Katana VentraIP

List of state partition proposals in the United States

Numerous state partition proposals have been put forward since the 1776 establishment of the United States that would partition an existing U.S. state or states so that a particular region might either join another state or create a new state. Article IV, Section 3, Clause 1 of the United States Constitution, often called the New States Clause, grants to the United States Congress the authority to admit new states into the United States beyond the thirteen that existed when the Constitution went into effect (June 21, 1788, after ratification by nine of the thirteen states).[1] It also includes a stipulation originally designed to give Eastern states that still had Western land claims, which included Virginia, North Carolina, and Georgia, a veto over whether their western counties could become states.[2]

Main articles: U.S. state and Admission to the Union

The clause has served the same function since then whenever a proposal to partition an existing state or states has come before Congress. New breakaway states are permitted to join the Union only with the proper consents.[4] Of the 37 states admitted to the Union by Congress, three were set off from an already existing state:


Another state that may fit into this category is Vermont, which existed as a de facto but unrecognized sovereign state from 1777 to 1791. The region had been a subject of a territorial dispute between New York and New Hampshire during the colonial period, which royal authorities had resolved in favor of New York. As the State of New York continued to claim Vermont's territory under that ruling after independence, the Continental Congress never recognized Vermont as an independent state. In 1790, after negotiating the common boundary between the two states and Vermont agreeing to pay New York $30,000, New York relinquished its land grant claim and consented to Vermont becoming part of the Union. Vasan Kesavan and Michael Stokes Paulsen assert that "although Vermont was admitted into the Union with New York's consent, it is not at all clear that New York's consent was constitutionally necessary. While Vermont was within the territory claimed by New York, the preponderance of evidence suggests that Vermont was not within the jurisdiction of New York."[4]


The following is a list of substantive proposals, both successful and unsuccessful, put forward since the nation's founding to partition or set off a portion of an existing U.S. state or states so that the region might either join another state or create a new state. Proposals to secede from the Union and proposals to create states from either organized incorporated or unorganized U.S. territories are not included. Land cessions made by several individual states to the federal government in the 18th and the 19th centuries also are not listed.

In February 2011, politicians and activists formed the group "Start our State," to advocate secession for Pima County and other southern counties to create a state called "Baja Arizona". The group wanted the Pima County Board of Supervisors to put the issue on the 2012 ballot, but it was rejected by the board due to lack of authority, so the group circulated petitions.[8] Interest in secession grew when Republican governor Jan Brewer and her allies enacted Arizona SB 1070, regarding illegal immigration.[9] Furthermore, the state had passed laws affecting Tucson elections and how the city bids for public works projects.[10]

Tucson

In the mid-1930s, the Walsenburg World-Independent proposed that secede from the state.[11] This was a pet project of Sam T. Taylor, a sports editor, who went on to become a long-serving state senator,[12] continuing to pursue the idea unsuccessfully.[13]

Huerfano County

In 1973, nearby had expressed interest in seceding from Colorado and joining New Mexico.[14]

Costilla County

On June 6, 2013, commissioners in announced a proposal to secede with seven other counties to form the state of North Colorado, citing concerns with state policy and recently enacted legislation relating to the region's main economic drivers, including agriculture and energy. The bid was motivated by a belief that the urban population centers of the State weren't concerned with the economic interests of more rural areas.[15][16][17] The commissioners stated that they would hold public meetings to gather input before crafting a ballot initiative by August 1, and that the proposal had aroused preliminary interest from fellow commissioners in Morgan, Logan, Sedgwick, Phillips, Washington, Yuma and Kit Carson counties.[18] Eleven counties were involved in the partition movement by election day, though Moffat County was looking into joining Wyoming rather than North Colorado.[19] Voters rejected partition in six of the eleven counties, including Weld and Moffat, and supported it (without binding authority) in five.[20]

Weld County

Politicians in the have made proposals to split Florida into two states, North Florida and South Florida. One such proposal was made in 2008 by the North Lauderdale commissioners.[21] The proposal was revived in 2014 when South Miami City Commission passed a South Florida state resolution on October 7 and sent it to counties in the proposed state's area.[22]

South Florida metropolitan area

The Republican Party placed a question on the county's May 2018 primary ballot asking Republican voters if they wanted all Georgia counties south of Macon to join together to “form the 51st state of South Georgia”. The question failed with only 27% of voters agreeing with it.[23]

Pierce County

In the mid and late 1860s, there was a proposal centered on in northern Idaho for the Territory of Columbia to be formed in the Inland Northwest from parts of what is now eastern Washington, northern Idaho and western Montana.[24]

Lewiston

Longstanding political rivalry along with geographic isolation led to proposals in the early 20th century that portions of and eastern Washington be united into a new state named Lincoln.[25][26]

northern Idaho

In 2020, "Move Oregon's Border for a Greater Idaho" proposed breaking off most of 's area and some of Northern California and join it with Idaho. Even if passed by voters, it would still need approval from all three state legislatures.[27][28][29][30][31] In 2021, five counties in eastern Oregon voted to "require county officials to take steps to promote" adding the counties to Idaho.[32] In May 2022, voters in Douglas and Josephine counties rejected an advisory vote, causing the proponents to scale back the scope of the proposal and issue a “less ambitious” map. The reduced scope includes only eastern Oregon, does not include any California territory, and only includes a little more than a third of the original map’s inhabitants. Eleven Oregon counties have approved some version of the proposal.[33] In February, 2023, the House State Affairs committee of the Idaho House of Representatives approved a resolution to authorize the legislature to discuss moving the state border with Oregon lawmakers.[34]

Oregon

Between 1840 and 1842, several northern counties in Illinois, including , Stephenson County, Winnebago County and Boone County, voted to reattach to Wisconsin, from which the counties were ceded to Illinois by Congress in 1818. The split was precipitated by the mutual antagonism between northerners and southerners due to social and political differences. The split was never realized due to lack of support from Chicago and Cook County, as the benefits of the Illinois and Michigan Canal linking northern to central and southern Illinois outweighed secession.[35]

Jo Daviess County

In 1861, the southern region of Illinois, known as , proposed secession due to cultural and political differences from Chicago and much of Central and Northern Illinois.[36][37]

Little Egypt

In 1925, considered secession to create the state of Chicago.[38]

Cook County

In the early 1970s, residents in western Illinois were upset over the allocation of state funds for transportation, prompting a student at to declare 16 counties the Republic of Forgottonia. Although the declaration was meant to be a joke, the secession idea was picked up by the Western Illinois Regional Council, until State Representative Doug Kane showed that the counties had received funding that was more than what they paid in state taxes.[39]

Western Illinois University

In November 2011, State Representatives and Adam Brown introduced a proposal to make Cook County a state of its own. They felt that all of Illinois outside of Cook County should become a separate state, due to Chicago's "dictating its views" to the rest of the state.[40]

Bill Mitchell

On February 7, 2019, State Representative , with co-sponsors Representatives Chris Miller and Darren Bailey, filed a resolution that urges the United States Congress to declare the City of Chicago the 51st state of the United States of America and separate it from the rest of Illinois.[41][42]

Brad Halbrook

In 1992, a group in southwestern Kansas advocated the secession of a number of counties in that region from the state. Nominally headed by , former Chairman of the Kansas Republican Party and gubernatorial candidate from Hugoton, the group gave the new state the name "West Kansas", a state bird (pheasant), and a state flower (yucca). The proposal was in reaction to laws raising real estate taxes, and shifting state education funding away from rural school districts and into more urban areas. Though organizers arranged for a series of straw polls that demonstrated widespread support for secession in nine counties,[43] the movement died out by the mid-1990s.[44]

Don O. Concannon

was initially part of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts before being admitted to the Union as a state in 1820. However, its boundary with British North America (now Canada) had been in dispute for several decades. In 1827, John Baker unilaterally declared the disputed territory (now part of Aroostook County) to be the "Republic of Madawaska". The declaration was rejected by Maine in 1831. Following the undeclared Aroostook War in 1838–1839, the United States and United Kingdom signed the Webster–Ashburton Treaty on August 9, 1842, to settle the border issue.

Maine

In 1998 and again in 2005, state representative proposed legislation to partition Maine into northern and southern states. He cited concern for the rural northern part, encompassing Maine's 2nd congressional district, being affected by "anti-business policies" and "overzealous environmental safeguards".[45] Reflecting his political opinion of the trends there, Joy suggested the southern half be named "Northern Massachusetts" and the northern half remain "Maine", though others have suggested "Acadia" for the northern half.[46]

Henry Joy

proposed during the American Revolution, would have been created from parts of Pennsylvania and Virginia and a small part of Maryland.

Westsylvania

In 1998, state legislator proposed to the Maryland General Assembly that a referendum be held to allow nine counties representing the Eastern Shore to secede from the state. They would invite counties from Delaware and Virginia to form the state of Delmarva.[47][48][49]

Richard F. Colburn

In September 2009, Commissioner John L. Thompson Jr. proposed that the county secede from Maryland because the county pays more to state government in taxes than it receives in services and benefits. The proposal was rejected by the other commissioners in the county.[50]

Frederick County

In February 2014, it was reported that residents from started petitions to form a new state, citing taxes and gun control as issues. Possible names for such a proposed state included Liberty, Antietam, Appalachia, and Augusta.[51]

Western Maryland

In October 2021, six Republican lawmakers from , Allegany, and Washington Counties in Western Maryland sent a letter to the legislative leaders of West Virginia to ask if said counties seceded from Maryland, could they be annexed into West Virginia.[52]

Garrett

The state's District of Maine had proposed secession multiple times in the early 19th century. Long-standing disagreements over land speculation and settlements led Maine residents and their allies in Massachusetts proper to force an 1807 vote in the Massachusetts General Court on permitting Maine to separate; the vote failed. Separatist sentiment in Maine was stoked during the War of 1812 when pro-British Massachusetts merchants opposed the war, and refused to defend Maine from British invaders. Finally, on June 19, 1819, the Massachusetts General Court passed enabling legislation separating the "District of Maine" from the rest of the state (an action approved by the voters in Maine on July 19, 1819, by 17,001 to 7,132). Then, on February 25, 1820, the court passed a follow-up measure officially accepting the fact of Maine's imminent statehood.[53] Maine became the 23rd state on March 15, 1820, as part of the Missouri Compromise, which also geographically limited the spread of slavery and enabled the admission to statehood of Missouri the following year.[54][55][56]

exclave

During the era some supporters of William Lloyd Garrison sought the secession of Essex County from the state.[57]

abolitionist

in the southwestern corner of the state, was ceded to the state of New York in 1857, due to Massachusetts being unable to administer the hamlet.

Boston Corner

A 1919 tax-protest proposal filed in the state legislature would have created an independent State of Boston.

[46]

In 1977, the islands of , Nantucket, and the Elizabeth Islands proposed to separate from Massachusetts because of a redistricting bill that would have deprived Dukes County, consisting of Martha's Vineyard and the Elizabeth Islands, and Nantucket County of separate representation in the General Court. At local town meetings, culminating in the All-Island Selectmen's Association Conference, residents and community leaders voted in favor of secession with an "overwhelming majority". When the Nantucket state representative filed a bill with the Massachusetts Legislature, Connecticut governor Ella T. Grasso suggested that the islands join her state. Additionally, the legislatures of New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont each supported the islands' annexation to their state. Although the redistricting bill passed, the state representatives pledged to assign aides for the two counties that would report to their state representative, and the area received much positive publicity.[58][59]

Martha's Vineyard

Several times between 1858 and 1957, Michigan's and parts of Wisconsin have engaged in talks about forming a fifty-first state called "Superior."[60]

Upper Peninsula

In 1979 a group called Citizens for Secession attempted to prompt leaders to move to Indiana and change the name to "Michiana County".[61]

Cass County

In the mid 19th century there had been intermittent advocacy for the , the four northeast counties of the state adjacent to Lake Superior, to join with northwestern Wisconsin and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan to form a new state to be named "North Country" or Superior, with Duluth as its capital.[62][63]

Arrowhead of Minnesota

In March 2021, HF 2423 was introduced to the state legislature with the goal of establishing a process for counties to vote to leave the state of Minnesota and instead join one of Minnesota's bordering states. A petition was also started alongside the introduction of the proposal with the primary goal of counties outside the Twin Cities area joining South Dakota, but also encouraging joining Iowa or Wisconsin.[65] The bill was introduced in response to Governor Tim Walz's response to the COVID-19 pandemic, in which Minnesota was shut down and restricted to a far stricter extent and for a longer duration of time than all its neighboring states. South Dakota, which remains the only state in the country to never issue any business restrictions at any time was viewed in a major contrast to Minnesota's restrictions. Shortly after the bill's introduction, South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem tweeted in favor of the bill.[66]

[64]

Mississippi[edit]

During the American Civil War of 1861–65, in Jones County, Mississippi, Newton Knight, a deserter from the Confederate army, organized a militia of fellow deserters and escaped slaves and declared Jones County to be the Free State of Jones. They successfully prevented Confederate authorities from enforcing conscription, taxation, and slavery within the county, and hoped for admission to the United States as a new state.

declared itself the McDonald Territory for a brief period of time in July 1961.[67][68] The movement was half in jest, after a city within the county was accidentally omitted from an official Missouri map.[69]

McDonald County

In 1939, a secessionist movement proposed the , to be formed from portions of Montana, adjacent areas of Wyoming, and parts of South Dakota. Motivated by opposition to New Deal politics and a desire to bring tourism to the area, the craze was reflected in state automobile license plates bearing the name; a "Miss Absaroka" contest held in that year; and a minor league baseball team called the Absaroka Eagles.[69][70][71][72]

State of Absaroka

In the 1890s, residents of the threatened secession when the state refused to enact water laws that would encourage irrigation.[73]

Nebraska Panhandle

In 2020, residents of rural proposed breaking away from the state due to the strong liberal influence of Clark County on the politics of the state. The movement proposes the state of "New Nevada". Proponents of "New Nevada", alongside those of "New California", filed an amicus brief in the Supreme Court case Texas v. Pennsylvania.[74]

Nevada

In 2001, the communities of and Rye considered secession in response to the enactment of a uniform statewide property tax.[75][76][77]

Newington

From 1674–1702 the colonial was divided into East Jersey, largely consisting of today's North Jersey, and West Jersey, largely consisting of South Jersey. The two regions maintain cultural differences with North Jersey largely being dominated by New York City, and South Jersey by Philadelphia. In 1980 a local journalist in Mount Holly, Albert Freeman, wrote an editorial calling for secession, initially a joke, this movement gained momentum leading to the Egg Harbor council voting to secede and form the state of South Jersey. The issue eventually caught the attention of local lawmakers, upset with the construction of the Meadowlands Sports Complex in North Jersey, while the reconstruction of the Garden State Park Racetrack in South Jersey was blocked. A non-binding referendum was held in six southern counties, with the exclusion of Camden and Gloucester counties, which passed with 51% of voters in favor of secession. The only county to vote against secession was Ocean County.[78][79][80][81][82]

Province of New Jersey

In the , writer Norman Mailer ran in the Democratic Party primary on a ticket with columnist Jimmy Breslin, who ran for City Council President. Part of their joint platform was a proposal that New York City should secede from New York State and become the 51st state.[83][84] At around the same time, a public-affairs series on the local educational TV station, WNET-TV, channel 13, was called The Fifty-First State.[85]

New York City mayoral election of 1969

In the 1990s, , from rural upstate Hammondsport, had advocated secession by regularly proposing bills to that effect while he was a state senator. His 1999 bill would have New York City, Long Island, Westchester and Rockland Counties become a separate state of New York, while the rest of the counties would be grouped as West New York.[86]

Randy Kuhl

From 2007 to 2009, residents discussed secession on the grounds that their tax money is not used to fund programs in their counties.[87] Proposals were made for the entire island (Kings, Queens, Nassau, and Suffolk counties) and for just the two suburban counties (Nassau and Suffolk).[88][89][90][91][92]

Long Island

State senators , Dale Volker, and Michael Ranzenhofer, all Republicans from western New York, proposed a nonbinding referendum to gauge support for dividing the state in November 2009.[93] The referendum was again proposed by Stephen Hawley in 2013 and 2015, with members of the Long Island delegation to the state legislature also backing the 2015 bill.[94]

Joseph Robach

2010 gubernatorial candidate 's supporters, Rus Thompson and James Ostrowski in the Buffalo region, have supported secession of western New York from New York City and its nearby counties.[95] Fred Smerlas, in discussing a potential platform for a 2010 Congressional run from western New York, stated that he would make the separation of New York City and upstate a top priority: "My first act if I ever got elected would be to take a big saw and cut New York City off."[96]

Carl Paladino

Fifteen towns in the of New York proposed potential secession in 2015 to join Pennsylvania.[97]

Southern Tier

In 1784, the western counties of , Washington, Sullivan, and parts of Hawkins County, formed the provisional State of Franklin, with Revolutionary War hero John Sevier as governor. However, since the state was not recognized by the Congress of the Confederation, it disbanded and joined North Carolina. In 1790, North Carolina relinquished the region to the federal government, creating the Southwest Territory. In 1796, the territory would be admitted to the Union as the State of Tennessee, with Sevier as its first governor.

Greene

In 1941, counties in southwestern Oregon joined counties of to secede as the State of Jefferson. The movement was centered in rural communities who felt ignored by political leaders in more urban areas.[69]

Northern California

In 2020, "Move Oregon's Border For a " proposed breaking off most of Oregon's area and some of Northern California and join it with Idaho. The areas proposed to break off of Oregon and California vote Republican but in a state whose legislatures are dominated by Democrats. Douglas and Josephine counties in Oregon approved language for petitions to put a measure on the ballot. Even if passed by voters, it would still need approval from all three state legislatures.[27][28]

Greater Idaho

In 2021, five counties in eastern Oregon voted to "require county officials to take steps to promote" .[32] In 2022, two more counties voted in favor of being added to Idaho.[98] As of 2024, 13 counties have approved ballot measures in favor of Greater Idaho.

adding the counties to Idaho

was proposed as the 14th state during the American Revolutionary War. It would have been located primarily in what is now West Virginia, southwestern Pennsylvania, and small parts of Kentucky, Maryland, and Virginia.

Westsylvania

More recent commentators have occasionally proposed separating the from the rest of Pennsylvania, either as a state unto itself[99] or as part of New Jersey.[100]

Philadelphia region

In 1984, the town of , coterminous with Block Island, threatened to secede because the state had denied them the ability to ban or to control the use of mopeds on the island. Both Massachusetts and Connecticut were reported as having interest in annexing the island. After the town voted to put the issue on the state ballot for June, the Rhode Island government eventually compromised by allowing the island to control the number of mopeds on the island.[101][102]

New Shoreham

Parts of South Dakota were proposed as part of , a territory inspired by opposition to New Deal politics and a desire for increased tourism.[69][70][71][72]

Absaroka

In 1861, after Tennessee joined the Confederacy, passed a proclamation to secede from Tennessee and form the "Free and Independent State of Scott" in order to support the Union. When it was discovered in 1986 that this county law was still on the books, the proclamation was finally repealed. The county then petitioned the state of Tennessee for readmission, even though the original secession had not been recognized by either the state or federal government.[103]

Scott County

Under the joint resolution of Congress, the joined the Union with the right to partition itself into as many as five states. As a result, Texas "divisionists" would occasionally propose partitioning in its early decades.[104][105]

Republic of Texas

partly settled by Mormons before it was purchased from Mexico by the United States, had proposed boundaries far larger than the eventual Utah Territory.

State of Deseret

In 2002, the United States House of Representatives voted to allow to leave the state and join Nevada, merging with the city of West Wendover.[106][107] However, Nevada Senator Harry Reid blocked the bill's consideration in the Senate, citing that it would affect the investments of the casinos in the border town.[108]

Wendover

In 2008, state representative Neal Hendrickson proposed Joint Resolution 6 (HJR006): "the creation of a separate state, consisting of the southern portion of the present state of Utah with a northern boundary stretching east and west across the present state of Utah at the southern border of ".[109] Hendrickson's bill cited differences between the urban and heavily populated northern part of the state, with the less populous and mostly rural south. The bill did not pass.[110]

Utah County

In 2004 and 2005, the town of voted to secede from Vermont to join New Hampshire, despite being situated in the center of the state; the symbolic votes, taken at the yearly town meeting, were a protest against a rise in property taxes in Vermont.[111][112] A similar motion was attempted in Winhall, but was voted down.[113]

Killington

proposed as the 14th state during the American Revolutionary War, included areas that were then part of Virginia but mostly later became West Virginia and Kentucky. It would have been located primarily in what is now West Virginia, southwestern Pennsylvania, and small parts of Kentucky, Maryland, and Virginia.

Westsylvania

The District of Kentucky: , Jefferson, and Lincoln (all formerly part of Kentucky County) sought on numerous occasions to split from Virginia, beginning in the 1780s. Ten constitutional conventions were held in the Constitution Square Courthouse in Danville between 1784 and 1792. In 1790, Kentucky's delegates accepted Virginia's terms of separation, and a state constitution was drafted at the final convention in April 1792. The Virginia General Assembly adopted legislation on December 18, 1789, separating its "District of Kentucky" from the rest of the State and approving its statehood.[53] Kentucky became the 15th state in the Union on June 1, 1792.[114]

Fayette

: Tensions within Virginia had been building; the western counties felt ignored and uncared for by the Richmond government. This broke into open rebellion after Virginia voted to secede from the Union. Several Trans–Allegheny region counties voted to secede from the state after Virginia joined the Confederate States of America at the beginning of the Civil War on April 17, 1861. Unionist leaders in Wheeling set up a new State government for Virginia under the Wheeling Convention that was recognized by the U.S. Government in Washington. On May 13, 1862, the General Assembly of the Restored Government of Virginia passed an act granting permission for creation of West Virginia,[115] and the secessionist area wrote a constitution. It was admitted to the Union as West Virginia[116] on June 20, 1863, the 35th state.[117] Support for the Confederacy and the Union was about evenly divided in the new State and a guerrilla war lasted until 1865.[118] Later, by its ruling in Virginia v. West Virginia (1871), the Supreme Court implicitly affirmed that the breakaway Virginia counties did have the proper consents necessary to become a separate state.[119]

West Virginia

: Given the difference between Northern Virginia (NoVa) and the rest of Virginia (RoVa), some have proposed separating the two parts of the Commonwealth.[120]

Northern Virginia

Present-day Washington is geographically divided into and Western regions by the Cascade Range. In the original proposal to establish Washington Territory, it was bounded on the east by the Columbia River.[121] Since 1861, some eastern residents have proposed forming a new state, sometimes in combination with the Idaho Panhandle and relatively small parts of Montana and Oregon (consisting of the greater market area of Spokane). Names proposed include East Washington, Lincoln, and Cascadia (a name sometimes applied to the Pacific Northwest region as a whole). Reasons given are the distinct needs of urban and rural populations and political differences over water rights, labor law, and taxation.[122][123]

Eastern

In 2015, a bill was introduced in the to create a task force for studying the impacts of adjusting the boundary lines of Washington to create two new states with one state east and one state west of the Cascade mountain range.[124] In the same legislative session, a similar bill was introduced that would have included parts of Oregon in the newly created states.[125] In 2017, legislators introduced a petition to the federal government regarding the creation of the state of Liberty, which would have a western boundary following the crest of the Cascade mountains and the western borders of Okanogan, Chelan, Kittitas, Yakima, and Klickitat counties, and whose eastern, northern, and southern boundaries would be the existing state borders.[126][127] A bill and a federal petition to establish the state of Liberty were again introduced in 2019.[128][129] None of these bills or petitions have been passed by the Washington House.

Washington House of Representatives

On July 21, 1967, some residents of the village of said they were seceding, in protest over the village's omission from the state's official highway map, to become what they called the "Sovereign State of Winneconne". After the village was restored to the highway map, the secessionists in the village of Winneconne reconciled with the state.[130] The village has since celebrated the event with an annual Sovereign State Days celebration.[131]

Winneconne, Wisconsin

Portions of the northern counties were included in proposals for the .

State of Superior

Parts of northern Wyoming were considered in a proposal for the .

State of Absaroka

51st state

List of active separatist movements in North America

List of U.S. county secession proposals

noting all state boundary changes

Territorial evolution of the United States

Erwin, James L. (2007). . Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780313332678.

Declarations of Independence: Encyclopedia of American Autonomous and Secessionist Movement

Michael J. Trinklein (2010). Lost States: True Stories of Texlahoma, Transylvania, and Other States That Never Made It. Quirk Books.  978-1594744105.

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"From Absaroka to Yazoo: The 124 United States That Could've Been"