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Regions of the United States
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This list of regions of the United States includes official (governmental) and non-official areas within the borders of the United States, not including U.S. states, the federal district of Washington, D.C. or standard subentities such as cities or counties. Defunct, extinct or archaic regions are described in historic regions of the United States. (See also: Template:U.S. regions)
Interstate regions
Official U.S. regions
Regions defined in law or regulations by the federal government.
Bureau of Reclamation Regions
Bureau of Reclamation regions
The Bureau of Reclamation divides the western United States into five regions:
Census Bureau-designated areas
U.S. Census Bureau regions
Regional divisions used by the United States Census Bureau
- Region 1 (Northeast)
- Division 1 (New England)
- Maine
- New Hampshire
- Vermont
- Massachusetts
- Rhode Island
- Connecticut
- Division 2 (Middle Atlantic)
- New York
- Pennsylvania
- New Jersey
- Region 2 (Midwest)
- Region 3 (South)
- Division 5 (South Atlantic)
- Delaware
- Maryland
- District of Columbia
- Virginia
- West Virginia
- North Carolina
- South Carolina
- Georgia
- Florida
- Division 6 (East South Central)
- Kentucky
- Tennessee
- Mississippi
- Alabama
- Division 7 (West South Central)
- Oklahoma
- Texas
- Arkansas
- Louisiana
- Region 4 (West)
- Division 8 (Mountain)
- Idaho
- Montana
- Wyoming
- Nevada
- Utah
- Colorado
- Arizona
- New Mexico
- Division 9 (Pacific)
- Alaska
- Washington
- Oregon
- California
- Hawaii
Standard Federal Regions
The ten standard Federal Regions were established by OMB (Office of Management and Budget) Circular A-105, "Standard Federal Regions," in April, 1974, and required for all executive agencies. In recent years, some agencies have tailored their field structures to meet program needs and facilitate interaction with local, state and regional counterparts. The OMB must still approve any departures, however.
- Region I: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont
- Region II: New Jersey, New York, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands
- Region III: Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia
- Region IV: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee
- Region V: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin
- Region VI: Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas
- Region VII: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska
- Region VIII: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming
- Region IX: Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada (American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands)
- Region X: Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington
Judicial circuits
As designated by Congress, the federal court system is divided into eleven judicial circuits, each with its own United States Court of Appeals. (There are also a District of Columbia Circuit and a Federal Circuit, both of which sit in Washington D.C. and have special, non-geographic jurisdictions.)
- 1st Circuit (Courthouse in Boston, Massachusetts)
- 2nd Circuit (Courthouse in New York, New York)
- 3rd Circuit (Courthouse in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
- 4th Circuit (Courthouse in Richmond, Virginia)
- 5th Circuit (Courthouse in New Orleans, Louisiana)
- 6th Circuit (Courthouse in Cincinnati, Ohio)
- 7th Circuit (Courthouse in Chicago, Illinois)
- 8th Circuit (Courthouse in St. Louis, Missouri)
- 9th Circuit (meeting places vary from California to Alaska, but headquarters are in San Francisco, California)
- 10th Circuit (Courthouse in Denver, Colorado)
- 11th Circuit (Courthouse in Atlanta, Georgia)
Federal Reserve banks
Federal Reserve districts
The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 divided the country into twelve regions with a central Reserve Bank in each. The Federal Reserve Districts are as follows:
- Boston
- New York
- Philadelphia
- Cleveland
- Richmond
- Atlanta
- Chicago
- St Louis
- Minneapolis
- Kansas City
- Dallas
- San Francisco
Time Zones
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Unofficial U.S. multi-state regions
The Belts
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Interstate metropolitan areas
Interstate megalopolises
Intrastate regions
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In connecticut, there are 15 official regions, each with a regional government that serves for the absence of county government in Connecticut. There are also a fair amount unnofficial regions in connecticut with no regional government.
Connecticut Panhandle and "The Oblong"
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The Little Egypt region of Illinois
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Kentucky's regions (click on image for color coding information.)
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Regions of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan
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Regions of New York as defined by the New York State Department of Economic Development
The Great Black Swamp roughly covered the black area within the green shaded counties.
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Pennsylvania's Pocono region counties
Major Regions
Travel/Tourism Regions
Other Regions
Grand Divisions
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Geographic Divisions
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Map of the Shenandoah Valley
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