South. Pennsylvania was the other side.
Yes. It separated Maryland from Pennsylvania.
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 five southern colonies are : Georgia, south Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, and Maryland. Maryland and Virginia are also called Chesapeake colonies.
The state that is neither north nor south of the Mason-Dixon Line is Missouri. The Mason-Dixon Line, historically used to delineate the border between free and slave states, runs between Pennsylvania and Maryland. Missouri is located to the west of this line and has parts that fall above and below it, but it is not entirely classified as either.
Maryland, Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia.
Yes. It separated Maryland from Pennsylvania.
It is south of it. The Mason-Dixon line is basically the long straight border between Maryland and Pennsylvania. Tennessee is well south of it.
The two natural borders of Maryland are the Potomac River to the south and the Mason-Dixon Line to the north, which separates Maryland from Pennsylvania.
It separated Pennsylvania (free soil) from Maryland (slave). Maryland did not join the Confederacy, so it remained a Union state.
Maryland (slave) and Pennsylvania (free soil)
The Mason-Dixon Line was the border between Maryland and Pennsylvania established by royal surveyors in the colonial period. Informally, it is the line between North and South.
Maryland,Virginia,Georgia,North Carolina, and South Carolina
South.
Georgia,South Corolina,north Corolina,Vergenia, Maryland
Mason and Dixon were Royal Surveyors sent to end the border dispute between the colonies Pennsylvania and Maryland. When they fixed that boundary, it became the unofficial dividing line between North and South, since it went as far as the Ohio River, which separated North and South in the Midwest territory.
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)
South Central Pennsylvania, just across the Mason-Dixon line from Maryland…