*What other interesting panhandles are there in the US / other countries?*
@dr.a0067 ай бұрын
Chile: all handle, no pan😅
@GervJean7 ай бұрын
Namibia!!!
@MrSuperMichel19977 ай бұрын
I guess Limburg (province) in the Netherlands? It's the leg/foot/boot of the Netherlands.
@Juno_unoo7 ай бұрын
I think the most bizarre is the Norwegian land that borders Russia. Also try: Croatia.
@FrutoseDeMorango7 ай бұрын
It would be cool if you continued the megalopolises series with like: The 8 Brazilians Megalopolises The 13 Chinese Megalopolises The 13 Hispanoamerican Megalopolises Africa, Southeast Asia and East Asia (Excluding China) only have 6 megalopolises each, so Idk if it's possible to make videos Also, India is listed as having only 3 megalopolises, which is very strange, and the only others in the world aside these are the one in Turkey and the one in Iran, so Idk how to distribute them Anyways, that's just an idea, hope you'll take a liking to it and produce more amazing videos!
@jimslancio7 ай бұрын
If I were holding Texas like a pan, I'd hold it by the El Paso salient, rather than the Amarillo block. Those mountains near El Paso make for a better textured grip.
@bobbywise23137 ай бұрын
The point might poke you though.
@mremu43587 ай бұрын
Can't argue with that logic, especially if you hold it by the Corpus Christi. A lot of oil seeps down there making it a more slippery grip
@HayTatsuko7 ай бұрын
Amarillo looks more like what's being cooked in the pan than what one might hold said pan by.
@garyshan72397 ай бұрын
Yeah but everything in Texas is bigger so they had to have a massive one
@bentonrp7 ай бұрын
You have a gift for logic, m'Lord...😶.
@froggi_doggi7 ай бұрын
I don't know if it's been mentioned, but your little guy looks like Ferb cosplaying Napoleon. (from the tv show Phineas and Ferb)
@General.Knowledge7 ай бұрын
Never noticed that! It's true!
@hpvspeedmachine41837 ай бұрын
@@General.Knowledge Make a video about river meanders and state borders !
@deeptoot14537 ай бұрын
I always thought that's where the inspiration was drawn from
@BinglesP7 ай бұрын
Considering how often Phineas and Ferb dressed up in history-inspired costumes throughout that show, it's very in-character too.
@yooochoob7 ай бұрын
What’s a Ferb?
@revinhatol7 ай бұрын
TRIVIA: There are three types of salients in North America. A bootheel goes southward, a panhandle goes eastward or westward, and (though rarely used) a "chimney" goes northward.
@clemson22footballfa14 ай бұрын
Those are official terms or just terms people use?
@revinhatol4 ай бұрын
@@clemson22footballfa1 Eeyup.
@ImThe5thKing4 ай бұрын
@@revinhatol Lived in Montana my entire life with multiple friends from Idaho. I've never heard "chimney" in my life. Everyone calls it the panhandle
@fastballfacts7 ай бұрын
“Bootheel” is used for the southeastern corner of Missouri as it is smaller and protrudes southward, resembling the heel of a boot. The original plans for the Missouri border didn’t include the bootheel and would have kept the same border line that divides Kentucky and Tennessee but it was added when it was argued the area had more in common with the other Mississippi River towns in Missouri than it did with the Arkansas Territory. It is technically classified as a salient as well.
@mrmoose66197 ай бұрын
That and the people of the area wanted to be in the same state as St. Louis so they would have a place to trade with in their own state from what I understand. Arkansas doesn't have much along the river... Memphis really dominates the area.
@michaelrae95997 ай бұрын
@@mrmoose6619 i read it was primarily one man who owned most of that land and he wanted to live in Missouri.
@timewave020127 ай бұрын
I watched the recent 2024 eclipse from that area (Kennett). Interestingly, I watched the 2017 eclipse from a part of IL that seems like it should be in MO (Kaskaskia), because it's on the western side of the Mississippi river, because the river changed course relative to the historic border. Maybe I'll find somewhere geographically interesting for the 2045 eclipse.
@criticaloptimist7 ай бұрын
Came here to say this but without the extra detail. lol thank you :)
@revinhatol7 ай бұрын
Ask New Mexico.
@matthewperry22187 ай бұрын
Maryland was the 7th state to join the US not the 13th. Lol and I do indeed live less then 15 min from that narrow spot in our state
@BigBuck3ts7 ай бұрын
Both of you are right technically. Maryland was the last state to ratify the Articles of Confederation, but the 7th state to join the union when the Constitution was adopted.
@MyFiddlePlayer6 ай бұрын
@@BigBuck3ts I came here to say that. Maryland wouldn't sign the Articles of Confederation until all of the other states gave up their western land claims and settled their boundary disputes. At the time, Maryland, Delaware, and Rhode Island were the only states not trying to claim land either from each other or west of the Appalachians. Maryland and Delaware's disputes with Pennsylvania were settled prior to the Revolution, the final act being when Mason and Dixon were hired to survey and clearly mark their mutual borders. Maryland's funky shape comes from the colonial charter, where the king granted the colony everything between the Potomac River and the 40th parallel, not realizing that these intersect and that the Potomac River has a fork in it. The later land grant establishing Pennsylvania overlapped the earlier grant to Maryland, due to inaccurate knowledge of the geography, and then Delaware was carved out of Maryland at a later date.
@charlesyoung74362 ай бұрын
@@MyFiddlePlayer Don't forgot the PA-DE boundary dispute that was not solved until 1921. Look up the "Twelve Mile Circle" and "The Wedge".
@jimslancio7 ай бұрын
Oklahoma is the only state that looks like a pan.
@jyrki216 ай бұрын
More like a deep fryer.
@WorldlyJack6 ай бұрын
@@jyrki21more of a butcher knife
@bernier426 ай бұрын
Meat cleaver, but I see what you’re saying.
@leonardmccoy47976 ай бұрын
Texas.
@abatall6 ай бұрын
except someone broke the bottom also pot with handle
@idaho_girl7 ай бұрын
Fun facts about the shape of Idaho. There are stories that the original border with what is now Montana was supposed to follow the continental divide. However, the border was surveyed more to the west giving a big chunk of the west slope of the norther Rockies to Montana. Second, the original territorial capital of Idaho was in Lewiston, in the southern part of the panhandle. But when the capital was moved to Boise, the people in the panhandle were not happy and entertained the idea of joining Washington or Montana. In order to placate them, the territorial government put the state university, the University of Idaho in Moscow, which is about 35 miles north of Lewiston. The university was established about 6 months before Idaho got statehood. To this day, the North Idaho, i.e., the panhandle, feels like a different state in many ways than the southern part. This is only emphasized by the panhandle being in the Pacific Time Zone and the southern part being in the Mountain Time Zone.
@jovetj7 ай бұрын
Same case in Nebarska, which is quite varied and diverse from east to west. The dry grassy hilly sandy panhandle (in the west) feels like a different state than the lush green of the east.
@criticaloptimist7 ай бұрын
And soon, if eastern Oregonians get their way, the sale of Idaho will change drastically! lol
@criticaloptimist7 ай бұрын
@@jovetjI think it’s unavoidable when states reach a certain side. I heard the richest county in the country is in western Nebraska because it’s got like fifty residents that are all wealthy ranchers. lol something like that. In Oregon, eastern Oregon truly is so remote that they really don’t feel like they’ve got much in common with mist of the state. I don’t blame them.
@peggyjones32827 ай бұрын
I think the panhandle was also pretty lawless. All the silver mining and logging camps. Washington didn't want the headache of governing it. So Idaho took it.
@msmith33957 ай бұрын
@@criticaloptimistit won’t happen. Why not just become their own state? They’re big enough.
@jakehr36 ай бұрын
You never explained why Maryland's panhandle gets so thin. While Maryland lobbied to get the Western half, that doesn't explain that much. The thinness comes from 2 factors: 1) the Potomac River and 2) the Mason-Dixon line. When the colonies were in their first years of establishing themselves, the Mason Dixon line was agreed upon between Maryland and Pennsylvannia as the dividing line between the two states. It also later became a de facto dividing line between the Northern and Southern States (although now a days most Marylanders would not consider themselves Southern). So that parallel was between those two states, and then the Potomac River was the Southern border with Virginia. Both borders get extremely close out west and that's why it gets so narrow.
@michaelrae95997 ай бұрын
The "Boot Heel" refers to the little part at the bottom of Missouri (that should have been in Arkansas).
@leechjim80237 ай бұрын
New Mexico also has a bootheel.
@michaelrae95997 ай бұрын
@@leechjim8023 it does. How THOSE lines were drawn would be interesting.
@KLTRF7 ай бұрын
@@michaelrae9599Orion 3:29
@benn4547 ай бұрын
@@michaelrae9599 They got 3/4 of a square, and then they screwed up the bottom.
@filodipicori7 ай бұрын
My Missouri friend loves this little anecdote "We could cede the Boot to Arkansas and the net IQ of both states would increase."
@thomasrinschler67837 ай бұрын
A quick correction on the OK panhandle - the Missouri Compromise line wasn't at 36 degrees, but 36 degrees and 30 minutes north.
@johnhblaubachea51567 ай бұрын
Good point; the 34 mile difference with the southern boundary with Kansas (37 degrees) sounded too small.
@carsarthu7 ай бұрын
I don't understand what makes Utah's protusion not a panhandle though
@Purriah7 ай бұрын
I’m guessing here… The protrusion is larger than the section without the protrusion, so it’s more like it has a chunk missing out of it than a handle.
@admirals8187 ай бұрын
I'm with you. It's only 15 miles wider than Nebraska's panhandle.
@iCanbEYOURrUKIA7 ай бұрын
I see what you mean, but by that definition, that means Nebraska's wouldn't be a panhandle either, but it is. And both strips of land (Nebraska & Utah's panhandles) border 3 other states as well. Semantics I guess 🤔
@leifkhas74257 ай бұрын
It's just the creator of the video forgot to mention it. Minnesota has one with Canada, called th3 Northwest angle but he forgot to mention it.
@General.Knowledge7 ай бұрын
There's definitely a difficulty in defining what constitutes a panhandle and what doesn't! I was confused myself making the video
@MewxPro7 ай бұрын
3:20 In Texas we also called OK's panhandle the Cimarron Strip.
@matthewkimble9647 ай бұрын
We in Oklahoma call it the only real panhandle seeing as we are shaped like a pan.
@ClementinesmWTF7 ай бұрын
@@matthewkimble964and why doesn’t Texas drift into the gulf? Because Oklahoma sucks. Stfu Oklahomer, your opinion doesn’t matter
@benn4547 ай бұрын
@@matthewkimble964 A saucepan, to be precise.
@matthewkimble9647 ай бұрын
@@benn454 🤣
@bernardo-martins7 ай бұрын
@@matthewkimble964 oklahoma looks like a literal pan that exploded on the bottom
@cparle877 ай бұрын
Maryland wanted river access. That makes complete sense.
@markgarin63557 ай бұрын
Thought Maryland boarder was just leftover from those around them
@General.Knowledge7 ай бұрын
It does!
@cparle877 ай бұрын
@@General.Knowledge I mean, look at all the nations along the west coast of Africa. No matter how big they are or what shape they are, they fought to ensure they had ocean access. That would make a good future video, I think. Going from Morocco to South Africa explaining how the nations got shaped that way and why they all fought to ensure they had access to the ocean, even if it was a super tiny strip.
@bigscarysteve7 ай бұрын
@@cparle87 And yet, having ocean access doesn't help African countries that much. Africa has few harbors. Thomas Sowell has a good video about why Africa's geography works against its economic development.
@jemiller2267 ай бұрын
@@bigscarysteve But that would require listening to Soewll talk, which is a hazardous proposal.
@marcelolopez10017 ай бұрын
Never thought of Misiones as a panhandle
@encycl07pedia-7 ай бұрын
@@weston407 These are not peninsulas. Learn the difference. Peninsulas are surrounded mostly by water.
@axelprino6 ай бұрын
It doesn't really fit the usual idea of a panhandle since it's mostly not caused by arbitrary lines in a map but rather actual geographical features, but I guess it technically counts as one.
@marcelolopez10016 ай бұрын
@@axelprino Excellent point
@feliciagaffney19986 ай бұрын
@@marcelolopez1001What is Misiones?
@marcelolopez10016 ай бұрын
@@feliciagaffney1998 It's a province in Argentina
@farpointgamingdirect7 ай бұрын
You forgot the PA panhandle on Lake Erie between NY and OH: "The Delaware River forms the boundary between Pennsylvania and New Jersey. In the northwest a small panhandle separates Ohio and New York and forms a 40-mile (65-km) waterfront on Lake Erie, giving the state access to the iron ore barges and other commerce of the Great Lakes." --Encyclopedia Britannica
@ericreese77927 ай бұрын
The trouble with that one is most of the panhandle shape is on the lake rather than on land.
@lakemacaine26897 ай бұрын
Half of Alaska panhandle is on the sea
@refosco19937 ай бұрын
You must be from PA
@MrsBrit17 ай бұрын
Lol no. That doesn't count as a panhandle. It's a land fart at best.
@roberttanenbaum33136 ай бұрын
Yes, I grew up in Erie PA and vote for it to be a panhandle 🎉
@ShonnMorris7 ай бұрын
You mentioned that you were intrigued in so many words that there could be disputes within one country. Bare in mind back in those days the states were more autonomous than they are now and functioned more like republics within a nation. it wasn't until after the civil war that power was more concentrated at the federal level. While states today still maintain a good deal of autonomy, claims to territory aren't one of them anymore and Congress would have to approve of any territorial changes between states which is why it's much harder today for states to secede from other states than it was prior to the civil war.
@z0phi3l7 ай бұрын
Also pre Revolutionary War the now states were culturally different, especially with the dutch, British, Spanish and French influences, those animosities were still prevalent here. And there was some religious differences too that can be factored in.
@ShonnMorris7 ай бұрын
@@z0phi3l Good points
@lucinae85127 ай бұрын
They would have to consider the after effects of territories being seceded will have on the political balance in Congress and Electoral College, which is why Statehood for Puerto Rico and Washington D.C. has been stalled for so long.
@bigscarysteve7 ай бұрын
@@z0phi3l What Spanish and French influences? The USA didn't gain any territory settled by the Spanish or the French until the 1800's. The big differences were religious ones and cultural ones caused due to which regions of England settled which colonies. Read the book _Albion's Seed_ by David Hackett Fischer. The importance of religion and religious differences in America's history is a huge one, but one which has been downplayed by historians and history teachers in the last 95 years or so.
@farpointgamingdirect7 ай бұрын
There was a recent border dispute between MD and VA. VA claimed the border was in the middle of the Potomac River. MD claimed the entire width of the river. MD won
@sifridbassoon7 ай бұрын
Thank you for mentioning the earlier and larger panhandle of Texas. I'm wondering why you didn't include Mississippi and Alabama as having panhandles.
@_DJL277 ай бұрын
9:23 Maryland was the 7th state, not the 13th. Rhode Island is considered the 13th state, holding out on ratifying the Constitution until 1790. I believe what you are referring to here is that Maryland was the 13th and final state to ratify the Articles of Confederation. The Congress of the Confederation (no longer the Continental Congress at this point) granted the panhandle to MD in 1781, so they finally joined the Confederation of States at that time. To be fair, I definitely see the argument for calling MD the 13th state on these terms; however, Constitutional ratification is what most consider to be the date of statehood. Therefore I’d think that most consider Maryland to have became the 7th state in 1788. (Btw, could MD’s small eastern portion - between VA & DE - be considered a panhandle? It has 2 land borders!)
@TheModeler994 ай бұрын
Maryland was the last state to ratify the Articles of Confederation, but the 7th state to join the union when the Constitution was adopted.
@South_Ossetian_Mapper4 ай бұрын
@@TheModeler99 Maryland would have!
@charlesyoung74362 ай бұрын
Actually, Virginia has a prominent southwestern panhandle that was created when West Virginia became a state in 1863. I even saw a TV mystery in which a man was murdered by someone using a large flat piece of coal carved in the form of VA as a bludgeon.
@jamesshively7 ай бұрын
Idaho's panhandle used to be home to the State Capital, Lewiston. But when the capital was moved to Boise, the panhandle/northern Idaho felt disconnected from the politically, culturally and geographically and thus wanted to either join Washington or form its own state. To prevent that, the Idaho territorial Government put the state University (The University of Idaho) in the second biggest city at the time, Moscow. The cultural divide still exists today. UIdaho is still the state's main University, it's much more similar to Washington than the rest of Idaho, and the cities with the two biggest influences in the Panhandle are Moscow (Because of the UI and agg economic capital of the region) and Spokane, which is located in Washington (Because of its population, universities, and size, and infrastructure)
@BonaparteBardithion7 ай бұрын
Political borders can be funny like that. If states were divided solely by geography and/or culture and industry we could probably split Washington down the middle and give the eastern half the Idaho panhandle.
@jimgreen57887 ай бұрын
The Alaska Panhandle is also the home of many prominent ports of the cruise lines, among which it's called the Inside Passage, and by many of the residents, it's simply Southeastern. Yes, the Westerners here were the ones you mentioned. However, there were a large number of Native Alaskans living there for hundreds to thousands of years before the arrival of the others, such as Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian.
@JG-nm9zk2 ай бұрын
Nope clearly Tlingit Haida and Tsimshian are "russian explores." This channel is such a cess pit.
@daltongalloway6 ай бұрын
Who actively hates how those panhandles look? No image shaming our states!
@gplunk7 ай бұрын
Amazing all the iterations the various territories went through; and the reasons behind those configurations....
@danomaly8176 ай бұрын
Geography and terrain/rivers play a role in determining the boundaries as well.
@stco24267 ай бұрын
Great vid. I knew little about this but now know much more. Thanks!!
@Lon3wolf186 ай бұрын
Ive enjoyed watching youre channel grow so much. Really like the new intro animation.
@SantaFe194847 ай бұрын
Next, make a video about the states that have weird exclaves due to the Mississippi changing course, and a similar issue in Europe due to the Danube changing course.
@briangebbia60017 ай бұрын
I live in a panhandle to a panhandle in a state that used to be called 'The Panhandle State." I guess I should watch.
@captainpalegg28607 ай бұрын
as of like 3 years ago there was a bid for maryland’s panhandle to become part of west virginia (which, i’m sure you’ll agree, would’ve made the map a lot nicer). i couldn’t find a follow-up on that, so i guess the idea was just quietly thrown in the trash.
@michaelfoulkes95027 ай бұрын
@@lindaangus2307Western Maryland borders West Virginia.
@captainpalegg28607 ай бұрын
@@lindaangus2307 maryland's panhandle is NOT the delmarva peninsula.
@Camm0Blue7 ай бұрын
If they would join West Virginia, I would move back home to Sharpsburg, but until then I will stay in West Virginia.
@scotttaylor71467 ай бұрын
4:00 "Kansas wanted to match those of neighbouring states" But Kansas was the first state created out of those listed...
@katherinec27597 ай бұрын
Did the others have already designated territorial boundaries first, though? That might still be accurate, even if Kansas was the first state of the group.
@kenaikuskokwim96947 ай бұрын
Missouri and Arkansas are older than Kansas. Congress also had a policy of trying to keep new states roughly equal in area.
@MRSYSTEM967 ай бұрын
Alaska looks more like a peninsula than a panhandle because it is surrounded on 3 sides by water. Maryland does look very strange with its panhandle. West Virginia looks oddly shaped too. Virginia also seems to have a panhandle directly south of West Virginia (and a little smaller than Idaho's) but apparently its not "official". You could easily make a video of unofficial panhandles in America. Ireland has some panhandles, County Donegal and County Monaghan, and some smaller subnational ones.
@BlitherVids7 ай бұрын
You forgot #11: Vermont. It has the smallest panhandle of any state. Look up the tiny town of Beecher Falls.
@jumpanama7 ай бұрын
The entirety of New England is as much a panhandle as Florida is. Surrounded on the west, north and east (in Maine) by Canadian provinces.
@justoad7 ай бұрын
Yeah that's what I was thinking, I don't know why he didn't mention it in the beginning of the video
@encycl07pedia-7 ай бұрын
Florida has a panhandle. Florida is not itself a panhandle.
@thomasrinschler67837 ай бұрын
8:10 @General.Knowledge You should look up the Toledo War. And that's just the one territorial dispute that came closest to outright war - there were several others that also ended up in fighting, but thankfully only just with fists...
@mapwiz-sf5yt7 ай бұрын
There was actually shooting and raiding between Maryland and Pennsylvania in 1733. @GeneralKnowledge got a good bit of the Maryland stuff wrong.
@BigBuck3ts7 ай бұрын
@@mapwiz-sf5ytGood ole Cresaps War. Maryland really has been screwed over with a lot of its border disputes in the past.
@coold81447 ай бұрын
The entire state of Maryland is a bunch of panhandles stuck together.
@filodipicori7 ай бұрын
How much harder would Sprocle's "Click US States" Quiz be without the panhandles?
@faenethlorhalien7 ай бұрын
I guess they like begging.
@heatherknopp37235 ай бұрын
Very interesting video. I also enjoyed the patriotic music playing in the background! 👍🇺🇸
@natekurtz39557 ай бұрын
What about Pennsylvania's panhandle along Lake Erie?
@zach23827 ай бұрын
That’s not a panhandle
@South_Ossetian_Mapper4 ай бұрын
@@zach2382 Yes, that is a panhandle!
@zach23824 ай бұрын
@@South_Ossetian_Mapper no it’s not it’s not even land
@Yora217 ай бұрын
This really should mention rivers and mountains. Everywhere a panhandle border isn't a straight line, one of these is a crucial factor in the story.
@zyxwut3216 ай бұрын
I live in Northern Virginia (almost like a panhandle itself), and I've been to the narrowest spot in Maryland many times. There's a small working-class mountain town there called Hancock, Maryland, right off of I-70 (incidentally, it's also the section where I-70 and I-68 converge right outside of town). A lot of truck stops and industrial parks around there with the interstates and freight rail nearby across the Potomac River in West Virginia. There you can easily be in 3 states (West Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania) in less than 10 minutes from any part of town. A lot of small farms and old homes of varying age and quality. The most famous town native is a late 19th century black drag queen named William Dorsey Swann, who performed in DC.
@IamTalathia7 ай бұрын
Western Maryland is very West Virginia-lite, but with a Maryland budget for its infrastructure.
@Finch4607 ай бұрын
West Texas looks like a panhandle as well.
@lesterstone85957 ай бұрын
I agree.
@gilesclone7 ай бұрын
Yeah. I can’t see how it didn’t make the list
@RedCanyonWolf6 ай бұрын
Yeah Texas is just 4 panhandles merging.
@will-o-the-wisp-witch6 ай бұрын
Looking forward to a video on peninsulas. I always felt the upper peninsula of Michigan could have been the panhandle of Wisconsin lol
@planetarystargazer7 ай бұрын
What If the United States 🇺🇸 never annexed Hawaii
@Yondix7 ай бұрын
Britan would
@mikedrown27217 ай бұрын
@@YondixBritain
@sgtdebones7 ай бұрын
UK
@arden77137 ай бұрын
There's an alternate history hub video on this
@igorlopes75897 ай бұрын
Then the great hawaiian replacement wouldn't have happened and americans would be slightly less hypocritical when talking about dA gReAt rEpLaCeMenT
@thetokutickler6 ай бұрын
Holy sh*t the negative space of Idaho's panhandle makes a side profile of a head! How did I not see that until now?!
@late_night_videos7 ай бұрын
Panhandles makes maps unique i for one am on the side to keep them forever
@nancienordwick41697 ай бұрын
The story of Idaho's panhandle is more complex than you have stated. The division between ID and MT was set to be the Continental Divide. However, when federal surveyors asked people in Butte, MT, where the continental divide was, they were directed to the Bitterroot mountains instead. This was a conspiracy of the people at the time in order to maintain both Butte and Great Falls in the same state because the Anaconda Copper Company had their mines in Butte and processing in Anacinda, but also Great Falls on the opposite side of the Continental Divide.
@pseudotasuki7 ай бұрын
West Virginia's Eastern Panhandle doesn't border DC. It borders Virginia.
@Politography5 ай бұрын
It really looks like their trying to border DC. 😂
@schs19775 ай бұрын
The Eastern panhandle of WV is about 1 hour drive outside DC.
@billmalec7 ай бұрын
Grew up in the Maryland panhandle.
@leechjim80237 ай бұрын
West Texas is also a pan handle.
@jul14406 ай бұрын
Instead of a panhandle, NM has the Bootheel region, similar to Italy's. There are jaguars living there, which sometimes cross over into AZ and get caught on trailcams.
@gunar.kroeger7 ай бұрын
chile is 100% panhandle. Croatia is maybe 80%
@RYwoodview7 ай бұрын
I think you're missing the geophysical reasons. The line between Idaho and Montana runs along the Continental Divide, and this natural travel obstacle is relevant to which side belongs to which state. The Alaskan panhandle is a long stretch of seacoast backing up against the Coastal Range in British Columbia. It is near impossible to travel on land between the state and province, and the natural seaways connect far more readily to mainland Alaska (and southward). Other people know Maryland and West Virginia better, but it's likely that other older transportation routes help explain their salients as well.
@sircod5 ай бұрын
The Montana-Idaho border actually runs along the Bitterroot Range, the Continental Divide is another 100 miles east.
@navret17077 ай бұрын
Thanks for the info. I have been curious about Alaska’s panhandle as it really seemed to make no sense. I was just too lazy to look it up.
@thecowboyofdrag7 ай бұрын
You should do another video about the state Boot Heels New Mexico, Missouri, Minnesota's Northwest Angle, northern Utah are good examples of boot heels, which is what Connecticut's Panhandle should be classified as. You could also say that both Northern and Eastern Louisiana could be boot heels, same goes for Coastal Mississippi and Alabama
@bigscarysteve7 ай бұрын
Maryland was the seventh state admitted to the Union, not the thirteenth! People don't agree as to where the eastern panhandle of West Virginia begins or ends. Some regard only the three easternmost counties as the panhandle, while others view it as consisting of eight counties. The reason the three easternmost counties are part of West Virginia have more to do with the strategic importance of the B&O railroad than the federal armory in Harpers Ferry.
@kellz73137 ай бұрын
When he said that about MD, I thought that was incorrect 😁
@bigscarysteve7 ай бұрын
@@kellz7313 I couldn't remember what number Maryland was, but I knew Rhode Island was the thirteenth. That's easy to remember because Rhode Island refused to ratify the Constitution. Finally, the other states told Rhode Island to ratify it, or else they would start treating Rhode Island like a foreign country. That convinced them.
@bertholdvonzahringen67996 ай бұрын
Maryland is both 13th and 7th. 13th to sign the Articles of confederation, our first government, but 7th to ratify the Constitution which happened several years later.
@smithandshortdogs7 ай бұрын
7:37 "Off we go into the wild blue yonder!"
@DarkMight1177 ай бұрын
I'm glad I'm not the only person that heard each of the armed services anthems.
@paulturner83727 ай бұрын
Really odd boundary line's
@potatogirth7 ай бұрын
The British Empire was vast yet always (well jokingly so) struggled with forming borders that made any sense. I guess we Americans just carried on the tradition after our independence lol
@matthewwasser56217 ай бұрын
According to a book called Lost States, which is about states people tried to create but failed to gain statehood, there was a movement to turn the Oklahoma panhandle into its own state called No Mans Land, but it failed and eventually joined Oklahoma.
@joeskis6 ай бұрын
If that happened I would have hoped they would pass a law where no one is allowed to live there.
@gregsells85495 ай бұрын
The movement was to create the Cimarron Territory, which could have become a state.
@Angelic_Vanguard7 ай бұрын
Maryland is the best state, if we are to ever give up our panhandle it will only be through taking West Virginia's panhandle
@Angelic_Vanguard7 ай бұрын
@@lindaangus2307 confidently incorrect
@TheRetroGuy20005 ай бұрын
Kind of curious as to why the bootheels on Missouri, Iowa, Alabama, Mississippi, and New Mexico, as well as the chimneys on New Hampshire and Minnesota, are not considered panhandles in this video, while Connecticut's tiny bootheel somehow is.
@zach23824 ай бұрын
Do not panhandles in any way shape or form they don’t fit any of the definitions. They’re not even close. There’s no reason to be thinking this. Not similar to Connecticut at all.
@lp-xl9ld7 ай бұрын
Maryland was not the 13th state; Rhode Island was
@nickporter92646 ай бұрын
Maryland was the final state to ratify the Articles of Confederation, the first constitution of the United States, in 1781 (as shown in the video). The present constitution wasn’t framed until 1787 with Rhode Island (who had ratified the Articles of Confederation in 1778) ratifying it in 1790.
@BS-vx8dg5 ай бұрын
In 1781, Maryland *_was_* the 13th state.
@anttheaquarist79227 ай бұрын
Great question!! Always wondered.
@alexfarrell38157 ай бұрын
You always talk about us states, what about Portuguese states?, or whatever administrative division you guys use.
@General.Knowledge7 ай бұрын
We use districts! And then 'councils' which are essentially the administrative boundaries of municipalities within districts. I have long thought of making a series on each country's territorial organization, maybe I will!
@konchu52216 ай бұрын
0:59 excellent theory, I had never considered this
@loganbutler10167 ай бұрын
The state with the most panhandlers is California - by far.
@GolemDude7 ай бұрын
Marylander here, our northern border (and Delaware becoming it’s own state) was a settlement after the Cresap's War with Pennsylvania during the 1730s, which we got the bad end of the deal, if things went our way, we would’ve had Philadelphia and the whole DelMarVa peninsula, our southern border was a river (except for the DC cutout) and the Mason Dixon line going any lower would’ve made an exclave There’s a whole Wikipedia page on it
@vuchaser997 ай бұрын
Maryland is one of the most screwed states... related to relations with England as a Catholic colony and being the little sibling to Virginia. The original charter was to 40North... but as you said this splits Philly in half and 40N is north of the tidal Delaware River... which was vital for trade. Virginia stole the VA portion of thr peninsula, as the charter called all land east of the Chesapeake Bay with exception of a line tangent to the radius of 11 miles from the church at New Castle to the latitude of Cape Henlopen... for thr Swedish colony of Delaware (which became Dutch, then English). Though due to a map error by Lord Baltimore placing Cape Henlopen at Fenwick Island... Delaware more than doubled in size. Lastly, the southern boarder of Maryland was along the navigatable Potomoc river. Which should have been the south branch, but once again being the bigger brother VA made it the north branch.
@BS-vx8dg5 ай бұрын
Yeah, MD got screwed, but because of it you have the most unique shape of all 50 states. (You also have one of the top 5 state flags).
@danielventura73107 ай бұрын
Afghanistan.
@marka.2006 ай бұрын
Summary: Definition and Naming: A panhandle is a narrow strip of land projecting from a state, resembling a panhandle. Officially termed "salient," it differs from a peninsula by not being surrounded by water on three sides. Global Examples: Countries like Namibia, Argentina, and India have panhandles due to historical colonial borders and regional geography. U.S. Panhandles: There are ten panhandles in nine U.S. states: Texas (two), West Virginia (two), Alaska, Florida, Connecticut, Idaho, Nebraska, Maryland, and Oklahoma. Texas: Texas has two panhandles. The northern one resulted from border negotiations during the Republic of Texas era and the Compromise of 1850, which established its current boundaries. West Virginia: West Virginia has two panhandles. The northern panhandle arose from colonial disputes settled after the Revolutionary War, and the eastern panhandle was claimed during its secession from Virginia. Alaska: Alaska's panhandle was shaped by colonial disputes between Russia and Great Britain. The U.S. inherited this strip when it purchased Alaska from Russia. Florida: Florida's panhandle, initially longer, was shaped by Spanish and French colonial territories and U.S. acquisitions, becoming part of Florida upon statehood in 1821. Connecticut: Connecticut's panhandle, established in 1683, resulted from disputes with New York. It was the first U.S. panhandle shown on a map. Idaho: Idaho's vertical panhandle resulted from the loss of territory to Montana and Washington when they were created, leaving a narrow strip in between. Nebraska: Nebraska’s panhandle is large and exists due to the state's western extension and borders with Colorado, South Dakota, and Wyoming. Maryland: Maryland’s panhandle, a thin strip connected by a narrow corridor, was secured in 1781 for farmland and access to the Mississippi River, with Pennsylvania relinquishing its claim. Oklahoma: Oklahoma’s panhandle, known as "no man's land," resulted from Texas dropping its northern territories due to the Missouri Compromise's restrictions on slave states. Panhandle Groups: Four of the ten U.S. panhandles are connected in pairs: Oklahoma's and Texas's panhandles, and West Virginia's eastern panhandle with Maryland's western one. Colonial Influence: The formation of many panhandles is linked to historical colonial borders, compromises, and disputes over territory among states and nations. Geographical and Historical Significance: Panhandles often reflect strategic, economic, and political decisions from the past, such as access to resources, alignment with national policies, and settlement disputes.
@tnt-boom7 ай бұрын
Just by looking at the map i found way more that look like panhandles.
@AGamerthatregretsalot7 ай бұрын
Me when borders that go along rivers, mountains, and natural terrain: 😡 Me when straight lines: 😊
@bertholdvonzahringen67996 ай бұрын
Maryland’s pan handle is much simpler than you describe. Maryland’s charter as a colony was everything north of the potomac and south of the 40th parallel. Pennsylvania’s charter’s southern border also was the 40th parallel, however the map they were working with was innaccurate, and a compromise was made to allow the planned site of Philadelphia to remain within Pennsylvania without completely cutting off Maryland from her western territory. The charters were made before accurate maps of the area were made and it wasn’t quite understood just how far north the potomac would flow and how close the supposed southern border would reach towards the northern one. Had the river flowed more directly inland Maryland would have been a far more normal looking state.
@JhonnyBoi7 ай бұрын
I thought this was about panhandlers tbh. I was happy someone was finally talking about it.
@iccolo7 ай бұрын
im impressed you pronounced connecticut correctly
@benjaminrobinson38427 ай бұрын
5:25 - You are certainly right about the Florida Panhandle having more to do with Alabama than Florida proper. Someone I worked with told me that the area was sometimes known as "LA," for "Lower Alabama."
@symptomofsouls7 ай бұрын
It's Floribama, part of Florida but the people are Alabama
@JoshuaWillis897 ай бұрын
Maryland is such a bizarre state. Its flag, its shape, the way part of Virginia is contiguous with Maryland but not the rest of Virginia, the fact that it contains the US capital within its borders, which isn’t part of Maryland, but also isn’t its own state. Just very bizarre.
@dustin357137 ай бұрын
You realize Alexandria VA was actually one a part of DC right? And that VA also exists on the Delmarva peninsula right?
@dustin357136 ай бұрын
@justmeherethereandeverywhere We probably are! Here’s the retrocession history en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/District_of_Columbia_retrocession
@UIJuS107 ай бұрын
To answer the question posed at the end of the video, the US can't "correct" the states' borders. Firstly, because these are the correct borders. Secondly, because it would require approval of the legislatures of all states involved.
@gregsells85495 ай бұрын
The Louisiana portion of the Spanish Florida panhandle is known as the Florida Parishes. One of the three counties in the Oklahoma panhandle is Texas County, between Cimarron County (Cimarron was the proposed territory encompassing the region) and Beaver County, which originally was the entire panhandle.
@stephenspackman55736 ай бұрын
Interesting that so few of these revolve around the “classical” motivations of access to a port and/or maintenance of a road.
@Frankjc3rd7 ай бұрын
Fun fact: There's a highway that connects the Northern panhandle of West Virginia and goes through the southwest corner of Pennsylvania to re-enter West Virginia. It has no exits in Pennsylvania whatsoever.
@Bradferd3337 ай бұрын
What Highway number is it? That's hilarious
@Frankjc3rd7 ай бұрын
@@Bradferd333 I actually forget right off the top of my head, I'm sure a map can be found somewhere.
@Frankjc3rd6 ай бұрын
@justmeherethereandeverywhere if that matches the description, then yeah. I haven't been there myself in years either.
@micahrobbins83537 ай бұрын
Saying panhandles look bad on a map is crazy to me. Having everything on a map look like a samey blob sounds bad to me
@micahrobbins83536 ай бұрын
@justmeherethereandeverywhere I kinda like those too to be honest lol. There are definitely a few too many, but it'd be pretty funny if there were just one perfectly geomtric state dominating the rest
@symptomofsouls7 ай бұрын
Massachusetts has 1 random town that sticks out from the southern border because the guy they hired to mark the lines on a map screwed it up. There was a massive dispute about whether or not the southern half of the town should join Connecticut or stay part of Massachusetts. The town is now Southwick, MA
@ferretyluv7 ай бұрын
I heard the reason Idaho has a panhandle is because they didn’t want people rushing in during the gold rush so they wanted all the mountains to stay in Montana.
@revinhatol7 ай бұрын
*Hancock, Maryland?*
@zach23827 ай бұрын
Yes, that’s a place in Maryland
@rayfridley66492 ай бұрын
@@zach2382 Yes, in Maryland, but just barely, Less than 2 miles between the Mason-Dixon Line to to the north and the Potomac River to the south.
@Arjay4046 ай бұрын
Florida's panhandle bothers me the most because it "steals" so much coastline from Alabama. Some of the other pandhandles also create "walls" between two states that would otherwise be connected, but having two states of the same country not be connected to each other by land isn't that big of a deal. but not having access to like 80%% of your coast is huge, especially since coastal access is so important and useful for a jurisdiction.
@74bassman6 ай бұрын
Were you playing the air force song in the background?😂
@harperburgess97697 ай бұрын
9:23 I don’t understand this? As a Marylander, I’ve always heard that we were the 7th state, so how can we be the 13th?
@impalaman97077 ай бұрын
Denmark is either the "middle finger" or the "sore thumb" that sticks up out of Continental Europe!🤣🤣🤣
@joaopedroso1967 ай бұрын
Brazil have the beat pan handle called "triângulo mineiro" or mines triangle
@joshuabayerjazz6 ай бұрын
Fun video!
@mariajoaoferrazdeabreu1507 ай бұрын
Great video.
@ShootingStarMS392087 ай бұрын
Very interesting!
@SoujiOkitaTwo7 ай бұрын
Btw mistake in thumbnail Haida Gwaii isn’t part of Alaska
@sethr.c10656 ай бұрын
It's a very large access easement as well as an easy way to allocate excess land in an arbitrarily shaped set of borders.
@Wildstag7 ай бұрын
Fun fact about MD's panhandle, but it also cements more of its claim to the Potomac River. On the MD/VA border, the actual state line ends at the low tide mark of the Potomac. Also, since WV was originally part of VA, it could control most of the upper reaches of the Potomac and thus limit MD's river usage. But the current state line allows MD to control enough that it's a non-issue.
@MikeCee77 ай бұрын
Most famous Boot-Heel has got to be Italy (regardless, if it’s technically a peninsula)
@weslabrash85937 ай бұрын
I’m pretty sure the Alaskan panhandle is physically connected to the main body of the state. The eastern edge of the panhandle runs on the mainland all the way to the tip.
@JunesGo7 ай бұрын
the Idaho panhandle is in the Rockies, so it makes sense that neither Montana nor Washington would want to extend their territorial claim into the mountains.
@SilverAg115 ай бұрын
The CT panhandle was pretty much a trade for the oblong (the red part of the map) which went to NY