Stuff You Should Know - Short Stuff: Mason-Dixon Line
Episode Date: August 31, 2022The dividing line between the North and South is purely political. But the story of its creation is pretty interesting.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey friends when you're staying at an Airbnb you might be like me wondering could my place be an Airbnb and if it could what could it earn?
So I was pretty surprised to hear about Lisa in Manitoba who got the idea to Airbnb the backyard guest house over childhood home now
The extra income helps pay her mortgage. So yeah, you might not realize it
But you might have an Airbnb to find out what your place could be earning at air bnb.ca slash host
Hey and welcome to the short stuff. I'm Josh. There's Chuck and there's Jerry
You can hear air conditioning in the background and this is short stuff. I
Got this idea just a couple of days ago Emily and I are watching Jeopardy as we
Don't do every night, but we we try to make it that appointment viewing. We have a good time watching that show together
Yeah, it's great. Do you remember the time we were on Jeopardy? I know how about that?
It's funny because my daughter will walk through the room occasionally be like you were on that show
So it was a question a couple of nights ago or I guess an answer a
Clue is what they call them and it said something about these two gentlemen
And I can't remember exactly how it was worded
but something about like surveying and I was like Lewis and Clark and it was Mason and Dixon and
Being from the south you always hear about the Mason Dixon line or not always but it's a common enough term
to where I was like wait a minute. I was like
Mason and Dixon were people and I never really thought about it. Of course they were but I knew nothing about this at all
so
This popped up the house of works had a pretty actually really good article on it. So
Here we go and away we go because I thought Mason and Dixon were probably politicians of some sort
I had no idea there were the surveyors you got to be a pretty amazing surveyor for somebody to name your survey after you
Especially when it's the one that's as important as the Mason Dixon line because as we'll see
It's the line that divided the north and the south but even before that decades before that
it was a really important line that settled the decades-long boundary dispute between William Penn and the Pennsylvania Colony and
Lord Baltimore Charles Calvert of the Maryland Colony to the south and those two were really going at it
and the reason they were going at it was because
Penn was given the land down to the 40th parallel the 40th degree latitude north latitude and
Calvert Lord Calvert was given the land from I think like the Potomac up to the 40th parallel
the problem is the earliest maps that map the 40th parallel got it kind of wrong and
Philadelphia by these early maps was in Maryland about five miles within the Maryland border and
William Penn said that just can't stand
We need Philadelphia. It's really important
Yeah, like everyone wanted Philadelphia one day those great people will throw batteries at Santa Claus
We need to claim this wonderful city. They'll make this show. It's always sunny in Philadelphia
It's gonna be pretty great and last a thousand years
Also at stake was about 4,000 square miles
so it was a lot of land and this was a dispute for
decades and
The people of these two areas started to kind of worry that things were getting so heated that they would be like double-taxed on their property
because both places would claim that they're in their part of the world and
So finally in 1763 the King of England said, alright, I'm gonna get in here. We're gonna commission this survey
I got a couple of crack
Surveyors once an astronomer named Charles Mason. One is a surveyor named Jeremiah Dixon. They're from England
They've got all this fancy fancy modern equipment that they're gonna bring along
They're gonna need a ton of booze and a lot of people and it's gonna take years, but we're gonna finally settle this
Yeah, they spent 58 months from what I can tell basically straight through living in tents
surveying a 233 mile or 374 kilometer stretch and
They settled that boundary dispute and did they ever because even still today
Surveyors modern surveyors who use geosynchronous satellites to do their surveying are in awe of how accurate
Mason and Dixon's survey line and their their boundary line work was that it was just
almost precisely dead on because they've gone back modern surveyors have gone back and recalculated it and they're like
That's basically exactly right. Yeah, and I think some of the techniques they use informed
Surveying that we still see today. So it's it's a pretty cool story
So let's take a break. We'll talk a little bit about that booze and
How they accomplished this feat a little more right after this?
Hey friends when you're staying at an Airbnb
You might be like me wondering could my place be an Airbnb and if it could what could it earn?
So I was pretty surprised to hear about Lisa in Manitoba who got the idea to Airbnb the backyard guest house over
Childhood home now the extra income helps pay her mortgage. So yeah, you might not realize it
But you might have an Airbnb to find out what your place could be earning at Airbnb dot ca
Slash host hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new I hard podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road
Okay, see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself?
What advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do you've come to the right place because I'm here to help this. I promise you oh god seriously
I swear and you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you
Oh, man, and so my husband Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yep
We know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy band or each week to guide you through life step by step
Oh, not another one kids relationships life in general can get messy. You may be thinking this is the story of my life
Oh, just stop now. If so tell everybody yeah, everybody
About my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye bye bye
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts
So they got drunk a lot apparently I guess so I don't want to harp on it
But it is pretty funny one of the footnotes in this article that you sent
Where did that come from? It was good. I will tell you later on
Okay
the supply list from
1764 and this is just one of the years and then 20 20 gallons of whiskey 40 gallons of brandy and 80 gallons of wine
In the end they were paid about
3500 pounds
35 16 pounds and nine shillings which would be about 300 grand today
or about
$60,000 per year
But they did a lot of hard work drawing this line. It was very meticulous. They had some Native Americans helping them as guides some Iroquois people
they had about a hundred and twenty people in their party and
They like I said, they had sort of the state-of-the-art
equipment at the time which
You know, I think informed later equipment, but it was pretty pretty crack stuff at the time
Yeah, there's one in particular called a zenith sector and it had a plumb line that ran
Vertically straight vertically to the ground and then it had a telescope that way you could you know put to different degrees at different angles
And then you had to get on the ground and look up through the telescope to find the star
You were looking for and then you could measure the angle of the star
With the zenith of the sky the highest point of the sky and calculate an angle here on earth
And that's the kind of stuff that they were doing again over 58 months and one of the reasons why the survey was so
advanced for its time is that it was the first geodetic survey carried out at least in North America and
Geodetic surveys are the ones that are so precise. They calculate the lumps and bumps and
Irregular spheroid shape of the earth into its calculations to make it that precise
That's why it was so precise
But again, these guys weren't using satellites and computers. They were using telescopes and plumb lines
That they had to get on the ground to look up to find stars with and their noodles to calculate their findings
I wonder if the the king of England's like we really just needed you to walk left and drop some birdseed
So what happened along the way they didn't drop birdseed this is kind of even more impressive. Is that a reference to something?
dropping birdseed
Well, I mean the old stories of dropping birdseed to find your way back. Oh, I'd but it was yeah
You never heard that. No, I haven't is it like the joke is because like the birds would come eat the seed?
I think it was probably from some fairytale originally
I don't know the Hansel and Gretel maybe
I totally ruin this I really think we're gonna edit this part out because I think I'm just gonna leave it as is
It was so beautiful and hilarious. Oh, I think we should leave it
Um, so what they did drop was?
Limestone posts that they brought over from England every mile along the way and I think it was like 230 something miles
In total as well as an 83 mile
north-south border between
What was Pennsylvania or what is now Delaware? What was then Pennsylvania in eastern, Maryland?
But they dropped these limestone posts along the way and then every five miles dropped a crown stone
Which is a very very heavy like a five to seven hundred pound stone that they carved a
Sea on one side for Calvert and a P on the other side for Penn
Sometimes they even had coat of arms and stuff like that
Until they got to the Appalachian Mountains and then they were like we can't do these crown stones anymore
We can't carry these up over the mountain and also it's hilarious. They ship these over from England like we're not sure if there's stone in America
So we're just gonna cover up
Those came from England because I know the the
Posts did I think the stones did as well. Okay. Yeah, I'm pretty sure which is hilarious, but also
really unnecessary
Sure, why I didn't know what was over here
So like I said, the Mason-Dixon line has been recalculated much to the thrill of modern surveyors and in 1991
I think one of the first surveys of the Mason-Dixon line was carried out by the Mason-Dixon line preservation partnership
Which is adorable because there's surveyors from Pennsylvania and surveyors from Maryland
involved in that partnership and they went around to do an inventory of all of those
milestones and crown stones as well
Yeah, and they found a lot of them, which is really cool. I think they found all but ten
And they reckon just maybe flooding apparently in the Civil War
They would use them for target practice and stuff like that or just the Civil War in general destroyed them
But all but ten is not too bad. No, it's not so the Mason-Dixon line was
established the boundary between
Pennsylvania, Maryland, and also Delaware and then what would become West Virginia and that in and of itself was pretty great considering how
Accurate they were. The reason why it divides the north and the south had nothing to do with Mason and Dixon
It had to do with the fact that
Maryland was a slave state
It was the northernmost slave state and in 1820 the Missouri Compromise was passed that basically said
The slave states are considered in the south and all the south states are slave states. The north states are free states and that's that and
Because Maryland was a slave state
It was considered the south and since it's south of the Mason-Dixon line the Mason-Dixon line was used to
Distinguish the north and the south between 1820 on
And that's kind of it. I'm sure Maryland today is like oh
Kind of not really though. Yeah, I think most of the south says the same thing too
I mean one of the biggest shocks I've ever gotten in my life
But a really dull life was finding out that Maryland was technically in the south. I had no idea
Yeah, I mean if you're from Georgia, I even remember growing up thinking Virginia was pushing it
But then I met Virginians and many I think maybe because they're fairly far north geographically on the east coast
Or sometimes very adamantly southern. Yeah, they really love horses too. Sure
That's that's pretty southern and then one other little tidbit. So from 1820 to 1850 when the Fugitive Slave Act was passed
If you were enslaved in Maryland and you can make it just across the border to Pennsylvania. You were free
Amazing and you would eventually become a
Philadelphia Eaglesman and
Boo Santa Claus. I don't know if they threw batteries at Santa Claus. They threw batteries at somebody
I feel like it was Santa Claus. Yeah, that that shows up in our
Black Friday episode if you want to go listen to that one. Okay, ooh
Dedicated fans there in Philly. That's all I'll say right and by the way Chuck that
The post that we were talking about it's called the survey of Mason and Dixon
Granddaddy of all title disputes and it's hosted on the Maryland bar
Our association's website that and why we MSBA org so look it up fantastic, and you'll be like, this is great
Okay, and I guess that's it right Chuck. I
Think that means you know what it means short stuff is out
Stuff you should know is a production of iHeart radio for more podcasts my heart radio visit the iHeart radio app
Apple podcasts or wherever you listen to your favorite shows?