Author Topic: Whence "Dixie"?  (Read 919 times)

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Offline Shorty

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Whence "Dixie"?
« on: December 26, 2004, 11:02:47 AM »
We all know that Dixie refers to the southern states, but what's the origin of that term?  I always assumed that it was related to the Mason, Dixon line.  The dictionary refers to "popular name for a ten-dollar bank note issued in Louisiana prior to the Civil War; so called because of the large DIX (ten) printed on one side."

Offline nohorse

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Whence "Dixie"?
« Reply #1 on: January 04, 2005, 10:05:28 AM »
Shorty:

I don’t think anyone has the absolute definitive answer.  As you mention I have also heard that the origin was from “Dixes” [Louisiana 10 dollar bills] or, as you also mention, it was a slang term for those states south of the Mason-Dixon line.   I’ve also heard mention that the word originated from a slave owner named Dixie or possibly Dixy that treated his slaves with great kindness.  After slavery was abolished in his home state [New York I think] he sold the slaves to a Southern plantation and the slave’s idyllically referred to their former home as “Dixie’s land” which was eventually incorporated into Daniel Emmett’s famous song.
GG-father: 6th Ala Inf
GG-uncles: 6th Ala Inf; 19th Tn; Wirt Adam's Cav.

Offline Shorty

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Whence "Dixie"?
« Reply #2 on: January 04, 2005, 01:44:47 PM »
I've read, with some detached amusement, how the motto "Heart of Dixie" has been officially deleted from 'Bama's liscense plates.  It seems that, after successfully negating the CS battle flag, the politically-correct crowd is aiming at anything Southern.  Disregarding the lyrics of the song "Dixie", Dixie is a generic name for a region, in which many of those same "protesters" live.  So, what's the beef?       :?