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The Northeast is one of the four regions defined by the U.S. Census Bureau for the collection and analysis of statistics. The Census Bureau defines the region as including the six New England states of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont, and three lower North-Eastern states of New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania. Some expanded definitions of the region include Mid-Atlantic locations such as Delaware, Maryland, Northern Virginia, and Washington, D.C.
The region is the base for the Northeast megalopolis, which includes many of the nation's largest metropolitan areas, including Boston, New York City, and Philadelphia. The megalopolis makes up 67% of the region's total population of 57,609,148. The gross domestic product of the region was $5.1 trillion as of 2022 and contains some of the most developed states based on the Human Development Index, with every state above the national average. It is also the most densely populated region in the United States, with 320 people per square mile (120 people/km2). The U.S. Census Bureau defines the Northeast United States as having a total area of 181,324 sq mi (469,630 km2), making it the smallest region of the United States by total area.
History
Indigenous people
Anthropologists recognize the "Northeastern Woodlands" as one of the cultural regions that existed in the Western Hemisphere at the time of European colonists in the 15th and later centuries. Most did not settle in North America until the 17th century. The cultural area, known as the "Northeastern Woodlands", in addition to covering the entire Northeast U.S., also covered much of what is now Canada and others regions of what is now the eastern United States.
Among the many tribes inhabiting this area were those that made up the Iroquois nations and the numerous Algonquian peoples. In the United States of the 21st century, 18 federally recognized tribes reside in the Northeast. For the most part, the people of the Northeastern Woodlands, on whose lands European fishermen began camping to dry their codfish in the early 1600s, lived in villages, especially after being influenced by agricultural traditions of the Ohio and Mississippi valley societies.
Colonial history
Embarkation of the Pilgrims, an 1857 portrait by Robert Walter WeirPenn's Treaty with the Indians, a 1772 portrait by Benjamin West
All of the U.S. states making up the Northeastern region were among the original Thirteen Colonies, though Maine and Vermont were part of other colonies before the United States became independent in the American Revolution. The two cultural and geographic regions that form parts of the Northeastern region have distinct histories. The first European explorer known to have explored the Atlantic shoreline of the Northeast since the Norse was Giovanni da Verrazzano in 1524. His ship La Dauphine explored the coast from what is now known as Florida to New Brunswick.
The first Europeans to settle and colonize New England were Pilgrims from England, who landed in present-day Massachusetts in 1620. The Pilgrims arrived on the ship Mayflower and founded Plymouth Colony so they could practice religion freely. Ten years later, a larger group of Puritans settled north of Plymouth Colony in Boston to form Massachusetts Bay Colony. In 1636, colonists established Connecticut Colony and Providence Plantations.
Providence was founded by Roger Williams, who was banished by Massachusetts for his beliefs in freedom of religion, and it was the first colony to guarantee all citizens freedom of worship. Anne Hutchinson, who was also banished by Massachusetts, formed the town of Portsmouth. Providence, Portsmouth and two other towns (Newport and Warwick) consolidated to form the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.
Henry Hudson explored the area of present-day New York in 1609 and claimed it for the Netherlands. His journey stimulated Dutch interest, and the area became known as New Netherland. In 1625, the city of New Amsterdam (the location of present-day New York City) was designated the capital of the province. The Dutch New Netherland settlement along the Hudson River and, for a time, the New Sweden settlement along the Delaware River divided the English settlements in the north and the south. In 1664, Charles II of England formally annexed New Netherland and incorporated it into the English colonial empire. The territory became the colonies of New York and New Jersey. New Jersey was originally split into East Jersey and West Jersey until the two were united as a royal colony in 1702.
New England played a prominent role in early American education. Starting in the 17th century, the larger towns in New England opened grammar schools, the forerunner of the modern high school.[citation needed] The first public school in the English colonies was the Boston Latin School, founded in 1635. In 1636, the colonial legislature of Massachusetts founded Harvard College, the oldest institution of higher learning in the United States.
In 1681, William Penn, who wanted to give Quakers a land of religious freedom, founded Pennsylvania and extended freedom of religion to all citizens.
Penn strongly desired access to the sea for the Province of Pennsylvania and leased what then came to be known as the "Lower Counties on the Delaware" from the Duke. Penn established representative government and briefly combined his two possessions under one General Assembly in 1682.
By 1704, the province of Pennsylvania had grown so large that their representatives wanted to make decisions without the assent of the Lower Counties and the two groups of representatives began meeting on their own, one at Philadelphia, and the other at New Castle, Delaware. Penn and his heirs remained proprietors of both and always appointed the same person Governor for their province of Pennsylvania and their territory of the Lower Counties. The fact that Delaware and Pennsylvania shared the same governor was not unique. From 1703 to 1738, both New York and New Jersey shared a governor. Massachusetts and New Hampshire also shared a governor for some time.
American Revolution
The Battle of Trenton, fought in New Jersey in December 1776 following Washington's covert crossing of the Delaware during the night of December 25, 1776, represented an inspiring victory for Washington's Continental Army and began to turn the Revolutionary War in the Americans' favor.
The beginnings of the American Revolutionary War would be in the Northeast, specifically in Massachusetts. The Battles of Lexington and Concord in northeast of Boston would be the first military engagements between the Revolutionaries and the British.[page needed] Many of the major battles of the revolution would be fought in the Northeast. The British would evacuate Boston in early-1776 and would move to capture New York City.[page needed]
The revolutionaries were pushed to the Delaware River before suddenly moving forward against the British in the Battles of Trenton and Princeton.[page needed] A stalemate was reached in 1778, between the British and American Revolutionaries and continued until the end of the war in 1783. The war would move to southern states and eventually conclude with the Battle of Yorktown in Virginia.[page needed]
Formation of the United States of America
The idea of an independent United States of America, with the designs of its government would be created primarily in the Northeast in a series of declarations, constitutions, and documents. The Continental Congresses would meet in Philadelphia, which would produce the Declaration of Independence and the Articles of Confederation. Following the American Revolution, the capital of the newly formed United States would move around in the states of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York. It was based in New York City from 1785 until 1790, when it was moved to Congress Hall in Philadelphia, where it remained for a decade, until 1800, when the construction of the new national capital of Washington, D.C. was completed.
The Constitutional Convention was held in Philadelphia, where the new United States Constitution was drafted in 1787. 6 of the first 13 states to ratify the new constitution would be in the Northeast, with the last of the original 13, Rhode Island, ratifying the constitution in 1790. Vermont would be admitted in 1791 as the 14th state. The first Congress would convene in Federal Hall in New York City in March 1789.
Early and mid-19th century
The Battle of Gettysburg, fought in and around Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, was the American Civil War's bloodiest battle; the Union's victory at Gettysburg represented a turning point in the war in the Union's favor.
Following the revolution the Northeast would see small skirmishes like the Whiskey Rebellion in western parts of Pennsylvania.[page needed] Many northeastern states would continue trading with the British and other European powers. Tensions between the United States and Europe (specifically Britain) would sour in the lead up to the War of 1812.
This caused certain trade merchants to meet in Hartford to propose succeeding from the United States. The War of 1812 would see less fighting in the Northeast and instead more fighting in western and southern areas. A failed invasion of Canada and the occupation of Maine would be some of the major conflicts during the war. The war would end in 1815 and most of the Northeast has not seen any major conflict since then.
The American Industrial Revolution was launched in Blackstone Valley in Rhode Island and Massachusetts, where textile mills spread across New England, and in eastern Pennsylvania, where coal, steel, and industrialization launched the nation's manufacturing sector.
After the end of the War of 1812, industry boomed in the Northeast in the early and middle parts of the 19th century. With the construction of railroad and canals crossing the northeast and the rise of western territories and resources from the south, the Northeast experienced the development of new industries and a fast-growing population. Many of the coastal cities, including Boston, New York City, and Philadelphia, served as ocean trade ports for American goods.
Cities, including Allentown, Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Rochester, and Syracuse, were settled and emerged as major industrial centers.
By 1860, New York City, based on its present-day boundaries, was the first U.S. city to reach a population exceeding one million.[page needed] Due to the settlement of the Midwest and Great Plains, agriculture would collapse in the Mid-Atlantic and New England, with many farms being abandoned by the end of the century, returning to rural forest.
Conflicts with the south over the spread of slavery would become a large factor in the start of the American Civil War, between the United States (western and Northeastern states) and the Confederacy (southeastern states). The admission of Maine as a free state in exchange for Missouri becoming a slave state as part of the Missouri Compromise in 1820 would settle the final boundaries of the Northeastern states.
The Mason-Dixon line would be established as the border of slavery, following the border of Pennsylvania and Delaware/Maryland.Abolitionist movements would start in the Northeast and Midwest and would become prominent towards the mid-19th century, these groups advocated the shrinking or banning of slavery in the United States. Some Northeastern states still had small amounts of slaves into the 1850s, though some would ban it during the decade.
The election of 1860 led to the start of the Civil War; southern states seceded from the United States in late-1860 and early-1861. States like Maryland and Delaware would remain in the union, even with slavery still legal. For the first two years, the eastern theater of the war would remain in Virginia and Maryland, but in 1863 the war would reach its northeastern most extent in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. The Battle of Gettysburg is considered a turning point in the Civil War, seeing the end of the Confederate push northwards.
While all Northeastern states would remain in the United States during the war, conflicts did arise, like the New York draft riots in 1863. The war would end in 1865 with the United States taking back control of Southern states.
Industrial Revolution and modern times
Little Italy in Lower Manhattan, c. 1900Northeastern United States in 1908 from The Harmsworth atlas and Gazetter
Following the Civil War, the Northeast would see a large economic boom and would become one of the most industrialized regions in the world. Many technological innovations would be made in the Northeast during this time. The Second Industrial Revolution would see the northeast grow massively, even more so than before the Civil War. Many cities in the Northeast would explode in population, with cities like Philadelphia and New York climbing over one million people, while other cities like Buffalo, Boston, and Pittsburgh would rise above half a million during this time.
New York City eventually grew to become one of the largest cities in the world by 1900. With the American involvement in both World Wars, the Northeast would become a large base of war production, with the Brooklyn Naval Yard producing many navy ships. Many worker strikes would occur in the states, including the Homestead strike in 1892. Many of these cities would see a peak population and industrial output in the aftermath of World War II in the 1950s.
Starting in the 1950s and continuing into the 21st century, a large industrial decline in the Northeast resulted in a depopulation of many Northeastern cities, many of which had not yet recovered from it into the 21st century. This led to the rise of programs of urban renewal and demolition of large parts of Northeastern cities during the mid and late 20th century.[page needed] There has also been a large population shift to the Sun Belt states starting in the 1960s.
New York state lost its claim to being the most populated state after it was surpassed by California in the 1970s. Some Northeastern cities, including New York City, have recovered from its decline in the mid-20th century.[page needed] Many new information and service industries have risen in the northeast, which has led to a boom in the 21st century in some cities in the Northeast like Boston, New York, and Philadelphia. Some other cities like Hartford, Syracuse, and Buffalo still are declining though in the 21st century.Hurricane Sandy would impact much of the northeast in 2012, severely damaging much of the coast and causing flooding inland. The hurricane would directly impact New Jersey and caused large amounts of flooding in New York City.
Although the first settlers of New England were motivated by religion, since the 21st century, New England had become one of the least religious parts of the United States. In a 2009 Gallup survey, less than half of residents in Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont reported religion as an important part of their daily life. In a 2010 Gallup survey, less than 30% of residents in Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, and Massachusetts reported attending church weekly, giving them the lowest church attendance among U.S. states.
Geography
Cape Cod Bay, a leading tourist destination in MassachusettsThe Palisades along the Hudson River in New JerseyMontauk Point Lighthouse on the east end of Long Island
The vast area from central Virginia to northern Maine, and from western Pennsylvania, from Pittsburgh in the west to the Atlantic Ocean in the east, have all been loosely grouped into the Northeast at one time or another. The U.S. Census Bureau's definition of the Northeast includes nine states: Maine, New York, New Jersey, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Pennsylvania.
The region is often subdivided into New England, the six states east of New York state and the Mid-Atlantic states of New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania. This definition has been essentially unchanged since 1880 and is widely used as a standard for data tabulation.
The U.S. Census Bureau has acknowledged the obvious limitations of this definition and the potential merits of a proposal created after the 1950 census, that would include changing regional boundaries to include Delaware, Maryland, and Washington, D.C. with the Mid-Atlantic states, but ultimately decided that "the new system did not win enough overall acceptance among data users to warrant adoption as an official new set of general-purpose State groupings. The previous development of many series of statistics, arranged and issued over long periods of time on the basis of the existing State groupings, favored the retention of the summary units of the current regions and divisions." The U.S. Census Bureau confirmed in 1994 that it would continue to "review the components of the regions and divisions to ensure that they continue to represent the most useful combinations of states and state equivalents."
Many organizations and reference works follow the Census Bureau's definition for the region. In the history of the United States, the Mason–Dixon line between Pennsylvania (the North) and Maryland (the South) traditionally divided the regions, but in modern times, various entities define the Northeastern United States in somewhat different ways.
The Association of American Geographers divides the Northeast into two divisions: "New England", which is the same as the Census Bureau; and it has the same "Middle States" but adds Delaware. Similarly, the Geological Society of America defines the Northeast as these same states but with the addition of Maryland and the District of Columbia.
The narrowest definitions include only the states of New England. Other more restrictive definitions include New England and New York as part of the Northeast United States, but exclude Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
States beyond the Census Bureau definition are included in Northeast Region by various other entities:
Various organizations include Delaware, Maryland, and the national capital of Washington, D.C.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration include in their Northeast Region Delaware, Maryland, and West Virginia.
The United States Fish and Wildlife Service includes in their Northeast Region: Delaware, Maryland, District of Columbia, West Virginia, and Virginia.
The National Park Service includes in their Northeast Region: Delaware, Maryland, West Virginia, and Virginia, though small parts are also in the National Capital Region.
Topography
While most of the Northeastern United States lie in the physiographic region of the Appalachian Highlands, some are also part of the Atlantic coastal plain, which extends south to the southern tip of Florida. The coastal plain areas include Cape Cod in Massachusetts, Long Island in New York, and most of New Jersey, and are generally low and flat with sandy soil and long tidal marsh waterways. The highlands, including the Piedmont and the Appalachian Mountains, are heavily forested, ranging from rolling hills to summits greater than 6,000 feet (1,800 m), and pocked with many lakes. The highest peak in the Northeast is Mount Washington in New Hampshire at 6,288 feet (1,917 m).
Land use
As of 2012[update], forest-use covered approximately 60% of the Northeastern states, including Delaware, Maryland, and Washington, D.C., about twice the national average. About 11% was cropland and another 4% grassland pasture or range. There is also more urbanized land in the Northeast (12%) than any other region in the U.S.
Many parks on a state and national level cover the inland parts of the region. Large parks include the Adirondack Park in northeastern New York, Green Mountain National Forest in Vermont, White Mountain Forest in northern New Hampshire, Baxter State Park in northern Maine, Acadia National Park on the eastern coast of Maine, Allegheny National Forest in northwestern Pennsylvania, and Catskill Park in southern New York. There are also some parks closer to the shore, though these are usually smaller and squeezed in-between urbanized areas. These include the Palisades Park in New Jersey, Fire Island in Long Island, and the Cape Cod shoreline in Massachusetts. The Northeast has 72 National Wildlife Refuges, encompassing more than 500,000 acres (780 sq mi; 2,000 km2) of habitat and designed to protect some of the 92 different threatened and endangered species living in the region.
Climate
The climate of the Northeastern United States varies from northernmost state of Maine to its southernmost state in Maryland. The region's climate is influenced by its positional western to eastern flow of weather in the lower middle latitudes in the United States. In summer the subtropical high (Bermuda High) moves toward the East Coast, this pumps warm and sultry air toward the Northeast (less so in the far northern areas of northern New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine). Summers are normally warm in northern areas to hot in southern areas. Frequent (but brief) thundershowers are common on hot summer days from Connecticut south to Maryland.
In winter, the subtropical high retreats southeastward, and the polar jet stream moves south bringing colder air masses from up in Canada and more frequent storm systems to the region. Winter often brings both rain and snow as well as surges of both warm and cold air. In the southern part of the Northeast from coastal Rhode Island southwest to eastern Maryland, the Appalachians partially protect these locations from the extreme cold coming from the west and the interior of North America.
The basic climate of the Northeast can be divided into a colder and snowier interior, including western Maryland, most of Pennsylvania, most of North Jersey, Upstate New York, and most of New England, and a milder coastal plain region from Cape Cod and southern Rhode Island southward, including Long Island, Southern Connecticut, New York City, central and southern New Jersey, part of the Pennsylvania portion of the Delaware Valley including Philadelphia, Delaware, and most of Maryland.
In the latter region the hardiness zone ranges from 7a to 8a. Annual mean temperatures range from the low-to-mid 50s F from Maryland to southern Connecticut, to the 40s F in most of New York State, New England, and northern Pennsylvania.
Most of the Northeast has a humid continental climate (Dfa/Dfb/occasional Dfc/Dc). The northernmost portion of the humid subtropical zone (Cfa/Do) begins at Martha's Vineyard and extreme SW Rhode Island and extends southwestward down the coastal plain to central and southern Maryland. The oceanic climate zone (Cfb/Do) only exists on Block Island and Nantucket. It is the only area of the Northeast where all months average between 0 and 22 °C (32 and 72 °F). Cape Cod borders this zone and warm-summer humid continental (Dfb/Dc).[citation needed]
As of the 2020 U.S. census, the population of the region was 57,609,148, representing 17.38% of the nation's total population. With an average of 345.5 people per square mile, the Northeast is 2.5 times as densely populated as the second-most dense region, the South. Since the last century, the U.S. population has been shifting away from the Northeast and Midwest toward the South and West.
The region's racial composition as of 2020 was 64.42% white, 11.51% African American, 0.51% Native American, 7.25% Asian, 0.04% Pacific Islander, 8.17% from other races, and 8.10% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 15.27% of the population. There were 22,418,883 households and 14,189,719 families in 2021. Of the 22,418,883 households, 27.7% included children under the age of 18.
In 2021, the region's the population's age distribution was 20.5% under age 18, 57.36% from 18 to 62, and 22.1% who were 62 years of age or older. The median age was 40.5 years. For every 100 females, there were 96.4 males. For every 100 women ages 18 and over, there were 94.3 men.
The median income for a household in the region in 2021 was $77,142, and the median income for a family was $97,347. About 11.9% of the population were below the poverty line, including 16.0% of those under age 18 and 10.4% of those age 65 or over.
The two U.S. Census Bureau divisions in the Northeast, New England and the Mid-Atlantic, rank second and first respectively among the 9 divisions in population density according to the 2013 population estimate. The South Atlantic region (233.1) was very close behind New England (233.2). Due to the faster growth of the South Atlantic region, it will take over the #2 division rank in population density in the next estimate, dropping New England to 3rd position. New England is projected to retain the number 3 rank for many, many years, as the only other lower-ranked division with even half the population density of New England is the East North Central division (192.1) and this region's population is projected to grow slowly.
New York City, New York is the most populated city in both the Northeast and the United States. Its population was 8,804,190 in 2020. Its metro area has a population of 20,140,470.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania is the second-most populated in the Northeast and sixth-largest in the nation. Its population was 1,603,797 in 2020. Its metro area population was 6,228,601.
Boston, Massachusetts is the third-largest city in the Northeast and 25th-largest in the nation. Its population was 675,647 in 2020. Its metro area had a population of 4,941,632.
Newark, New Jersey is the fourth-largest city in the Northeast and 66th-largest in the U.S. Its population was 311,549 in 2020. Its metro area is combined with the New York area.
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania is the fifth-largest city in the Northeast and 68th-largest in the nation. Pittsburgh is at the western frontier of the Northeast, a short drive from the Ohio border, and is widely regarded as the transition point between the Northeast and Midwest. Its population was 302,971 in 2020. Its metro area has a population of 2,370,930.
Jersey City, New Jersey is the sixth-largest city in the Northeast and 72nd-largest in the nation. It had a population of 292,449 in 2020. It sits directly across the Hudson River from New York City.
Buffalo, New York is the seventh-largest city in the Northeast and 81st-largest in the U.S. Its population was 278,349 in 2020. Its metro area had a population of 1,166,902.
Yonkers, New York is the eighth-largest city in the Northeast and 115th-largest city in the U.S. It had a population of 211,569 in 2020. It borders the Bronx, a borough of New York City to its south.
Rochester, New York is the ninth-largest city in the Northeast and the 116th-largest city in the United States. It had a population of 211,328 in 2020. The Rochester metro has a population of 1,090,135.
Worcester, Massachusetts is the tenth-largest city in the Northeast and the 114th-largest city in the United States. It had a population of 206,518 in the 2020 census. It is an edge city of Greater Boston and its metro is combined with it.
Economy
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As of 2012[update], the Northeast U.S. accounts for approximately 23% of the nation's gross domestic product. Due to its vast population and diverse landscapes, the Northeast has a large and robust economy, ranging from financial services in Manhattan, to agriculture in Central Pennsylvania.
New York City
The New York Stock Exchange in Lower Manhattan is the largest stock exchange in the world by market capitalization.
As of 2021[update], the New York metropolitan area is estimated to produce a gross metropolitan product (GMP) of $2.1 trillion US dollars, ranking it first in the U.S. If the New York metropolitan area were a sovereign state, it would have been the eighth-largest economy in the world. Manhattan is considered the world's financial center, with many large banks based in Manhattan and some of the largest stock exchanges on Wall Street, like the New York Stock Exchange, it is so prominent that the term "Wall Street" is usually synonymous with finance. Many other companies are based in New York City area, either in Midtown Manhattan, downtown Brooklyn, Long Island City, or the various suburbs, like Stamford or White Plains. Some of the largest companies based in New York City area include, Verizon, J.P. Morgan Chase, Citigroup, MetLife, PepsiCo, IBM, Time Warner, Goldman Sachs, and Pfizer. Several technology companies have been founded in New York, or moved their headquarters to New York from other places.
New York City is the nation's most populated city, and the New York metropolitan area including and surrounding it is the nation's most populated metropolitan region, contributing to a sizable shopping economy, including many large shopping malls and department stores based in the area, such as Macy's on 34th Street, Fifth Avenue, and American Dream in East Rutherford, New Jersey, the Palisades Center in West Nyack, New York, and the SoNo Collection in Norwalk, Connecticut. The Port of New York and New Jersey, one of the nation's largest ports, is located on New York Harbor.
Philadelphia
Adirondack Park
As of 2021[update], the Philadelphia metropolitan area is estimated to produce a GMP of $479 billion US dollars, making it the 9th largest economy in the United States. Many large companies are based in Philadelphia, the nation's sixth-largest city, including AmerisourceBergen, Comcast, and DuPont. The Philadelphia Mint is also located in the city.
Boston
The Boston metropolitan area is a major center for insurance, finance, and technology, serving as the global headquarters for General Electric, Liberty Mutual, and other large companies.
Other regions
Rural regions and states, including most of Upstate New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine, rely more on agriculture, logging, mining, and tourism to help boost their local and statewide economies. Many national and state parks in the region generate lots of tourism, especially during fall months. The logging industry is especially prominent in Maine, making up a large part of Northern Maine's economy.
Many Northeastern states have very large economies and are highly developed. As of 2022, the per capita gross domestic products for these states are:
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission oversees 34 nuclear reactors, eight for research or testing and 26 for power production in the Northeastern United States.
Transportation
Rail systems
The New York City Subway, one of the busiest transit systems in the world, used by over two billion passengers annuallyA MBTA Commuter Train. one of the Northeast's busiest commuter rail systems, entering Mansfield station in Mansfield, Massachusetts
The Northeast is served by Amtrak trains, with the Northeast Regional and Acela, two of the busiest intercity rail lines running from Washington D.C. in the south to Boston in the north. Other Amtrak Lines that serve the Northeast include the Downeaster, Empire Service, Vermonter, Lake Shore Limited, Pennsylvanian. Light rail, commuter rail, and other subway systems are also available in the region.
Grand Central Terminal in New York City, a National Historic Landmark and the second-busiest train station in the nation after New York Penn Station, also in New York City
30th Street Station in Philadelphia. Served by all SEPTA Regional Lines, Amtrak, NJ Transit's Atlantic City Line, it is the third-busiest Amtrak station and 11th-busiest train station in North America with over four million passengers in 2019.
Pennsylvania Station in New York City is served by some NJ Transit lines, and some Long Island Rail Road and Amtrak trains. It is the busiest train station in North America, with over 10 million passengers in 2019, along with 27 million passengers from NJ Transit and 69 million from Long Island Rail in 2017.
Grand Central Terminal in New York City is served by Metro North and some Long Island Rail trains (beginning in January 2023). Grand Central Terminal had over 67 million annual passengers in 2017 and is the second-busiest train station in the nation and third-busiest in North America.
Union Station in New Haven, Connecticut is served by New Haven Line, Hartford Line, and Shoreline East along existing Amtrak train lines. It had 350,000 annual Amtrak passengers in 2017.
South Station in Boston is served by southern MBTA commuter lines and Amtrak, and was the seventh-busiest train station in North America with nearly 29 million passengers as of 2017.
North Station in Boston is served by northern MBTA commuter lines and the Downeaster on Amtrak. It had six million MBTA users in 2012 and 152,000 Amtrak passengers in 2021.
Airports
JFK International Airport in Queens, New York. The busiest airport in the Northeast and the 13th busiest in the nation.
The following table includes all airports categorized by the FAA as large or medium hubs located in the Northeastern states.
National
Rank
Metro area served
Airport code
Airport name
Largest airline
Annual
Passengers
13
New York
JFK
John F. Kennedy International Airport
JetBlue (39%)
15,273,342
14
New York
EWR
Newark Liberty International Airport
United (53%)
14,514,049
19
Boston
BOS
Logan International Airport
JetBlue (30%)
10,909,817
21
Philadelphia
PHL
Philadelphia International Airport
American (44%)
9,820,222
25
New York
LGA
LaGuardia Airport
Delta (21%)
7,827,307
48
Pittsburgh
PIT
Pittsburgh International Airport
Southwest (26%)
3,069,259
54
Hartford
BDL
Bradley International Airport
American (17%)
2,273,259
Road
Many major highways cross the Northeast, connecting it to the rest of the nation.
Number
Length (mi)
Length (km)
Southern or western terminus
Northern or eastern terminus
Formed
Removed
Notes
I-70
2171.71
3,495.03
I-15 in Cove Fort, Utah
I-695 at Woodlawn, Baltimore County, Maryland
01956-01-011956
current
Serves Pennsylvania Associated routes: none in the Northeast
I-76
435.66
701.13
I-71 in Westfield Center, Ohio
I-295 at Bellmawr, New Jersey
01964-01-011964
current
Serves two northeastern states:Pennsylvania, New Jersey Associated routes: I-176, I-276, I-376, I-476, I-676
Route 133/Future A-35 at Canadian border in Highgate, Vermont
01960-01-011960
current
Serves two northeastern states: New Hampshire, Vermont Associated route: I-189
I-90
3020.44
4,860.93
SR 519/4th Avenue/Edgar Martinez Drive in Seattle, Washington
MA 1A in Boston, Massachusetts
01956-01-011956
current
Serves three northeastern states: Pennsylvania, New York, Massachusetts Associated routes: I-190 (New York), I-290 (New York), I-390, I-490, I-590, I-690, I-790, I-890, I-990, I-190 (Massachusetts), I-290 (Massachusetts) Longest Interstate highway in the US
Serves eight northeastern states:Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine Associated routes: I-195, I-295, I-395, I-495, I-695, I-895 Longest primary north-south Interstate highway
Unfinished in Pennsylvania Serves two northeastern states: Pennsylvania, New York Associated routes: none
The New Jersey Turnpike (I-95) is one of the busiest highways in the nation.
Many other minor highways exist in the Northeast, connecting cities. Major US Routes which run through the Northeast include US 1, US 2, US 3, US 4, US 5, US 6, US 7, US 9, US 11, US 13, US 15, US 19, US 20, US 22, US 30, US 40, US 44, US 46, US 62, US 130, US 201, US 202, US 206, US 209, US 219, US 220, US 222, US 224, US 302, US 322, US 422, US 522.
The Northeast has the highest amount of tolled roads/bridges in the nation with only two states in the Northeast having no tolls, Connecticut and Vermont. Notable turnpikes include the Pennsylvania Turnpike (I-76/I-276/I-95), New Jersey Turnpike (partially I-95), New York Thruway (I-87/I-90), Massachusetts Turnpike (I-90), Maine Turnpike (I-95), PA Turnpike Northeast Extension (I-476). The northeast also contains many tolled and non-tolled parkways, many of which are in New York City metro. Major parkways include the Garden State Parkway, Taconic State Parkway, Hutchinson River Parkway, Saw Mill River Parkway, Lake Ontario State Parkway, Niagara Scenic Parkway, Belt Parkway, Grand Central Parkway, Northern State Parkway.
Major crossings
The George Washington Bridge crossing the Hudson River, carrying most traffic on Interstate 95 from New Jersey to New York.The Driscoll Bridge is one of the world's widest and busiest motor vehicle bridges, crossing the Raritan River on New Jersey's Garden State Parkway.The Holland Tunnel crossing under the Hudson River, connecting Jersey City with Lower Manhattan.
Delaware Memorial Bridge (I-295, NJ Turnpike) - Crosses the Delaware River between Delaware and New Jersey, the southern most fixed crossing on the river. Eastbound span opened in 1951, westbound span opened in 1968.
Walt Whitman Bridge (I-76) - Crosses the Delaware River, connecting southern Philadelphia to southern New Jersey suburbs. Opened in 1957.
Benjamín Franklin Bridge (I-676) - Connects downtown Philadelphia with Camden, New Jersey and southern New Jersey. Opened in 1926.
Delaware River Turnpike Toll Bridge (I-95, PA Turnpike) - Connects the PA Turnpike to the NJ Turnpike. I-95 was only designated in 2018, formerly was I-276. Opened in 1956.
Driscoll Bridge (Garden State Parkway) - Crosses the Raritan River near its mouth at Raritan Bay. Opened in 1954, the bridge is located within the heart of the state of New Jersey, providing access to the Jersey Shore to the south and North Jersey to the north.
Newark Bay Bridge (I-76, NJ Turnpike) - Crosses Newark Bay, connecting Newark to Jersey City and Bayonne. Opened in 1956.
Bayonne Bridge (NJ 440/NY 440) - Crosses Arthur Kill, connecting Bayonne to Staten Island, New York. Opened in 1931, raised in 2017.
Verrazzano Narrows Bridge (I-278) - Crosses New York Harbor to connect Staten Island to Brooklyn, double decked. Opened in 1964.
Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel (I-478) - Crosses underneath the East River to connect Lower Manhattan to Brooklyn. Opened in 1950.
Brooklyn Bridge, Manhattan Bridge, Williamsburg Bridge - The bridges cross the East River to connect Lower Manhattan to Brooklyn. Opened in 1883, 1909, and 1903.
PATH Hudson Tubes - Carries the PATH metro trains underneath the Hudson River to connect Newark, Jersey City, and Hoboken to Lower and Midtown Manhattan. The tubes opened up in 1908/1909.
Holland Tunnel (I-78) - Crosses underneath the Hudson River, connects road traffic from Jersey City and Newark to Lower Manhattan. Opened in 1927.
Queens-Midtown Tunnel (I-495) - Crosses underneath the East River, connecting the Long Island Expressway to Manhattan. Opened in 1940.
North River Tunnels (NJ Transit, Amtrak) Carries the Northeast Corridor underneath the Hudson River, connecting rail traffic from New Jersey to Pennsylvania Station and New England. Opened in 1910.
Lincoln Tunnel (NJ 495) - Crosses underneath the Hudson River to connect New Jersey to Midtown Manhattan. Opened in 1937.
Queensboro Bridge (NY 25) - Connects Midtown Manhattan to Long Island City. Opened in 1909.
Triborough Bridge (I-278) - Crosses the East River and Harlem River, provides road connections to Upper Manhattan, Queens, and the Bronx. Also crosses and connects Randalls Island. Opened in 1936.
Hell Gate Bridge (Amtrak) - Crosses the East River and Bronx Kill, provides a rail connection from Pennsylvania Station to the Bronx and Connecticut. Opened in 1917.
George Washington Bridge (I-95) - Crosses the Hudson River, connecting New York and New England to New Jersey and cross-country I-80. One of the busiest crossings in the United States. Double Decked. Opened in 1931.
Alexander Hamilton Bridge (I-95) - Crosses the Harlem River, connecting Manhattan and the GW Bridge to the Cross Bronx Expressway. Opened in 1963.
Whitestone Bridge (I-678) - Crosses the East River, connecting South Bronx to Queens. Opened in 1939.The Zakim Bridge carrying traffic on Intestate 93 from Boston across the Charles River.
Throgs Neck Bridge (I-295) Crosses the East River, connecting the Bronx and New England to the Queens and Long Island, northern most crossing of the East River. (no fixed crossings are in Long Island Sound) Opened in 1961.
Tappan Zee Bridge (I-87, I-287) - Crosses the Hudson River, carrying NY Thruway and suburban traffic from Rockland and Westchester counties. Alternative to GW Bridge. Current span opened in 2017, former span opened in 1955.
Newburgh-Beacon Bridge (I-84) - Crosses the Hudson River, carrying traffic from Pennsylvania and southeastern New York across the river to New England. Opened in 1963.
Q Bridge (I-95) - Crosses the Quinnipiac River, carrying New Haven traffic along with traffic heading to New England or New York. Current span opened in 2012, original span opened in 1958.
Baldwin Bridge (I-95) - Crosses the Connecticut River, carrying cross-state traffic and connecting Old Saybrook to New London. Opened in 1948.
Jamestown/Newport Pell Bridges (RI 138) - Crosses Narraganset Bay, connecting Newport, Rhode Island to the rest of the state. Jamestown Bridge opened in 1992, Newport Pell opened in 1969.
Charter Oak Bridge (CT 15/US 5) - Crosses the Connecticut River, connecting southern Hartford and I-91 northbound to East Hartford and I-84 eastbound. Opened in 1991.
The Rainbow Bridge, connecting New York to Canada nearby Niagara Falls.Bulkeley Bridge (I-84) - Crosses the Connecticut River, connecting Hartford area traffic across the river. The oldest interstate crossing in the US. Opened in 1908.
Ted Williams Tunnel (I-90) - Crosses underneath Boston Harbor. Connects the Mass Pike and I-93 to East Boston and Logan Airport. Opened in 1995/2003.
Zakim Bridge (I-93) - Crosses the Charles River, carrying Boston traffic to the northern Massachusetts and Maine/New Hampshire. Opened in 2003.
Piscataqua River Bridge (I-95) - Crosses the Piscataqua River, carrying traffic from New Hampshire and Massachusetts to Maine. Opened in 1972.
Peace Bridge (QEW/I-190) - Crosses the Niagara River, carrying traffic from Buffalo, New York into Ontario. Opened in 1927.
Rainbow Bridge (NY 384/NY 104) - Crosses the Niagara River, carrying traffic from Niagara Falls, New York into Niagara Falls, Ontario. Opened in 1941.
Lewiston-Queenston Bridge (I-190) Crosses the Niagara River, carrying traffic from Buffalo, New York into Ontario. Opened in 1962.
History
The Jersey City Terminal, a major rail and ferry connection between New Jersey and New York City.The Cross-Bronx Expressway (I-95) is an urban freeway which was built using slum clearance policies in the 1950s and 1960s. Today it is one of the most congested highways in the nation. It is regarded as a major cause for urban decay in the Bronx.
The Northeast has been a place for many firsts in transportation in the US, from the first commercial railroad in the US in Milton, Massachusetts (Granite Railway), first rapid transit system (MBTA Green Line), the first limited access road was the Bronx River Parkway, opened in 1922, New York is also where the first urban freeway was built in the late-1930s. (FDR Drive) The northeast would also be home to some of the first major freeway revolts in Greenwich Village, and would see the first major highway teardown (Miller Highway) in the 1970s.
Before European settlement, most of the Northeast was loosely connected by Native American trails, some of which would be incorporated into early-European settlement roads and turnpikes. One major early road was the Boston Post Road, connecting New York City and Boston along the Connecticut and Rhode Island coasts. Later these roads would be included in the King's Highway, spanning most of the east coast. Smaller turnpikes would also connect cities across the northeast. These roads would prove essential to moving goods across the English colonies in the 18th century and would later play a large part in the American Revolution.
The region saw a boom in canal-building in the early-19th century, with a major canal being the Erie Canal, opened in 1825, connecting the Great Lakes to the Hudson River and Atlantic Ocean through Western New York. The first railroads would be built in the late-1820s and would explode in mileage in the mid to late 19th century. Places like Philadelphia, New York, Boston, Newark, and Pittsburgh would become large water and rail hubs during the Industrial Revolution and would see tremendous booms in population and use.
Many large rivers in the northeast like the Hudson and Delaware would be slowly crossed with bridges starting in the 1800s, with the first fixed crossing of the Hudson River south of Albany being the Poughkeepsie Railroad Bridge, opened in 1889. The Delair Bridge, which would connect Philadelphia with New Jersey was opened six years later in 1896. The first crossing of the Hudson River into New York City would be the series of Hudson River PATH tunnels, being opened in 1908 and 1909. The first major vehicle tunnel would be the Holland Tunnel, opened up in 1927.
The start of highway construction would be the Bronx River Parkway and Long Island Motor Parkway, both of which started construction in the early-1900s. The rise of Robert Moses in New York would see the construction of many major road bridges and highways crossing the city and metro area. East River Drive (eventually renamed FDR Drive), was built along the corresponding river in Manhattan. The mid-20th century would see the rise of urban and suburban freeways and the decline of passenger and freight rail, with many lesser used tracks being abandoned or torn up during this time. It would also see the original Pennsylvania Station demolished in Midtown Manhattan during the mid-1960s. The construction of the Cross-Bronx Expressway in New York, Central Artery in Boston, and the Vine Street Expressway in Philadelphia tore up many ethnic and minority neighborhoods in the name of urban renewal. Many other highways were proposed during this era, like the Lower Manhattan Expressway and the Inner Belt in Boston, which were not built due to fierce highway revolts and rising costs. After the major highway revolts and rise of environmental concerns, new highway and interstate projects were mostly cancelled or shortened in the Northeast by the 1990s.
Despite the lack of new major road projects in the Northeast, the region has still continued to grow in population, resulting in the rise of alternative forms of transport like HOV lanes or commuter rails. This has led to the Northeast having one of the highest transit usage percentages in North America, with the Long Island Railroad being the most used commuter rail in the continent. One exception was the Big Dig, a major road project that would tear down the former elevated Central Artery (I-93) and instead tunnel it (and widen). It would also construct a new Charles River bridge and the Ted Williams Tunnel (I-90). This would end up becoming one of the costliest construction projects in the world, costing $21 billion adjusted to 2020 inflation. The former highway's path would become the Rose Kennedy Greenway, a large public park. The Sheridan Expressway (former I-895) was also rebuilt into a boulevard in the late-2010s.Rochester, New York has torn down the Inner Loop due to low traffic and to reunify neighborhoods in downtown and to create developable space.
Culture
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One geographer, Wilbur Zelinsky, asserts that the Northeast region lacks a unified cultural identity, but has served as a "culture hearth" for the rest of the nation. Several much smaller geographical regions within the Northeast have distinct cultural identities.
Landmarks
Almost half of the National Historic Landmarks maintained by the National Park Service are located in the Northeastern United States.
Religion
According to a 2009 Gallup poll, the Northeastern states differ from most of the rest of the U.S. in religious affiliation, generally reflecting the descendants of immigration patterns of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, with many Catholics arriving from Ireland, Italy, French Canada - Quebec, Portugal and east-central Europe. Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New York and New Jersey are the only states in the nation where Catholics outnumber Protestants and other Christian denominations. More than 20% of respondents in Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont declared no religious identity. Compared to other U.S. regions, the Northeast, along with the Pacific Northwest, has had the lowest regular religious service attendance and the fewest people for whom religion is an important part of their daily lives as of 2015.
Sports
The Northeast region is home to numerous professional sports franchises in the "Big Four" leagues (NFL, NBA, NHL and MLB), with more than 100 championships collectively among them.
New York metropolitan area: Giants, Jets (NFL), Yankees, Mets (MLB), Knicks, Nets (NBA), Rangers, Islanders, Devils (NHL)
Major League Soccer features four Northeastern teams: New England Revolution, New York City FC, New York Red Bulls and Philadelphia Union. The region also has two WNBA teams: Connecticut Sun and New York Liberty.
Notable golf tournaments in the Northeastern United States include The Northern Trust, Travelers Championship, and Atlantic City LPGA Classic. The US Open, held in New York, is one of the four Grand Slam tennis tournaments.
Notable Northeastern motorsports tracks include Watkins Glen International, Pocono Raceway, New Hampshire Motor Speedway and Lime Rock Park, which have hosted Formula One, IndyCar, NASCAR and International Motor Sports Association races. Also, drag strips such as Englishtown, Epping and Reading have hosted NHRA national events. Belmont Park at New York hosts the Belmont Stakes horse races, which is part of the Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing.
The region has also been noted for the prevalence of the traditionally Northeastern sports of ice hockey and lacrosse.
Politics
The Northeastern United States tended to vote Republican in federal elections through the first half of the 20th century, but the region has since the 1990s shifted to become the most Democratic region in the nation, along with the West Coast. Results from a 2008 Gallup poll indicated that eight of the top ten Democratic states were located in the region, with every Northeastern state having a Democratic Party affiliation advantage of at least ten points. The following table demonstrates Democratic support in the Northeast as compared to the remainder of the nation.
Year
% President vote
% Senate seats
% House seats
Northeast
Remainder
Northeast
Remainder
Northeast
Remainder
2000
57.6
47.5
60.0
46.3
59.6
45.7
2002
60.0
45.0
58.3
44.7
2004
57.1
47.3
60.0
40.0
59.5
43.0
2006
75.0
45.0
73.8
48.3
2008
60.7
52.0
80.0
52.5
81.0
52.9
2010
75.0
47.5
67.9
38.5
The following table of United States presidential election results since 1920 illustrates that over the past eight presidential elections, only three Northeastern states supported a Republican candidate. New Hampshire voted for George W. Bush in 2000; Pennsylvania and Maine's 2nd congressional district voted for Donald Trump in 2016, Maine's 2nd district voted for Trump again in 2020, and 2024 saw Trump take back Pennsylvania and again hold on to Maine's 2nd district. 2004 is so far the only election in U.S. history in which the winner did not win any northeastern state. Bolded entries indicate that party's candidate also won the general election.
State
1920
1924
1928
1932
1936
1940
1944
1948
1952
1956
1960
1964
1968
1972
1976
1980
1984
1988
1992
1996
2000
2004
2008
2012
2016
2020
2024
CT
R
R
R
R
D
D
D
R
R
R
D
D
D
R
R
R
R
R
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
ME
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
D
D
R
R
R
R
R
D
D
D
D
D
D
D (RME-02)
D (R ME-02)
D (RME-02)
MA
R
R
D
D
D
D
D
D
R
R
D
D
D
D
D
R
R
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
NH
R
R
R
R
D
D
D
R
R
R
R
D
R
R
R
R
R
R
D
D
R
D
D
D
D
D
D
NJ
R
R
R
D
D
D
D
R
R
R
D
D
R
R
R
R
R
R
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
NY
R
R
R
D
D
D
D
R
R
R
D
D
D
R
D
R
R
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
PA
R
R
R
R
D
D
D
R
R
R
D
D
D
R
D
R
R
R
D
D
D
D
D
D
R
D
R
RI
R
R
D
D
D
D
D
D
R
R
D
D
D
R
D
D
R
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
VT
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
D
R
R
R
R
R
R
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
The following table shows the breakdown of party affiliation of governors, attorneys general, state legislative houses and U.S. congressional delegation for the Northeastern states for the upcoming term beginning in January 2025. (Demographics reflect registration-by-party figures from that state's registered voter statistics.)
State
Governor
Attorney general
Upper House majority
Lower House majority
Senior U.S. senator
Junior U.S. senator
U.S. House delegation
Demographics
CT
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic 25-11
Democratic 102-49
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic 5-0
Democratic 36-21
ME
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic 20-15
Democratic 76-73-2
Republican
Independent
Democratic 2-0
Democratic 36-30
MA
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic 35-5
Democratic 134-25-1
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic 9-0
Democratic 29-9
NH
Republican
Republican
Republican 16-8
Republican 222-178
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic 2-0
Republican 34-29
NJ
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic 25-15
Democratic 52-28
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic 9-3
Democratic 38-24
NY
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic 41-22
Democratic 103-47
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic 19-7
Democratic 49-22
PA
Democratic
Republican
Republican 28-22
Democratic 102-101
Democratic
Republican
Republican 10-7
Democratic 45-40
RI
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic 34-4
Democratic 64-10-1
Democratic
Democratic
Democratic 2-0
Democratic 39-14
VT
Republican
Democratic
Democratic 16-13-1
Democratic 87-56-4-3
Independent
Democratic
Democratic 1-0
Democratic 47-31
See also
Atlantic Northeast
Jersey Shore
New England–Acadian forests
Northeast Corridor
Northeast megalopolis
Northeastern coastal forests
Rust Belt
Notes
Elevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988.
The term "East Coast" is often used to refer to the Northeastern megalopolis. 'East Coast' primarily refers to the region between Washington D.C. in the south and Boston in the north.
The U.S. Census Bureau reorganized its administrative units, and its regional offices do not cover the Census regions (the northeasternmost regional office headquartered in New York covers New England, New York, New Jersey, and Puerto Rico).
Based on U.S. Census Bureau population projections to 2030 (and assuming constant land area) the population density for the South Atlantic division will increase significantly to 294.6/mi2, New England's density will increase to 249.2/mi2 and the East North Central division will increase only slightly to 200.2/mi2. The division with the 5th highest density is projected to be the East South Central division at 111.6/mi2.
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External links
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Northeastern United States.
This article cites its sources but does not provide page references You can help by providing page numbers for existing citations August 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message The Northeastern United States also referred to as the Northeast the East Coast or the American Northeast is one of the four census regions defined by the United States Census Bureau Located on the Atlantic coast of North America the region borders Canada to its north the Southern United States to its south the Midwestern United States to its west and the Atlantic Ocean to its east Northeastern United States American Northeast the NortheastRegionNew York CityBostonAcadia National ParkNiagara FallsAdirondack MountainsThe PalisadesPhiladelphiaA map of the Northeastern United States as defined by the Census BureauSubregionsNew EnglandMid AtlanticCountryUnited StatesStatesMaine New Hampshire Vermont Massachusetts Rhode Island Connecticut New York New Jersey and PennsylvaniaArea Region181 324 sq mi 469 630 km2 Land162 257 sq mi 420 240 km2 Water19 067 sq mi 49 380 km2 9 51 Urban74 800 sq mi 194 000 km2 Highest elevation Mount Washington New Hampshire 6 288 ft 1 916 66 m Lowest elevation Atlantic Ocean 0 ft 0 m Population 2020 Region57 609 148 Density320 sq mi 120 km2 Demonym s Northeasterner YankeeGDP Region 5 1 trillion 2022 Per capita 88 600 2022 Time zoneUTC 5 EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT The Northeast is one of the four regions defined by the U S Census Bureau for the collection and analysis of statistics The Census Bureau defines the region as including the six New England states of Connecticut Maine Massachusetts New Hampshire Rhode Island and Vermont and three lower North Eastern states of New Jersey New York and Pennsylvania Some expanded definitions of the region include Mid Atlantic locations such as Delaware Maryland Northern Virginia and Washington D C The region is the base for the Northeast megalopolis which includes many of the nation s largest metropolitan areas including Boston New York City and Philadelphia The megalopolis makes up 67 of the region s total population of 57 609 148 The gross domestic product of the region was 5 1 trillion as of 2022 and contains some of the most developed states based on the Human Development Index with every state above the national average It is also the most densely populated region in the United States with 320 people per square mile 120 people km2 The U S Census Bureau defines the Northeast United States as having a total area of 181 324 sq mi 469 630 km2 making it the smallest region of the United States by total area HistoryIndigenous people Anthropologists recognize the Northeastern Woodlands as one of the cultural regions that existed in the Western Hemisphere at the time of European colonists in the 15th and later centuries Most did not settle in North America until the 17th century The cultural area known as the Northeastern Woodlands in addition to covering the entire Northeast U S also covered much of what is now Canada and others regions of what is now the eastern United States Among the many tribes inhabiting this area were those that made up the Iroquois nations and the numerous Algonquian peoples In the United States of the 21st century 18 federally recognized tribes reside in the Northeast For the most part the people of the Northeastern Woodlands on whose lands European fishermen began camping to dry their codfish in the early 1600s lived in villages especially after being influenced by agricultural traditions of the Ohio and Mississippi valley societies Colonial history Embarkation of the Pilgrims an 1857 portrait by Robert Walter WeirPenn s Treaty with the Indians a 1772 portrait by Benjamin West All of the U S states making up the Northeastern region were among the original Thirteen Colonies though Maine and Vermont were part of other colonies before the United States became independent in the American Revolution The two cultural and geographic regions that form parts of the Northeastern region have distinct histories The first European explorer known to have explored the Atlantic shoreline of the Northeast since the Norse was Giovanni da Verrazzano in 1524 His ship La Dauphine explored the coast from what is now known as Florida to New Brunswick The first Europeans to settle and colonize New England were Pilgrims from England who landed in present day Massachusetts in 1620 The Pilgrims arrived on the ship Mayflower and founded Plymouth Colony so they could practice religion freely Ten years later a larger group of Puritans settled north of Plymouth Colony in Boston to form Massachusetts Bay Colony In 1636 colonists established Connecticut Colony and Providence Plantations Providence was founded by Roger Williams who was banished by Massachusetts for his beliefs in freedom of religion and it was the first colony to guarantee all citizens freedom of worship Anne Hutchinson who was also banished by Massachusetts formed the town of Portsmouth Providence Portsmouth and two other towns Newport and Warwick consolidated to form the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations Henry Hudson explored the area of present day New York in 1609 and claimed it for the Netherlands His journey stimulated Dutch interest and the area became known as New Netherland In 1625 the city of New Amsterdam the location of present day New York City was designated the capital of the province The Dutch New Netherland settlement along the Hudson River and for a time the New Sweden settlement along the Delaware River divided the English settlements in the north and the south In 1664 Charles II of England formally annexed New Netherland and incorporated it into the English colonial empire The territory became the colonies of New York and New Jersey New Jersey was originally split into East Jersey and West Jersey until the two were united as a royal colony in 1702 New England played a prominent role in early American education Starting in the 17th century the larger towns in New England opened grammar schools the forerunner of the modern high school citation needed The first public school in the English colonies was the Boston Latin School founded in 1635 In 1636 the colonial legislature of Massachusetts founded Harvard College the oldest institution of higher learning in the United States In 1681 William Penn who wanted to give Quakers a land of religious freedom founded Pennsylvania and extended freedom of religion to all citizens Penn strongly desired access to the sea for the Province of Pennsylvania and leased what then came to be known as the Lower Counties on the Delaware from the Duke Penn established representative government and briefly combined his two possessions under one General Assembly in 1682 By 1704 the province of Pennsylvania had grown so large that their representatives wanted to make decisions without the assent of the Lower Counties and the two groups of representatives began meeting on their own one at Philadelphia and the other at New Castle Delaware Penn and his heirs remained proprietors of both and always appointed the same person Governor for their province of Pennsylvania and their territory of the Lower Counties The fact that Delaware and Pennsylvania shared the same governor was not unique From 1703 to 1738 both New York and New Jersey shared a governor Massachusetts and New Hampshire also shared a governor for some time American Revolution The Battle of Trenton fought in New Jersey in December 1776 following Washington s covert crossing of the Delaware during the night of December 25 1776 represented an inspiring victory for Washington s Continental Army and began to turn the Revolutionary War in the Americans favor The beginnings of the American Revolutionary War would be in the Northeast specifically in Massachusetts The Battles of Lexington and Concord in northeast of Boston would be the first military engagements between the Revolutionaries and the British page needed Many of the major battles of the revolution would be fought in the Northeast The British would evacuate Boston in early 1776 and would move to capture New York City page needed The revolutionaries were pushed to the Delaware River before suddenly moving forward against the British in the Battles of Trenton and Princeton page needed A stalemate was reached in 1778 between the British and American Revolutionaries and continued until the end of the war in 1783 The war would move to southern states and eventually conclude with the Battle of Yorktown in Virginia page needed Formation of the United States of America The idea of an independent United States of America with the designs of its government would be created primarily in the Northeast in a series of declarations constitutions and documents The Continental Congresses would meet in Philadelphia which would produce the Declaration of Independence and the Articles of Confederation Following the American Revolution the capital of the newly formed United States would move around in the states of Pennsylvania New Jersey and New York It was based in New York City from 1785 until 1790 when it was moved to Congress Hall in Philadelphia where it remained for a decade until 1800 when the construction of the new national capital of Washington D C was completed The Constitutional Convention was held in Philadelphia where the new United States Constitution was drafted in 1787 6 of the first 13 states to ratify the new constitution would be in the Northeast with the last of the original 13 Rhode Island ratifying the constitution in 1790 Vermont would be admitted in 1791 as the 14th state The first Congress would convene in Federal Hall in New York City in March 1789 Early and mid 19th century The Battle of Gettysburg fought in and around Gettysburg Pennsylvania was the American Civil War s bloodiest battle the Union s victory at Gettysburg represented a turning point in the war in the Union s favor Following the revolution the Northeast would see small skirmishes like the Whiskey Rebellion in western parts of Pennsylvania page needed Many northeastern states would continue trading with the British and other European powers Tensions between the United States and Europe specifically Britain would sour in the lead up to the War of 1812 This caused certain trade merchants to meet in Hartford to propose succeeding from the United States The War of 1812 would see less fighting in the Northeast and instead more fighting in western and southern areas A failed invasion of Canada and the occupation of Maine would be some of the major conflicts during the war The war would end in 1815 and most of the Northeast has not seen any major conflict since then The American Industrial Revolution was launched in Blackstone Valley in Rhode Island and Massachusetts where textile mills spread across New England and in eastern Pennsylvania where coal steel and industrialization launched the nation s manufacturing sector After the end of the War of 1812 industry boomed in the Northeast in the early and middle parts of the 19th century With the construction of railroad and canals crossing the northeast and the rise of western territories and resources from the south the Northeast experienced the development of new industries and a fast growing population Many of the coastal cities including Boston New York City and Philadelphia served as ocean trade ports for American goods Cities including Allentown Buffalo Pittsburgh Rochester and Syracuse were settled and emerged as major industrial centers By 1860 New York City based on its present day boundaries was the first U S city to reach a population exceeding one million page needed Due to the settlement of the Midwest and Great Plains agriculture would collapse in the Mid Atlantic and New England with many farms being abandoned by the end of the century returning to rural forest Conflicts with the south over the spread of slavery would become a large factor in the start of the American Civil War between the United States western and Northeastern states and the Confederacy southeastern states The admission of Maine as a free state in exchange for Missouri becoming a slave state as part of the Missouri Compromise in 1820 would settle the final boundaries of the Northeastern states The Mason Dixon line would be established as the border of slavery following the border of Pennsylvania and Delaware Maryland Abolitionist movements would start in the Northeast and Midwest and would become prominent towards the mid 19th century these groups advocated the shrinking or banning of slavery in the United States Some Northeastern states still had small amounts of slaves into the 1850s though some would ban it during the decade The election of 1860 led to the start of the Civil War southern states seceded from the United States in late 1860 and early 1861 States like Maryland and Delaware would remain in the union even with slavery still legal For the first two years the eastern theater of the war would remain in Virginia and Maryland but in 1863 the war would reach its northeastern most extent in Gettysburg Pennsylvania The Battle of Gettysburg is considered a turning point in the Civil War seeing the end of the Confederate push northwards While all Northeastern states would remain in the United States during the war conflicts did arise like the New York draft riots in 1863 The war would end in 1865 with the United States taking back control of Southern states Industrial Revolution and modern times Little Italy in Lower Manhattan c 1900Northeastern United States in 1908 from The Harmsworth atlas and Gazetter Following the Civil War the Northeast would see a large economic boom and would become one of the most industrialized regions in the world Many technological innovations would be made in the Northeast during this time The Second Industrial Revolution would see the northeast grow massively even more so than before the Civil War Many cities in the Northeast would explode in population with cities like Philadelphia and New York climbing over one million people while other cities like Buffalo Boston and Pittsburgh would rise above half a million during this time New York City eventually grew to become one of the largest cities in the world by 1900 With the American involvement in both World Wars the Northeast would become a large base of war production with the Brooklyn Naval Yard producing many navy ships Many worker strikes would occur in the states including the Homestead strike in 1892 Many of these cities would see a peak population and industrial output in the aftermath of World War II in the 1950s Starting in the 1950s and continuing into the 21st century a large industrial decline in the Northeast resulted in a depopulation of many Northeastern cities many of which had not yet recovered from it into the 21st century This led to the rise of programs of urban renewal and demolition of large parts of Northeastern cities during the mid and late 20th century page needed There has also been a large population shift to the Sun Belt states starting in the 1960s New York state lost its claim to being the most populated state after it was surpassed by California in the 1970s Some Northeastern cities including New York City have recovered from its decline in the mid 20th century page needed Many new information and service industries have risen in the northeast which has led to a boom in the 21st century in some cities in the Northeast like Boston New York and Philadelphia Some other cities like Hartford Syracuse and Buffalo still are declining though in the 21st century Hurricane Sandy would impact much of the northeast in 2012 severely damaging much of the coast and causing flooding inland The hurricane would directly impact New Jersey and caused large amounts of flooding in New York City Although the first settlers of New England were motivated by religion since the 21st century New England had become one of the least religious parts of the United States In a 2009 Gallup survey less than half of residents in Maine Massachusetts New Hampshire and Vermont reported religion as an important part of their daily life In a 2010 Gallup survey less than 30 of residents in Vermont New Hampshire Maine and Massachusetts reported attending church weekly giving them the lowest church attendance among U S states GeographyCape Cod Bay a leading tourist destination in MassachusettsThe Palisades along the Hudson River in New JerseyMontauk Point Lighthouse on the east end of Long Island The vast area from central Virginia to northern Maine and from western Pennsylvania from Pittsburgh in the west to the Atlantic Ocean in the east have all been loosely grouped into the Northeast at one time or another The U S Census Bureau s definition of the Northeast includes nine states Maine New York New Jersey Vermont Massachusetts Rhode Island Connecticut New Hampshire and Pennsylvania The region is often subdivided into New England the six states east of New York state and the Mid Atlantic states of New Jersey New York and Pennsylvania This definition has been essentially unchanged since 1880 and is widely used as a standard for data tabulation The U S Census Bureau has acknowledged the obvious limitations of this definition and the potential merits of a proposal created after the 1950 census that would include changing regional boundaries to include Delaware Maryland and Washington D C with the Mid Atlantic states but ultimately decided that the new system did not win enough overall acceptance among data users to warrant adoption as an official new set of general purpose State groupings The previous development of many series of statistics arranged and issued over long periods of time on the basis of the existing State groupings favored the retention of the summary units of the current regions and divisions The U S Census Bureau confirmed in 1994 that it would continue to review the components of the regions and divisions to ensure that they continue to represent the most useful combinations of states and state equivalents Many organizations and reference works follow the Census Bureau s definition for the region In the history of the United States the Mason Dixon line between Pennsylvania the North and Maryland the South traditionally divided the regions but in modern times various entities define the Northeastern United States in somewhat different ways The Association of American Geographers divides the Northeast into two divisions New England which is the same as the Census Bureau and it has the same Middle States but adds Delaware Similarly the Geological Society of America defines the Northeast as these same states but with the addition of Maryland and the District of Columbia The narrowest definitions include only the states of New England Other more restrictive definitions include New England and New York as part of the Northeast United States but exclude Pennsylvania and New Jersey States beyond the Census Bureau definition are included in Northeast Region by various other entities Various organizations include Delaware Maryland and the national capital of Washington D C The U S Environmental Protection Agency and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration include in their Northeast Region Delaware Maryland and West Virginia The United States Fish and Wildlife Service includes in their Northeast Region Delaware Maryland District of Columbia West Virginia and Virginia The National Park Service includes in their Northeast Region Delaware Maryland West Virginia and Virginia though small parts are also in the National Capital Region Topography While most of the Northeastern United States lie in the physiographic region of the Appalachian Highlands some are also part of the Atlantic coastal plain which extends south to the southern tip of Florida The coastal plain areas include Cape Cod in Massachusetts Long Island in New York and most of New Jersey and are generally low and flat with sandy soil and long tidal marsh waterways The highlands including the Piedmont and the Appalachian Mountains are heavily forested ranging from rolling hills to summits greater than 6 000 feet 1 800 m and pocked with many lakes The highest peak in the Northeast is Mount Washington in New Hampshire at 6 288 feet 1 917 m Land use As of 2012 update forest use covered approximately 60 of the Northeastern states including Delaware Maryland and Washington D C about twice the national average About 11 was cropland and another 4 grassland pasture or range There is also more urbanized land in the Northeast 12 than any other region in the U S Many parks on a state and national level cover the inland parts of the region Large parks include the Adirondack Park in northeastern New York Green Mountain National Forest in Vermont White Mountain Forest in northern New Hampshire Baxter State Park in northern Maine Acadia National Park on the eastern coast of Maine Allegheny National Forest in northwestern Pennsylvania and Catskill Park in southern New York There are also some parks closer to the shore though these are usually smaller and squeezed in between urbanized areas These include the Palisades Park in New Jersey Fire Island in Long Island and the Cape Cod shoreline in Massachusetts The Northeast has 72 National Wildlife Refuges encompassing more than 500 000 acres 780 sq mi 2 000 km2 of habitat and designed to protect some of the 92 different threatened and endangered species living in the region Climate The climate of the Northeastern United States varies from northernmost state of Maine to its southernmost state in Maryland The region s climate is influenced by its positional western to eastern flow of weather in the lower middle latitudes in the United States In summer the subtropical high Bermuda High moves toward the East Coast this pumps warm and sultry air toward the Northeast less so in the far northern areas of northern New York Vermont New Hampshire and Maine Summers are normally warm in northern areas to hot in southern areas Frequent but brief thundershowers are common on hot summer days from Connecticut south to Maryland In winter the subtropical high retreats southeastward and the polar jet stream moves south bringing colder air masses from up in Canada and more frequent storm systems to the region Winter often brings both rain and snow as well as surges of both warm and cold air In the southern part of the Northeast from coastal Rhode Island southwest to eastern Maryland the Appalachians partially protect these locations from the extreme cold coming from the west and the interior of North America The basic climate of the Northeast can be divided into a colder and snowier interior including western Maryland most of Pennsylvania most of North Jersey Upstate New York and most of New England and a milder coastal plain region from Cape Cod and southern Rhode Island southward including Long Island Southern Connecticut New York City central and southern New Jersey part of the Pennsylvania portion of the Delaware Valley including Philadelphia Delaware and most of Maryland In the latter region the hardiness zone ranges from 7a to 8a Annual mean temperatures range from the low to mid 50s F from Maryland to southern Connecticut to the 40s F in most of New York State New England and northern Pennsylvania Most of the Northeast has a humid continental climate Dfa Dfb occasional Dfc Dc The northernmost portion of the humid subtropical zone Cfa Do begins at Martha s Vineyard and extreme SW Rhode Island and extends southwestward down the coastal plain to central and southern Maryland The oceanic climate zone Cfb Do only exists on Block Island and Nantucket It is the only area of the Northeast where all months average between 0 and 22 C 32 and 72 F Cape Cod borders this zone and warm summer humid continental Dfb Dc citation needed DemographicsHistorical population CensusPop Note 17901 968 040 18002 632 75533 8 18103 486 48632 4 18204 359 65325 0 18305 542 38127 1 18406 761 08222 0 18508 626 85127 6 186010 594 26822 8 187012 298 73016 1 188014 507 40718 0 189017 406 96920 0 190021 046 69520 9 191025 868 57322 9 192029 662 05314 7 193034 427 09116 1 194035 976 7774 5 195039 477 9869 7 196044 677 81913 2 197049 040 7039 8 198049 135 2830 2 199050 809 2293 4 200053 594 3785 5 201055 317 2403 2 202057 609 1484 1 2022 est 57 040 406 1 0 Ethnic origins in the Northeast As of the 2020 U S census the population of the region was 57 609 148 representing 17 38 of the nation s total population With an average of 345 5 people per square mile the Northeast is 2 5 times as densely populated as the second most dense region the South Since the last century the U S population has been shifting away from the Northeast and Midwest toward the South and West The region s racial composition as of 2020 was 64 42 white 11 51 African American 0 51 Native American 7 25 Asian 0 04 Pacific Islander 8 17 from other races and 8 10 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino of any race were 15 27 of the population There were 22 418 883 households and 14 189 719 families in 2021 Of the 22 418 883 households 27 7 included children under the age of 18 In 2021 the region s the population s age distribution was 20 5 under age 18 57 36 from 18 to 62 and 22 1 who were 62 years of age or older The median age was 40 5 years For every 100 females there were 96 4 males For every 100 women ages 18 and over there were 94 3 men The median income for a household in the region in 2021 was 77 142 and the median income for a family was 97 347 About 11 9 of the population were below the poverty line including 16 0 of those under age 18 and 10 4 of those age 65 or over The two U S Census Bureau divisions in the Northeast New England and the Mid Atlantic rank second and first respectively among the 9 divisions in population density according to the 2013 population estimate The South Atlantic region 233 1 was very close behind New England 233 2 Due to the faster growth of the South Atlantic region it will take over the 2 division rank in population density in the next estimate dropping New England to 3rd position New England is projected to retain the number 3 rank for many many years as the only other lower ranked division with even half the population density of New England is the East North Central division 192 1 and this region s population is projected to grow slowly State 2020 census 2010 census Change Total Area DensityConnecticut 3 605 944 3 574 097 0 89 4 842 35 sq mi 12 541 6 km2 741 sq mi 286 km2 Maine 1 362 359 1 328 361 2 56 30 842 90 sq mi 79 882 7 km2 43 sq mi 17 km2 Massachusetts 7 029 917 6 547 629 7 37 7 800 05 sq mi 20 202 0 km2 879 sq mi 340 km2 New Hampshire 1 377 529 1 316 470 4 64 8 952 64 sq mi 23 187 2 km2 150 sq mi 58 km2 Rhode Island 1 097 379 1 052 567 4 26 1 033 81 sq mi 2 677 6 km2 1 025 sq mi 396 km2 Vermont 643 077 625 741 2 77 9 216 65 sq mi 23 871 0 km2 68 sq mi 26 km2 New England 15 116 205 14 444 865 4 65 62 688 4 sq mi 162 362 km2 236 sq mi 91 km2 New Jersey 9 288 994 8 791 894 5 65 7 354 21 sq mi 19 047 3 km2 1 225 sq mi 473 km2 New York 20 201 249 19 378 102 4 25 47 126 36 sq mi 122 056 7 km2 421 sq mi 163 km2 Pennsylvania 13 002 700 12 702 379 2 36 44 742 67 sq mi 115 883 0 km2 286 sq mi 111 km2 Middle Atlantic 42 492 943 40 872 375 3 96 99 223 24 sq mi 256 987 0 km2 420 sq mi 162 km2 Total 57 609 148 55 317 240 4 14 161 911 64 sq mi 419 349 2 km2 354 sq mi 137 km2 Largest cities in the Northeast New York City New York is the most populated city in both the Northeast and the United States Its population was 8 804 190 in 2020 Its metro area has a population of 20 140 470 Philadelphia Pennsylvania is the second most populated in the Northeast and sixth largest in the nation Its population was 1 603 797 in 2020 Its metro area population was 6 228 601 Boston Massachusetts is the third largest city in the Northeast and 25th largest in the nation Its population was 675 647 in 2020 Its metro area had a population of 4 941 632 Newark New Jersey is the fourth largest city in the Northeast and 66th largest in the U S Its population was 311 549 in 2020 Its metro area is combined with the New York area Pittsburgh Pennsylvania is the fifth largest city in the Northeast and 68th largest in the nation Pittsburgh is at the western frontier of the Northeast a short drive from the Ohio border and is widely regarded as the transition point between the Northeast and Midwest Its population was 302 971 in 2020 Its metro area has a population of 2 370 930 Jersey City New Jersey is the sixth largest city in the Northeast and 72nd largest in the nation It had a population of 292 449 in 2020 It sits directly across the Hudson River from New York City Buffalo New York is the seventh largest city in the Northeast and 81st largest in the U S Its population was 278 349 in 2020 Its metro area had a population of 1 166 902 Yonkers New York is the eighth largest city in the Northeast and 115th largest city in the U S It had a population of 211 569 in 2020 It borders the Bronx a borough of New York City to its south Rochester New York is the ninth largest city in the Northeast and the 116th largest city in the United States It had a population of 211 328 in 2020 The Rochester metro has a population of 1 090 135 Worcester Massachusetts is the tenth largest city in the Northeast and the 114th largest city in the United States It had a population of 206 518 in the 2020 census It is an edge city of Greater Boston and its metro is combined with it EconomyThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2023 As of 2012 update the Northeast U S accounts for approximately 23 of the nation s gross domestic product Due to its vast population and diverse landscapes the Northeast has a large and robust economy ranging from financial services in Manhattan to agriculture in Central Pennsylvania New York City The New York Stock Exchange in Lower Manhattan is the largest stock exchange in the world by market capitalization As of 2021 update the New York metropolitan area is estimated to produce a gross metropolitan product GMP of 2 1 trillion US dollars ranking it first in the U S If the New York metropolitan area were a sovereign state it would have been the eighth largest economy in the world Manhattan is considered the world s financial center with many large banks based in Manhattan and some of the largest stock exchanges on Wall Street like the New York Stock Exchange it is so prominent that the term Wall Street is usually synonymous with finance Many other companies are based in New York City area either in Midtown Manhattan downtown Brooklyn Long Island City or the various suburbs like Stamford or White Plains Some of the largest companies based in New York City area include Verizon J P Morgan Chase Citigroup MetLife PepsiCo IBM Time Warner Goldman Sachs and Pfizer Several technology companies have been founded in New York or moved their headquarters to New York from other places New York City is the nation s most populated city and the New York metropolitan area including and surrounding it is the nation s most populated metropolitan region contributing to a sizable shopping economy including many large shopping malls and department stores based in the area such as Macy s on 34th Street Fifth Avenue and American Dream in East Rutherford New Jersey the Palisades Center in West Nyack New York and the SoNo Collection in Norwalk Connecticut The Port of New York and New Jersey one of the nation s largest ports is located on New York Harbor Philadelphia Adirondack Park As of 2021 update the Philadelphia metropolitan area is estimated to produce a GMP of 479 billion US dollars making it the 9th largest economy in the United States Many large companies are based in Philadelphia the nation s sixth largest city including AmerisourceBergen Comcast and DuPont The Philadelphia Mint is also located in the city Boston The Boston metropolitan area is a major center for insurance finance and technology serving as the global headquarters for General Electric Liberty Mutual and other large companies Other regions Rural regions and states including most of Upstate New York Vermont New Hampshire and Maine rely more on agriculture logging mining and tourism to help boost their local and statewide economies Many national and state parks in the region generate lots of tourism especially during fall months The logging industry is especially prominent in Maine making up a large part of Northern Maine s economy Many Northeastern states have very large economies and are highly developed As of 2022 the per capita gross domestic products for these states are New York US 2 1 trillion per capita 105 226 Pennsylvania US 931 billion per capita 71 825 New Jersey US 753 billion per capita 81 307 Massachusetts US 693 billion per capita 99 274 Connecticut US 323 billion per capita 89 301 New Hampshire US 106 billion per capita 76 008 Maine US 85 billion per capita 61 491 Rhode Island US 72 billion per capita 65 879 Vermont US 41 billion per capita 63 275 The Nuclear Regulatory Commission oversees 34 nuclear reactors eight for research or testing and 26 for power production in the Northeastern United States TransportationRail systems The New York City Subway one of the busiest transit systems in the world used by over two billion passengers annuallyA MBTA Commuter Train one of the Northeast s busiest commuter rail systems entering Mansfield station in Mansfield Massachusetts The Northeast is served by Amtrak trains with the Northeast Regional and Acela two of the busiest intercity rail lines running from Washington D C in the south to Boston in the north Other Amtrak Lines that serve the Northeast include the Downeaster Empire Service Vermonter Lake Shore Limited Pennsylvanian Light rail commuter rail and other subway systems are also available in the region No Name Metro Rail type City No of lines Annual Ridership Q4 2019 1 New York City Subway New York Rapid Transit New York 36 2 723 960 1002 MBTA subway Boston Rapid Transit Light Rail Boston 12 199 501 3523 Long Island Rail Road New York Commuter Rail New York Long Island 13 117 773 4004 SEPTA subway Philadelphia Rapid Transit Philadelphia 3 90 240 8005 PATH New York Rapid Transit Newark Jersey City New York 4 90 276 6006 NJ Transit Commuter Rail New York Philadelphia Commuter Rail Hoboken Paterson Atlantic City 11 88 319 6007 Metro North Railroad New York Commuter Rail NYC New Haven White Plains Stamford 3 4 86 459 0008 SEPTA Trolley Philadelphia Light Rail Philadelphia 8 24 321 2009 SEPTA Regional Rail Philadelphia Commuter Rail Philadelphia 13 35 594 80010 MBTA Commuter Rail Boston Commuter Rail Boston Providence Worcester 14 32 420 40011 Pittsburgh Light Rail Pittsburgh Light Rail Pittsburgh Bethel Park 3 27 975 60012 NJ Transit Tram New York Philadelphia Light Rail Trenton Camden Newark Jersey City 3 23 700 00013 Buffalo Metro Rail Buffalo Light Rail Buffalo 1 1 890 20014 Hartford Line Hartford Commuter Rail New Haven Hartford Springfield 1 750 00015 Shore Line East New Haven Commuter Rail New Haven New London Stamford 1 660 500Major stations Grand Central Terminal in New York City a National Historic Landmark and the second busiest train station in the nation after New York Penn Station also in New York City30th Street Station in Philadelphia Served by all SEPTA Regional Lines Amtrak NJ Transit s Atlantic City Line it is the third busiest Amtrak station and 11th busiest train station in North America with over four million passengers in 2019 Pennsylvania Station in New York City is served by some NJ Transit lines and some Long Island Rail Road and Amtrak trains It is the busiest train station in North America with over 10 million passengers in 2019 along with 27 million passengers from NJ Transit and 69 million from Long Island Rail in 2017 Grand Central Terminal in New York City is served by Metro North and some Long Island Rail trains beginning in January 2023 Grand Central Terminal had over 67 million annual passengers in 2017 and is the second busiest train station in the nation and third busiest in North America Union Station in New Haven Connecticut is served by New Haven Line Hartford Line and Shoreline East along existing Amtrak train lines It had 350 000 annual Amtrak passengers in 2017 South Station in Boston is served by southern MBTA commuter lines and Amtrak and was the seventh busiest train station in North America with nearly 29 million passengers as of 2017 North Station in Boston is served by northern MBTA commuter lines and the Downeaster on Amtrak It had six million MBTA users in 2012 and 152 000 Amtrak passengers in 2021 Airports JFK International Airport in Queens New York The busiest airport in the Northeast and the 13th busiest in the nation The following table includes all airports categorized by the FAA as large or medium hubs located in the Northeastern states National Rank Metro area served Airport code Airport name Largest airline Annual Passengers13 New York JFK John F Kennedy International Airport JetBlue 39 15 273 34214 New York EWR Newark Liberty International Airport United 53 14 514 04919 Boston BOS Logan International Airport JetBlue 30 10 909 81721 Philadelphia PHL Philadelphia International Airport American 44 9 820 22225 New York LGA LaGuardia Airport Delta 21 7 827 30748 Pittsburgh PIT Pittsburgh International Airport Southwest 26 3 069 25954 Hartford BDL Bradley International Airport American 17 2 273 259Road Many major highways cross the Northeast connecting it to the rest of the nation Number Length mi Length km Southern or western terminus Northern or eastern terminus Formed Removed NotesI 70 2171 71 3 495 03 I 15 in Cove Fort Utah I 695 at Woodlawn Baltimore County Maryland 01956 01 01 1956 current Serves Pennsylvania Associated routes none in the NortheastI 76 435 66 701 13 I 71 in Westfield Center Ohio I 295 at Bellmawr New Jersey 01964 01 01 1964 current Serves two northeastern states Pennsylvania New Jersey Associated routes I 176 I 276 I 376 I 476 I 676I 78 146 28 235 41 I 81 at Jonestown Pennsylvania Canal Street in New York City 01957 01 01 1957 current Serves three northeastern states Pennsylvania New Jersey New York Associated routes I 278 I 478 I 678 I 878I 79 343 46 552 75 I 77 in Charleston West Virginia PA 5 in Erie Pennsylvania 01967 01 01 1967 current Serves Pennsylvania Associated routes I 279 I 579I 80 2899 59 4 666 44 US 101 in San Francisco California I 95 in Teaneck New Jersey 01956 01 01 1956 current Serves 2 northeastern states Pennsylvania and New Jersey Associated routes I 180 I 380 I 280I 81 855 02 1 376 02 I 40 in Dandridge Tennessee Canadian border at Wellesley Island New York 01961 01 01 1961 current Serves two northeastern states Pennsylvania New York Associated routes I 481 and I 781I 83 85 03 136 84 President Street and Fayette Street in Baltimore Maryland I 81 in Harrisburg Pennsylvania 01959 01 01 1959 current Serves Pennsylvania Associated route I 283I 84 232 71 374 51 I 81 in Scranton Pennsylvania I 90 in Sturbridge Massachusetts 01963 01 01 1963 current Serves four states Pennsylvania New York Connecticut Massachusetts Associated routes I 384 I 684I 86 223 39 359 51 I 90 near North East Pennsylvania NY 17 NY 79 in Windsor New York 01999 01 01 1999 current Unfinished in New York Serves two northeastern states Pennsylvania New York Associated routes noneI 87 333 49 536 70 I 278 in New York City A 15 at Canadian border in Champlain New York 01957 01 01 1957 current New York only Associated routes I 287 I 587 I 787I 88 117 75 189 50 I 81 in Binghamton New York I 90 in Schenectady New York 01968 01 01 1968 current New York only Associated routes noneI 89 191 12 307 58 I 93 SR 3A in Bow New Hampshire Route 133 Future A 35 at Canadian border in Highgate Vermont 01960 01 01 1960 current Serves two northeastern states New Hampshire Vermont Associated route I 189I 90 3020 44 4 860 93 SR 519 4th Avenue Edgar Martinez Drive in Seattle Washington MA 1A in Boston Massachusetts 01956 01 01 1956 current Serves three northeastern states Pennsylvania New York Massachusetts Associated routes I 190 New York I 290 New York I 390 I 490 I 590 I 690 I 790 I 890 I 990 I 190 Massachusetts I 290 Massachusetts Longest Interstate highway in the USI 91 290 37 467 31 I 95 in New Haven Connecticut A 55 at Canadian border in Derby Line Vermont 01958 01 01 1958 current Serves three northeastern states Connecticut Massachusetts Vermont Associated routes I 291 Connecticut I 291 Massachusetts I 391 I 691I 93 189 95 305 69 I 95 US 1 in Canton Massachusetts I 91 in St Johnsbury Vermont 01957 01 01 1957 current Serves three northeastern states Massachusetts New Hampshire Vermont Associated routes I 293 I 393I 95 1919 31 3 088 83 US 1 in Miami Florida NB 95 at Canadian border in Houlton Maine 01957 01 01 1957 current Serves eight northeastern states Pennsylvania New Jersey New York Connecticut Rhode Island Massachusetts New Hampshire Maine Associated routes I 195 I 295 I 395 I 495 I 695 I 895 Longest primary north south Interstate highwayI 99 98 34 158 26 I 70 I 76 in Bedford Pennsylvania I 86 NY 17 in Painted Post New York 01998 01 01 1998 current Unfinished in Pennsylvania Serves two northeastern states Pennsylvania New York Associated routes noneThe New Jersey Turnpike I 95 is one of the busiest highways in the nation Many other minor highways exist in the Northeast connecting cities Major US Routes which run through the Northeast include US 1 US 2 US 3 US 4 US 5 US 6 US 7 US 9 US 11 US 13 US 15 US 19 US 20 US 22 US 30 US 40 US 44 US 46 US 62 US 130 US 201 US 202 US 206 US 209 US 219 US 220 US 222 US 224 US 302 US 322 US 422 US 522 The Northeast has the highest amount of tolled roads bridges in the nation with only two states in the Northeast having no tolls Connecticut and Vermont Notable turnpikes include the Pennsylvania Turnpike I 76 I 276 I 95 New Jersey Turnpike partially I 95 New York Thruway I 87 I 90 Massachusetts Turnpike I 90 Maine Turnpike I 95 PA Turnpike Northeast Extension I 476 The northeast also contains many tolled and non tolled parkways many of which are in New York City metro Major parkways include the Garden State Parkway Taconic State Parkway Hutchinson River Parkway Saw Mill River Parkway Lake Ontario State Parkway Niagara Scenic Parkway Belt Parkway Grand Central Parkway Northern State Parkway Major crossings The George Washington Bridge crossing the Hudson River carrying most traffic on Interstate 95 from New Jersey to New York The Driscoll Bridge is one of the world s widest and busiest motor vehicle bridges crossing the Raritan River on New Jersey s Garden State Parkway The Holland Tunnel crossing under the Hudson River connecting Jersey City with Lower Manhattan Delaware Memorial Bridge I 295 NJ Turnpike Crosses the Delaware River between Delaware and New Jersey the southern most fixed crossing on the river Eastbound span opened in 1951 westbound span opened in 1968 Walt Whitman Bridge I 76 Crosses the Delaware River connecting southern Philadelphia to southern New Jersey suburbs Opened in 1957 Benjamin Franklin Bridge I 676 Connects downtown Philadelphia with Camden New Jersey and southern New Jersey Opened in 1926 Delaware River Turnpike Toll Bridge I 95 PA Turnpike Connects the PA Turnpike to the NJ Turnpike I 95 was only designated in 2018 formerly was I 276 Opened in 1956 Driscoll Bridge Garden State Parkway Crosses the Raritan River near its mouth at Raritan Bay Opened in 1954 the bridge is located within the heart of the state of New Jersey providing access to the Jersey Shore to the south and North Jersey to the north Newark Bay Bridge I 76 NJ Turnpike Crosses Newark Bay connecting Newark to Jersey City and Bayonne Opened in 1956 Bayonne Bridge NJ 440 NY 440 Crosses Arthur Kill connecting Bayonne to Staten Island New York Opened in 1931 raised in 2017 Verrazzano Narrows Bridge I 278 Crosses New York Harbor to connect Staten Island to Brooklyn double decked Opened in 1964 Brooklyn Battery Tunnel I 478 Crosses underneath the East River to connect Lower Manhattan to Brooklyn Opened in 1950 Brooklyn Bridge Manhattan Bridge Williamsburg Bridge The bridges cross the East River to connect Lower Manhattan to Brooklyn Opened in 1883 1909 and 1903 PATH Hudson Tubes Carries the PATH metro trains underneath the Hudson River to connect Newark Jersey City and Hoboken to Lower and Midtown Manhattan The tubes opened up in 1908 1909 Holland Tunnel I 78 Crosses underneath the Hudson River connects road traffic from Jersey City and Newark to Lower Manhattan Opened in 1927 Queens Midtown Tunnel I 495 Crosses underneath the East River connecting the Long Island Expressway to Manhattan Opened in 1940 North River Tunnels NJ Transit Amtrak Carries the Northeast Corridor underneath the Hudson River connecting rail traffic from New Jersey to Pennsylvania Station and New England Opened in 1910 Lincoln Tunnel NJ 495 Crosses underneath the Hudson River to connect New Jersey to Midtown Manhattan Opened in 1937 Queensboro Bridge NY 25 Connects Midtown Manhattan to Long Island City Opened in 1909 Triborough Bridge I 278 Crosses the East River and Harlem River provides road connections to Upper Manhattan Queens and the Bronx Also crosses and connects Randalls Island Opened in 1936 Hell Gate Bridge Amtrak Crosses the East River and Bronx Kill provides a rail connection from Pennsylvania Station to the Bronx and Connecticut Opened in 1917 George Washington Bridge I 95 Crosses the Hudson River connecting New York and New England to New Jersey and cross country I 80 One of the busiest crossings in the United States Double Decked Opened in 1931 Alexander Hamilton Bridge I 95 Crosses the Harlem River connecting Manhattan and the GW Bridge to the Cross Bronx Expressway Opened in 1963 Whitestone Bridge I 678 Crosses the East River connecting South Bronx to Queens Opened in 1939 The Zakim Bridge carrying traffic on Intestate 93 from Boston across the Charles River Throgs Neck Bridge I 295 Crosses the East River connecting the Bronx and New England to the Queens and Long Island northern most crossing of the East River no fixed crossings are in Long Island Sound Opened in 1961 Tappan Zee Bridge I 87 I 287 Crosses the Hudson River carrying NY Thruway and suburban traffic from Rockland and Westchester counties Alternative to GW Bridge Current span opened in 2017 former span opened in 1955 Newburgh Beacon Bridge I 84 Crosses the Hudson River carrying traffic from Pennsylvania and southeastern New York across the river to New England Opened in 1963 Q Bridge I 95 Crosses the Quinnipiac River carrying New Haven traffic along with traffic heading to New England or New York Current span opened in 2012 original span opened in 1958 Baldwin Bridge I 95 Crosses the Connecticut River carrying cross state traffic and connecting Old Saybrook to New London Opened in 1948 Jamestown Newport Pell Bridges RI 138 Crosses Narraganset Bay connecting Newport Rhode Island to the rest of the state Jamestown Bridge opened in 1992 Newport Pell opened in 1969 Charter Oak Bridge CT 15 US 5 Crosses the Connecticut River connecting southern Hartford and I 91 northbound to East Hartford and I 84 eastbound Opened in 1991 The Rainbow Bridge connecting New York to Canada nearby Niagara Falls Bulkeley Bridge I 84 Crosses the Connecticut River connecting Hartford area traffic across the river The oldest interstate crossing in the US Opened in 1908 Ted Williams Tunnel I 90 Crosses underneath Boston Harbor Connects the Mass Pike and I 93 to East Boston and Logan Airport Opened in 1995 2003 Zakim Bridge I 93 Crosses the Charles River carrying Boston traffic to the northern Massachusetts and Maine New Hampshire Opened in 2003 Piscataqua River Bridge I 95 Crosses the Piscataqua River carrying traffic from New Hampshire and Massachusetts to Maine Opened in 1972 Peace Bridge QEW I 190 Crosses the Niagara River carrying traffic from Buffalo New York into Ontario Opened in 1927 Rainbow Bridge NY 384 NY 104 Crosses the Niagara River carrying traffic from Niagara Falls New York into Niagara Falls Ontario Opened in 1941 Lewiston Queenston Bridge I 190 Crosses the Niagara River carrying traffic from Buffalo New York into Ontario Opened in 1962 History The Jersey City Terminal a major rail and ferry connection between New Jersey and New York City The Cross Bronx Expressway I 95 is an urban freeway which was built using slum clearance policies in the 1950s and 1960s Today it is one of the most congested highways in the nation It is regarded as a major cause for urban decay in the Bronx The Northeast has been a place for many firsts in transportation in the US from the first commercial railroad in the US in Milton Massachusetts Granite Railway first rapid transit system MBTA Green Line the first limited access road was the Bronx River Parkway opened in 1922 New York is also where the first urban freeway was built in the late 1930s FDR Drive The northeast would also be home to some of the first major freeway revolts in Greenwich Village and would see the first major highway teardown Miller Highway in the 1970s Before European settlement most of the Northeast was loosely connected by Native American trails some of which would be incorporated into early European settlement roads and turnpikes One major early road was the Boston Post Road connecting New York City and Boston along the Connecticut and Rhode Island coasts Later these roads would be included in the King s Highway spanning most of the east coast Smaller turnpikes would also connect cities across the northeast These roads would prove essential to moving goods across the English colonies in the 18th century and would later play a large part in the American Revolution The region saw a boom in canal building in the early 19th century with a major canal being the Erie Canal opened in 1825 connecting the Great Lakes to the Hudson River and Atlantic Ocean through Western New York The first railroads would be built in the late 1820s and would explode in mileage in the mid to late 19th century Places like Philadelphia New York Boston Newark and Pittsburgh would become large water and rail hubs during the Industrial Revolution and would see tremendous booms in population and use Many large rivers in the northeast like the Hudson and Delaware would be slowly crossed with bridges starting in the 1800s with the first fixed crossing of the Hudson River south of Albany being the Poughkeepsie Railroad Bridge opened in 1889 The Delair Bridge which would connect Philadelphia with New Jersey was opened six years later in 1896 The first crossing of the Hudson River into New York City would be the series of Hudson River PATH tunnels being opened in 1908 and 1909 The first major vehicle tunnel would be the Holland Tunnel opened up in 1927 The start of highway construction would be the Bronx River Parkway and Long Island Motor Parkway both of which started construction in the early 1900s The rise of Robert Moses in New York would see the construction of many major road bridges and highways crossing the city and metro area East River Drive eventually renamed FDR Drive was built along the corresponding river in Manhattan The mid 20th century would see the rise of urban and suburban freeways and the decline of passenger and freight rail with many lesser used tracks being abandoned or torn up during this time It would also see the original Pennsylvania Station demolished in Midtown Manhattan during the mid 1960s The construction of the Cross Bronx Expressway in New York Central Artery in Boston and the Vine Street Expressway in Philadelphia tore up many ethnic and minority neighborhoods in the name of urban renewal Many other highways were proposed during this era like the Lower Manhattan Expressway and the Inner Belt in Boston which were not built due to fierce highway revolts and rising costs After the major highway revolts and rise of environmental concerns new highway and interstate projects were mostly cancelled or shortened in the Northeast by the 1990s Despite the lack of new major road projects in the Northeast the region has still continued to grow in population resulting in the rise of alternative forms of transport like HOV lanes or commuter rails This has led to the Northeast having one of the highest transit usage percentages in North America with the Long Island Railroad being the most used commuter rail in the continent One exception was the Big Dig a major road project that would tear down the former elevated Central Artery I 93 and instead tunnel it and widen It would also construct a new Charles River bridge and the Ted Williams Tunnel I 90 This would end up becoming one of the costliest construction projects in the world costing 21 billion adjusted to 2020 inflation The former highway s path would become the Rose Kennedy Greenway a large public park The Sheridan Expressway former I 895 was also rebuilt into a boulevard in the late 2010s Rochester New York has torn down the Inner Loop due to low traffic and to reunify neighborhoods in downtown and to create developable space CultureThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2021 One geographer Wilbur Zelinsky asserts that the Northeast region lacks a unified cultural identity but has served as a culture hearth for the rest of the nation Several much smaller geographical regions within the Northeast have distinct cultural identities Landmarks Almost half of the National Historic Landmarks maintained by the National Park Service are located in the Northeastern United States Religion According to a 2009 Gallup poll the Northeastern states differ from most of the rest of the U S in religious affiliation generally reflecting the descendants of immigration patterns of the late 19th and early 20th centuries with many Catholics arriving from Ireland Italy French Canada Quebec Portugal and east central Europe Massachusetts Rhode Island New York and New Jersey are the only states in the nation where Catholics outnumber Protestants and other Christian denominations More than 20 of respondents in Maine New Hampshire and Vermont declared no religious identity Compared to other U S regions the Northeast along with the Pacific Northwest has had the lowest regular religious service attendance and the fewest people for whom religion is an important part of their daily lives as of 2015 Sports The Northeast region is home to numerous professional sports franchises in the Big Four leagues NFL NBA NHL and MLB with more than 100 championships collectively among them New York metropolitan area Giants Jets NFL Yankees Mets MLB Knicks Nets NBA Rangers Islanders Devils NHL Philadelphia Eagles NFL Phillies MLB 76ers NBA Flyers NHL Boston Patriots NFL Red Sox MLB Celtics NBA Bruins NHL Pittsburgh Steelers NFL Pirates MLB Penguins NHL Buffalo Bills NFL Sabres NHL Major League Soccer features four Northeastern teams New England Revolution New York City FC New York Red Bulls and Philadelphia Union The region also has two WNBA teams Connecticut Sun and New York Liberty Notable golf tournaments in the Northeastern United States include The Northern Trust Travelers Championship and Atlantic City LPGA Classic The US Open held in New York is one of the four Grand Slam tennis tournaments Notable Northeastern motorsports tracks include Watkins Glen International Pocono Raceway New Hampshire Motor Speedway and Lime Rock Park which have hosted Formula One IndyCar NASCAR and International Motor Sports Association races Also drag strips such as Englishtown Epping and Reading have hosted NHRA national events Belmont Park at New York hosts the Belmont Stakes horse races which is part of the Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing The region has also been noted for the prevalence of the traditionally Northeastern sports of ice hockey and lacrosse PoliticsThe Northeastern United States tended to vote Republican in federal elections through the first half of the 20th century but the region has since the 1990s shifted to become the most Democratic region in the nation along with the West Coast Results from a 2008 Gallup poll indicated that eight of the top ten Democratic states were located in the region with every Northeastern state having a Democratic Party affiliation advantage of at least ten points The following table demonstrates Democratic support in the Northeast as compared to the remainder of the nation Year President vote Senate seats House seatsNortheast Remainder Northeast Remainder Northeast Remainder2000 57 6 47 5 60 0 46 3 59 6 45 72002 60 0 45 0 58 3 44 72004 57 1 47 3 60 0 40 0 59 5 43 02006 75 0 45 0 73 8 48 32008 60 7 52 0 80 0 52 5 81 0 52 92010 75 0 47 5 67 9 38 5 The following table of United States presidential election results since 1920 illustrates that over the past eight presidential elections only three Northeastern states supported a Republican candidate New Hampshire voted for George W Bush in 2000 Pennsylvania and Maine s 2nd congressional district voted for Donald Trump in 2016 Maine s 2nd district voted for Trump again in 2020 and 2024 saw Trump take back Pennsylvania and again hold on to Maine s 2nd district 2004 is so far the only election in U S history in which the winner did not win any northeastern state Bolded entries indicate that party s candidate also won the general election State 1920 1924 1928 1932 1936 1940 1944 1948 1952 1956 1960 1964 1968 1972 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2020 2024CT R R R R D D D R R R D D D R R R R R D D D D D D D D DME R R R R R R R R R R R D D R R R R R D D D D D D D R ME 02 D R ME 02 D R ME 02 MA R R D D D D D D R R D D D D D R R D D D D D D D D D DNH R R R R D D D R R R R D R R R R R R D D R D D D D D DNJ R R R D D D D R R R D D R R R R R R D D D D D D D D DNY R R R D D D D R R R D D D R D R R D D D D D D D D D DPA R R R R D D D R R R D D D R D R R R D D D D D D R D RRI R R D D D D D D R R D D D R D D R D D D D D D D D D DVT R R R R R R R R R R R D R R R R R R D D D D D D D D D The following table shows the breakdown of party affiliation of governors attorneys general state legislative houses and U S congressional delegation for the Northeastern states for the upcoming term beginning in January 2025 Demographics reflect registration by party figures from that state s registered voter statistics State Governor Attorney general Upper House majority Lower House majority Senior U S senator Junior U S senator U S House delegation DemographicsCT Democratic Democratic Democratic 25 11 Democratic 102 49 Democratic Democratic Democratic 5 0 Democratic 36 21ME Democratic Democratic Democratic 20 15 Democratic 76 73 2 Republican Independent Democratic 2 0 Democratic 36 30MA Democratic Democratic Democratic 35 5 Democratic 134 25 1 Democratic Democratic Democratic 9 0 Democratic 29 9NH Republican Republican Republican 16 8 Republican 222 178 Democratic Democratic Democratic 2 0 Republican 34 29NJ Democratic Democratic Democratic 25 15 Democratic 52 28 Democratic Democratic Democratic 9 3 Democratic 38 24NY Democratic Democratic Democratic 41 22 Democratic 103 47 Democratic Democratic Democratic 19 7 Democratic 49 22PA Democratic Republican Republican 28 22 Democratic 102 101 Democratic Republican Republican 10 7 Democratic 45 40RI Democratic Democratic Democratic 34 4 Democratic 64 10 1 Democratic Democratic Democratic 2 0 Democratic 39 14VT Republican Democratic Democratic 16 13 1 Democratic 87 56 4 3 Independent Democratic Democratic 1 0 Democratic 47 31See alsoAtlantic Northeast Jersey Shore New England Acadian forests Northeast Corridor Northeast megalopolis Northeastern coastal forests Rust BeltNotesElevation adjusted to North American Vertical Datum of 1988 The term East Coast is often used to refer to the Northeastern megalopolis East Coast primarily refers to the region between Washington D C in the south and Boston in the north The U S Census Bureau reorganized its administrative units and its regional offices do not cover the Census regions the northeasternmost regional office headquartered in New York covers New England New York New Jersey and Puerto Rico Based on U S Census Bureau population projections to 2030 and assuming constant land area the population density for the South Atlantic division will increase significantly to 294 6 mi2 New England s density will increase to 249 2 mi2 and the East North Central division will increase only slightly to 200 2 mi2 The division with the 5th highest density is projected to be the East South Central division at 111 6 mi2 References Census Regions and Divisions of the United States PDF United States Department of Commerce Economics and Statistics Administration United States Census Bureau Geography Division Archived from the original 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Retrieved August 25 2024 2004 Electoral College Results National Archives November 5 2019 Retrieved August 25 2024 External linksWikivoyage has a travel guide for Northeastern United States 42 N 73 W 42 N 73 W 42 73