OZK 150: Introduction to Ozarks Studies - Lecture 1: The Where and the What of the Ozarks

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  • Опубліковано 11 січ 2025

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  • @jakelwasson
    @jakelwasson 4 роки тому +24

    I was born and raised in Springfield, MO. My mother's side of the family has been in the Ozarks for generations. My interest in that heritage has recently been rekindled, so I'm delighted to find this series of lectures.

  • @zackarymcclain164
    @zackarymcclain164 3 роки тому +10

    I was raised in Crawford county Arkansas and I'm thankful and proud to say that I was raised in the "ozarks"

  • @ProfessorTravis
    @ProfessorTravis 5 років тому +19

    Arkansas-Ozarks Geology Professor here. A+ on the geology. Although, it's a little Missouri biased ;)
    I'm excited to watch through these lectures, I'm sure I'll find some information I use in my own classroom.

    • @whatabouttheearth
      @whatabouttheearth 5 років тому +2

      Hey Mr. geology professor. Speaking of Missouri biased (: ...can you explain what the "Kissee Mills structural trend" fault is and where I can find more information?
      I saw it on GeoSTRAT but cant find information. Is it part of the Chesapeake fault?
      Thank you.

    • @twotone3471
      @twotone3471 4 роки тому +2

      Wouldn't give it a A+, as the description of the St. Francois Mountains formation kinda leaves out that they were Volcanic Islands, akin to the lesser Antilles of the Caribbean of today.

    • @CrazyK64
      @CrazyK64 3 роки тому +1

      @@twotone3471 I live right by the junction of 23 and 16...yup Booger Co..there are lava flows here..I was not surprised one bit..

  • @James-ko1bl
    @James-ko1bl 3 роки тому +10

    At Ouachita Baptist University it was supposed to be a trick question with no bonus points on an English test because there was supposed to be no answer. "What is the plural of ya'll?" A no brainer for a Boone county resident. I got extra points with "All ya'll "!

    • @ContinuousRefinement
      @ContinuousRefinement 3 роки тому +3

      We used to hear the term 'yu-uns'; I think it's the plural of "you ones".

    • @ryanmcginness2888
      @ryanmcginness2888 2 роки тому +3

      ​@@ContinuousRefinement That there is some hillbilly grammar if i's ever heard it speaked.

  • @ransom0
    @ransom0 4 роки тому +4

    Viva Dr. Blevins. Best historian and teacher from the Ozarks ever thx bye

  • @Ammo08
    @Ammo08 5 років тому +7

    You need to talk one of your geology professor friends into doing an in-depth series of lectures on the geological formation of the Ozarks. I frequently go back and revisit your lectures. I grew up in Ripley County, MO and I love the history of this area.

  • @Kmarty2000
    @Kmarty2000 4 роки тому +2

    67 and grew up in Des Arc, MO during the 50s & 60s. Wonderful memories going to Poplar Bluff for shopping or Dr. visits.

  • @helenmilenski861
    @helenmilenski861 2 роки тому +3

    I am from that tiny little part of Kansas Ozarks. One part of my Family is from Berryville, AR, and were some of the first founders of that area.

  • @DavidMueller666
    @DavidMueller666 3 роки тому +5

    I live in Southwestern Illinois and the highland areas here and in Southern Illinois are Identified by some as the Illinois Ozarks. I have lived here all of my life and I think of myself as being Ozarkian and I can identify with Ozarkian culture and ideals.

  • @missouristateuniversity
    @missouristateuniversity  11 років тому +18

    This course provides a multidisciplinary introduction to the study of the Ozarks region and its inhabitants, including Ozarks history and geography, regional folk culture and traditions, and current issues.

    • @232323C
      @232323C 6 років тому +1

      don't give me your "social construct" Bullshite...piss off

    • @Adam-hj8ou
      @Adam-hj8ou 3 роки тому +2

      @@232323C I love the Ozarks and I am an Ozarker so I know it sounds like he is dismissing the identity but he isn’t.
      He’s just saying that regions based off of A particular people and their identity are a construct of that society. It’s just a way that social theorists conceptualize these things.
      Just to repeat, I do think it does sound dismissive in many cases, but I don’t think he means it in that way.
      Also, the term is maybe a little pointless as everything human organization is just classified as a “construct” which makes it sounds like it didn’t also develop naturally through selection, adaptation, etc. and all identities are artificial (which comes off as very dehumanizing).

    • @ContinuousRefinement
      @ContinuousRefinement 6 місяців тому

      Y'all = You all...Yu'uns = You ones.

  • @vladimirchernov5866
    @vladimirchernov5866 Рік тому +1

    We settled up Ashley Creek in 1799. Texas county is the Ozark Ridge.

  • @EricTheRed4143
    @EricTheRed4143 4 роки тому +4

    thanks for putting this up. I'm doing research for a writing project and this is a good place to start :)

  • @ejruff4232
    @ejruff4232 Рік тому +2

    I was raised in Boone County, Arkansas, We considered Springfield Mo. as "top of the Ozarks" Branson Mo. as "Heart of the Ozarks", Harrison Ar. as the "Hub (center) of the Ozarks).

    • @ryacus
      @ryacus Рік тому +1

      Most of my paternal grandfathers family was from Jasper not far from Harrison my grandpa and his grandfather were both born in Missouri though oddly I assume they were both born while their parents were visiting family since they lived in Newton county for nearly 100 years.

  • @Giganfan2k1
    @Giganfan2k1 6 років тому +6

    I would be happy calling it Ozark Valleys, though Ozark Hollows I think has a better ring.
    Post all of the lectures if you can this is great for writers trying to break into writing about the history of the land we love.

  • @jeanettetumminia7807
    @jeanettetumminia7807 Рік тому

    Love this
    Had family farm in st Francis county on downslope of Womack plateau…you are very knowledgeable about this area where my family recreated for four generations

  • @ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474
    @ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474 6 років тому +5

    Sodey Pop was also a term used in Delmarva by the old timers. These same old timers spoke of Sannee Claus 🎅, a Beaut-ee-ful Day, etc.

    • @ryanmcginness2888
      @ryanmcginness2888 2 роки тому

      I've heard it spelled Sody Pop. It was a colloquialism for a Cokie-Colee.

  • @janellr.n5238
    @janellr.n5238 6 років тому +5

    My family was from Lebanon and Stoutland MO. I retired to S.W. MO.

  • @ContinuousRefinement
    @ContinuousRefinement 3 роки тому +3

    There are different theories about how the plateau adopted the name "Ozark".
    It may have derived from a French variation of "aux arc", meaning "to the arches", referring to the many natural arches that remain from collapsed caves.
    It may be derived from an distinct observation of early (French) explorers that the early Native Americans who lived here used and carried 'bows' (l'arc) and arrows...a distinct recognition of the Arkansas tribes who inhabited the area.

  • @JamesHolben
    @JamesHolben 6 років тому +10

    Being raised by my paternal grandmother in rural Johnson County AR, I reckon I have an plentiful vocabulary taining to Ozark folklore an such.

  • @juliamarple3785
    @juliamarple3785 Рік тому +1

    So helpful, thanks. Coming out for a road trip!

  • @kosjeyr
    @kosjeyr Рік тому +1

    Born in Illinois and although it's controversial: the Shawnee Hills of Illinois are the "Illinois Ozarks."

  • @rosegarza676
    @rosegarza676 Рік тому +1

    I grew up in Louisiana, I was in junior high and high school in the 70s. We where not taught that Louisiana was part of the ozarks. We where also taught that Missouri is not a southern state. It is above the mason dixion line.

    • @MrPhillip2
      @MrPhillip2 4 місяці тому

      The Mason-Dixon Line is up between Maryland and Pennsylvania, way north.
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mason-Dixon_line

  • @GHTRUCKING0.72CPM
    @GHTRUCKING0.72CPM 5 років тому +7

    7th generation Ozarkian god bless this place
    gona have a bunch of kids and raise them here

  • @MrThebirddog
    @MrThebirddog 3 роки тому +1

    I'm from the Bootheel, flat lander. I have heard many of the words and phrases. This is very interesting

  • @katiemoyer8679
    @katiemoyer8679 3 роки тому +6

    The Main reason Most very SW Illinois area claims to be the border of the Ozarks is because the terrain is Classic Ozark. Come Look….👀

    • @samdavis3557
      @samdavis3557 3 роки тому +1

      they do call it the Illinois ozarks

  • @doniphan72ify
    @doniphan72ify 6 років тому +4

    Anything west and/or north of Doniphan Missouri, is the Ozarks . Anything east or south of Doniphan is the Mississippi Delta or the Mississippi alluvial plain . It's very noticeable where you are once you leave town, depending on the direction you're headed once you leave .

  • @houstonsrb
    @houstonsrb 6 років тому +3

    I grew up near Tahlequah, OK. We didn't consider ourselves as being in the Ozarks, but there was obviously a lot of similar cultural influences... but combined with native American, western, mid-western, and southern as well. "Sodey-pop" was heard from older generations, especially if they originated from Arkansas, but younger people said "soda-pop", and later shortened to just "pop" (or just "soda"). The dialect changed a lot from my grandpa to my dad to me. Sometimes growing up I had to really focus just to understand my grandpa. Would be interesting to view this entire course.

  • @realMelonTusk
    @realMelonTusk 2 роки тому +2

    Reporting in from Joplin, MO.

  • @hamrickdr
    @hamrickdr 7 років тому +7

    Haha, my mother's family is from Iberia. If you are there you are definitely in the Ozarks!

    • @ContinuousRefinement
      @ContinuousRefinement 3 роки тому

      We live north of Dixon...my wife's family ("Dake") is from Iberia.

  • @BC25citizen
    @BC25citizen 3 місяці тому +1

    Interesting. I learned geology in California and had never given one thought to your region (even though I am a map person). Then, quite recently, I heard Arkansas singer Jesse Welles. I became curious about those mountains and went looking for Ozarks geology. Found you instead. My husband and I watched the first two lectures straight through. I hope you have more. Still scratching my head about the geology though.
    Anyway, I hope you hear this: ua-cam.com/video/FPUjySRY5_E/v-deo.htmlsi=jkjzsN9ik7vcsyYX

  • @Ammo08
    @Ammo08 6 років тому +3

    We pronounce it "core-toys" is this part of the Eastern Ozarks..Great lecture and video...

  • @LearnwithJanice
    @LearnwithJanice 8 місяців тому +1

    Hello from Kansas 🇺🇲

  • @takayama1638
    @takayama1638 6 років тому +5

    Jed Clampett, Granny, Ellie Mae, Jethro Bodine are from Taney County. It's not so much if you are in the Ozarks, but is the Ozarks in you?

    • @CrazyK64
      @CrazyK64 3 роки тому

      That darlin is a fact.

  • @daveveit4052
    @daveveit4052 4 роки тому +3

    nice job, good depth

  • @BrucesPhonograph
    @BrucesPhonograph 5 років тому +6

    Fundamentally, the Ozarks should be defined by geology!

    • @ryanmcginness2888
      @ryanmcginness2888 2 роки тому

      Why?
      Ozarkians are way more about culture than rocks. It's just erosion. Dey ain't mountainees, they'se justie ditchwees.

    • @MrPhillip2
      @MrPhillip2 4 місяці тому +1

      @@ryanmcginness2888your statement is true, our mountains ain’t high, but our valleys sure are deep. This is because of geology; we are on the Springfield-Salem Plateau (uplifted, flat lying rocks) which has been eroded for 280 million years.

  • @bernieclark7248
    @bernieclark7248 4 роки тому +2

    Anyone have a link to the ethnic/anthropological study of Taney County that Blevins references around 38 minutes in?

    • @karenbartlett1307
      @karenbartlett1307 4 роки тому +1

      He could mean this one:www.jstor.org/stable/2561819?seq=1 I simply searched the term "Ethnic study of the Ozark Mountains" and there were several results. This one looked like it may be the one Dr. Blevins references. There may be more.

    • @Adam-hj8ou
      @Adam-hj8ou 3 роки тому +2

      If you are interested in the early ethnic make up of America I recommend the book Albion’s Seed: Four British Folkways in America.
      It won’t get you to the exact Ozark ethnicities but it’ll help you to learn the founding stock’s identity and from there follow their migration westward.
      One thing I found when studying the history of the United States and our demographics was the prevalence of Scottish and a few Irish settlers on the early frontier in the Appalachian region. Later you see a trend of mostly Anglo and Scottish stock moving further west, along with Germans, as metropolitan areas saw over crowding.
      Newer Irish migrants didn’t really go to the frontier but stayed in the metropolitan North East. This trend would continue with future waves of migration. So overtime the original 13 colonies actually became slightly less Anglo while the west became more like the demographics of the original 13 colonies at their founding. That is until more people started moving west.

  • @mickeydapikey335
    @mickeydapikey335 6 років тому +2

    Please post the rest of the course

    • @mickeydapikey335
      @mickeydapikey335 6 років тому +1

      I thought course one was just a teaser because I couldn't find any more after that on the Missouri State University UA-cam page probably cuz there's so much great content to sift through. Then a day later the rest of them showed up in my recommended UA-cam. Thank you so much, God bless

  • @whatabouttheearth
    @whatabouttheearth 3 роки тому +1

    Didnt Aux Arcs mean 'at the bow' (of the river) and it turned into Oz-ark. So wasn't it a simple navigational refference to designate a place?

  • @davidrice8823
    @davidrice8823 5 років тому +7

    Ozarks, or Appalachia, take your pic. I'd go either, or!!

    • @CrazyK64
      @CrazyK64 3 роки тому

      But that Appalachians are much much bigger..mom's from the poconos and dad from Fayetteville..7 Gen. Of our blood here.

  • @ryanmcginness2888
    @ryanmcginness2888 2 роки тому +1

    The Ozarks are named after the Aux Arcs. French fur trappers settled this area. The james and white river confluence.

  • @garyshinn4626
    @garyshinn4626 6 років тому +2

    I am from Pope Co. Ark. I live in Laurel Co. Ky South East Ky. The culture is mostly the same in both places.

    • @Adam-hj8ou
      @Adam-hj8ou 3 роки тому

      I thought the same thing when traveling through parts of the foothills in Tenn. and in northern Georgia. I believe it’s the fact it’s all been left behind by industrialization, they’ve had a frontier/ hill folk identity, population generally comprised of Scottish and Anglo settlers (later German), has always been very rural, etc.

    • @garyshinn4626
      @garyshinn4626 3 роки тому +1

      @@Adam-hj8ou My people settled in Pope Co, Arkansas in 1836 they were from Cabarrus Co. North Carolina. I still own part of their property. The culture traveled from N.C. Tenn. Ky. Va. to Ark. and Mo. a long time ago. It is still alive and well here in Eastern Ky. where I live now.

    • @Adam-hj8ou
      @Adam-hj8ou 3 роки тому

      @@garyshinn4626 yeah, that doesn’t surprise me. That’s kind of what I assumed as Arkansas and Missouri would be settled later on (obviously haha).
      There is a great book I recommended to someone else called “Albions Seed” which covers the origins of the founding stock of the US and were they settled. From there you can follow their paths west.

  • @debraweaver3188
    @debraweaver3188 6 років тому +8

    Shannon country here. In a lot of ways we would of been better off if they hadn't put all that money into the area.

  • @michaelmaltese939
    @michaelmaltese939 3 роки тому +1

    I wish I had seen this right when it first came out I would have hooked him up with some awesome cartography software. Probably Corral

  • @whatabouttheearth
    @whatabouttheearth 5 років тому +1

    Spingfield is prosperous because of an increased intersectionality of trade routes

  • @ryanmcginness2888
    @ryanmcginness2888 2 роки тому

    What is the Aux Arcs?

  • @jamesalias595
    @jamesalias595 Рік тому

    I was born in Cole County(not Ozarks), but our family came from Miller County (Ozarks) There really isn't much difference between southern Cole County and Miller County, but one is in the Ozarks and one is not.

  • @kenbaker4528
    @kenbaker4528 3 роки тому +1

    I grew up in Boonville Missouri, but never considered myself Ozarker.

  • @Tear777
    @Tear777 9 років тому +2

    Thank you!

  • @dfrank2044
    @dfrank2044 3 роки тому +1

    This is the same land in the Netflix series?

    • @regularchannel1641
      @regularchannel1641 3 роки тому +2

      Yes. But that whole show is filmed elsewhere. Only the “B” roll and overhead footage was filmed in the Ozarks around Lake if the Ozarks area.

    • @dfrank2044
      @dfrank2044 3 роки тому +2

      Thanks for clarification.

  • @michaelmaltese939
    @michaelmaltese939 3 роки тому +1

    Arty-chokes, poke sal-led, ginsang,, stud Haus staly-yun, overt chyunder, aeskya pa, feesh,. Alabama talk

  • @larrystrick1862
    @larrystrick1862 2 роки тому +1

    Ozark Hippie Camp has some good youtube caving and hiking content.

  • @multiyapples
    @multiyapples 5 років тому +1

    Interesting.

  • @joecrunkleton596
    @joecrunkleton596 4 роки тому +2

    Nice presentation. But the maps and nomenclature is a bunch of hocome.

  • @twotone3471
    @twotone3471 4 роки тому +4

    Missouri and Arkansas are ill defined territories. The Mississippi Delta deserves to be included in Louisiana, The Highlands deserve their own governance, and Missouri North of the Missouri River should belong to Iowa. As they exist, they are so contrary as to work at cross purposes, often leading to bad governance for both states.

  • @ideageorge
    @ideageorge 2 роки тому +2

    Just a quick note to the person on the camera. It’s less important to follow the speaker and more helpful to focus on what they are pointing at or describing. Imagine being the viewer. Thank you.

  • @PiousMoltar
    @PiousMoltar 5 років тому +1

    Gotta love maps

  • @charlesburgess6323
    @charlesburgess6323 8 років тому

    who is the professor?

    • @austin65432
      @austin65432 8 років тому +1

      I know this is super late, but it is Dr. Brooks Blevins. He is an expert on the field of Ozarks Studies.

    • @CJColvin
      @CJColvin 7 років тому +1

      Charles Burgess He has a little bit of a Southern accent.

    • @doniphan72ify
      @doniphan72ify 6 років тому +1

      @@CJColvin ... Lol yes . Most people from the Ozarks do

    • @CJColvin
      @CJColvin 6 років тому +1

      @@doniphan72ify You are correct mate. The part of Missouri that has a southern accent would be the Ozark region.

    • @doniphan72ify
      @doniphan72ify 6 років тому +1

      @@CJColvin ... And the Mississippi Delta Region of Missouri which has more of an Alabama type of accent .

  • @timothysappington976
    @timothysappington976 3 роки тому

    Grandin, Mo born and raised..

  • @ryanmcginness2888
    @ryanmcginness2888 2 роки тому

    All his questions....at 34:56. Yeep.

  • @huggers5733
    @huggers5733 Рік тому

    Drink everytime he says MAP 😂

  • @ElkEars
    @ElkEars Рік тому

    Ozark(s) is a derivative of French, yes. But you're a little off. Aux mean 'the' and arcs means 'bows.' It refers to the bows and bends in the Piney River in Missouri. It refers to an area. What you stated is incorrect. Maybe because you're and Arkie?

  • @krisistephens1359
    @krisistephens1359 Рік тому +2

    the earth is not millions or billions of years old.

    • @MrPhillip2
      @MrPhillip2 4 місяці тому +3

      4.54 Billion years. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_of_Earth
      That’s what science says, anything else is a bad guess or flat out fiction.

  • @fifilamoore1718
    @fifilamoore1718 4 роки тому

    Yes that’s how one can talk to a 100 year old. .? I’m sure he would class your up bringing as weird too.whos to judge who

  • @evangarvey7612
    @evangarvey7612 4 роки тому

    Holy shit I wondered what Billy bob's brother up to

  • @hubertyoung5571
    @hubertyoung5571 2 роки тому +1

    You'll should consider the Flood. Millions of yrs.... that is pathetic. Look at what happened in a short time after Mt. St. Helen eruption. I live in Manitoba. But I am attracted to the Ozarks. Everything sounds good except for the Evolution theory.

  • @chrissyheiss1820
    @chrissyheiss1820 6 років тому +4

    Could do without all the “millions of years “ talk, but otherwise very interesting!

    • @BrucesPhonograph
      @BrucesPhonograph 5 років тому +7

      Mega time (viz. "millions" or even "billions") suggests geology. Geology with its mega time fundamentally defines the Ozarks, other definitions are fundamentally derived from this.

    • @MrPhillip2
      @MrPhillip2 4 місяці тому +2

      The geology defines the region. The rocks you see were deposited as a lime mud off the left coast of the continent on a vast continental shelf 350 million years ago.
      Example: NW Arkansas is the largest chicken producer in the country because there is no soil to speak of, it’s all rocks, can’t farm, so raise Chickens! This gave rise to Tysons Inc. a global industry. Due to geology.
      The rocky ground was good for growing grapes. Karst topography caused many caves and springs and streams…. Add sugar and you’ve got moonshine. The stereotype is derived from the geologic resources.

  • @tacticaltrioadventure5224
    @tacticaltrioadventure5224 3 роки тому

    And millions years agoooo lolllllll