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CALENDAR

Southern Places Calendars
Southern Places Calendars



GEOGRAPHY TEACHING RESOURCES

Geopgraphy Bee
The Geography Bee Complete Preparation Handbook


National Geography Bee
National Geography Bee Official Study Guide


Don't Know Much About Geography
Don't Know Much About Geography


Handy Geography Answer Book
Handy Geography Answer Book


Geography Coloring Book
Geography Coloring Book


Mapping the World by Heart
Mapping the World by Heart


If the World Were a Village
If the World Were A Village


Name that Country Game
Name that Country Game


The Global Puzzle
The Global Puzzle


My First Amazing Wold Explorer/History Explorer Bundle CD
My First Amazing Wold Explorer/History Explorer Bundle CD


Geography: Realms, Regions and Concepts
Geography: Realms, Regions and Concepts




Teacher's Best - The Creative Process


Southern States Posters, Art Prints, Charts & Maps Index
for the geography and social studies classrooms and home schoolers.


social studies > geography > North America > United States > Southern States < history


Deep South Map, National Geographic
Deep South Map (side 2)
1983 National Geographic

Alabama
Arkansas
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maryland
Mississippi
North Carolina
Oklahoma
South Carolina
Tennessee
Texas
Virginia
West Virginia

(1983 information - assign your students to update information.)

Deep South Map text - Corn, not gold, greeted Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto in 1539 when he landed in Florida in search of treasure. Across the South, he found teeming communities of Mississippian Indians, their cornfields whispering of riches in the soil.

Spain wanted a secure Florida to protect treasure fleets homeward bound from Mesoamerica. Beginning in 1565 – 52 years after Ponce de Leon sailed the coast – the Spanish held sway from St. Augustine. Then in 1682, as English fur traders ventured west from Charles Town, France claimed the mouth of the Mississippi River.

Competing Europeans courted Indians, depleted by disease and warfare, as allies and trading partners. By 1710 the British had razed every Spanish mission. France's Louisiana languished, while Britain's Carolinas prospered under a plantation system based on slavery.

After the Revolution, cotton ignited a land rush by whites that drove some 90,000 Indians westward, including 16,000 Cherokees along the Trail of Tears. By 1860 cotton reigned from North Carolina into Texas, sustained by slaves whose numbers had swelled from nearly 250,000 in 1790 to about three million.

Following the Civil War, most black freedmen returned as sharecroppers to subdivided plantations; eventually many landless whites also became sharecroppers. Cotton ruled again, peaking in 1914, but the growth of textile mills and small cities began to alter the economy. Wartime military spending and the later space program stimulated manufacturing and light industy. Farmers diversified crops or left for the city. Several million blacks streamed north. But in the 1970s and 1980s – for the first time since the Civil War – more blacks entered the South than left.

Tens of millions of tourists pour into Florida each year, swamping the resident population. As the the 21st century draws near, high technology rubs shoulders with resorts along Florida's southeast coast, promising a new prosperity.

I - AD 1000-1543 - INDIAN LEGACY -

Indians of the Southeast shared a subtropical farming culture, perhaps derived from Mesoamerica, based on corn, beans, and squash. From well-defended villages, such as palisaded Chiaha and moated Pacaha, Indians traded from the Gulf to the Great Lakes. Their huge earthen mounds supported temples and chiefs' houses. More delicate artifacts as shell ornaments and decorated pottery from such sites as Ethowah in Georgia.

II - 1543-1700 - IMPERIAL FOOTHOLDS -

The viceroyalty of New Spain laid claim to the continent's souther tier, but England's Charles II granted a charter for an ocean-to-ocean territory to the proprietors of Carolina in 1663. He expanded it in 1665. France, failing in Florida in the 1560s, achieved a foothold on Biloxi Bay in 1699. Indians still controlled the interior.

III - 1700-1783 - THREE EMPIRES AND THREE RACES -

Hard times sent Barbadian sugar planters to the Carolinas in the late 1600s. After trial and error, these and other settlers chose rice as their staple, establishing plantations societies on the fertile wetlands of the Carolina-Georgia tidewater. Charleston, Savannah, and New Orleans evolved as social and commerical centers.

Some planters brought slaves with them from the Caribbean. Most, however, purchased Africans from Angola, Ghana, and elsewhere in western Africa. A minority in 1700, blacks in South Carolina outnumbered whites by two to one within 30 years.

Many planters, new to the difficulties of growing rice, relied on those slaves familiar with the finicky plant. In 40 years South Carolina's production soared more than a hundredfold. After 1750, indigo supplemented rice. Thriving on drier soils, the dye crop carried plantation culture inland.

In the early 1700s tens of thousands of Scotch-Irish and Germans moved south to Carolina's interior lowlands and backcountry. Displacing Indians, they carved out tracts to raise corn, wheat, tobacco, cattle and hogs. English and small groups of Swiss and French Protestants landed on the coast. Highland Scots spread inland up the Cape Fear River. By 1725 German farmers had settle in the lower Mississippi Valley. And in the 1760s Acadians, later called Cajuns, arrived from Nova Scotia.

IV - 1783-1865 - COTTON KINGDOM -

Eli Whitney's cotton gin of 1793, varieties of cotton suited to the uplands, the collapse of the indigo market, and the insatiable demand of Britain's textile industry accelerated the boom. Planters and slaves from the coastal districts around charleston and New Orleans soon established cotton on virgin upland tracts. By 1820 other cotton regions had sprouted in Tennessee and Alabama.

Greed for land force the Indians out, and settlers swarmed into their ancestral territories. Production soared in the black belt – the rich, dark-soiled heartlan of the expanding coton kingdom. Many small-acreage farmers rose into the ranks of large landowners.

Also pushed out by cotton, pioneer stockmen of the Carolinas backcountry eventually reached northeart Texas, taking with them their open-range cattle-hering tradition. Others spread southwest into the sandy piney woods.

Cotton-bearing wagons converged on sch fall-line depots as Columbia, Augusta, and Macon. Flat-bottomed “cotton boxes” floated downriver to seaports. By 1860 local railroads, such as the Vicksburg and Jackson, linke various production areas with major waterways.

Most slaveholders owned fewer than five slaves, and most farmers had none. Yet by 1860 large plantations with at least 20 slaves contributed more than one-third of the four-million-bale crop – on less than a quarter of the improved land. A world unto itself, the cotton plantation, centered on the handsome “big house” with its service buildings and rows of slave quarters behind, has come to epitomize antebellum southern culture.

V - 1865-1940 - POSTBELLUM -

After Reconstruction, northern capital, local cotton, and plentiful labor forstered a piedmont textile industry. In the early 1900s lumber milles devoured forests. By 1938 city jobs and the ravages of the boil weevil had propelled more than a million blacks north. New Deal policies encouraged remaining farmers to diversify their crops.

Southeastern United States Map
Southeastern United States Map

VI - 1940 - (1983) PRESENT - NEW DEEP SOUTH

Two-thirds rural in 1940, the region is now nearly two-thirds urban, with rapidly expanding metropolitan centers. Population of the nine states jumped from 23 to 42 million, but unevenly. Florida's 414 percent growth dwarfed Mississippi's 15.



Alabama Flag Art PrintAlabama Posters Page

Alabama, commonly known as the “Heart of Dixie”, doesn't have an official nickname. Alabama joined the Union on December 14, 1819 as the 22nd state. Alabama's motto is “Audemus jura nostra defendere” or “We Dare Defend Our Rights.” The state bird of Alabama is the Yellowhammer, the state flower the Camilia and the Longleaf Pine is the state tree.


Arkansas Flag Art PrintArkansas Posters Page

Arkansas, known as the “The Natural State” joined the Union on June 15, 1836 as the 25th state. Arkansas' motto is “Regnat populus”, The people rule. The state bird of Arkansas is the Mockingbird, the state flower the Apple Blossom and the Loblolly Pine is the state tree.


Delaware Flag Art PrintDelaware Posters Page

Delaware, nicknamed the First State, joined the Union on December 7, 1787 as the 1st state to ratify the Constitution. Delaware became a colony in 1638 and was founded by the New Sweden Company. The Swedes brought the idea of a log cabin, it was perfect for the climate - sturdy, easy to build, and warm. In 1655, the Dutchmen, Peter Stuyvesant took over the Swedish Colony, changing the name to Delaware.


Florida Flag Art PrintFlorida Posters Page

Florida, known as the “Sunshine State”, joined the Union on March 3, 1845 as the 27th state. Florida's state flower is orange blossoms, tree is the palmetto palm, and the mockingbird is the state bird. Florida's motto is "In God We Trust."


Georgia Flag Art PrintGeorgia Posters Page

Georgia, known as the “Peach State” and "Empire of the South, joined the Union on January 2, 1788 as the 4th state. The state flowers are cherokee rose and azalea, tree is the live oak, and the Brown Thrasher and the Bobwhite Quail the state birds. Georgia's motto is - Wisdom, Justice & Moderation.


Kentucky Flag Art PrintKentucky Posters Page

Kentucky, known as the “Bluegrass State”, is one of four states known as a “commonwealth"” (Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Virginia are the others), joined the Union on June 1, 1792 as the 15th state. Kentucky's motto is “United we stand, divided we fall.” The state bird of Kentucky is the Cardinal, the state flower the Goldenrod and the Tulip Poplar (a member of the Magnolia family) is the state tree. Kentucky is in


Louisiana Flag Art PrintLouisiana Posters Page

Louisiana, known as the ”Pelican State”, joined the Union on April 30, 1812 as the 18th state. Louisiana's motto is “Union, Justice, and Confidence”. The state bird of Louisiana is the Brown Pelican, the state flowers the Magnolia blossom and the Louisiana Iris, the Bald Cypress is the state tree.


Maryland Flag Art PrintMaryland Posters Page

Maryland, known as the Old Line State, is also known as the Free State, the Cockade State, the Monument State, the Oyster State, and the Queen State, as it was named in honor of Queen Mary. Maryland became the 7th state to ratified the Constitution on April 28, 1788. Her motto is "Fatti Maschii Parole Femine" (Manly deeds, womanly words).


Mississippi Flag Art PrintMississippi Posters Page

Mississippi, nicknamed the Magnolia State, joined the Union on December 10, 1817 as the 20th state. Mississippi's motto is “Virtute et armis”, “By valor and arms”. The state bird of Mississippi is the Mockingbird, the state flower and tree is the Magnolia.


North Carolina Flag Art PrintNorth Carolina Posters Page

North Carolina, known as the “Tar Heel State”, joined the Union on November 21, 1789 as the 12th state. The state flower is dogwood and tree is the pine, the honeybee is the state insect, and the cardinal the state bird. North Carolina's motto is Esse quam videri (“To be, rather than to seem”).


South Carolina Flag Art PrintSouth Carolina Posters Page

South Carolina, known as the “Palmetto State”, joined the Union on May 23, 1788 as the 8th state. The state flower is yellow jessamine (Gelsemium sempervirens), tree is the palmetto, and the Carolina wren the state bird. South Carolina's motto is “Dum Spiro Spero” - While I breathe, I hope.


Oklahoma Flag Art PrintOklahoma Posters Page

Oklahoma, known as the “Sooner State”, joined the Union on November 16, 1907 as the 46th state. The word “Oklahoma” comes from two Choctaw Indian words (okla+humma) meaning “red people” and was suggested as the name for the Indian territory created by the Indian Removal Act of 1830.


Tennessee Flag Art PrintTennessee Posters Page

Tennessee, is nicknamed the “Volunteer State”. Tennessee joined the Union on June 1, 1796 as the 16th state. Tennessee's motto is “Agriculture and Commerce”. The state bird of Tennessee is the Mockingbird, the state wildflower the Passion Flower, cultivated flower the Iris, and the Tulip Poplar is the state tree.


Texas Flag Art PrintTexas Posters Page

Texas, known as the “Lone Star State” because it was once an independent nation, joined the Union on December 29, 1845 as the 28th state. Texas' motto is “Friendship.” The state bird of Texas is the Mockingbird, the state flower the Blue Bonnet (Lupines texensis) and the Pecan is the state tree.


Vermont Flag Art PrintVirginia Posters Page

Virginia, known as the “Mother of Presidents”, joined the Union on June 25, 1788 as the 10th state. Virginia is one of four states that is called a commonwealth (Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Kentucky). The state flower and tree is the Flowering Dogwood, the swallowtail butterfly is the state insect, and the cardinal the state bird. Virginia's motto is “Sic Semper Tyrannis” - "Thus Always to Tyrants".


West Virginia Flag Art PrintWest Virginia Posters Page

West Virginia, known as the Mountain State, was the 35th state to join the Union on June 20, 1863, the only state to be admitted by proclamation (Pres. Lincoln). West Virginia's motto is Montani Semper Liberi, “Mountaineers are Always Free.”


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