Mason–Dixon line
surveyed border line between U.S. states of Delaware, Maryland, and Pennsylvania / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Mason–Dixon line, also called Mason's and Dixon's line was the border between Maryland and Pennsylvania. It was surveyed and marked between 1763 and 1767.[1] Two English surveyors, Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, were hired by the Penn and Calvert families to settle a border dispute.[2] In 1760 the British government was tired of the violence between the two colonies. They demanded the dispute over the border between Maryland and Pennsylvania be settled according to an agreement made in 1732.[2] The line the two surveyors came up with was so accurate it is still considered a marvel.[3] GPS measurements show the line to be off by an inch (2.54 cm) or less in places and no more than 800 feet (240 m) in others.[4]