Induveca wrote:hands11 wrote:Induveca wrote:DC isn't viewed as a large city by frequent travelers. It's a small southern vibe city with massive suburbs.
Great place for business, but not exactly enticing for those with extra cash to burn when they have other options.
It does ?
I've lived here my entire life. Can't say I've gotten the small southern vibe thing.
Definitely, Georgetown/Old Town/much of older DC always reminds me of Charlestown, SC (a good thing). The southern accents obviously as well.
I've lived around here most of my life, and I see what you're saying. It started out as a southern city, tied to Maryland and Virginia agriculture, but like Baltimore (and Charleston) it had heavy ties to the North through trade, and because of that and the government, it always had a different type of population than a typical southern town, especially after the Civil War. From the Depression/WWII onward, the growth of the government was a magnet for people all over the country, including many from NYC area and New England. There's not much South left in DC, not like Raleigh or Savannah.
When I was little in Arlington, all the kids in my class were asked who their father's (yeah, it was sexist back then too) supported for president. Kennedy, Humphrey, Nixon, maybe there was a McCarthy. One said, "My dad's voting for George Wallace." I recall everyone,
everyone, turning and looking at her, maybe surprised or curious that there was any open support for him in our presence. She was the only one in the class that I remember having a real, deep southern accent. DC and its suburbs have not been all that connected to the South for a long time.