It's Mason-Dixon.
The Mason-Dixon line divided the North from the South, the free states from the slave states. The south, in memory of this division, is still sometimes referred to as "Dixie".
Confederate and Union Boundary IMPROVEMENT The Mason-Dixon line
Besides becoming the border between Maryland and Pennsylvania, Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon's line became what separated the states that allowed slavery (Confederate; south) and the states that didn't (Union; north)
The Mason-Dixon line, named for Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, the surveyors who mapped it out, was originally the border between the colonies of Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware, and Virginia (in present-day West Virginia). The line later was extended westwards, marking the border between slave states and free states.
The "Mason-Dixon" Line Not true, the Mason-Dixon line was used due to colonial disputes with the British colonies at about 1763
The Mason Dixon Line which has come to symbolize the cultural boundary between the Northern United States and Dixie.
The Mason-Dixon Line is the boundary between Pennsylvania and Virginia. It was surveyed between 1763 and 1767 to settle a border dispute between the British colonies of Pennsylvania and Maryland.
Maryland and all the states south of it are south of the Mason-Dixon line. It was originally a line separating Pennsylvania and Delaware from Maryland and Virginia. This boundary was extended agreed in 1779. The line was named after George Mason and Jerimiah Dixon. These men had surved the line, thus the name "Mason -Dixon".
The Mason-Dixon line.
mason Dixon line
It's Mason-Dixon.
Pennsylvania and Maryland
Mason Dixon Line
Mason Dixon line
The Mason-Dixon line was known for the division between the northern and southern states in the U.S
The Mason Dixon Line