Tangier Is has an airport & has had one for 40+ years.  I've flown in
there.   Small planes, mind you.  It's also accessible by anyone with
a motorboat. You didnt need a satellite TV to pick up "foreign" or
"polluting" accents.  There was radio available and broadcast TV, too.
None of these places are so isolated as these stories like to pretend.
When I was a kid, we used to spend the morning fishing in the
Chesapeake, then go to the Tangier inn & restaurant and get the
world's best grits & gravy. They do have a distinctive accent, often
attributed to massive inbreeding. That was probably just our Accomac
county snobbery talking.

I remember reading a Thomas Hardy novel, maybe Jude the Obscure, and
thinking that the provincial Sussex accent mocked by another character
sounded remarkably like someone from Rappahannock VA.

Can we get back to our regularly scheduled topic?  Here's a question
for you:  If you had sufficient resources to make your dream costume,
what would it be?
--cin
Cynthia Barnes
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

> Most versions I have heard of this refer to Tangiers Island, which is off
of Virginia not the Carolinas, I have heard references to the Carolinas and
even the Ozarks!  Tangiers is still accessible only by ferry.  Of course
none of the various places in America I have heard touted as having a
surviving 16th century accent were in fact settled in that period!

> Ron Carnegie
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