Submitted by diffitt t3_yz1rtw in Pennsylvania
Does anywhere else do this? People in Lancaster love this and the radio commercials even label them as such too ~
Submitted by diffitt t3_yz1rtw in Pennsylvania
Does anywhere else do this? People in Lancaster love this and the radio commercials even label them as such too ~
Yup, I remember hearing “Harrisburg, Lancaster, and York” so many times on the radio as a kid. They just get lumped together and since the others are central, Lancaster might as well be too lol.
I think it’s also cultural and demographic. Chester county kinda gets lumped into the greater Philly metropolitan area whereas most people don’t really consider Lancaster to be in that.
So it’s easier to put it in the York Harrisburg etc category. Also Lancaster is just kind of it’s own thing lol. It’s a weird place.
Lancaster area is definitely its own thing. My great aunt lives in New Holland and I've had to prep outsiders for what to expect when we go to her area.
Are you referring to the Welsh Mountain area? Hatfield vs McCoys, that area.
I'm in Bucks County and my cousins Iin Hershey hate when people from my area say Hersehy is central PA. I guess when they think central they think of thr VERY CENTER LOL
Just going by mileage across the state I get it. Like you say, that's basically the cusp of where Central would begin so I guess they can claim either Central or SE.
I live in Hershey and just call it Pennsyltucky.
Oh no they hate that more lol
>Lancaster is basically considered the Eastern most point for South-central PA.
Did they get the memo? https://www.sctapa.com
Berks is not south-central, but some high school teams are part of the LL League.
People in the west do not think of Harrisburg as central. We think of State College as central PA. But, from the standpoint that it is between Pittsburgh and Philly, sure it’s central PA. 😂
There's Central, and then there's SOUTH Central. People in SC drop the word "South" for shortness; it's implied. Even we would admit that true "just Central" PA is, as you said, State College.
Plus, Harrisburg is the political capital of the state, so in that manner, it's central. With respect, there's nothing up in State College but a big ol' university in a tiny town, mountains and woods. (source: having visited a few times, and my partner is an ex-Nittany Lion.)
Philly is East, Pittsburgh is West, Harrisburg is Central, it’s just how the state is generalized
I've had someone from just west of Harrisburg tell me they're from western PA. I was so confused bc I'm from basically Ohio which is actual western PA.
No one lives west of Harrisburg. It's like saying you live on the Moon.
It's not habitable until you reach Pittsburgh & that's in Ohio.
OK, whatever.
:Þ
I grew up in Allentown in the 70s, I've lived in Philly, and attended college in Pittsburgh. Spent the first 25 years of my career in Harrisburg.
I find it insulting that you are shitting on most of the state.
Perhaps that's your intent to get upvotes here. But grow up. PA is an awesome state, it's not just Philly or Pittsburgh.
Yeah. In no way a shit-hole. Welcome to life in Pennsyltucky where everyone is slowly dying.
Have a good night. I have to work in the morning.
So, like... Cumberland County?
I was born & raised in CC & we definitely identify as South-Central PA or "the mid-state" there. Don't know what that was about.
Yeah Cumberland county. I honestly have no clue. I know one set of their grandparents were from York so maybe that's why? I was thrown though. I'd say they were screwing with me if I didn't know they were serious.
York is further EAST, not further west.
I mean, during the 18th century, Carlisle was considered the beginnings of the west, the last settler town before the "frontier", but other than that...
Yeah sorry I meant maybe she thought of Cumberland as western bc her family was from more eastern PA. But she still stuck to it being western PA when I pushed back asking if she meant central.
Did they say Western PA or the West Shore?
Western PA
Gotcha. West shore I could accept. Western PA I’m not sure about.
I haven’t had that much experience with this, but are they using the term as a less politically charged euphemism for the whole “Pennsultucky” deal?
The state is anchored by two left-leaning counties on either end, each fringed by somewhat less predictable townships making up blueish-to-purple counties on the border.
If “central” isn’t a geographic divide, but a cultural and demographic line between where the state’s population is most concentrated at either end, with the demographic and political trends associated with that concentration, and where that kind of density, demographic diversity, and political leanings shift … then, yeah, “central” is associated with the center of the state, even if it isn’t central geographically.
It’s the center counties’ demographic and political trends, radiating outward as far as they can go before hitting Pittsburgh and Philly’s competing demographic and political trends. Where that boundary becomes a battleground is the border of “central”.
This post has some long sentences.
Yeah, it’s meta or whatever. I’m locating my clauses and parentheticals centrally.
Either that, or I was killing time on my phone while also distracted by doing something else.
Well Dauphin(Harrisburg) is also considered South Central PA and its blue, in general what unites South Central more than anything is the PA Dutch culture and generally being in between SEPA and Western PA at least in my experience
I’m from Chester County. In my experience, people from Lancaster County don’t seem to identify with anything southeastern PA, be it Philly (and it’s sports teams), or going to the Jersey shore in the summer. It’s weird because the place is only 45 minutes west of me.
I agree with everything except the sports team aspect. There are a lot of Philly fans in Lancaster. I would say there is definitely more Philly than Pittsburgh fans here
Because Lancaster is in the east. They had better be Philly fans. The divide is usually what is generally east and west of State College. Though in the northeast of the state there are some Cleveland/Buffalo sports fans. I imagine the northeast has some NYC fan exclaves itself.
Back in the early days of Pennsylvania, PA effectively ended at the mountains. To the west was the frontier wilderness and didn't really get settled until centuries afterward. Even now it's basically Pittsburgh, Erie, State College, and a whole lot of nothing. So I'd argue central PA is east of Blue Mountain.
Pittsburgh was founded a generation before the American revolution. Sure, there were parts of the state that would not be founded for another 100 years because of the mountains. The railroads and a hunger for coal and steel mostly fixed that.
Also, I’d not quite say that it’s State College, Pittsburgh, Erie and nothin. It’s not as well settled as what is around Philly for sure. But millions of people live in the went side of the state, even if their coal and steel hubs took a hit in the past couple generations.
Anything with a 717 area code is, roughly, south central
Well since SEPA specifically refers to Philly metro and suburbs most of the time, anything west of that usually calls itself 'Central' even if its on the eastern side of the state. South Central PA is odd, The eastern part forms the core of Dutch Country, the western part you are more in the Appalachian foothills, and then in between you have the capital region.
There's even a regional planning org(http://www.southcentralassembly.org/)
Being from Hershey, I made my friend from Clearfield more than a little confused when I claimed to be from Central PA lol. (And honestly, she did have a point in saying that my area is not Central PA, but rather South Central PA if that even)
The real central portion of PA is where the Sheetz/Wawa divide is located.
To some people it's Philly, Pittsburgh, or central. The people in Scranton and Erie don't look kindly at that view.
Thought it was well-settled that Scranton was NEPA.
good thing its that state that determines what is what. lanc is part of central pa so says the state
But for what reason? Local government? What would the purpose be to place Lancaster/York in Central PA? What does it effect that they don’t place them in their geographical area? There’s no benefit at all IMO
Likely for tourism advertising. Southeast PA is centered on Philly, which is really different from what Lancaster County has to offer.
probably local govt, or state gov. gerrymandering etc
My family lived in Chester and Delaware counties for generations, and my wife and I moved to Lancaster County about a decade ago. Lancaster county culture is VERY different from Chester/Delaware/Montgomery/Philly counties. You could have a whole thread dedicated to the differences. I honestly sometimes feel like I’m in a different country altogether.
You should start a thread. As a chester county native who hasn’t spent much time in Lancaster area (except to occasionally buy something) I would be interested in these cultural differences.
Honestly fuck all the way off OP
Damn, why are you upset
When I relocated from Lancaster county to Pittsburgh, my new neighbor was very confused when I said we came from central PA. He thought I meant State College.
I did same as you except I always said I came from Ephrata, in Lancaster County. My parents are from Lancaster County but I grew up an Army brat.
If it's Mid-Penn, YIAAA or LL League, then it is south-central PA.
More cultural than geographic.
I think geographically Lancaster is more similar to Central PA than Southeastern PA. Not that any part of the state is super different from each other but yk what I mean
Harrisburg is about as central PA as Johnstown is and no one calls Johnstown central PA
Where should the cutoff line be?
Anywhere east of Harrisburg, and anywhere west of Altona should not be considered 'centeral'
If it borders the big river then it is central PA. Once you get west of Chester, you are central.
The outskirts of Centre county, anywhere that’s not the center of the state
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You mean west of Chester?
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I’d say anything west of SEPTA territory is fair to be called central PA.
It's South Central. It even says so on the county's website lol.
They are in a central PA state of mind.
They are trying to disassociate themselves from Philadelphia. They're actually suburbs.
Short answer. No one in that area wants to be labeled as a "big city." Calling themselves Central PA means that they do not have to be associated with "big city areas."
C4bl3Fl4m3 t1_iwxnwmc wrote
I grew up in Cumberland County.
Lancaster is roughly considered the Eastern most point for South-Central PA. And I think it's lumped in because it forms the whole Harrisburg/Hershey/York/Lancaster area, because Harrisburg is definitely Central. The eastern part of Central, but still Central.