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Origin Of The Nickname 'Dixie'.

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Banned

New Zealand
306 Posts
 Posted 04/07/2005  12:09 am Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add Aidan Work to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Like a number of Americans,I have heard that the use of the term 'Dixie' as a reference to those States in the southern U.S.A. that were part of the Confederate States of America has a very interesting origin.It is believed that the root of the nickname lies in the word 'Dix',which is the French word for 'Ten',which is found on
some banknotes from Louisiana,as Louisiana,being a former French colony,still has a very strong French-speaking population whose culture is derived from the French of Nova Scotia - the Cajuns.The most famous song that I have heard that mentions 'Dixie' directly is
'The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down',which is sung by Joan Baez,who is,actually of Hispanic descent.

Aidan.
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SFDukie's Avatar
United States
980 Posts
 Posted 04/07/2005  3:58 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SFDukie to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Hi Aidan,
Some have also said it comes from the Mason-Dixon line. Since this is an international forum, I'll add that those were the names of the surveyors who determined the boundary line between Maryland and Pennsylvania-or "North" and "south" Morgan Fred can doubtless provide more details


Also interesting to me is that southwestern Utah is also known as Dixie, and has a Dixie State college and the USFS Dixie National Forest.
Don
Edited by SFDukie
04/07/2005 4:00 pm
Rest in Peace
Mike's Avatar
United States
2884 Posts
 Posted 04/07/2005  11:03 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Mike to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Dug this up on Google.........Mike

Dixie: Many theories have been advanced in vain efforts to account
satisfactorily for this term. Those that occur most frequently are:
1. The word preserves the name of a kind slave owner on Manhattan
Island, a Mr. Dixy. His rule was so kindly that "Dixy's Land" became
famed far and wide as an Elysium abounding in material comforts.
2. Ten dollar notes issued by the Citizens Bank of Louisiana before the
Civil War bore the French 'dix', ten, on the reverse side and were
consequently known as 'dixes' or 'Dixie’s'. Hence Louisiana and
eventually the South in general came to be known as the land of
'Dixie’s' or 'Dixie’s land'
3. Dixie is derived somehow from Dixon of Mason and Dixon's line.
(For non-USens, the Mason-Dixon line is a survey line fixing the boundary between the states of Pennsylvania and Maryland.)
(By the by, there are 2 other meanings for Dixie, or dixy: a British usage meaning an iron kettle or pot, used to make tea or stew, and a Utah Mormon usage for "All that part of Mormon Dom south of the rim of the Great Basin...")
For the fourth etymology, looking in _Webster’s New World Dictionary of American English_, Victoria Neufeldt, Ed. (Webster’s New World, 1988) we find:
Dixie: from 'Dixie' (earlier, Dixie's Land), title of song (1859)
By Daniel D. Emmett (1815-1904), U.S. songwriter, after 'Dixie',
originally name of a Negro character in a minstrel play (1850)
Excepting the above, the song 'Dixie' is the earliest print usage of the term cited in any of the references I looked at. The song was immensely popular and the Encyclopedia Britannica (1984) says it was the unofficial anthem of the Confederacy during the Civil War. I suspect that the song spread and popularized the term.
The Enc. Britannica says D.D. Emmett was born and died in Mount Vernon, Ohio, and organized one of first minstrel show troupes in 1843. "['Dixie']... was originally a 'walk-around', or concluding number for a minstrel show." The _Dictionary of Word & Phrase Origins_, William and Mary Morris (Harper&Row, 1962) says the song was first performed in New York. (This later edition also seems to have modified its entries on Dixie and Dixieland from the edition Brian Leibowitz cites above: The Dixie entry says "See Mason-Dixon Line.” then says there's no connection between Dixon and Dixie and repeats the Louisiana banknote theory, as above. However, under the entry for Dixieland, "There are many stories about this word. Perhaps the most credible is [Louisiana banknote theory]. Another fanciful story [Manhattan slave owner theory]. That sounds pretty farfetched to me.") Considering that 'Dixie' was composed by a "Buckeye" (an Ohio-an, for you non-Americans) for New Yorkers, in black dialect ("In Dixie Lann whar I was bawn in, Arly on one frosty mawnin"), I truly wonder if D.D.Emmett was talking about "the South", even though the original song also said "Away! away! away! Down South in Dixie".
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United States
2724 Posts
 Posted 04/08/2005  5:58 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add national dealer to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
quote:
Some have also said it comes from the Mason-Dixon line. Since this is an international forum, I'll add that those were the names of the surveyors who determined the boundary line between Maryland and Pennsylvania-or "North" and "south"


Technically, the Mason Dixon line begins at the west corner of Delmar, Delaware.

The corner stone lies at the Maryland-Delaware line. They moved it 36 inches last year.

_____________________________________________________________________

History & History Related Items

Delmar history:

Rich in railroad history, Delmar straddles the Delaware and Maryland borders in southwest Delaware, making it a key point of the Mason-Dixon Line. Easy to reach west of Highway 13 or Route 54, the town is minutes north of Salisbury, Maryland and south of Seaford, Delaware. Notable railroad sites include the 19th century highball signal located near the railroad tracks in the center of town. Recognized as the official beginning of the Mason-Dixon line (1763-1767), the Cornerstone and Middlepoint Marker of that famous survey is located just five miles west of town. The Mason-Dixon line is a prominent historical fact in Delaware, since it forms the western and southern boundaries of the state. It wasn't until the Delaware Railroad reached the Maryland Border in 1859 that the town, one of the rare U.S communities divided by state lines, was born and named after its two mother states.
The founding of Delmar: 1859
The incorporation date of Delmar: 1899
_____________________________________________________________________

http://www.usacitiesonline.com/decountydelmar.htm
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SFDukie's Avatar
United States
980 Posts
 Posted 04/08/2005  6:10 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SFDukie to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Thanks ND,
Didn't realize that "the first state" was also defined by the M-D line.
Love those towns with "two state" names- Norlina, Virgilina, Texarkana, Kanorado, Florala- that's all I can come up with off the top of my head.
NC-SC resurveyed their boundary recently as well as DE-MD.
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