Cover of How the States Got Their Shapes, by Mark Stein, 2008. |
Have you ever wondered why the Upper Peninsula of Michigan
isn’t actually connected to the rest of Michigan? Why is South Dakota larger
than North Dakota? Why is Delaware even a state? If these thoughts have ever
crossed your mind, then Mark Stein’s 2008 book How the States Got Their Shapes is the book for you. Stein covers
all of the borders of all 50 states, and tells us why those borders are where
they are.
How the States Got
Their Shapes is an interesting idea for a book and it provides the answers
to some really good questions, but the execution isn’t all that it could be.
While Stein’s writing is succinct and workmanlike, it’s rarely vibrant. It’s
tough to summarize all of this information in just a few pages for each state,
but the never ending treaties and colonial charters quickly become a blur. How the States Got Their Shapes is
interesting as I was reading it, but there’s little that will stick with me for
very long. The nature of the book means that there will inevitably be a fair
amount of repetition, as you will read about disputes involving Connecticut
under several different states. It’s probably read best in small doses, and not
cover to cover.
But, those reservations aside, there are still many
interesting facts in How the States Got
Their Shapes. Some of my favorites are:
No one knows if North Dakota or South Dakota was admitted to
the Union first. President Benjamin Harrison deliberately shuffled the
statehood papers on his desk so he didn’t know in which order he signed them.
Wisconsin and Michigan had a border dispute about whether or
not their border follows the East branch of the Montreal River or the West
branch. This dispute has never been formally resolved, although I don’t think
anyone in Wisconsin or Michigan is still that upset about it.
The town of Carter Lake, Iowa, is across the Missouri River
from the rest of Iowa.
There are two tiny pieces of land on the New Jersey shore,
just across the Delaware River, that actually belong to Delaware. This land was
created when the Delaware River was dredged, but because they were created from
areas on Delaware’s side of the river, they belong to Delaware.
The area of Washington, DC, was originally supposed to be a
square, and it was for a while. But in 1846, upon learning that DC might outlaw
the slave trade, Virginia took its land back.
The “Southwick Jog” is a tiny little bite that Massachusetts
took out of Connecticut so Massachusetts could have access to the Congamond
Lakes.
Michigan got its Upper Peninsula as compensation for losing
land along Lake Michigan to Indiana and along Lake Erie to Ohio, in order that
those two states would have ports on the Great Lakes. Ohio and Michigan even
fought the so-called Toledo War over the port of Toledo. (It wasn’t really a
war, more like just some bad feelings.)
If those are the kind of historical tidbits you like, How the States Got Their Shapes is the
book for you.
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