Submitted by Elegant-Anteater783 t3_zpcbjp in massachusetts
11BMasshole t1_j0s9e0t wrote
Reply to comment by Fit-Anything8352 in Where does Western Mass begin to you? by Elegant-Anteater783
I’ve been in this area for 50 years. Absolutely no one considers Huntington the Berkshires. They consider it the Hilltowns. Most people associate the Berkshires with Lee, Lenox , Stockbridge, Great Barrington, Williamsburg, Pittsfield, North Adams.
Hence it’s own distinct area called the Berkshires.
Fit-Anything8352 t1_j0s9mz6 wrote
Even then there's still a little problem with "the Berkshire mountains" not being entirely contained in Berkshire county lol without the peak of Crumb Hill. We can disagree over where to draw the east border but that's a bigger oversight. You'd think it would be named after something it actually contains, right?
Hell you can even go on the Wikipedia page for "The Berkshires" and see how half of the things it contains aren't in Berkshire county.
RedditSkippy t1_j0sd034 wrote
Mt. Greylock is the highest peak in the Berkshires AND the rest of Massachusetts.
Fit-Anything8352 t1_j0sfqez wrote
Mount greylock is not part of the "Berkshire mountains"(Massachusetts part of the Green Mountains). It is part of the Taconics that run along the border of New York and Massachusetts/Connecticut. They are geologically separate mountain ranges.
Greylock is the highest point in Massachusetts though, I never said it wasn't. It isn't by any definition except maybe the cultural one "the peak of the Berkshires," despite being frequently misattributed as such.
Zazadawg t1_j0te6tt wrote
technically Mt greylock is part of the taconic mountains
RoyalSloth t1_j0shli3 wrote
I mean yes the geographic Berkshire hills go beyond Berkshire county. But anyone from the Berkshires knows “the Berkshires” by itself means you’re talking about the county. If you mean the hills you’d need to specify that
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