2]; [http://dz-srv1.sub.uni-goettingen.de/sub/digbib/loader?did=D6784 vol 3]; [http://dz-srv1.sub.uni-goettingen.de/sub/digbib/loader?did=D6003 vol 4]
* Hall, Donald, foreword, Feintuch, Burt and Watters, David H., editors, ''Encyclopedia of New England'' (2005), hundreds of long articles by scholars
-
Karlsen, Carol F. ''The Devil in the Shape of a Woman: Witchcraft in Colonial New England'' (1998), new social history*
-
Lockridge, Kenneth A. ''A New England Town: The First Hundred Years: Dedham, Massachusetts, 1636-1736'' (1985), new social history
-
McPhetres, S. A. ''A political manual for the campaign of 1868, for use in the New England states, containing the population and latest election returns of every town'' (1868)
* [http://www.hti.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=moa;idno=AJA1967 Palfrey, John Gorham. ''History of New England'' (5 vol 1859-90)]
-
Zimmerman, Joseph F. ''The New England Town Meeting: Democracy in Action'' (1999)
* '''NEW YORK : Atlas of Historical County Boundaries; John H. Long, Editor; Compiled by Kathryn Ford Thorne; A Project of the Dr. William M. Scholl Center for Family and Community History; The new Berry Library; Simon & Schuster; 1993.
Contributors: U.S. Census Bureau. [http://www.census.gov/geo/www/us_regdiv.pdf "Census Regions and Divisions of the United States"] (PDF). Retrieved May 11, 2005.
External links
-
Historic Descriptions of New England Cities and Towns
-
Historic USGS Maps of New England & NY
-
New England Articles of Confederation
-
Charter of New England
-
Discover New England
-
New England Governors Conference
-
Flag of New England
-
Boston.com
-
NewEngland.com
-
New England Pride
-
David's Foliage Report
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