Florida Panhandle

The Florida Panhandle, Northwest Florida, or West Florida, an informal, unofficial term for the northwestern part of Florida, is a strip of land roughly 200 miles wide and 50 to 100 miles long (320 km by 80 to 160 km), lying between Alabama on the north and the west, Georgia also on the north, and the Gulf of Mexico to the south. Its eastern boundary is arbitrarily defined. The terms West Florida and Northwest Florida are today generally synonymous with the Panhandle, although historically West Florida was the name of a British colony (1763–1783), later a Spanish colony (1783–1821), both of which included modern-day Florida west of the Apalachicola River as well as portions of what are now Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana.

Florida Panhandle

The Florida Panhandle, Northwest Florida, or West Florida, an informal, unofficial term for the northwestern part of Florida, is a strip of land roughly 200 miles wide and 50 to 100 miles long (320 km by 80 to 160 km), lying between Alabama on the north and the west, Georgia also on the north, and the Gulf of Mexico to the south. Its eastern boundary is arbitrarily defined. The terms West Florida and Northwest Florida are today generally synonymous with the Panhandle, although historically West Florida was the name of a British colony (1763–1783), later a Spanish colony (1783–1821), both of which included modern-day Florida west of the Apalachicola River as well as portions of what are now Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana.