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Third Coast

 
Wikipedia: Third Coast
The Great Lakes from space

"Third Coast" is an American colloquialism used to describe several (usually coastal) regions distinct from the West Coast and the East Coast of the United States.

The term is most often used to refer to the Great Lakes region.[1] Many regional businesses incorporate the name "Third Coast" in their names and products, such as Michigan's Third Coast Kite and Hobby, which has an image of the coastal dunes in its logo,[2] and Michigan-based Bell's Brewery, which sells "Third Coast Beer". The beer's label pictures a map of Iosco County, Michigan, which borders Lake Huron[3].

The term is also used to refer to the Gulf Coast of the United States[4] and American South.[citation needed] It is used in cities such as Houston, Texas;[citation needed] Tampa, Florida;[citation needed] and New Orleans, Louisiana.[citation needed]

While lacking an actual coast, the city of Nashville, Tennessee is sometimes referred to as the "Third Coast", implying that its cultural significance rivals that of the traditional American coasts.[5]

Fresh Coast

"Fresh Coast" is an American colloquialism used to describe the freshwater coastal region of the United States surrounding the Great Lakes.

Distinct from the continental coastlines of the West Coast and the East Coast, the "Fresh Coast" is located in the upper regions of the Midwest, bordering Canada and stretching from the western edge of Lake Superior to the eastern edge of Lake Ontario in New York.

The term was coined[citation needed] by Milwaukee mayor Tom Barrett and is most often used to spur commerce, in contrast to the colloquialism "Rust Belt".[6] Regional media outlets have adopted the phrase in an effort to re-brand Great Lakes development. The term connotes both the area's large of resource fresh water and its exception educational resources (e.g., University of Chicago, University of Michigan, University of Wisconsin, Marquette University). The term is especially popular in Milwaukee,[citation needed] as Southeastern Wisconsin is America's leading freshwater hub for both industry and academia.

"In 1959, Disneyland opened in Anaheim, and the city said, 'We will become a tourism Mecca,'" Meeusen said. "But for 12 years, it didn't do anything, and Disney moved on to Orlando. It opened Disney World there in 1972, and Orlando said, 'We will be the tourism Mecca.' They got their act together – changed zoning, created tax incentives and worked with their universities to create hospitality education programs. "The city attracted other destinations, and Orlando is the tourism capital today, and Anaheim is not. Milwaukee right now is Anaheim in 1959 or Orlando in 1972. We could do nothing. Or we could get our act together and coordinate our corporate, academic and government to become the freshwater capital of the U.S. and possibly the world," Meeusen said. (Rich Meeson is the current CEO of Badger Meter in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.)

See also

References

  1. ^ McClelland, Ted (2008). The Third Coast: Sailors, Strippers, Fishermen, Folksingers, Long-Haired Ojibway Painters, and God-Save-the-Queen Monarchists of the Great Lakes. Chicago: Chicago Review Press. ISBN 1556527217. 
  2. ^ http://www.elbertasolsticefestival.com/schedule.html
  3. ^ http://blog.mlive.com/michigan/2008/03/medium_bells-kalamazoo-third-coast-beer-label.jpg
  4. ^ Goodwin, Katherine R. (Fall), "The Third Coast: Echoes of Exploration and Discovery", The Compass Rose (Special Collections, The University of Texas at Arlington Libraries) XVII (2), http://libraries.uta.edu/speccoll/crose03/thirdcoast.htm 
  5. ^ Page referencing Nashville with nickname retrieved 8/21/2008
  6. ^ Milwaukee on the "fresh coast," not "rust belt," says Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett in D.C. speech - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

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