The Southeastern United States is a large region of the country that includes a core of states that reaches north to
Maryland and
West Virginia, bordering the
Ohio River and
Mason–Dixon line, and stretches west to
Arkansas and
Louisiana. Unlike the Northeast, there is no official
U.S. government definition for the Southeast, and it is defined variably among agencies and organizations. Its unique cultural and historic heritage includes the following aspects: • Distinct
Native American cultures (
Indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands) • Early European settlements of
English,
Scotch-Irish,
Scottish and
German heritage • Rejection of the
Anglican Church as instituted by
Great Britain and resorting to other denominations of
Protestantism • Helping partake in the
American Revolutionary War • Importation of hundreds of thousands of
enslaved black Africans • Growth of a large
black population • Reliance on slave labor from early 1600s to mid-1800s • Southern
yeoman farmers that differed from the
planter class • Legacy of the
Confederacy after the
Civil War •
Reconstruction Era •
Jim Crow era and
Great Migration •
Civil rights movement • Emergence of the
New South and
New Great Migration These aspects, among other things, led to "the South" developing distinctive customs, literature, musical styles, and varied cuisines that have profoundly shaped traditional American culture. The shift from a mainly
rural society to more cities and
urbanized metropolitan areas picked up speed following
World War II in the 1940s. Since the late 20th century, certain Southeastern states and areas have seen great economic growth. This growth has led to many migrants moving to Southeastern states. In 2020, Fortune 500 companies headquartered in southeastern states included: Virginia with 22, Georgia with 18, Florida with 18, North Carolina with 13, and Tennessee with 10.
South Atlantic states The South Atlantic region of the United States is one of the nine
Census Bureau Divisions of the country. This region corresponds to the
Southern states/areas that were geographically part of the
Thirteen Colonies, with the addition of
Florida. It includes eight states and one federal district:
Delaware,
Florida,
Georgia,
Maryland,
North Carolina,
South Carolina,
Virginia,
West Virginia and the
District of Columbia. The South Atlantic is also a recognized geographical division used by the
United States Geological Survey. All entities within the region apart from the District of Columbia and West Virginia border the Atlantic Ocean. As of 2010, the South Atlantic states had a combined population of 61,774,970. The South Atlantic region covers . With the exception of West Virginia, the region has seen rapid population growth and economic development in recent decades. As of 2023, the South Atlantic region is home to three of the top ten universities in the nation, according to 2022-23
U.S. News & World Report rankings:
Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland,
Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., and
Duke University in
Durham, North Carolina, which is ranked the tenth-best in the nation. Distinct among these states, Alabama's French culture has been preserved through the
Alabama Creoles, and Kentucky's French culture can be observed throughout Louisville. The East South Central states form the core of
Old Dixie, one of the nine
moral regions identified by
James Patterson and Peter Kim in their acclaimed 1991 geopolitical best-seller,
The Day America Told The Truth. Politically and culturally, the East South Central is more
conservative than the South Atlantic; Mississippi, Alabama, Kentucky, and Tennessee's governments have been described during 2012 to 2023 as some of the most conservative. Religiously, conservative
Evangelical Protestantism dominates the East South Central region as a central part of the
Bible Belt. As of 2020, the East South Central states had a combined population of 19,430,030. The East South Central region covers 183,401 square miles of land. Within the region, Tennessee is the largest state by population, though Alabama is the largest by land area; Tennessee was also the East South Central's fastest growing state between 2010 and 2020, with Alabama second. Kentucky was the third-fastest growing state, and Mississippi experienced population decline; despite population decline, Mississippi did increase in diversity. ==Major population centers==