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New England
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The New England region of the United States is located
in the northeastern corner of the country. It includes
the states Connecticut, Maine,
Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
The region's most populous city, and historically its
business and cultural center, is Boston.
During the
20th century, urban expansion has also made the New York
metropolitan area an important economic influence on
southwestern Connecticut.
New England is the oldest clearly-defined region of
the United States, unique among U.S. geographic regions
in that it is also a former political entity. Originally
inhabited by indigenous peoples, English settlers,
fleeing religious persecution in Europe, arrived nearly
four centuries ago at the beginning of the 17th century.
It was one of the first regions of the original North
American British colonies to demonstrate ambitions of
independence from the Crown in the 18th century,
although it would later collectively oppose the War of
1812 with Great Britain. In the 19th century, it played
a prominent role in the movement to abolish slavery in
the United States, became a source of some of the first
examples of American literature and philosophy, and
showed the first signs of the effects of the Industrial
Revolution in North America.
Together, the Mid-Atlantic and New England regions
are generally referred to as the Northeastern region of
the United States.
Population
In 1910, 6,552,681 people lived in New
England.
Today, the total population of New England is
13,922,517. If New England were one state, the
population would rank 5th in the nation, behind Florida.
The total area in this scenario (181,440 sq km) would
rank 20th behind North Dakota.
Regional population layout
Southern New England
The bulk of the region's population is concentrated in
southern New
England, which comprises Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The most populous state
is Massachusetts, with the population centered mostly
around its political and cultural capital, Boston.
Western Massachusetts is less densely populated that
eastern Massachusetts. The resulting effect is a
cultural divide between urban New Englanders and rural
New Englanders living in Western
Massachusetts, Vermont,
New Hampshire, and Maine.
Connecticut is more of a cultural paradox compared to
the other states in the region. The southwestern part of
the state (which contains about 1/2 the state's
population and can roughly be drawn as everything south
and west of an imaginary line from just north of Danbury
to New Haven) is essentially a suburb of or a part of
the New York metropolitan area. This area has grown
rapidly in population since 1970, as many corporations
formerly headquartered in Manhattan moved to nearby
Fairfield County to take advantage of lower taxes while
still staying within the general region, bringing jobs
and "New York transplants." Therefore,
culturally, this region of the state is more like that
of neighboring New York City than the rest of the New
England region. The remainder of the state (and other
half of its population) is very similar culturally to
that of the neighboring states of Massachusetts and
Rhode Island. The wealth in western Connecticut, the
Hartford and New Haven suburbs and the shoreline all
contribute to the state having the state's highest per
capita income of any in the United States.
An example of this cultural dichotomy can be found in
residents' allegiance to sports teams. Western
Connecticut residents may root for either Boston or
New
York teams, unlike other New England residents who tend
to be staunchly loyal to Boston teams. Television
broadcasts in Hartford and New Haven typically give
equal coverage to sports teams in both Boston and
New York.
Coastal New England
The coastline is more urban than western New
England, which is typically rural, even in urban states
like Massachusetts. These characteristics of the
region's population are due mainly to historical
factors; the original colonists settled mostly on the
coastline of Massachusetts Bay. The only state without
access to the Atlantic Ocean, Vermont, is also the
least-populated. After nearly 400 years, the region
still maintains, for the most part, its historical
population layout.
New
England's coast is dotted with urban centers,
such as Portland, Portsmouth, Boston, New Bedford, Fall
River, Providence, New Haven, and Bridgeport, as well as
smaller cities, like Newburyport, Gloucester, Biddeford,
Bath, and New London. The smaller fishing towns, like
Gloucester, are popular tourist attractions, as they
tend to retain their historical character, and often
have colorful pasts.
Cape Cod, also a popular tourist attraction, is lined
with sandy beaches and dotted with bed and breakfast
tourist lodgings. The picturesque and rugged coast of
Maine is best known for its beauty and for lobster. New
Hampshire, which has the smallest coastline of all of
the coastal New England states, is home to Hampton
Beach, also frequented by visitors to the region.
Urban New England
Boston is considered to be the cultural and
historical capital of New
England.
Providence is the second-largest city in New England and
claims the largest contiguous area of National Historic
Society-designated buildings in the U.S.
Worcester is the third-largest city in New England and
by far the largest urban area in the more rural mid- to
northwestern part of the region. Three of the four most
densely populated states in the United States are in New
England. In order, the four most densely populated
states are: New
Jersey, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and
Connecticut. Indeed, southern
New England forms an
integral part of the BosWash megalopolis, a
conglomeration of urban centers that spans from Boston
to Washington, D.C.
The Greater Boston metropolitan area has a total
population of approximately 5.8 million.
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