County collecting

County collecting is keeping track of the counties and other major census divisions one has visited in the United States.[1][2] Many county collectors try to go for blackout, to visit every county unit in the United States. Others try to black out individual states, and others are only interested in keeping track of the counties they have visited without blacking out any states.

County collecting is a way for people to relate to geography and their own life histories. One journalist characterized it as "a very organized form of wanderlust."[1] Many county collectors became interested in the pursuit after being given a school assignment to plot their travels on a county-outline map of the United States. Many county collectors document their travels by being photographed with a county sign marker, or by taking a photo of the sign itself.[3] Some document these travels with gas and other receipts. However, the web sites and organized groups that facilitate county collecting do not require a participant to prove his or her entry into a particular county.

The Extra Miler Club (EMC) was founded in 1973 by three county completionists who came up with the idea because they had been collecting license plates and noticed in their discussion how many rural counties they had all visited in that pursuit. The club is a non-profit organization that meets annually in conjunction with the Automobile License Plate Collectors Association and recognizes completers (of which there are now 66, as of 2022) on its web site.[4] The club publishes a quarterly print newsletter.

As of August 2022, the county collecting web site mob-rule.com has 7725 registered users from all 50 states, 9 provinces of Canada, and 26 other foreign countries. The average number of visited counties is 585. [5]

Some avid county collectors visit new counties by taking circuitous routes, for example, driving from Minneapolis to Chicago by way of Green Bay, Wisconsin. Many determined collectors take entire trips which consist of driving around states in cornrow patterns. However, taking a short detour from a direct route to visit one or more counties is called dipping.

There are currently 3,144 counties and county-equivalents in the United States,[6] including the boroughs and census areas of Alaska, the parishes of Louisiana, the planning regions of Connecticut, the independent cities of Baltimore, Maryland, St. Louis, Missouri, Carson City, Nevada, 38 cities in Virginia and Washington, D.C. There are also counties and county equivalents in the provinces of Canada from Ontario to Nova Scotia. Mathematician William J. Cook used the principles of the travelling salesman problem to calculate that the optimal route visiting every county's seat in the mainland United States would cover 93,466 miles (150,419 km), though he noted that county collectors typically travel a much longer distance.[7]

Ken Jennings discussed the phenomenon and the Extra Miler Club in his 2012 book, Maphead: Charting the Wide, Weird World of Geography Wonks'.[8]

  1. ^ a b Kelly, John (May 23, 2012). "Visiting every U.S. state too easy for you? How about every U.S. county?". The Washington Post. Retrieved July 13, 2017.
  2. ^ Hayden, Eric (May 28, 2012). "Road-Trip Completionist: Meet the Man Who's Been to Every County in the U.S." Time.
  3. ^ Hennesey-Fiske, Molly (August 22, 2004). "Collecting Counties: Even Crossing the Border into Obsession". Boston Globe. Retrieved July 13, 2017.
  4. ^ Extra Miler Club. "Extra Miler Club". Extra Miler Club. Retrieved August 12, 2022.
  5. ^ "County Scoreboard". Mob-Rule. December 7, 2023.
  6. ^ "Want to Visit All 3,143 Counties in the U.S.? There's a Club for That". Yahoo Travel. September 1, 2014.
  7. ^ Cook, William (July 22, 2015). "An Optimal Tour for Extra Milers". University of Waterloo. Retrieved August 23, 2022.
  8. ^ Jennings, Ken (2012). Maphead: Charting the Wide, Weird World of Geography Wonks. New York: Scribner. pp. 11, 149. ISBN 9781439167182.