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See also: America, the boundary See also: line (See also: lat
.
39° 43' 26.3" N.) between See also: Maryland and Pennsylvania, U.S.A.; popularly the line separating " See also: free " states and " slave " states before the See also: Civil War
.
The line derives its name from See also: Charles
See also: Mason (1730-1787) and See also: Jeremiah See also: Dixon, two See also: English astronomers, whose survey of it to a point about 244 M. west of the See also: Delaware between 1763 and 17671 marked the close of the protracted boundary dispute (arising upon the See also: grant of Pennsylvania to
See also: William Penn in 1681) between the Baltimores and Penns, proprietors respectively of Maryland and Pennsylvania
.
The dispute arose from the designation, in the grant to Penn, of the
See also: southern boundary of Pennsylvania mainly as the parallel marking the " beginning of the fortieth degree of Northerne Latitude," after the See also: northern boundary of Mary-See also: land had been defined as a line " which lieth under the fortieth degree of See also: north latitude from the equinoctial." The eastern See also: part of the line as far as Sideling See also: Hill in the western part of the
i These surveyors also surveyed and marked the boundary between Maryland and Delaware.
See also: present See also: Washington county, was originally marked with mile-stones brought from See also: England, every fifth of which See also: bore on one See also: side the arms of Baltimore and on the opposite side those of Penn; but the difficulties in transporting them to the westward were so See also: great that many of them were not set up
.
Owing to the removal of the See also: stone marking the north-
See also: east corner of Maryland, this point was again determined and marked in 1849-185o by Lieut.-Colonel J
.
D
.
See also: Graham of the U.S. topographical See also: engineers; and as the western part of the boundary was not marked by stones, and See also: local disputes arose, the line was again surveyed between 1901 and 1903 under the direction of a commission appointed by Pennsylvania and Maryland
.
The use of the See also: term " Mason and Dixon Line " to designate the boundary between the free and the slave states (and in general between the North and the See also: South) See also: dates from the debates in Congress over the See also: Missouri Compromise in 1819–182o
.
As so used it may be defined as not only the Mason and Dixon Line proper, but also the line formed by the See also: Ohio See also: River from its intersection with the Pennsylvania boundary to its mouth, thence the eastern, northern and western boundaries of Missouri, and thence westward the parallel 36° 3o'—the line established by the Missouri Compromise to See also: separate free and slave territory in the " See also: Louisiana See also: Purchase," except as regards Missouri
.
It is to be noted, however, that the Missouri Compromise did not affect the territory later acquired from Mexico
.
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