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Map of the original Mason–Dixon line
The Mason–Dixon line, also called the Mason and Dixon line or Mason's and Dixon's line, is a demarcation line separating four U.S. states, forming part of the borders of Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware, and West Virginia (part of Virginia until 1863). It was surveyed between 1763 and 1767 by Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon as part of the resolution of a border dispute involving Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Delaware in colonial America. The dispute had its origins almost a century earlier in the somewhat confusing proprietary grants by King Charles I to Lord Baltimore (Maryland) and by King Charles II to William Penn (Pennsylvania and Delaware).
The largest portion of the Mason–Dixon line, along the southern
Pennsylvania border, later became informally known as the boundary
between the Southern slave states and Northern free states. This usage came to prominence during the debate around the Missouri Compromise of 1820, when drawing boundaries between slave and free territory was an issue, and resurfaced during the American Civil War, with border states also coming into play. The Confederate States of America
claimed the Virginia portion of the line as part of its northern
border, although it never exercised meaningful control that far north –
especially after West Virginia separated from Virginia and joined the
Union as a separate state in 1863. It is still used today in the
figurative sense of a line that separates the Northeast and South culturally, politically, and socially (see Dixie).
Background
Historical marker at Front and South Sts., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the starting point for the survey
Maryland's charter of 1632 granted Cecil Calvert land north of the entire length of the Potomac River up to the 40th parallel. A problem arose when Charles II granted a charter for Pennsylvania
in 1681. The grant defined Pennsylvania's southern border as identical
to Maryland's northern border, but described it differently, as Charles
relied on an inaccurate map. The terms of the grant clearly indicate
that Charles II and William Penn believed the 40th parallel would intersect the Twelve-Mile Circle around New Castle, Delaware, when in fact it falls north of the original boundaries of the City of Philadelphia, the site of which Penn
had already selected for his colony's capital city. Negotiations ensued
after the problem was discovered in 1681. A compromise proposed by
Charles II in 1682, which might have resolved the issue, was undermined
by Penn receiving the additional grant of the "Three Lower Counties"
along Delaware Bay, which later became the Delaware Colony, a satellite of Pennsylvania. Maryland considered these lands part of its original grant.
The conflict became more of an issue when settlement extended into the interior of the colonies. In 1732 the Proprietary Governor of Maryland, Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore, signed a provisional agreement with William Penn's
sons, which drew a line somewhere in between and renounced the Calvert
claim to Delaware. But later, Lord Baltimore claimed that the document
he had signed did not contain the terms he had agreed to, and refused to
put the agreement into effect. Beginning in the mid-1730s, violence
erupted between settlers claiming various loyalties to Maryland and
Pennsylvania. The border conflict would be known as Cresap's War.
Progress was made after a Court of Chancery ruling affirming the 1732 agreement, but the issue remained unresolved until Frederick Calvert, 6th Baron Baltimore
ceased contesting the claims on the Maryland side and accepted the
earlier agreements. Maryland's border with Delaware was to be based on
the Transpeninsular Line
and the Twelve-Mile Circle around New Castle. The Pennsylvania–Maryland
border was defined as the line of latitude 15 miles (24 km) south of
the southernmost house in Philadelphia (on what is today South Street). As part of the settlement, the Penns and Calverts commissioned the English team of Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon to survey the newly established boundaries between the Province of Pennsylvania, the Province of Maryland, and Delaware Colony.
In 1779, Pennsylvania and Virginia agreed "To extend Mason's and
Dixon's line, due west, five degrees of longitude, to be computed from
the river Delaware, for the southern boundary of Pennsylvania, and that a
meridian, drawn from the western extremity thereof to the northern
limit of the said state, be the western boundary of Pennsylvania for
ever."
After Pennsylvania abolished slavery in 1781, the east-west part of this line and the Ohio River became a border between slave and free states, with Delaware retaining slavery until the 13th Amendment was ratified in 1865.
Geography of the line
Diagram of the survey lines creating the Mason–Dixon line and "
The Wedge"
Province of Maryland, 1632–1776
Mason and Dixon's actual survey line began to the south of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and extended from a benchmark east to the Delaware River and west to what was then the boundary with western Virginia.
The surveyors also fixed the boundary between Delaware and
Pennsylvania and the approximately north–south portion of the boundary
between Delaware and Maryland. Most of the Delaware–Pennsylvania
boundary is an arc, and the Delaware–Maryland boundary does not run truly north–south because it was intended to bisect the Delmarva Peninsula rather than follow a meridian.
The Maryland–Pennsylvania boundary is an east–west line with an approximate mean latitude of 39°43′20″ N (Datum WGS 84).
In reality, the east-west Mason–Dixon line is not a true straight line
in the geometric sense, but is instead a series of many adjoining line
segments, following a path between latitude 39°43′15″ N and 39°43′23″ N.
The surveyors also extended the boundary line 40 miles (64 km)
west of Maryland's western boundary, into territory that was still in
dispute between Pennsylvania and Virginia, though this was contrary to
their original charter.
Mason and Dixon's survey was finished on October 9, 1767, about 31
miles (50 km) east of what is now Pennsylvania's southwest corner.
In 1774, commissioners from Pennsylvania and Virginia met to
negotiate their boundary, which at the time involved Pennsylvania's
southern border west of Maryland and its entire western border. Both
sides agreed that Pennsylvania's grant made its western border a tracing
of the course of the Delaware River, displaced five degrees
(approximately 265 miles) to the west. And both sides thought this would
place Fort Pitt
in Virginia territory (in fact it would not have). With that in mind,
the governor of Pennsylvania argued that, despite the agreement reached
with Maryland, Pennsylvania's southern border west of Maryland was still
the 39th parallel,
about 50 miles (80 km) south of the Mason–Dixon line. Negotiations
continued for five years, with a series of proposed lines. In the end, a
compromise was reached: the Mason–Dixon line would be extended west to a
point five degrees west of the Delaware River. To compensate
Pennsylvania for the claimed territory lost, its western boundary would
be run due north rather than copying the course of the Delaware River.
The Mason–Dixon line was marked by stones every mile
1 mile (1.6 km) and "crownstones" every 5 miles (8.0 km), using stone
shipped from England. The Maryland side says "(M)" and the Delaware and
Pennsylvania sides say "(P)".
Crownstones include the two coats of arms. Today, while a number of the
original stones are missing or buried, many are still visible, resting
on public land and protected by iron cages.
Mason and Dixon confirmed earlier survey work, which delineated
Delaware's southern boundary from the Atlantic Ocean to the "Middle
Point" stone (along what is today known as the Transpeninsular Line).
They proceeded nearly due north from this to the Pennsylvania border.
Later, the line was marked in places by additional benchmarks and
survey markers. The lines have been resurveyed several times over the
centuries without substantive changes to Mason's and Dixon's work. The
stones may be a few, to a few hundred, feet east or west of the point
Mason and Dixon thought they were: in any event, the line drawn from
stone to stone forms the legal boundary.
History
A
"crownstone" boundary monument on the Mason–Dixon line. These markers
were originally placed at every 5th mile (8.0 km) along the line,
ornamented with family coats of arms facing the state that they
represented. The coat of arms of Maryland's founding
Calvert family is shown. On the other side are the arms of
William Penn.
The line was established to end a boundary dispute
between the British colonies of Maryland and Pennsylvania/Delaware.
Maryland had been granted the territory north of the Potomac River up to
the 40th parallel. Pennsylvania's grant defined the colony's southern
boundary as following a 12-mile (radius) circle
(19 km) counter-clockwise from the Delaware River until it hit "the
beginning of the fortieth degree of Northern latitude." From there the
boundary was to follow the 40th parallel due west for five degrees of
longitude. But the 40th parallel does not, in fact, intersect the
12-mile circle, instead lying significantly farther north. Thus
Pennsylvania's southern boundary as defined in its charter was
contradictory and unclear. The most serious problem was that the
Maryland claim would put Philadelphia, the major city in Pennsylvania, within Maryland.
The dispute was peacefully resolved in 1767 when the boundary was fixed as follows:
- Between Pennsylvania and Maryland:
- The parallel (latitude line) 15 miles (24 km) south of the then
southernmost point in Philadelphia, measured to be at about 39°43′ N and
agreed upon as the Maryland–Pennsylvania line.
- Between Delaware and Maryland:
- The existing east–west transpeninsular line from the Atlantic Ocean to the Chesapeake Bay, as far as its midpoint from the Atlantic.
- A 12-mile (radius) circle (12 mi (19 km)) around the city of New Castle, Delaware.
- A "tangent line" connecting the midpoint of the transpeninsular line to the western side of the 12-mile circle.
- A "north line" along the meridian (line of longitude) from the tangent point to the Maryland-Pennsylvania border.
- Should any land within the 12-mile circle fall west of the north
line, it would remain part of Delaware. (This was indeed the case, and
this border is the "arc line".)
"A Plan of the West Line or Parallel of Latitude" by Charles Mason, 1768
The disputants engaged an expert British team, astronomer Charles Mason and surveyor Jeremiah Dixon, to survey what became known as the Mason–Dixon line. It cost the Calverts of Maryland and the Penns of Pennsylvania £3,512 9/ –
(equivalent to £481,520 in 2021) to have 244 miles (393 km) surveyed
with such accuracy. To them the money was well spent, for in a new
country there was no other way of establishing ownership.
"Mason Dixon Line Trail" The
Mason Dixon Trail stretches from Pennsylvania to Delaware and is a popular attraction to tourists.
The Mason–Dixon line is made up of four segments corresponding to the terms of the settlement:
- the tangent line
- the north line
- the arc line
- the 39°43′ N parallel
The most difficult task was fixing the tangent line, as they had to
confirm the accuracy of the transpeninsular line midpoint and the
12-mile circle, determine the tangent point along the circle, and then
actually survey and monument the border. They then surveyed the north
and arc lines. They did this work between 1763 and 1767. This actually
left a small wedge of land in dispute between Delaware and Pennsylvania until 1921.
In April 1765, Mason and Dixon began their survey of the more
famous Maryland–Pennsylvania line. They were commissioned to run it for a
distance of five degrees of longitude west from the Delaware River,
fixing the western boundary of Pennsylvania (see the entry for Yohogania County). However, in October 1767, at Dunkard Creek near Mount Morris, Pennsylvania, nearly 244 miles (393 km) west of the Delaware, their Iroquois guides refused to go any further, having reached the border of their lands with the Lenape, with whom they were engaged in hostilities. As a result, the group was forced to quit, and on October 11, they made their final observations, 233 miles (375 km) from their starting point.
In 1784, surveyors David Rittenhouse and Andrew Ellicott
and their crew completed the survey of the Mason–Dixon line to the
southwest corner of Pennsylvania, five degrees from the Delaware River.
Other surveyors continued west to the Ohio River. The section of the
line between the southwestern corner of Pennsylvania and the river is
the county line between Marshall and Wetzel counties, West Virginia.
As the 20th century moved along and modern roadways came to
northeastern Maryland and Delaware, the old boundary line was noted by
construction crews, newspaper columnists, and the traveling public. When
contractors started working on a section of Route 40, a modern dual
highway between Elkton and Glasgow, they discovered a time and weather
battered original Mason Dixon Marker. It was relocated to northside of
the highway and when the governors of Delaware and Maryland dedicated
the highway on June 26, 1941, newspaper reporters took note of the
ancient old relic.
Although greatly mangled by traffic in the second half of the
twentieth century, it still stands today. But long before bulldozers and
other heavy equipment started moving earth for the dual highway before
World War II, there were concerns about the preservation of this
monument. In 1885, the Cecil Democrat reported that after 119-years, the
stone on the road from Elkton to Glasgow had "yielded to the action of
the elements and fell over." The editor urged the Cecil County
Commissioners, Commissioner of the Land Office, Governor or some public
minded citizen to preserve this "old time-honored, moss-covered relic of
a generation, which has passed away. . . "
On November 14, 1963, during the bicentennial of the Mason–Dixon line, U.S. President John F. Kennedy opened a newly completed section of Interstate 95
where it crossed the Maryland–Delaware border. After the president,
flanked by the governors of Delaware and Maryland, cut a ribbon opening
the Interstate, they moved to the grassy median strip where a replica
Mason and Dixon Marker had been placed for the bicentennial. There
President Kennedy and the governors unveiled a limestone replica. It was one of his last public appearances before his assassination in Dallas, Texas. The Delaware Turnpike and the Maryland portion of the new road were later designated as the John F. Kennedy Memorial Highway.
The Mason–Dixon line has been resurveyed three times: in 1849, 1900, and in the 1960s.
Systematic errors and experiments to weigh the Earth
Mason and Dixon could only do the work as accurately as they did due to the work of Nevil Maskelyne, some of whose instruments they used.
There was keen interest in their work and much communication between
the surveyors, Maskelyne and other members of the British Scientific
establishment in the Royal Society in Britain, notably Henry Cavendish.
During such survey work, it is normal to survey from point to
point along the line and then survey back to the starting point, where
if there were no errors the origin and re-surveyed position would
coincide.
Normally the return errors would be random – i.e. the return survey
errors compared to the intermediate points back to the start point would
be spatially randomly distributed around the start point. Mason and Dixon found that there were larger than expected systematic errors, i.e. non-random errors, that led the return survey consistently being in one direction away from the starting point.
When this information got back to the Royal Society members,
Henry Cavendish realised that this may have been due to the
gravitational pull of the Allegheny Mountains deflecting the theodolite plumb-bobs and spirit levels. Maskelyne then proposed measuring the gravitational force causing this
deflection induced by the pull of a nearby mountain upon a plumb-bob in
1772 and sent Mason (who had returned to Britain) on a site survey
through central England and Scotland to find a suitable location during
the summer of 1773. Mason selected Schiehallion at which to conduct what became known as the Schiehallion experiment, which was carried out primarily by Maskelyne and determined the density of the Scottish mountain. Several years later Cavendish used a very sensitive torsion balance to carry out the Cavendish experiment and determine the average density of Earth.
In culture
Name
It
is unlikely that Mason and Dixon ever heard the phrase "Mason–Dixon
line". The official report on the survey, issued in 1768, did not even
mention their names. While the term was used occasionally in the decades following the survey, it came into popular use when the Missouri Compromise of 1820 named "Mason and Dixon's line" as part of the boundary between slave territory and free territory.
Symbolism
In popular usage to people from the United States, the Mason–Dixon line symbolizes a cultural boundary between the North and the South (Dixie).
Originally "Mason and Dixon's Line" simply referred to the border
between Pennsylvania (including "the Delaware Counties") and Maryland.
However, it has been used metaphorically to describe the entire boundary
between slave and free states during the 19th-century. After Pennsylvania abolished slavery, it served as a demarcation line for the legality of slavery. Technically speaking, that demarcation did not extend beyond Pennsylvania where Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware, all slave states, lay south and east of the boundary. Also lying north and east of the boundary was New Jersey,
where slavery was formally abolished in 1846, but former slaves
continued to be "apprenticed" to their masters until the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1865.
The Missouri Compromise line (Parallel 36°30′ north) had a much clearer geographic connection to slavery in the United States leading up to the Civil War.
In popular culture
Popular culture contains a multitude of references to the Mason–Dixon
line as a general geographic division, or character names evoking it,
although a minority of those specifically relate to the line itself.
Film
Cartoons
- The line makes several appearances in the 1953 Bugs Bunny cartoon "Southern Fried Rabbit".
The line separates the drought-affected North from which the "Yankee"
Bugs leaves in search of carrots in the green lands of the "Dixie"
South, the latter being guarded by Yosemite Sam, who thinks the Civil War is still ongoing.
Literature
Music
- The 1918 song, "Rock-a-Bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody", written by Jean Schwartz, Sam M. Lewis, and Joe Young, popularized by Al Jolson, includes the lyric "Just hang my cradle, Mammy mine/ Right on that Mason–Dixon Line".
- A small group of musicians from Paul Whiteman's orchestra led by C melody saxophonist Frank Trumbauer and including Bix Beiderbecke
recorded two sides for Columbia on May 15, 1929 titled, "Alabammy Snow"
and "What A Day!" under the pseudonym, "Mason–Dixon Orchestra".
It is probable that they chose this pseudonym because the catalog
number of the record would be 1861-D, 1861 being the year that the
American Civil War began.
- The lyric "First to cross the Mason–Dixon line" featured in the opening verse of the song "I've Done it Again" (composers Marianne Faithfull / Barry Reynolds) on Grace Jones' 1981 album Nightclubbing.
- The 1955 song, "Hey, Porter", by Johnny Cash makes reference to the Mason–Dixon line in the line, How much longer will it be until we cross that Mason-Dixon line?
- From the 2000 album Sailing to Philadelphia by British singer-songwriter and guitarist Mark Knopfler, the title track (also featuring James Taylor)
is about the two English surveyors Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon
travelling to Philadelphia to survey the Mason–Dixon line; the lyrics
draw from Mason & Dixon by Thomas Pynchon, a novel about their relationship.
- Sonic Youth's "Paper Cup Exit" from the album Sonic Nurse (2004) has the line "Touch down on the new Mason-Dixon line" (sang by Lee Ranaldo)
- Dan Seals sung "Mason Dixon line" and the song symbolically references the line.
- GZA references the "Mason-Dixon Line" in the closing words of his feature verse on Raekwon's song "Guillotine (Swords)" from his debut 1995 album Only Built 4 Cuban Linx.
- Tom Lehrer references the Mason–Dixon line in his song "I Wanna Go Back to Dixie".
- Lady Antebellum's eponymous album has a song "Home Is Where The Heart Is," which contains the line "It's just south of the Mason-Dixon line".
- The 1916 song "Are You from Dixie ('Cause I'm from Dixie Too)" originally recorded by Billy Murray
contains the lyrics "If you're from Alabama, Tennessee, or Caroline.
Any place below the Mason-Dixon line. Then you're from Dixie."
- Brad Paisley, LL Cool J, and Lee Thomas Miller's controversial 2013 song "Accidental Racist"
uses the Mason–Dixon line as a metaphor for north–south, black/white,
and other cultural (dysfunctional) relations: "Oh, Dixieland/The
relationship between the Mason-Dixon needs some fixin'"
- David Allan Coe sings about the Mason Dixon line in 'I still Sing the old songs'
- Connie Smith sings about the Mason Dixon Line in 'Cincinnati, Ohio', lyrics by Bill Anderson
- The 1983 song Dixieland Delight by country singer Ronnie Rogers and recorded by American country music band Alabama references the Mason-Dixon Line multiple times throughout the song.
- The country band Mason Dixon
Sports
- In the regional baseball rivalry between the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox, the theoretical border that separates population centers that are majority-Red Sox fans from majority-Yankees fans in Connecticut is sometimes called the "Munson-Nixon Line", in a (somewhat parodial) reference to the Mason–Dixon line. Credited to Steve Rushin of Sports Illustrated, the line is named for famed Yankee catcher Thurman Munson and Red Sox right fielder Trot Nixon. In the book The Nine Nations of North America,
this line is mentioned (but not named) as the true marker of whether a
given location in Connecticut is socially part of New England or the rust belt region the author calls The Foundry. This line has moved over the years, but it's still there.