(Redirected from Eastern seaboard)
Regional definitions vary from source to source. The states shown in dark red are usually included, while all or portions of the striped states may or may not be considered part of the East Coast.
The "'Eastern Seaboard'," or "'Atlantic Seaboard'" are terms referring to the easternmost coastal states in the
United States. They touch the
Atlantic Ocean and stretch up to
Canada. It usually includes all
thirteen original states, as well as such selected places as
Washington, D.C.,
Florida,
Maine and
Vermont. People elsewhere in the United States sometimes refer to the East Coast colloquially as "back east" or "out east."
Inclusion of states
The term "East Coast" is often associated with the
Northeastern and
Mid-Atlantic United States, particularly for cultural concepts such as an "Eastern college" or "East-coast liberal" or the "I-95 Corridor" (referring to
Interstate 95). The
Southeastern portion of the coast from Virginia to Florida is more typically associated culturally with the larger
American South. "East Coast" may also refer even more narrowly to the highly urbanized strip along the coast from
Boston, Massachusetts, to
Washington, D.C., which is also known as the "Northeast Corridor", a definition which excludes the less densely populated areas of
Upstate New York and
Western Pennsylvania, with cities like
Buffalo and
Pittsburgh, which may have more in common with the
Midwest than with cities like
New York,
Philadelphia,
Washington, D.C.,
Baltimore and
Boston.
History
The East Coast was part of the
Atlantic world, and had elaborate trade interconnections with
Britain,
France,
Africa, as well as with the
British,
French and
Spanish colonies of the
New World. It was also the scene of large scale colonization by the British starting in the 1580s. Some colonies failed but most thrived. On the other hand the
Dutch,
Swedish, Spanish and other colonies were eventually taken over by the English speakers. A series of wars between Britain and the French (and Indians), and Spanish, and then wars between the Americans and the British and their Indian allies, kept the frontier regions violent down to 1814. The Americans grew rapidly, and moved to frontiers in the west, and also to the North and South, in unstoppable waves after 1750. The attempts by the (British) Government to prevent European settlement west of the Appalachians (in order to pacify former Native American allies following
Pontiac's War, were the primary cause of the American colonist's rebellion. The very rapid demographic growth was due to enormous amounts of good land, ample food, and a favorable disease environment. The Americans doubled in number every 25 years by natural increase. This was augmented before 1775 by steady flows of new migrants from Britain, as well as large numbers from Germany, plus slave purchases. Immigration fell off after 1775, then resumed about 1840. Millions of "old" immigrants came from Britain, Ireland, Germany and Scandinavia before 1890, and even more millions came from Southern and Eastern Europe between 1890 and 1914, when war and immigration restrictions stopped most population movement. Large scale immigration did not resume until the 1960s.
The 13 colonies developed their own political culture in the 18th century, called
republicanism. They revolted in 1775, creating the new "United States of America" in 1776.
Culturally it is also where most of the first wave of immigrants from Europe settled before America began its western expansion. The
Appalachian Trail runs through most of these states from Maine through Georgia. Historically the
Mason-Dixon Line cuts this area in half at the northern border of
Maryland, which still indicates a cultural change. Through the course of early
United States history, the Eastern Coast was divided over many issues including
slavery. In the
1860s this came to a head and the
Civil War broke out. This war was fought mostly in East Coast states, including
Maryland,
Virginia, and
North and
South Carolina.
See also
★
Atlantic Coast
★
Geology of the Appalachians
★
West Coast of the United States
★
Third Coast
References