From steep, sloping mountain forests to lush farmlands that evoke the
English countryside, the Carolinas and Georgia offer a landscape as
diverse and colorful as the personable demeanor of the region's
residents.
The tri-state area has aged gracefully with time, leaving in place an
amiable drawl and such culinary traditions as hot buttered grits and
fresh boiled peanuts, yet it has also managed to rival its Northern
competitors in technology and style. Long burdened with a "Scarlett"
reputation cluttered with pickup trucks and good ol' boys, these
Southern states now boast bright, neon-lighted cities complete with
cutting-edge architecture, high-tech industry, exhilarating sports
events, and intricately designed highways--not to mention big-city
gridlock.
Still, the Old South lives on, at least in pockets, and some achingly
pastoral countryscapes seem to be torn from the pages of such Deep South
authors as Tennessee Williams, Eudora Welty, and William Faulkner. But
it is in the bosom of the tri-state area, in a setting of old-style
graciousness, that the muscular, gleaming New South engine of commerce,
industry, and innovation powers on.
Clich้s die hard, though, and Hollywood has been reluctant to let go
of its love affair with the colorful Old South. Best-selling novels and
Academy Award-winning screenplays continue to mine the mystique of a
South clad in its own troublesome history. The region has become a big
attraction for writers and movie producers lured by superb natural
settings, historic ambience, and (in the case of the producers)
beneficent right-to-work laws. So many movies have been made in and
around Wilmington, North Carolina, that it has been dubbed "Hollywood
East"; (the popular TV series Dawson's Creek is also filmed on
location there).
The South of yore may live on in Hollywood, but the talk today is of
the New South, a land characterized less by drawls and "y'alls" and more
by a bright, intelligent group of people bringing culture and business
to an area that once slept quietly by the cotton gin. These new sons and
daughters of the South might invite "y'all to come back now" for a
second visit; but they'll suggest that you bring along a checkbook to
buy their products (such as a set of high-end furniture manufactured in
Lenoir) or that you invest in one of the mega pharmaceutical research
labs that have set up shop in the Research Triangle of North Carolina.
The Carolinas and Georgia are no longer whistling "Dixie" but
standing up and making their voices heard in the world marketplace. The
voices reflect the diversity of a population that not so long ago faced
considerable challenges regarding racial inequality, challenges that
Georgia native son Martin Luther King, Jr., so eloquently called upon
the nation to meet. One happy result of the efforts to surmount those
challenges in recent years has been the reverse migration of many
African Americans from the North home to the South.
The New South has other voices, including those of politicos
clamoring to fill the shoes and Senate seats of the controversial Jesse
Helms and the seemingly immortal but likely-to-expire-at-any-minute
Strom Thurmond. And of course, there's the dignified, soft-spoken peanut
farmer from Plains who became president of the United States and is now
an agent of world peace.
The Carolinas and Georgia are major destinations for travelers.
Charleston and Savannah were ranked third and sixth, respectively, as
top cities in the country in Cond้ Nast Traveler's Readers'
Choice Awards 2002. From the Smoky Mountains to the sun-kissed Atlantic
coastline, from the windswept dunes of Kitty Hawk all the way to
Georgia's Suwannee River country and the Okefenokee Swamp, the tri-state
area is attracting visitors by the millions.
Taken as a whole, the North Carolina/South Carolina/Georgia tri-state
area is like a country unto itself. It's wildly diverse and packed with
places to see and things to do. We've traveled the back roads of the
Carolinas and Georgia since we were kids, exploring the Old South and
the New South. That's why we feel qualified to bring you our suggestions
of the best, with the understanding, of course, that there's always
plenty of room for disagreement. Here are our picks for the cream of the
crop.
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