Pennsylvania and Maryland.
Pennsylvania and Maryland.
Mason Dixon line
Mason Dixon Line
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
Confederate and Union Boundary IMPROVEMENT The Mason-Dixon line
states rights
The Mason-Dixon Line is the invisible line that historically separated the northern and southern states in the United States. It was surveyed in the 1760s and came to represent the cultural and political divide between the free states in the North and the slave states in the South.
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
Mason Dixon line
the lines that separated the north and the south were the border states If you mean the northern and southern states of USA then the Mason-Dixon line. The Mason-Dixon line is the wrong answer. Maryland was in the north but is below the Mason-Dixon line. Thus proving the answer incorrect. This line was to divide Philly from Maryland. And was done prior to the conflict. The true division of North and South is the 36 30 parallel plus Virginia. This is the line that started the debate over slavery. Where it could and could not exist. This is the line drawn in the sand which created the conflict. This is the line that shaped states and our country.