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re: Does Missouri regret coming to SEC now?

Posted on 11/19/12 at 4:26 pm to
Posted by Numberwang
Bike City, USA
Member since Feb 2012
13163 posts
Posted on 11/19/12 at 4:26 pm to
I'd agree that Benton County (Rogers/Bentonville) has generally always been somewhat less southern. That was the case long before Wal-Mart's big growth. They were one of the only reliably Republican counties in Arkansas, back when the rest of the south was Democratic. They got a lot of Michiganders and Chicagoans for decades, both workers and retirees.


Fayetteville is southern. Count the BBQ joints. Its not traditional "black" old south, and western Arkansas has always had a little bit more of "wild west" to it ala Texas, but its still Southern. Families from Little Rock, Stuttgart and Pine Bluff have been sending their kids to Fayetteville to school since 1871. Lots of the local bigwigs are transplants from eastern Arkansas and the Delta.

There is a definite shift that happens shortly north of Joplin that makes Missouri feel very midwestern for the most part. Cornfields, etc.
This post was edited on 11/19/12 at 4:34 pm
Posted by Tackle74
Columbia, MO
Member since Mar 2012
5264 posts
Posted on 11/19/12 at 8:09 pm to
quote:

I'd agree that Benton County (Rogers/Bentonville) has generally always been somewhat less southern. That was the case long before Wal-Mart's big growth. They were one of the only reliably Republican counties in Arkansas, back when the rest of the south was Democratic. They got a lot of Michiganders and Chicagoans for decades, both workers and retirees.


Fayetteville is southern.


You shitting me there is very little difference between Rogers, Bentonville, SPringdale and Fayetteville. Buena Vista I will give you that one
Posted by SunHog
Illinois
Member since Jan 2011
9202 posts
Posted on 11/19/12 at 8:28 pm to
quote:

I'd agree that Benton County (Rogers/Bentonville) has generally always been somewhat less southern. That was the case long before Wal-Mart's big growth. They were one of the only reliably Republican counties in Arkansas, back when the rest of the south was Democratic. They got a lot of Michiganders and Chicagoans for decades, both workers and retirees.


Fayetteville is southern. Count the BBQ joints. Its not traditional "black" old south, and western Arkansas has always had a little bit more of "wild west" to it ala Texas, but its still Southern. Families from Little Rock, Stuttgart and Pine Bluff have been sending their kids to Fayetteville to school since 1871. Lots of the local bigwigs are transplants from eastern Arkansas and the Delta.

There is a definite shift that happens shortly north of Joplin that makes Missouri feel very midwestern for the most part. Cornfields, etc.


Nailed it.
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