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The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition.  2002.
 
American Geography
 
 
Tests have revealed that many Americans are amazingly ignorant of the geography of their nation. In one widely cited example, a student in California identified Chicago as a city in Italy. Perhaps the word Chicago, with its vowel ending, sounded vaguely un-American to the student. Yet the apparent general ignorance of geography leaves unanswered the question of how much Americans have to know about geography to follow literate discourse. Many literate Americans, who have no difficulty reading the New York Times, are unable to name the capitals of all fifty states. Nor could they identify all of the states through which the Mississippi River flows. But they do know all of the states, major cities, and natural landmarks and have at least a general notion of their location. For example, they know that the Mississippi River originates in the upper Middle West and empties into the Gulf of Mexico in Louisiana. They also know that the Ohio River and Missouri River intersect the Mississippi, and that the confluence of these rivers shaped the economic development of the United States and determined the location of many of its cities. Following literate discourse also demands an ability to make the correct associations with terms such as Wall Street, Madison Avenue, Hollywood, and West Point. All of these are famous for some distinctive activity that occurs in, on, or near them.  1
  As is true elsewhere in this dictionary, the entries under “American Geography” are based on an assessment of what Americans should know to follow literate discourse. Each state, the major state capitals, the largest cities, and the most important natural landmarks have separate entries. So do possessions of the United States, such as Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. For the sake of precision, the geographical borders of each state have been listed. These entries also include a large number of places known primarily or exclusively for their associations.
—J.F.K.
  2
Entries
 
Adirondack Mountains Akron Alabama
Alaska Albany Albuquerque
Aleutian Islands Allegheny Mountains Anchorage
Ann Arbor Annapolis Appalachia
Appalachian Mountains Arizona Arkansas
Atlanta Atlantic City Austin
Baltimore bayou Beacon Hill
Berkeley Berkshires Beverly Hills
Birmingham Black Hills Blue Ridge Mountains
Boston Bowery Broadway
The Bronx Brooklyn Buffalo
California Cambridge Cape Canaveral
Cape Cod Cape Hatteras Cascades
Central Park Chapel Hill Charleston
Charlotte Chattanooga Chesapeake Bay
Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland
Colorado Colorado River Columbia River
Columbus Coney Island Connecticut
Cumberland Gap Cumberland Mountains Dallas
Death Valley Deep South Delaware
Denver Des Moines Detroit
District of Columbia El Paso Ellis Island
Far West Fifth Avenue Florida
Florida Keys Fort Worth Fresno
Georgia Grand Canyon Great Lakes
Great Plains Great Salt Lake Great Smoky Mountains
Green Mountains Greenwich Village Gulf of Mexico
Harlem Hartford Hawaii
Hollywood Honolulu Houston
Hudson River Idaho Illinois
Independence Indiana Indianapolis
Iowa Jacksonville Jersey City
Kansas Kansas City Kentucky
Lake Erie Lake Huron Lake Michigan
Lake Ontario Lake Superior Las Vegas
Little Rock Long Island Los Angeles
Louisiana Louisville Madison
Madison Avenue Maine Manhattan
Martha’s Vineyard Maryland Mason-Dixon line
Massachusetts Memphis Miami
Michigan Mid-Atlantic states Middle West
Milwaukee Minneapolis Minnesota
Mississippi Mississippi River Missouri
Missouri River Mojave Desert Montana
Mount McKinley Mount Rainier Mount Rushmore
Mount Saint Helens Mount Vernon Mount Whitney
Nantucket Nashville Nebraska
Nevada New England New Hampshire
New Haven New Jersey New Mexico
New Orleans New York New York City
Newark Newport Niagara Falls
Nob Hill Norfolk North Carolina
North Dakota Oakland Ohio
Ohio River Oklahoma Oklahoma City
Omaha Oregon Pacific Islands
Painted Desert Park Avenue Pennsylvania
Philadelphia Phoenix Piedmont
Pike’s Peak Pittsburgh Portland
Potomac River Providence Puerto Rico
Reno Rhode Island Richmond
Rio Grande Rochester Rocky Mountains
Rustbelt Sacramento St. Lawrence River
St. Louis St. Paul St. Petersburg
Salt Lake City San Andreas Fault San Antonio
San Diego San Francisco San Francisco Bay
San Joaquin Valley San Jose Santa Fe
Santa Fe Trail Saratoga Springs Seattle
Selma Shenandoah Valley Sierra Nevada
South Carolina South Dakota Sunbelt
Tampa Tennessee Tennessee River
Texas Times Square Toledo
Tucson Tulsa Twin Cities
Utah Vermont Virgin Islands
Virginia Washington Washington, D.C.
West Point West Virginia White Mountains
Wisconsin Wyoming Yellowstone National Park
Yosemite National Park
 
 
The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition. Edited by E.D. Hirsch, Jr., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil. Copyright © 2002 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

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