Northwest Angle
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Northwest-Angle,-MN.png
The Northwest Angle, known simply as the angle by locals, is a small part of northern Minnesota that is the only part of the United States outside of Alaska that is north of the 49th parallel. That parallel is the northern boundary of the 48 contiguous states extending eastward from the west coast along the northern boundaries of Washington, Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, and part of Minnesota to the Northwest Angle. Farther east, the U.S.A. does not extend that far north. Map projections sometimes create an optical illusion that Maine extends farther north than that; that illusion does not occur in maps in which parallels of latitude are straight lines. Like Alaska and Point Roberts, Washington, the Northwest Angle cannot be reached from the rest of the USA without either going through Canada or crossing water—specifically, the Lake of the Woods.
The northwest corner of the Northwest Angle is at Template:Coor dms.
The Treaty of Paris (1783), concluded between the United States and the Kingdom of Great Britain at the end of the American Revolutionary War, stated that the boundary between the U.S.A. and the British possessions to the north would run "...through the Lake of the Woods to the most northwesternmost point thereof, and from thence on a due west course to the river Mississippi..." The parties did not suspect that the source of the Mississippi, Lake Itasca, was south of that point. Consequently the Northwest Angle is the result of 18th-century ignorance of geography. In the Anglo-American Convention of 1818, the error was corrected by having the boundary run due south from the northwest point of the lake to the 49th parallel and then westward along it. When this north-south line was surveyed, it was found to intersect other bays of the lake and therefore cut off a portion of U.S. territory, now known as the Northwest Angle.
The Northwest Angle has only about 150 residents and the last one-room public school in the state. The border crossing is unstaffed. Travelers using the single gravel road into the Angle are expected to use the telephone provided to contact Canadian or U.S. customs and make their declarations. See Angle Township, Minnesota.
Secession from the United States, and annexation by Canada, has occasionally been proposed by residents of the Northwest Angle, but is unlikely.
See also
External links
- Angle Inlet School: Minnesota's last one-room school (http://www.yahooey.com/angleschool/)
- Marking the Northwest Angle (http://www.profsurv.com/ps_scripts/article.idc?id=1292) by Roger E. Grimsley, PLS