Mason Dixon Line - meaning and definition. What is Mason Dixon Line
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What (who) is Mason Dixon Line - definition

SURVEYED BORDER LINE BETWEEN U.S. STATES OF DELAWARE, MARYLAND, AND PENNSYLVANIA
Mason Dixon line; Mason dixon line; Mason-dixon line; Mason-Dixon; Mason and Dixon's Line; Mason and Dixon Line; Mason Dixon Line; Mason-Dixon Line; Mason dixie line; Mason-dixie line; Mason–Dixon Line; Mason-Dixon line; Manson–Nixon line; Manson-Nixon line; North–South divide in the United States; North-South divide in the United States; Mason's and Dixon's line
  • "A Plan of the West Line or Parallel of Latitude" by Charles Mason, 1768
  • The Wedge]]"
  • Province of Maryland, 1632–1776
  • Historical marker at Front and South Sts., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the starting point for the survey
  • Map of the original Mason–Dixon line
  • Mason–Dixon line where the [[Torrey C. Brown Rail Trail]] becomes the [[York County Heritage Trail]] near [[New Freedom, Pennsylvania]]
  • Illustration of [[Charles Mason]] and [[Jeremiah Dixon]] surveying the line
  • Calvert]] family is shown. On the other side are the arms of [[William Penn]].
  • Mason Dixon Trail]] stretches from Pennsylvania to Delaware and is a popular attraction to tourists.

Mason-Dixon Line         
¦ noun (in the US) the boundary between Maryland and Pennsylvania, taken as the northern limit of the slave-owning states before the abolition of slavery.
Origin
named after Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, who surveyed it in 1763-7.
MasonDixon Conference         
Mason-Dixon Conference
The MasonDixon Conference is a defunct NCAA Division II (former NCAA College Division) athletics conference, formed in 1936 and disbanded in October 1978. A track championship bearing the conference's name continued for several years after the demise of the all-sports league.
James Dixon (Lancashire cricketer)         
ENGLISH CRICKETER
James Dixon (cricketer); J. Dixon
James Dixon (dates of birth and death unknown) was an English first-class cricketer, active 1878, who played for Lancashire in one match against Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge. He scored 2 runs in Lancashire's first innings before being dismissed by Fred Morley.

Wikipedia

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).

Examples of use of Mason Dixon Line
1. An awful lot of people think he‘s the funniest thing this side of the Mason–Dixon line.
2. Democrats see such a move as no less than a GOP takeover, one that would effectively gut Democrat–dominated New Orleans and undermine the party‘s hold on a governorship and Senate seat south of the Mason–Dixon line.
3. Hoyer (Md.), an ally of the Blue Dogs, is one of several Democratic leaders who urged Obama to forge a relationship with the 13–year–old group, which draws many of its members from south of the Mason–Dixon line.
4. Fraser Robinson Jr.‘s trek north to Chicago was one that millions of Southern blacks took over several generations, altering the racial landscape on both sides of the Mason–Dixon line.
5. In the American South, they do not refer to the "Civil War", but "the War between the States" or even "the War of Northern Aggression". Indeed, the Confederate flag can be seen everywhere below the Mason–Dixon line.