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There are 13 states that are considered Deep South. Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, South Carolina are just 4 states.
The "Deep South" included Georgia, southern Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, north Louisiana, and East Texas. The term refers to a cultural and geographic subregion in the southern US. These states also known as the "Cotton States" due to high numbers of large cotton plantations.
Alabama
because we no longer wanted to be part of the union, where the southern states were not considered soverign and the union states did not believe in states' rights like the south did
Definitions of what is the southern region of the United States vary slightly from one person and context to another. The south certainly includes all the states of the Confederacy, but also others. Among the states of the south are the following.The Confederate States:VirginiaNorth CarolinaSouth CarolinaGeorgiaFloridaAlabamaMississippiTennesseeLouisianaArkansasTexasDepending on circumstances, the following might also be considered part of the South:MarylandWest VirginiaKentuckyOklahoma (became a state after the Civil War and so was not "part" of the Confederacy.)MissouriKansas
There are 13 states that are considered Deep South. Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, South Carolina are just 4 states.
Alabama
No. Kentucky is part of the upland south, along with Tennessee, eastern Virginia, eastern North Carolina. The deep south is typically thought of as Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina.
The "Deep South" included Georgia, southern Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, north Louisiana, and East Texas. The term refers to a cultural and geographic subregion in the southern US. These states also known as the "Cotton States" due to high numbers of large cotton plantations.
Alabama
The South and the Southwest are the regions that are considered part of the Sunbelt.
No, Georgia is in the southeastern US, on the Atlantic coast, and is considered part of the Deep South.
The Deep South is the states of the United States along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico and part of the Western Atlantic Ocean. The extreme westerly state is Texas and the most easterly is South Carolina. In between those extremes are: Lousiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. The Deep South is often seen as more of a cultural area than a geographic one.
Virginia was the state that is considered to be part of the old south.
no
There are many states that are considered ot be part of 'Mid-America'. These include Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Dakota.
Yes, South Carolina is considered the "Deep South". I found a good explanation below...from the Wikipedia entry "Deep South" "Although often used in history books to refer to the seven states which originally formed the Confederacy, the term "Deep South" was not actually coined until long after the conflict had ended. Prior to the Civil War, "Lower South" was the usual designation used to refer to the said states. When "Deep South" first made its appearance in print "during the second third of the twentieth century" it originally applied to the states/areas of Mississippi, north Louisiana, southern parts of Alabama and Georgia, and northern Florida. This was the part of the South considered to be the "most Southern" of all. Later, the general definition expanded to include the whole of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina, often taking in bordering areas of East Texas and the original inclusion of north Florida. In its broadest application today, the Deep South is considered to be "an area roughly coextensive with the old cotton belt from eastern North Carolina through South Carolina west into East Texas, with extentions north and south along the Mississippi."