What is the Midwest? Is Minnesota in it? How about Ohio? Or the Dakotas?
To many Minnesotans, the answers might seem obvious. But there is actually quite a bit of disagreement over which states are truly part of the Midwest. Several people have contacted Curious Minnesota, the Star Tribune's community-driven reporting project serving inquisitive readers, for an answer.
On a map, Minnesota appears roughly midway between the coasts, surrounded by a cluster of states far from either ocean. Minnesota is in the approximate center of the Central Time Zone. The Mississippi River, long the symbolic dividing line between "the East" and "the West," runs through Minnesota. Minnesotans speak in the Midwestern vernacular — for example, we call carbonated soft drinks "pop."
Defining the Midwest, it turns out, is not as geographically simple as it might seem. In fact, it's not even entirely about geography.
In 2016, the news-explainer website Vox invited readers to name the states that they think compose the Midwest. States receiving the most votes were Minnesota, Iowa, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Ohio, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas and both Dakotas.
Those are the same states the U.S. Census Bureau, which divides the country into four regions, refers to as the Midwest.
In a recent (and ongoing) poll by the online publication CityLab, readers who identify as Midwestern were asked where they live. Respondents supplied ZIP codes, not states, so the resulting map includes numerous scattered blobs, mostly surrounding cities. But they're also concentrated in those same states.
Yet some places have fuzzier identities, noted David Montgomery, the St. Paul-based CityLab journalist who conducted the survey. Cities such as Pittsburgh, Louisville, Oklahoma City and Rapid City, S.D., are considered sort of Midwestern but are also associated with other regions of the country.