The South is ascendant. So, my goodness, why is its accent fading?

Every year, the annual Peanut Festival in Brooklet, Georgia, features the ultimate Southern fair competition. With a regional pace that matches its laconic drawl, the “slow tractor race” hands first prize to the driver who crosses the finish line last.

Resident Cristy Malott, who helps her husband, Tony, run Southeastern Trade & Auction, knows Brooklet as a leisurely place where she can pick her own strawberries and buy pork from a local farm. She also says that its Southern pace is picking up. 

And nowhere are the changes more evident than in the thinning out of the region’s accent and dialect, one of the most recognizable in the world. “Hey y’all,’’ will signal the American South quicker’n a cat on a hot tin roof. 

Why We Wrote This

The South’s increasing clout as a political, economic, and cultural force comes at a cost. The lower taxes, gentler winters, and affordable housing are drawing newcomers, often Midwesterners, changing how locals speak and live.

When the most recent shift began

Like many remote small towns throughout the country, Brooklet’s population had dwindled well into the 1990s as businesses closed and children left for school or better-paying city jobs. 

But over the past 20 years, the U.S. Census reports double-digit growth here. A new Korean auto plant nearby is part of it, but so is a growing migration trend across the country, aided by accessible internet, remote work options, lower taxes, and more moderate weather. All of which has led to the dramatic tipping southward of the nation’s demographic center.

The change may highlight the South’s assets and opportunities. But it also hints at danger for its unique and salient features – including “that gorgeous Southern drawl,” as one local calls it. 

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