Austin will become part of Houston. It’s just a matter of time. The 290 corridor will merge them and in another 40 years you won’t be able to tell where Houston stops and Austin starts (just like today, where you can’t tell where Galveston stops and Houston starts.
The Metroplex wants to be considered a Eastern Seaboard city. Just like Atlanta. Nothing particularly Southern in either one, now days.
Long time Oklahoma resident here, though I was born and spent most of my childhood in the upper Midwest. Oklahoma is an interesting case, having been settled mostly after the Civil War, with different settlement patterns for different parts of the state. As a result, one can generally say that roughly the northern third of the state is culturally part of the Midwest, the southwest quadrant is part of the West, and the southeast (called “little Dixie”) part of the South.
A courtesy bump with a summary. Still no WV “southerners”?
Will Texas be the first to hit 20?
View Poll Results: Which Southern USA state do you currently call home?
This poll will close on 09-22-2015 at 09:28 AM
Texas 14 19.44%
Georgia 10 13.89%
North Carolina 10 13.89%
Florida 8 11.11%
Virginia 7 9.72%
Tennessee 6 8.33%
Missouri 3 4.17%
Oklahoma 3 4.17%
South Carolina 3 4.17%
Louisiana 2 2.78%
Maryland 2 2.78%
Alabama 1 1.39%
Arkansas 1 1.39%
Kentucky 1 1.39%
Mississippi 1 1.39%
West Virginia 0 0%
Other (please specify) 0 0%
Voters: 72
I am currently in OK and I don’t really think it qualifies as Southern. Even one of the TV stations here used t have an ad blurb saying “The HEART of the HEART-land!”
Yeah, everyone I know here thinks Dallas Cowboys are their home NFL team, and it does sometimes seem like Dallas Way North in certain ways, but that’s really mostly business interests. This place is not Southern. At least, not without an asterisk.
Southern*
*not really, but sometimes. Mostly MidWestern with a few Southernties thrown in.
Parts of California (and all of Wyoming) feel more cowboy-ish (like I knew in rural parts of Texas) than here. But Cowboys are more Western than Southern. And as said by others, Texas is always Texan first, then Southern.
“We play both kinds of music here. Country AND Western!”
Even when my parents lived in Atlanta, that didn’t feel Southern. Now, small towns? Oh hell yeah! Small town MS, FL, AL, GA (ime) are all still VERY Southern.
Say, AncientHumanoid, what place that you’ve been, or read about, or seen in movies or TV, qualifies as the quintessential Southern town or city?
I’d be tempted to say New Orleans, Memphis, Savannah or Charleston SC. Nashville has its Southern flavor, but it’s not even in the Top 50 quintessential ones. Nor is Birmingham. Maybe Mobile?
Nice choice. I thought of Natchez after I had posted. The Old South especially.
Side topic: I’m a little surprised at the small showing for Arkansas. Is there an Oklahoma thing going on there as well, you reckon?
All I know for sure is that Billy Bob Thornton is from there and if there is a quintessential Southerner working in movies and TV these days it’s Billy Bob.
Texas, not native, but retired here. Previously lived in Louisiana, Alabama, Florida. Father’s side of family is from Missouri.
Grew up in Wisconsin, spent summers in Missouri, went to college in Louisiana, so I think I have the bi-cultural advantage of both a midwestern and a southern upbringing.
I just drove from Baltimore to Ocean City. I don’t know if that route is representative of the state as a whole but there was no southern vibe at all. Even the farmland looked and felt more Midwestern (or even British) than Southern.