If your name is Mason or Dixon, please comment below. Don't forget to check out Name Explain's video: kzbin.info/www/bejne/kHiUiHiqeLuFf8k&t
@death-istic95865 ай бұрын
Yo.❤
@exsanguinator14655 ай бұрын
Who's this Mason Dixon and why do they like lines so much?
@masonmoden75685 ай бұрын
I am Mason. Do I get a prize?
@masondixon54975 ай бұрын
My name is Mason Dixon!
@kwisin13375 ай бұрын
I must compliment your audio, for outdoor recording. Well done for the total package.
@ianwebb55645 ай бұрын
Fun fact: As a Marylander, I've found that a lot of people assume that the state nickname "The Old Line State" is based on the Mason-Dixon Line, when it's actually based on the 1st Maryland Regiment, led by William Smallwood in the revolutionary war, which ended up (arguably) saving the Continental Army and the revolution as a whole at the Battle of Long Island.
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
Well dang, I guess that needs to be a video as well!
@DetroitMuscle5 ай бұрын
@@iammrbeatyes please make that video
@ianwebb55645 ай бұрын
That'd genuinely make me so happy!
@ThunderTheBlackShadowKitty5 ай бұрын
@@iammrbeat Actually yeah that's a great topic, details about the revolutionary war.
@thorpeaaron11105 ай бұрын
@@iammrbeatyes
@dikemawson30085 ай бұрын
I am a survey party chief. I am watching this on my lunch break. It's incredible what was achieved with such primitive technology. Back then you would have to measure angles based on a compass and measure distances with a metal chain. Nowadays, we have total stations that can measure angles and distances at the same time with incredible accuracy and precision. Generally speaking, boundaries are defined by where the original surveyor put them, regardless of how inaccurate the original tools were. Even with modern technology, you cannot simply measure the literal bearings and distances defined by a legal description. Because of common law, you have to determine where the lines were originally drawn which reqiuires tremendous amounts of research which is a heavily misunderstood part of our profession. Thanks for this quality content! FYI; The "stones" you are referring to are called "stone bounds." They are a type of survey monument.
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
Underrated comment. Thanks for sharing all that!
@SylviaRustyFae5 ай бұрын
@@iammrbeat Damn, if this had only not been a collab vid so you cud pin this underrated comment :3
@bigrigcrunchberry9665 ай бұрын
So my apologies but, I find it very frustrating when people refer to essentially anything previous civilizations as "primitive technology". Because I feel it severely undermines the intelligence those civilizations, and our species as a whole. Because as with every period throughout our existence, the resources, tools, and so on where state of the art for its period. Honestly I feel most of my frustration stems from ancient aliens, and how they really kind of insult the human species by claiming humans from 400 A.D. where too primitive. Thus external resources must explain these structures and so on.
@NoyeMetal4445 ай бұрын
I’m a field crew chief too! You are absolutely correct. I feel like your average person does not know much about how land surveying works lol. I don’t know if most people even step into a public records room unless they’re getting a marriage license from the clerk’s office or they’re meeting with a title examiner. Thankfully Mr Beat makes topics like this fun and educational!
@Compucles5 ай бұрын
@@bigrigcrunchberry966 Fair enough. Is "outdated technology" a better term?
@lordburgendy61085 ай бұрын
I was in a cemetery in Philadelphia to see Ben Franklin's grave. I found it, took my photo, and was walking out when I saw a weird looking headstone. It looked like a square cube. I stopped to check it out, and there was a plaque on the front of it. It was Charles Mason's grave, and they used an original Mason-Dixon stone to be his headstone!
@SylviaRustyFae5 ай бұрын
+
@patrickwentz84135 ай бұрын
and now I am on a quest to see this headstone.
@lordburgendy61085 ай бұрын
@@patrickwentz8413 Christ Church Burial Ground in Philadelphia
@djquinn115 ай бұрын
That’s pretty cool.
@samfeldman15083 ай бұрын
It was terrible what Charles Mason did to Sharon Tate.😜🤪😉🤷♂️
@MinisDunyasi55 ай бұрын
Mr. Beat’s commitment is impressive: “Hiking in the name of teaching history.”
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
I love hiking anyway so it was really two interests in one! :)
@malafunkshun80865 ай бұрын
@@iammrbeat Best of both worlds, my good Sir! Aloha 😊🤙🏼👏🏼
@ynnjaeeOG5 ай бұрын
he never misses a beat.
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
:)
@today2735 ай бұрын
Lol ❤ he misters a beat
@SylviaRustyFae5 ай бұрын
Well, he's not called Miss Beat after all
@Professor_Taiga-Vanguard5 ай бұрын
No! Stop it!
@sdmurphy202 ай бұрын
You forgot "pun intended" 😂
@jeffm97705 ай бұрын
My grandmother once told me a story that when they were surveying, Mason drank out of a jar and Dixon drank out of a cup and that's why we have Mason Jars and Dixie cups. She was a little strange, but we loved her.
@clinthowe76295 ай бұрын
that’s as good a story as any other American myth. two cheers for grandma hip hip hooray! hip hip hooray! 😂 hey! I’d sooner believe grandma than I would the “I chopped down the cherry tree, cannot tell a lie” schtick. 😊
@darkhobo5 ай бұрын
@@clinthowe7629I think we say "Huzzah" because of the setting.
@DugrozReports4 ай бұрын
Awesome grandma!
@wendychavez53484 ай бұрын
I love your grandma! Would love to have a Dixie cup of tea with her, along with some jam out of a Main jar.
@joanfoxwright42215 ай бұрын
Mr Beat, I love your videos; I'm 72, and I learn a lot from you. Thank you.
@CL_CORTES5 ай бұрын
Me too, and I'm 52! I wish Mr. Beat was my History teacher in the 80's !
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
Thank YOU
@joanfoxwright42215 ай бұрын
You are very welcome! Keep teaching us!💖@@iammrbeat
@trevinbeattie48885 ай бұрын
I remember the Mason-Dixon line being a point of contention between Bugs Bunny and Colonel Sam in “Southern Fried Rabbit”. “Gotta burn my boots - they touched Yankee soil!”
@charlespomfret72075 ай бұрын
Look me up at my Gettysburg address
@Aabil115 ай бұрын
@@charlespomfret7207 That was such a great line!!
@Atrainfrey5 ай бұрын
I grew up in south central Pennsylvania right above the mason dixon, I used to backpack the mason dixon trail along the susquehanna river all the time growing up. Been following this channel for years now, pretty cool to see a video on this.
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
That is pretty awesome.
@Retrievinggold5 ай бұрын
Are you a York County or Lancaster guy? I’m a Solanco guy myself
@Atrainfrey5 ай бұрын
@@Retrievinggold York county, right across the Norman Wood bridge from you lol
@Retrievinggold5 ай бұрын
@@Atrainfrey heck yeah man best place ever to grow up fishing and hiking running around the roads. It’s a shame everything is getting closed up after dark now cause of idiots destroying it
@elizabethsemarge48005 ай бұрын
As a Northern Virginian, if you ask most of us. You don't hit the south until you leave Fairfax and Loudoun Co. 😅
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
This makes sense
@LTParis5 ай бұрын
That is the more modern border of the south. The DMV is kinda the last big blue bastion before you get into the red states/regions.
@indianguy22765 ай бұрын
I always thought it was south of Manassas myself
@elizabethsemarge48005 ай бұрын
@@indianguy2276 that sir is 💯 fact Prince William County IS the south lol
@ThunderTheBlackShadowKitty5 ай бұрын
As a deep southerner I always saw Virginia as THE neutral ground, not truly southern or northern. I know it sounds corny but it is honest. Usually I just lump Virginia with West Virginia & Kentucky as "Appalachia". It works well.
@weldin5 ай бұрын
Mr Beat Presents: Geographical straight lines in American History!
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
That curve slightly to match the curvature of the earth!
@njb11265 ай бұрын
@@iammrbeatthat could be a great series, you could do a series on how states got their borders.
@polishedrelish5 ай бұрын
I see what you did there
@Compucles5 ай бұрын
@@njb1126 There's actually a really good book all about that. It's called "How the States Got Their Shapes" by Mark Stein.
@weldin5 ай бұрын
@@Compucles Knowing Better also did one in 2017
@coreywalker75865 ай бұрын
Just found this channel. Already know its gonna be one of my favorites
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
:)
@NickHernandez20245 ай бұрын
How are you now just finding this fantastic channel? 😅
@NameExplain5 ай бұрын
Who's that good look drawing that pops up in the video? Asking for a friend.
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
It's YOU
@davea63145 ай бұрын
A bloody Limey and a bloody Yank making educational videos linked together.
@Illumisepoolist5 ай бұрын
Hey Parick! How you doing?
@ianferguson39985 ай бұрын
Also Charles Mason was part of the survey of Mt Schiehallion, which allowed us to measure the weight of the Earth. His work helped Henry Cavendish determine that the Allegheny mountains might be causing errors in the measurements because of their gravity pulling on the instruments. Really good stuff these guys were doing.
@mkayyhub5 ай бұрын
I’m not a surveyor but I work in urban planning/studies and I work closely with them. It’s so beautiful to know the field I work in helped my ancestors out in their journey up north.
@amandalinthicum12205 ай бұрын
As many of your videos I've watched, I've never noticed how buff you are! You look great.
@indianguy22765 ай бұрын
I have never known that I needed Mr. Beat to say "baiiiiiii" until today, and I am here for it
@jg-77805 ай бұрын
The Mason-Dixon line is definitely a good tool for distinguishing between the historical north and south, but as a Marylander myself, I find that in modern times, the cultural boundary between the north and south is somewhere around Fredericksburg, VA, as in my experience, cities like Baltimore and DC are a lot more culturally and economically connected to cities like Philly and NY than to cities like Charlotte and Atlanta.
@chriskelly18904 ай бұрын
As a Marylander, I would certainly agree. There was nothing Southern about growing up in Montgomery County, MD. Southern culture was in fact quite alien.
@philmccracken75204 ай бұрын
Thats because since 1990's Maryland and Delaware have been invaded by yankee horde ! Mostly from NY State !
@mariowalker90482 ай бұрын
Some argue the potamic river as the modern Mason Dixon line. A few Marylanders identify as southern
@Gabriel2oh62 ай бұрын
Agreed. I’ve grown up in Washington state my whole life but lived two years in Maryland and I didn’t feel anything culturally south about my time there. Seemed like a nice, normal, liberal state.
@herschelwright46635 ай бұрын
Yosemite Sam: “That’s the Mason-Dixon Line. And no Yankees are crossing!”
@TheLegoryan5 ай бұрын
This is such an awesome video! Thank you Mr. Beat probably my favorite video you have ever made!!
@tippytoes23585 ай бұрын
The line between getting sweet iced tea and unsweet iced tea.
@matthewstorrs70845 ай бұрын
Speaking as a Maryland native, it's always been weird to me that Maryland is technically considered a "Southern State". I get why; slave-owning state and all that, but culturally, in the modern day, not so much. Granted, I grew up in the urban corridor between Baltimore and DC, and I know that East of the Bay as well as in the Appalachians are much closer to the south in terms of culture, but the middle portion (where the majority of the population is) feels much closer to the likes of Pennsylvania, Delaware, or New Jersey than to Virginia or points South. I go down to visit the part of the family in Alabama, and we have very little in common. As an aside, since you mentioned Supreme Court cases in this video, wanted to say that I recently learned about Pickering v. Board of Education, which I did not learn about in any of my US History classes (including AP US! The horror!). Looked for videos on it, but didn't see one from you, and that could be a fun one if you're looking for new ones to talk about. Always nice to see the court expand freedom of speech.
@seanreiter5 ай бұрын
I grew up in South Jersey. Just slightly north of the line. Based off of the things I heard growing up, you would think it was the Deep South.
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
I agree with you! Maryland feels much more Northern than Southern these days.
@laurat72325 ай бұрын
Not to point out the obvious, but Harriet Tubman was fleeing Maryland and headed to Philadelphia, so Maryland you are Southern.
@cowsaysmoo515 ай бұрын
Yeah same. I'm from Delaware (Slower Lower to be specific). The southern half of the Delmarva Peninsula really seems like a little isolated pocket of "the South," as I don't think THE South really starts until you get into Virginia and such. But Sussex/Wicomico counties and the surrounding areas are definitely Southern in terms of culture.
@jnyerere5 ай бұрын
@@laurat7232Also Frederick Douglass as well.
@Willlbone5 ай бұрын
Been binging Mr. Beat for like a week straight. Absolute GOAT
@shannonbeat5 ай бұрын
Yes!
@dylanwysocki44065 ай бұрын
i dont know why but im going on a binge of all your videos rn and theyre all really well put together and educational
@Qsefe995 ай бұрын
Mr. Beat, I know you're probably back in Kansas or west Virginia, but a fan from northeast PA says hello. We have a lot of history and museums around here that are great. I have worked at my local museums just a small amount, and the records and artifacts we have are quiet extensive. If you ever run out of video ideas just come on down. Me and my brother love your videos, keep up the great work!
@DugrozReports4 ай бұрын
Does he live in W. Virginia part of the time now?
@Qsefe994 ай бұрын
@@DugrozReports He kept jumping across the border, so who knows where he is
@MatthewTheWanderer5 ай бұрын
The weird thing is, Maryland isn't really considered part of the "South" anymore. Even the Census Bureau considers it part of the Northeast instead. I guarantee you that the vast majority of Americans have no idea that the Mason-Dixon Line is mainly just the border between Maryland and Pennsylvania, even they have all heard of it. So, no, the Mason-Dixon Line itself is NOT a major cultural boundary in America, anymore. Not the actual line, anyway. The idea of it is, for sure, but the cultural line it represents is much further south now.
@Compucles5 ай бұрын
I was taught that Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland were the Mid-Atlantic States; which combined with New York and the New England States made up the American Northeast Region.
@MatthewTheWanderer5 ай бұрын
@@Compucles Yep, exactly, me too!
@chriskelly18904 ай бұрын
Exactly. Maryland stayed in the Union and there is very little Southern culture in the state.
@onurbschrednei4569Ай бұрын
@@chriskelly1890there used to be the tidewater culture in MD, which was deeply intertwined with slavery on tobacco farms. But I’d say the dominance of tidewater culture in MD already went away in the 19th century, when Baltimore became one of the main immigration ports in the US, introducing lots of ethnic communities that don’t exist in the South.
@Brizzrizz22 күн бұрын
I think of Maryland as a Limbo state, because my dad and his maternal family is all from MD and considers themselves southern and Maryland a southern state, as my family had been there since they were enslaved , it’s just interesting cause it seems that in the rural parts Southern culture is still well and alive, but the heavily urbanized cities reflect those of the North, I think Maryland is a true border state where it is both but neither, the most northern southern state and the most southern northern state, it’s just definitely a unique area. As a Northerner myself from New England, I’d never consider Maryland North eastern
@FreezyBreeze145 ай бұрын
Andrew Ellicott (actually pronounced Ell-ih-kitt by MD locals) was the nephew of another Andrew Ellicott, who was one of the founders of Ellicott City, MD
@stuartaaron6135 ай бұрын
I wondered if there was a connection, thank you for clearing that up.
@MidwestArtMan5 ай бұрын
It's a good thing they drew that giant line behind themselves. I'm sure it made it easy to get home.
@carissapeyton5 ай бұрын
I live about 5 minutes south of the MD line in Manchester! Pass over it every week! Super cool living in an area with such rich history!!!
@aidenharris43435 ай бұрын
Mr. Beat, my Dude! I am So thrilled you did this. I’m from PA and I’m absolutely fascinated by the line-and resulting Cresap’s War. I’ve been a little confused why this wasn’t being discussed by historians-or anyone-in modern times; we didn’t learn much about this in school-aside from it being a brief dispute, of course. So thank you for being one of those who Are talking about it. It might be smaller in comparison to other conflicts, but it’s fascinating
@bleeploughly63115 ай бұрын
You always make such interesting videos, I could watch you speak on just about any topic
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
Thank you. That comment means a lot!
@clarencewildes17475 ай бұрын
When I was stationed in Albany, GA (USMC) the civilian workers called us Yankees. A lot. I asked several of them if they knew where the Mason - Dixon line was, since I’m a Maryland native. The general consensus was “It’s up around Macon somewhere.”
@levicolon33474 ай бұрын
Thats pretty funny story JARHEAD , BTW SEMPER FI !
@natemiller68025 ай бұрын
Loved the video. I visited the marker a couple years ago at the southwest corner of Delaware. It was neat seeing a cluster of three markers there at the corner with Maryland. It would be neat to learn more about the 12 mile circle and the wedge oddities
@stevebreeding37515 ай бұрын
I live a few miles from the end marker of the mason dixon line and till farms on both sides of the line in Delaware and Maryland
@xenoxaos14 ай бұрын
Definitely hit up the three states at white clay creek park a few times. It's still funny that people don't even know Delaware is a state.
@eliplayz225 ай бұрын
1:25 It also marks roughly where north of the Mason-Dixon line, snow cover all winter long is a given
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
It does seem that way, doesn't it...
@openminds87655 ай бұрын
As always awesome research and fun presentation ✅ Thanks - We enjoy learning from your KZbins.👏
@jsfmcdill5 ай бұрын
The vast majority of Marylanders and I believe most Southerners would not consider Maryland as part of the modern day south. (I’m a Marylander)
@beckysnead89145 ай бұрын
I'm a native, too. But I disagree.
@Blueslyfox5 ай бұрын
@@beckysnead8914the SUTH WILL RAISE AGEINER
@pixilatedsarin24085 ай бұрын
10:30 I didnt realize Mr. Beat was built like a beast! Look at those cannons.
@ortherner5 ай бұрын
mr beast
@JoeWhitaker-235 ай бұрын
Mr. Beef!
@zr19115 ай бұрын
MR BEAT NEVER SKIPS ARM DAY
@grantdidomizio87445 ай бұрын
I live in Evansville, IN where the Ohio River is the boundaries of the line! Back when I went to high school at FJ Reitz in town (which is on a hill with a superb view overlooking), we used to say we were the school closest to the Mason Dixon. Don’t know if that’s true, but definitely can tell cultural differences even between Henderson, KY and Evansville!
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
Yeah that Ohio River split is quite distinct.
@CrispyBacon15 ай бұрын
Mr Beat… you are one brave man to do that introduction
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
How come?
@NotAKoenigsegg5 ай бұрын
did not expect a dixie chicks reference in a Mr. Beat video
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
Two videos in a row, actually! haha
@BrianSiano5 ай бұрын
Thomas Pynchon's novel _Mason and Dixon_ is an incredible fantasia built around the two surveyors. It's written in a mock-18th century style, it's full of Joaks Obvious and Obscure, and observations on science, politics, and the loss of magic. Pynchon is one of our greatest living writers, and this is one of his literary mountains. It was also the inspiration for Mark Knopfler's song "Sailing to Philadelphia."
@thewetzelsixx90095 ай бұрын
Wasn't gonna comment, but that bit at the end convinced me. Also, love seeing two of my favorite educational KZbinrs connecting a little for something like this. I was born a little north of Philadelphia, but I've lived most of my life in Tennessee far south of the line.
@cowsaysmoo515 ай бұрын
I, a proud Delawarean, am tickled just to have my tiny state mentioned. But I am a bit sad you didn't really mention the north/south part of the line that separates my state from those crab-eating Marylanders. Speaking of Delaware/Maryland, I am from a town at the southernmost point of Delaware called Delmar. It is actually a twin city, with there being a Delmar, Maryland and a Delmar, Delaware. Kind of like how there's Kansas City, Missouri and Kansas City, Kansas. It would be super cool to see you talk about the history of these twin cities that exist, as I find it interesting how cities can develop and spill over state (and possibly even national?) boundaries.
@bradbaldus17134 ай бұрын
Dude! Have you ever been to Leipsic? Delaware has an active crab fishery and crab picking is a big cultural thing throughout Delaware and even SE PA although Maryland crows about having the best crabcakes, but you probably knew that once you thought about it.
@beatlejason5 ай бұрын
Very cool. I'm from Texas and have heard it referred to my whole life but had no idea the history. Thanks Mr. Beat!
@kyledh61855 ай бұрын
Mr Beat if you’ve never heard it go check out the song “Sailing to Philadelphia” by Mark Knopfler and James Taylor. Knopfler sings from the perspective of Jeremiah Dixon, and Taylor sings as Mason
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
I shall check it out. Thanks for bringing it to my attention!
@MrHws5mp5 ай бұрын
@@iammrbeat It's gorgeous. "Well you're a good surveyor Dixon but I swear you'll make me mad. The West will kill us both you gullible Geordie lad." 🙂
@matthewbusanic96175 ай бұрын
I grew up in southern PA. There was a plaque on a nearby lawn that stated that Mason & Dixon gazed at the stars in this spot to help define where the line that bares their name would eventually be.
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
That's pretty cool!
@matthewbusanic96175 ай бұрын
@@iammrbeat Found it on google maps, www.google.com/maps/place/Stargazers'+Stone/@39.9387246,-75.7335973,16z/data=!4m6!3m5!1s0x89c65868df2c203d:0x7184d9bf5b1356f7!8m2!3d39.9392171!4d-75.732463!16s%2Fg%2F11gfnf_w9n?entry=ttu
@ActuallyNickV5 ай бұрын
I live right along the Mason-Dixon line and never knew the history behind it lol. Went on plenty of scouting trips out there, but never thought about why it was called that. pogged video brother 🤙
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching and the comment! And REPRESENT
@EmSchneb4 ай бұрын
I live on a farm that sits on the Mason Dixon line in Maryland, in fact 28 acres are in Pennsylvania. We found a crownstone in the 50s and named the farm Crown Stone Farm. We still have the stone it’s faded but you can still see the crown emblem.
@paulsonus5 ай бұрын
I'm a Marylander, and I've never considered myself southern. I culturally fit in with the North better. I think this is reflected on electoral maps as well. Granted, I grew up near DC, so that probably has a large influence on it. I think Maryland fits into it's own category really, cause we're not Southern for the most part, but we're also not really Northern.
@brightlineflorida12215 ай бұрын
Geographically you are a Southerner, but culturally you are a Northerner. As a South Floridian, There is a saying in Florida: "The more south you go, the more northern it gets."
@beckysnead89145 ай бұрын
As a Marylander I'm pretty tired of explaining to people in the south that we are technically southern.
@paulsonus5 ай бұрын
@@beckysnead8914 the South doesn't want us and the North doesn't either. I think we're just our own thing to be honest Mid-Atlantic is the best geographical description for us I think besides just "Maryland."
@OrioleBeagle5 ай бұрын
People in New England think we Marylanders have Southern accents.
@gwenpolo13075 ай бұрын
2 interesting and informative videos back to back? Mr. Beat treating us good!
@kevincronk79815 ай бұрын
I'm from Northern Virginia, and am so far North that I am only technically from the South. Marylanders don't seem southern at all, even compared to my family from New England and Upstate New York. The actual cultural boundary in my experience between the North and South runs midway through Virginia, Maryland and Northern Virginia are entirely Northern
@thatguyoverthere96345 ай бұрын
Said like someone who's never been west of Baltimore. Western Maryland makes NOVA look like a New York, the contrast in personality is so extreme.
@mountaineernews25 ай бұрын
I agree, northern Virginia is completely separated from the rest of Virginia politically economically culturally. There is no similarities and not to mention the rest of the state absolutely hates northern Virginia‘s guts and northern Virginia is just four counties, Loudoun Fairfax, Prince William, and Arlington with Loudoun County being the one in charge and let’s be honest these areas don’t even wanna consider themselves a part of Virginia but yet they make up 27% of Virginia’s population so The only way to fix this is if you give northern Virginia to Maryland or DC that would make a lot more sense
@kevincronk79815 ай бұрын
@mountaineernews2 Loudon isn't "in charge" whatever that's even supposed to mean, I've lived my whole life in Arlington and I couldn't even tell you if Loudon is in Virginia or Maryland it has no impact on me
@mountaineernews25 ай бұрын
@@kevincronk7981 well, I wouldn’t look it’s it that way you see what I mean by in charge I mean that Loudoun County has the most influence over the other northern Virginia counties and let’s just say that Loudoun County’s laws are basically identical, to Fairfax, prince Williams and your Arlington County‘s laws and many laws in Arlington County were copied or stolen from you. Guessed it, Loudoun. Because well, these four counties are basically sheep they do whatever they want with each other
@mountaineernews25 ай бұрын
@@kevincronk7981 well, OK yes Loudoun doesn’t have an impact on your day-to-day lives but in your county government it does you see most of Arlington County’s laws are usually copied or stolen from Loudoun County, and vice versa heck all Northern Virginia county steel laws from each other I don’t wanna get too deep in it because I don’t wanna bore you, but they’re actually a lot more similar than what meets the eye also Loudoun County is the richest county in the Country so there’s already a huge chunk of influence right there in Fairfax county is not far behind Loudoun County. In fact, all Northern Virginia counties are inside the top 10 for the wealthiest counties in the country.
@Mbarnstein628915 ай бұрын
I lived on both sides of the Mason Dixon Line. I first lived about four miles north of it in Shrewsbury, Pennsylvania for the first six years and nine months of my life. Then I lived south of it since 1998.
@ds54365 ай бұрын
And the Beat goes on... a nature hike.
@wapartist4 ай бұрын
This is very interesting. Im from Georgia but several friends of mine from Maryland consider themselves Southerners
@ThunderTheBlackShadowKitty5 ай бұрын
Im a deep southerner and tbh i always felt Maryland and Delaware have more northern influence than southern. I see Virginia as a neutral ground and North Carolina is where the true south begins.
@DiscoDashco5 ай бұрын
Hey Mr. Beat, don’t think we don’t notice those amazing gunz you hold that microphone, and point at stuff with! Great video per usual, sir.
@patrickwentz84135 ай бұрын
When I was stationed at Leavenworth, Kansas I met a group of British Army officers and we got into a discussion about geography and I had a hard time explaining to them how difficult it was to know exactly where you were as a colonist in America. I used the Mason-Dixon line as an example. They thought I was a nincompoop. Wish I had this video.
@OpinionesDeJACCsOpinions5 ай бұрын
Well, part of the difficulty comes from the fact that the colonies were still claiming parts outside their modern borders and people from them often agreed with those larger claims! Heck, even after independence that stuff was still going on. It probably wasn't until almost a century after independence that most of the claims had been settled in the original 13 colonies-turned-states. Although, on occasion small border disputes have come to light even into the 21st century, but it's mostly more about definitions and accuracy rather than big land grabs like it used to be about. One of the biggest disputes nowadays that I'm aware of seems to be between Georgia and Tennessee because it involves a river that could benefit Georgia. New Jersey had a dispute with New York about Ellis Island that they ended up settling in the Supreme Court in the 1990s. The Carolinas had one that they decided to work on their own, some houses had to change addresses because they were built in between the states.
@chrispannygolf16015 ай бұрын
You’re my absolute favorite KZbinr. Love your work.
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
Woahness! Thank you so much!
@NoyeMetal4445 ай бұрын
I used to work with a gentleman who’s ancestor was George Washington’s boss while they surveyed a good portion of Virginia for the King. Their family is still in the land surveying business all these years later!
@KaptainCnucklz5 ай бұрын
Great vid! I live not far from the line in Elkton. Weather's been all over the place lately, so consider yourself lucky that you managed to record on a day without rain.
@capnstewy555 ай бұрын
The quakers actually encouraged immigration of Presbyterians from Scotland and Ireland to settle along the border as the Catholics of Maryland were stealing so much from them and the other nonviolent religious groups of Pennsylvania. The Presbyterians then promptly started raiding across the border the other way.
@KC_Streams5 ай бұрын
My wife lives in Baltimore and when visiting her family something that's surprised me is how utterly irrelevant the Mason Dixon line feels. Because DC is such a major area that's quite difficult to drive past, whenever we go on family trips out of state, it's almost always to Pennsylvania. In fact, we've driven to Pennsylvania more times than I could count as a family, but never once driven to Virginia. My perception as a non-American who's spent a lot of time in Maryland is that nowadays the Virginia-Maryland border feels like a way bigger divide. I can't imagine anyone form Pennysylvania feeling like they're crossing a significant line when they go to Maryland nor the inverse By contrast, living in the UK I definitely am aware any time I cross the watford gap service station and officially enter the North of England
@magicvibrations51805 ай бұрын
As a non-american, I'd never heard of the Mason-Dixon line before. Thank you for educating me on the fascinating history of your country!
@tuckerseifert39775 ай бұрын
Sometimes I wish I could learn about these things from a non-US perspective for myself. From your country, are there any analogous regions/identities like the North and South in the U.S.?
@magicvibrations51805 ай бұрын
@@tuckerseifert3977 Not really, I'm from Denmark which is comparable in size to Maryland. However, much like GB, we're still a kingdom with power over the Faroe Islands and Greenland. The relationship between Denmark and Greenland is complicated, with much of Greenlands economy being largely dependent on Danish infrastructure and imports. If you want a deep dive on Greenlandic life and culture, including a look into their relationship with Denmark, I recommend watching the video Johnny Harris made last year about Greenland.
@welcometonebalia5 ай бұрын
@@tuckerseifert3977Speaking for metropolitan France, there was, at least, a divide between North and South, especially up until the Revolution, let's say. If you draw a line that cuts France in half by the middle, there were huge linguistic differences (langues d'oïl in the North, langues d'oc in the South), same for law (Germanic customary law in the North, Roman written law in the South), and many cultural variations, including the shape of roof tiles. As the country became more centralized and the modern French language more standardised, from the Albigensian crusade to the Revolution through the Hundred Years War and the rise of absolute monarchy, this divide has lost a big part of its relevance, but to an extent something remains to this day, in various aspects of culture, including accents, food, sports and so on.
@israelgarcia78015 ай бұрын
@@welcometonebaliavery cool that you guys do have such a rich history even though you may not be directly connected to it it is fun to know things. But I do think it is funny that most of all our history is less than 300 years which is nothing compared to other nations.
@tuckerseifert39775 ай бұрын
@@magicvibrations5180 that’s a great point! I’m actually fascinated with Greenland! I’ll have to do a deeper dive. I wonder how the sense of nationality is there. Like, what is the Greenland identity? It has such fascinating history!.
@MerchantW5 ай бұрын
You have been poppin off recently Mr. Beat. Banger for banger
@DannerBanks5 ай бұрын
I was today years old when I learned that Mr Beat is yoked.
@younglagx5 ай бұрын
Always a good day when Mr Beat uploads a video.
@brianarbenz13295 ай бұрын
Very good video overall, but: 10:26 _"North of it there was practically no racial segregation."_ I grew up in New Albany, Ind., on the Ohio River across from Louisville. Yes, right on the Mason-Dixon Line. New Albany and nearby Jeffersonville Indiana (which was also directly across from Louisville) had segregated public schools. Madison, Ind. also did (it's on the Ohio River 40 miles northeast of Louisville), Corydon, Ind. did (it's about 30 miles west of Louisville), and the much bigger city of Evansville, Ind. (on the Ohio River) did too. And 120 miles north of the Mason Dixon line, Indianapolis had one high school set aside for blacks (the proudly named Crispus Attucks High School), while all others in the city were for whites only A significant difference north of the Mason-Dixon line is that Indiana on its own banned segregation in public schools in 1950, four years before Brown v. Board, and all these cities' schools quickly obeyed with very little trouble from the public. Public facilities, like buses and parks, were almost entirely free of segregation in Indiana, but many department stores were separate in Evansville's downtown; there was a black store district just off the central business district. And lots and lots of northern communities had red lining ordinances going back to the early 1900s forcing neighborhoods to be segregated. When ordinances didn't do that, restrictive deeds on each individual lots did -- all to keep housing prices and therefore housing equity higher for whites. That's powerful white privilege that lives on.
@_Dibbler_5 ай бұрын
Fun Fact: If you see a German giggle when you say Dixieland: In Germany there is a very well known portable Toilet manufacturer called Dixi and is the commonly used name for all portable toilets. I, at least, always have to smile when I hear Dixieland :)
@anthonyhelms39175 ай бұрын
I did not know the mason dixon line started in Maryland. I thought Maryland if not a combined Virginia at the time was the “Dixie line” this was fantastic another great video mr. Beat. Both of your channels are are amazing. Shout out to the beat goes on.
@caseclosed93425 ай бұрын
I grew up in Pennsylvania and we used to go out hiking to look for those markers when I was in summer camp. Brings back memories!
@mountaineernews25 ай бұрын
As a West Virginian we don’t really truly consider ourselves southern we’re more of a mix and have closer similarities to Pennsylvania and Ohio rather than the rest of the south
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
This makes total sense!
@jasonfischer89465 ай бұрын
I found one of those stones one time when I was a surveyor. I got all giddy.
@fuzzfac39425 ай бұрын
Mr beat is jacked??
@godturtle62745 ай бұрын
12:17 "oh wait... they're just The Chicks now"💀
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
💀
@Stussmeister2 ай бұрын
Very interesting and informative. I've been a lifelong resident of Pennsylvania, yet while I've visited Maryland a couple of times (i.e. Baltimore, Ocean City), my home i(in the Philadelphia suburbs) s closer to the borders with Delaware and New Jersey. and about an hour's drive from the Mason-Dixon Line. I'd also like to add that I have relatives who live in the Deep South (i.e. Alabama), and my dad (who has visited these relatives) says that the way of life down in that region is much slower and simpler than our frenetic East Coast pace.
@thermalserpent42695 ай бұрын
Why does he sound kind of tired in the beginning
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
Because I was hiking up a mountain.
@simplesimon82555 ай бұрын
Use your head
@ValdrVideo5 ай бұрын
He literally said it was hard to hike and hold the camera at the same time
@SAMURAINUTS5 ай бұрын
Use your heart @@simplesimon8255
@sagenod4405 ай бұрын
The answer is within the question
@trp59955 ай бұрын
Great video, Mr. Beat. You filmed that on the Pa. Wv border. When you were on the Pa. side of the border, you were in Greene County, Pa. That's the county where I grew up. And, based on that, I eould argue that the Mason Dixon line was drawn about 10 to 15 miles too far south.
@davea63145 ай бұрын
Ask Bugs Bunny and Yosemite Sam about the Mason-Dixon Line. 😜 Lol
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
I put them in this video!
@davea63145 ай бұрын
@@iammrbeatI saw that. Lol 🤣
@craigorr97135 ай бұрын
I was born and raised in Delaware. We said we were the only state east of the Mason-Dixon line (the western border of Delaware part of the line you mentioned near the beginning).
@souptime86355 ай бұрын
the lines Mason, what do they mean!
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
It be Mason
@msspi7645 ай бұрын
Cool video. As a Marylander who’s moved around a lot, there is or at least used to be an amazing difference in some basic cultural norms between Maryland (at least the western part of it) and southern Pennsylvania. There’s (or at least used to be) a more striking cultural difference between Virginia (south of the Potomac River) and Maryland. Recent “advances” such as social media have reduced or obscured those just as they have changed many cultural pockets in places like cajun/creole Louisiana, Appalachian West Virginia and Kentucky, and the islands in the Chesapeake Bay. But there remain remnants of all of those differences yet today.
@donnyfunaro99543 ай бұрын
No I’m Mr. Beat
@wrightway655 ай бұрын
One of the best subscriptions I have on KZbin!
@thesonicfan47965 ай бұрын
My name is Mason
@dogedog86865 ай бұрын
My name is Dixon
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
Hi Mason
@iammrbeat5 ай бұрын
Hi Dixon @@dogedog8686
@bradbaldus17134 ай бұрын
A couple of Delaware things. The survey started with an arc drawn from the top of the cupola of the courthouse in the most northern county in Delaware located in New Castle, demarking the border between PA and DE and part of DE and NJ. The arc starts from above the mean high tide line on the eastern (New Jersey) side of the Delaware River so that Delaware includes about 6’ on the Jersey side of the river along the course of the arc, something very inconvenient for the Delaware State Police when bodies wash up over there. The arc then continues until where DE, PA and MD now meet and continues straight west from there. The markers between DE and PA have Ps and Ds carved on them and the one where the 3 states meet (a replacement marker) has P, D and M carved into its sides.
@markshepherd36325 ай бұрын
Jeremiah Dixon who surveyed the line, is buried in County Durham England. He was also from there. It is also the same County as where George Washington family is from. Washington Old Hall the family home is open to the public in Washington Village which is part of the town of Washington.
@kimberlybega82714 ай бұрын
I grew up in PA and had to take PA history in 9th grade but still learned a lot from this video! I knew what the Mason-Dixon line was and what it represented as far as slave vs free states, but that was about it. Also, now I know why West Virginia has a panhandle! I also am enjoying this recent trend of shooting videos on location. 😊
@Indoctrinate4205 ай бұрын
I *KZbin Made Me Censor This* Mr. Beat, always laying down the history lessons. Wish your channel was around when I was highschool!
@_i_a_n_4 ай бұрын
Solo multi-camera work seems fun. Appreciate that you enjoy what you do, it seems.
@Texas-Chris4 ай бұрын
Really enjoy your content Sir !!! Congratulations on hitting 1 million subscribers !!! These history from location are so great !!! Keep on making great content. God Bless !!!
@kenlodge33995 ай бұрын
Thank you for that much lighthearted yet erudite explanation. Excellent as always.
@RonnieGreher4 ай бұрын
I remember seeing this referred to as “Macy Dixie” in bugs bunny cartoons as a kid in NYC. What a fun and informative video this was for me.
@VoidHalo5 ай бұрын
As a Canadian, I always assumed the Mason Dixon line was longer. And further south. I looked it up on a map a couple of years ago and was surprised at how far north it came. In retrospect, it's not all that surprising. The shortness of it still astounds me, though. For being such an important border, there are many state lines that are longer. Although, probably more state lines that are way shorter. Dang New England.
@PremierCCGuyMMXVI5 ай бұрын
Man, makes me grateful we have google maps today 💀
@eh26435 ай бұрын
Mr. Beat lookin’ swole! Great video.
@davidmehling43105 ай бұрын
Thank you for explaining something which seems to have largely deviated from its original meaning and relating how difficult it was surveying a straight line in those days especially in mountains and forests.
@flybennu5 ай бұрын
Another great video from Mr. Beat! I learned so much in this one. Thanks, man!
@flybennu5 ай бұрын
ooh also, cool to see you also enjoy Patrick's videos! ;D
@thomasreto29974 ай бұрын
I’m surprised that you didn’t mention the “rail trail”. As a Pittsburgh native, I and my two sons love to go for bicycle rides along this trail quite often… you can even bike from Pittsburgh to Washington DC along this trail🤙