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New England
New England, collective name given to the
six states of the northeastern United States, namely,
Maine,
New Hampshire,
Vermont,
Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, and
Connecticut.
The region is bordered on the west by
New York State, on the north by
Canada, on the east by the Atlantic Ocean,
and on the south by
Long Island Sound; the land rises in the north and west to the New
England Appalachian Mountains.
The coast is the most important commercial area, although during the 20th
century industry and tourism have largely superseded the traditionally
important activities of fishing and shipbuilding. Many of the major events
of
America's colonial
history period, including the start of the American Revolution, took
place in New England.
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The six
New England states of MASSACHUSETTS, RHODE
ISLAND, CONNECTICUT, NEW HAMPSHIRE, VERMONT and
MAINE like to view themselves as the repository of
all that is intrinsically American. In this version of
history, the tangled streets of old Boston, the farms of
Connecticut and the village greens of Vermont are the
cradle of the nation. Certainly, nostalgia is at the
root of the region's tourist trade; while the real
business of making a living happens in cities for the
most part well off the tourist trail, innumerable small
towns have been dolled up to recapture a past that is at
best wishful, and at times purely fictional. Picturesque
they may be, with white-spired churches beside
immaculate rolling greens, but they're not always
authentic: there's little to distinguish a clapboard
house built last year from another, two hundred years
old, which has just had its annual coat of white paint.
The genteel seaside towns of modern
Cape Cod and Rhode Island are a far cry from the first
European settlements in New England. While the Pilgrims
congregated in neat and pristine communities, later
arrivals, with so much land to choose from, felt no need
to reconstruct the compact little villages they had left
behind in Europe. Instead, they fanned out across the
Native American fields, or straggled their farmhouses in
endless strips along the newly built roadways (thus
establishing a more genuinely American style of
development). As the European foothold on the continent
became more certain, the coastline came increasingly to
be viewed as prime real estate, to be lined with grand
patrician homes - from the Vanderbilt mansions of
Newport to the presidential compounds of the Bush and
Kennedy families.
The Ivy League colleges - Harvard,
Yale, Brown, Dartmouth, et al - still embody New
England's strong sense of its own superiority, though in
fact the region's traditional role as home to the WASP
elite is due more to the vagaries of history and
ideology than to economic or cultural realities. Its
thin soil and harsh climate made it difficult for the
first pioneers to sustain an agricultural way of life,
while the industrial prosperity of the nineteenth and
early twentieth centuries is now for the most part a
distant memory. Despite recent diversification, and the
development of some high-tech industries, New England
has pokets, mostly in rural Vermont and New Hampshire,
that are as poor as any in the US economic base.
New England can be a rather pricey
place to visit, especially in late September and
October, when visitors flock to see the magnificent
fall foliage . Its tourist facilities are aimed at
weekenders from the big cities as much as outsiders;
places like Cape Cod make convenient short breaks
for locals, but they're not the bucolic retreats you
might expect. Connecticut and Rhode Island
in particular clearly form part of the great east coast
megalopolis, which stretches from Washington to Boston -
you rarely escape the feeling that you're traveling
through some vast suburb of New York. Boston
itself, however, is a vibrant and stimulating city,
while further up the coast the towns finally thin out
and the scenery gets appealing (as does the seafood
). Inland, too, the lakes and mountains of New
Hampshire , and particularly Maine , offer
rural wildernesses to rival any in the nation.
Vermont is slightly less diverse, but its country
roads offer pleasant wandering through tiny villages and
serene forests.
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