South Jersey
- This is about a region in the United States. For the island of Jersey, see Jersey.
South Jersey is a colloquial term, with no consensus definition, covering the southern portions of New Jersey between the lower Delaware River and the Atlantic Ocean. Some people divide New Jersey into North Jersey and South Jersey; some put Central Jersey between them.
New Jersey is sandwiched between two large cities: New York City in the northeast and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the southwest; Benjamin Franklin called her a "barrel tapped at both ends". South Jersey is theoretically the area within the Philadelphia sphere of influence, whereas North Jersey is the area within New York City's influence.
South Jersey differs slightly from the historic province of West Jersey, which included western Mercer County and the valley of the Delaware River north of that, but only the southern tip of the present Ocean County. The upper Delaware is rarely called South Jersey, but Ocean County often is.
South Jersey is the area that grew and expanded with Philadelphia, as part of its metropolitan area, as opposed to with New York. Traditionally, the term was used to separate only the very most urban and industrial, northeastern of New Jersey's counties from the rural rest of the state, as West Jersey separated East Jersey historically. While West Jersey encompassed the areas that now make up approximately 14 of New Jersey's 21 counties in the center, south, and northwest of the state, "South Jersey" today comprises only 7 counties, with the other 14 now being considered "North Jersey" as they have grown and industrialized due to the outward growth of New York more so than of Philadelphia.
There is no longer any space, or even a line, between the New York and Philadelphia metropolitan areas. They meet in Central Jersey, the counties directly north of South Jersey: Somerset County, Middlesex County, Mercer County, northern Ocean County, and Monmouth County. These counties could be considered equally part of North Jersey and South Jersey because they have shared features with both regions.
Today, however, the counties of Central Jersey are almost exclusively considered to be within New York City's metropolitan influence and sprawl and consequently are almost always referred to as part of North Jersey and almost never anymore as South Jersey. As North Jersey continues to migrate south and South Jersey continues to migrate north, the two once distinct regions of the state continue to become more and more similar.
The more suburban areas of South Jersey are known nationwide for their high standards of living. In 2005, Money Magazine named Moorestown the "best place to live" in the United States, although they stated that a number of adjacent municipalities (particularly Mount Laurel, Haddonfield, and Cherry Hill) could have just as easily been given the distinction. By contrast, nearby Camden is known as a pocket of extreme poverty and crime.
The Jersey Devil has been alleged to be located in the Pine Barrens of South Jersey.
See also: Jersey
South Jersey counties
- Atlantic County
- Burlington County
- Camden County
- Cape May County
- Cumberland County
- Gloucester County
- Salem County
Famous South Jerseyans
- Vernon Hill
- Fred Neulander
- George Norcross
- Bruce Willis
- Kelly Ripa
- Joe Monzo
- Paul Volcker
- Michelle Malkin
South Jersey Culture
South Jersey Tourism Corporation
South Jersey holds a culture and lifestyle very different from that of North and Central Jersey. A list of differences includes but is not limited to:
- Wawa Food Markets
- Diners
- The Jersey Devil
- The Pine Barrens
- Camden and its high crime rate
- Shopping at the Berlin Farmers' Market
- ShopRite and ACME
- High pine tree pollen
- Traffic Circles and Jughandles
- Blueberry farms in Hammonton
- The Shore Culture and vacationers going "Down the Shore" instead of "to the beach"
- The Italian and Jewish population
- The strange pronunciation of "water" (sounds like wuhter), "street" (stchreet), "Atlantic City" ('lanic City), "creek" (crick) and "Puerto Rico" (Porta Reeko)
- "Hoagies" vs. "Subs"
- The signs on the Atlantic City Expressway
- Tastykakes
- Herr's BBQ potato chips
- Pennsylvania Dutch Birch Beer
- "Custard" vs. "Soft Serve"
- Galactic Bowling
- Variance of temperatures in January
- The use of the phrase "yo" as a greeting
- The employees who pump gas for customers at gas stations
- The Camden Aquarium
- "Jimmies" vs. "Sprinkles"
- The popularity of paintball among teenagers
- Clementon Park and Storybook Land
- "Funnel Cake" vs. "Fried Dough"
- "Water Ice" vs. "Italian Ice" or "Slush"
- Different roads with similar or the same names (several Church roads, Cooper Roads, Black and White Horse Pikes and White Horse Road)
- SGR and the creation of the song "V-Town" about Voorhees Township
- Garden State Park
- "Jeet?" vs. "Did you eat?"
- Wheaton Village
- The relatively flat land
- Visiting Cowtown Rodeo and the biweekly Cowtown flea market also known as "The Sharptown Mall".