Upstate: Difference between revisions
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HuskyHuskie (talk | contribs) I don't think this is defined "loosely", I think the problem is that there are starkly differing definitions. Leaving the wording here vague, seems to me, to be an acceptable compromise |
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== See also == |
== See also == |
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* [[Special:PrefixIndex/Upstate|Articles beginning with "Upstate"]] |
* [[Special:PrefixIndex/Upstate|Articles beginning with "Upstate"]] |
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* [[Downstate Illinois]], which |
* [[Downstate Illinois]], which refers to the part of [[Illinois]] outside the [[Chicago metropolitan area]] |
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{{disambig}} |
{{disambig}} |
Revision as of 03:00, 13 May 2012
The term upstate often refers to the northernly portions of several U.S. states. It also can refer to parts of states that have a higher elevation, away from sea level. These regions tend to be rural; an exception is Delaware.
On the east coast, "upstate" generally refers to places away from the Atlantic Ocean.
- Upstate California refers to the 20 northernmost counties of California, the portion north of but not including the San Francisco Bay Area and Sacramento metro area, approximately the northern half of northern California
- Maine, except for "Down East"
- Upstate New York, an area of New York north of the New York City metropolitan area
- Upstate South Carolina, the northwestern "corner" of South Carolina
See also
- Articles beginning with "Upstate"
- Downstate Illinois, which refers to the part of Illinois outside the Chicago metropolitan area