Where do 5 or more U.S. counties meet in a single point?





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26















The other day I was looking at a county map near my home in NE Georgia. I noticed that there is a point where 4 counties meet - Hall, Jackson, Gwinnett, and Barrow (see screenshot).
enter image description here



This made me wonder if there are any locations in the U.S. where 5 or more counties meet at a single geographic point? If so, where?










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    interesting that the point of Jackson, Barrow & Gwinnett is tangential to the edge of Hall, and that Hall doesn't have a point there.

    – FreeMan
    May 6 at 19:45






  • 3





    There's a near quintipoint in Texas.

    – Rob
    May 7 at 3:13






  • 12





    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's a geography trivia question that has nothing to do with travelling.

    – David Richerby
    May 7 at 11:21






  • 4





    @Will By that reasoning, any question about any possible place on earth is a travel question. You don't make a travel question just by adding "And can I travel there?" onto the end of it: that's just boat programming. (Especially when the original question says nothing about travelling and "Can I travel there?" only gets added once somebody says it's off-topic.)

    – David Richerby
    May 7 at 12:13








  • 2





    If you're curious about other countries, the best multipoint seems to be on Sicily

    – Nathan Cooper
    May 7 at 14:09


















26















The other day I was looking at a county map near my home in NE Georgia. I noticed that there is a point where 4 counties meet - Hall, Jackson, Gwinnett, and Barrow (see screenshot).
enter image description here



This made me wonder if there are any locations in the U.S. where 5 or more counties meet at a single geographic point? If so, where?










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    interesting that the point of Jackson, Barrow & Gwinnett is tangential to the edge of Hall, and that Hall doesn't have a point there.

    – FreeMan
    May 6 at 19:45






  • 3





    There's a near quintipoint in Texas.

    – Rob
    May 7 at 3:13






  • 12





    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's a geography trivia question that has nothing to do with travelling.

    – David Richerby
    May 7 at 11:21






  • 4





    @Will By that reasoning, any question about any possible place on earth is a travel question. You don't make a travel question just by adding "And can I travel there?" onto the end of it: that's just boat programming. (Especially when the original question says nothing about travelling and "Can I travel there?" only gets added once somebody says it's off-topic.)

    – David Richerby
    May 7 at 12:13








  • 2





    If you're curious about other countries, the best multipoint seems to be on Sicily

    – Nathan Cooper
    May 7 at 14:09














26












26








26


2






The other day I was looking at a county map near my home in NE Georgia. I noticed that there is a point where 4 counties meet - Hall, Jackson, Gwinnett, and Barrow (see screenshot).
enter image description here



This made me wonder if there are any locations in the U.S. where 5 or more counties meet at a single geographic point? If so, where?










share|improve this question














The other day I was looking at a county map near my home in NE Georgia. I noticed that there is a point where 4 counties meet - Hall, Jackson, Gwinnett, and Barrow (see screenshot).
enter image description here



This made me wonder if there are any locations in the U.S. where 5 or more counties meet at a single geographic point? If so, where?







usa where-on-earth






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked May 6 at 15:16









WillWill

24235




24235








  • 1





    interesting that the point of Jackson, Barrow & Gwinnett is tangential to the edge of Hall, and that Hall doesn't have a point there.

    – FreeMan
    May 6 at 19:45






  • 3





    There's a near quintipoint in Texas.

    – Rob
    May 7 at 3:13






  • 12





    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's a geography trivia question that has nothing to do with travelling.

    – David Richerby
    May 7 at 11:21






  • 4





    @Will By that reasoning, any question about any possible place on earth is a travel question. You don't make a travel question just by adding "And can I travel there?" onto the end of it: that's just boat programming. (Especially when the original question says nothing about travelling and "Can I travel there?" only gets added once somebody says it's off-topic.)

    – David Richerby
    May 7 at 12:13








  • 2





    If you're curious about other countries, the best multipoint seems to be on Sicily

    – Nathan Cooper
    May 7 at 14:09














  • 1





    interesting that the point of Jackson, Barrow & Gwinnett is tangential to the edge of Hall, and that Hall doesn't have a point there.

    – FreeMan
    May 6 at 19:45






  • 3





    There's a near quintipoint in Texas.

    – Rob
    May 7 at 3:13






  • 12





    I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's a geography trivia question that has nothing to do with travelling.

    – David Richerby
    May 7 at 11:21






  • 4





    @Will By that reasoning, any question about any possible place on earth is a travel question. You don't make a travel question just by adding "And can I travel there?" onto the end of it: that's just boat programming. (Especially when the original question says nothing about travelling and "Can I travel there?" only gets added once somebody says it's off-topic.)

    – David Richerby
    May 7 at 12:13








  • 2





    If you're curious about other countries, the best multipoint seems to be on Sicily

    – Nathan Cooper
    May 7 at 14:09








1




1





interesting that the point of Jackson, Barrow & Gwinnett is tangential to the edge of Hall, and that Hall doesn't have a point there.

– FreeMan
May 6 at 19:45





interesting that the point of Jackson, Barrow & Gwinnett is tangential to the edge of Hall, and that Hall doesn't have a point there.

– FreeMan
May 6 at 19:45




3




3





There's a near quintipoint in Texas.

– Rob
May 7 at 3:13





There's a near quintipoint in Texas.

– Rob
May 7 at 3:13




12




12





I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's a geography trivia question that has nothing to do with travelling.

– David Richerby
May 7 at 11:21





I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's a geography trivia question that has nothing to do with travelling.

– David Richerby
May 7 at 11:21




4




4





@Will By that reasoning, any question about any possible place on earth is a travel question. You don't make a travel question just by adding "And can I travel there?" onto the end of it: that's just boat programming. (Especially when the original question says nothing about travelling and "Can I travel there?" only gets added once somebody says it's off-topic.)

– David Richerby
May 7 at 12:13







@Will By that reasoning, any question about any possible place on earth is a travel question. You don't make a travel question just by adding "And can I travel there?" onto the end of it: that's just boat programming. (Especially when the original question says nothing about travelling and "Can I travel there?" only gets added once somebody says it's off-topic.)

– David Richerby
May 7 at 12:13






2




2





If you're curious about other countries, the best multipoint seems to be on Sicily

– Nathan Cooper
May 7 at 14:09





If you're curious about other countries, the best multipoint seems to be on Sicily

– Nathan Cooper
May 7 at 14:09










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















42














Lake Okeechobee in Florida is the best known location in the US where this happens, according to the Twelve Mile Circle website:




Looking at Lake Okeechobee on this Microsoft Encarta map clearly shows a point where five different Florida counties come together at a single point: Glades; Hendry; Palm Beach, Martin and Okeechobee. There is no other spot in the United States where this occurs.



enter image description here




The blog states that this is the only location in the US; as far as we can tell that's correct, even though Ron Maupin found another near-occurrence in Texas.






share|improve this answer





















  • 53





    "Microsoft Encarta" now there's a name I haven't heard in a long time. A long time.

    – MikeTheLiar
    May 6 at 20:09











  • The only point within a single state. But can this happen at the edge/corner of multiple states?

    – smci
    May 7 at 2:48











  • "Lake Okeechobee in Florida is the only location in the US where this happens" That is untrue. See my answer.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 4:18













  • @RonMaupin Nearly is nearly enough.

    – Deduplicator
    May 7 at 15:17






  • 1





    @RonMaupin's answer is incorrect: the five counties there come very close but don't all meet at a point.

    – David Richerby
    May 7 at 17:46



















13














In Texas, there is a point where five counties meet:



enter image description here



The (roughly) triangle shaped county is Delta County. The county to the north is Lamar County. The county to the south is Hopkins county. The two counties to the east are Red River County (NE) and Franklin County (SE).



A better picture:



enter image description here






share|improve this answer





















  • 5





    If you search this site (originally linked in a comment on the question) for "near-quintipoint", you'll find it claims this Texas situation is not an actual quintipoint. Can you address this?

    – Angew
    May 7 at 7:56






  • 4





    Relevant image from the web site linked by the previous comment.

    – ikegami
    May 7 at 8:28






  • 4





    Texas DOT map (pdf) showing the "near-quintipoint" hook at the eastern end of Delta county, albeit not as exaggerated as with the Wolfram-generated maps.

    – user4556274
    May 7 at 9:34






  • 3





    @Angew, if you ever visit there, you will find the point where the five counties meet, and if you ever go fishing there, you will have game wardens from the five different counties checking your fishing license.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 12:57






  • 3





    I don’t understand why this answer hasn’t been deleted; it’s quite clearly, blatantly wrong. This is exactly the issue with the HNQ; an incorrect answer to an off topic question, both with absurd numbers of votes.

    – Tim
    May 8 at 11:40



















12














There are five counties in Florida that meet in the middle of Lake Okeechobee.



I haven't been able to find more, but the Wikipedia article implies that there may be more.



Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadripoint#Multipoints_of_greater_numerical_complexity






share|improve this answer



















  • 5





    This article from Condé Nast states that the Florida "quintipoint" is the only one in the United States. (Note that the Wikipedia article only implies that there are others elsewhere in the world, not necessarily in the USA.)

    – Michael Seifert
    May 6 at 15:26













  • @MichaelSeifert, that is not true. See my answer.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 4:20












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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









42














Lake Okeechobee in Florida is the best known location in the US where this happens, according to the Twelve Mile Circle website:




Looking at Lake Okeechobee on this Microsoft Encarta map clearly shows a point where five different Florida counties come together at a single point: Glades; Hendry; Palm Beach, Martin and Okeechobee. There is no other spot in the United States where this occurs.



enter image description here




The blog states that this is the only location in the US; as far as we can tell that's correct, even though Ron Maupin found another near-occurrence in Texas.






share|improve this answer





















  • 53





    "Microsoft Encarta" now there's a name I haven't heard in a long time. A long time.

    – MikeTheLiar
    May 6 at 20:09











  • The only point within a single state. But can this happen at the edge/corner of multiple states?

    – smci
    May 7 at 2:48











  • "Lake Okeechobee in Florida is the only location in the US where this happens" That is untrue. See my answer.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 4:18













  • @RonMaupin Nearly is nearly enough.

    – Deduplicator
    May 7 at 15:17






  • 1





    @RonMaupin's answer is incorrect: the five counties there come very close but don't all meet at a point.

    – David Richerby
    May 7 at 17:46
















42














Lake Okeechobee in Florida is the best known location in the US where this happens, according to the Twelve Mile Circle website:




Looking at Lake Okeechobee on this Microsoft Encarta map clearly shows a point where five different Florida counties come together at a single point: Glades; Hendry; Palm Beach, Martin and Okeechobee. There is no other spot in the United States where this occurs.



enter image description here




The blog states that this is the only location in the US; as far as we can tell that's correct, even though Ron Maupin found another near-occurrence in Texas.






share|improve this answer





















  • 53





    "Microsoft Encarta" now there's a name I haven't heard in a long time. A long time.

    – MikeTheLiar
    May 6 at 20:09











  • The only point within a single state. But can this happen at the edge/corner of multiple states?

    – smci
    May 7 at 2:48











  • "Lake Okeechobee in Florida is the only location in the US where this happens" That is untrue. See my answer.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 4:18













  • @RonMaupin Nearly is nearly enough.

    – Deduplicator
    May 7 at 15:17






  • 1





    @RonMaupin's answer is incorrect: the five counties there come very close but don't all meet at a point.

    – David Richerby
    May 7 at 17:46














42












42








42







Lake Okeechobee in Florida is the best known location in the US where this happens, according to the Twelve Mile Circle website:




Looking at Lake Okeechobee on this Microsoft Encarta map clearly shows a point where five different Florida counties come together at a single point: Glades; Hendry; Palm Beach, Martin and Okeechobee. There is no other spot in the United States where this occurs.



enter image description here




The blog states that this is the only location in the US; as far as we can tell that's correct, even though Ron Maupin found another near-occurrence in Texas.






share|improve this answer















Lake Okeechobee in Florida is the best known location in the US where this happens, according to the Twelve Mile Circle website:




Looking at Lake Okeechobee on this Microsoft Encarta map clearly shows a point where five different Florida counties come together at a single point: Glades; Hendry; Palm Beach, Martin and Okeechobee. There is no other spot in the United States where this occurs.



enter image description here




The blog states that this is the only location in the US; as far as we can tell that's correct, even though Ron Maupin found another near-occurrence in Texas.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited May 7 at 17:47

























answered May 6 at 15:25









GlorfindelGlorfindel

3,42652541




3,42652541








  • 53





    "Microsoft Encarta" now there's a name I haven't heard in a long time. A long time.

    – MikeTheLiar
    May 6 at 20:09











  • The only point within a single state. But can this happen at the edge/corner of multiple states?

    – smci
    May 7 at 2:48











  • "Lake Okeechobee in Florida is the only location in the US where this happens" That is untrue. See my answer.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 4:18













  • @RonMaupin Nearly is nearly enough.

    – Deduplicator
    May 7 at 15:17






  • 1





    @RonMaupin's answer is incorrect: the five counties there come very close but don't all meet at a point.

    – David Richerby
    May 7 at 17:46














  • 53





    "Microsoft Encarta" now there's a name I haven't heard in a long time. A long time.

    – MikeTheLiar
    May 6 at 20:09











  • The only point within a single state. But can this happen at the edge/corner of multiple states?

    – smci
    May 7 at 2:48











  • "Lake Okeechobee in Florida is the only location in the US where this happens" That is untrue. See my answer.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 4:18













  • @RonMaupin Nearly is nearly enough.

    – Deduplicator
    May 7 at 15:17






  • 1





    @RonMaupin's answer is incorrect: the five counties there come very close but don't all meet at a point.

    – David Richerby
    May 7 at 17:46








53




53





"Microsoft Encarta" now there's a name I haven't heard in a long time. A long time.

– MikeTheLiar
May 6 at 20:09





"Microsoft Encarta" now there's a name I haven't heard in a long time. A long time.

– MikeTheLiar
May 6 at 20:09













The only point within a single state. But can this happen at the edge/corner of multiple states?

– smci
May 7 at 2:48





The only point within a single state. But can this happen at the edge/corner of multiple states?

– smci
May 7 at 2:48













"Lake Okeechobee in Florida is the only location in the US where this happens" That is untrue. See my answer.

– Ron Maupin
May 7 at 4:18







"Lake Okeechobee in Florida is the only location in the US where this happens" That is untrue. See my answer.

– Ron Maupin
May 7 at 4:18















@RonMaupin Nearly is nearly enough.

– Deduplicator
May 7 at 15:17





@RonMaupin Nearly is nearly enough.

– Deduplicator
May 7 at 15:17




1




1





@RonMaupin's answer is incorrect: the five counties there come very close but don't all meet at a point.

– David Richerby
May 7 at 17:46





@RonMaupin's answer is incorrect: the five counties there come very close but don't all meet at a point.

– David Richerby
May 7 at 17:46













13














In Texas, there is a point where five counties meet:



enter image description here



The (roughly) triangle shaped county is Delta County. The county to the north is Lamar County. The county to the south is Hopkins county. The two counties to the east are Red River County (NE) and Franklin County (SE).



A better picture:



enter image description here






share|improve this answer





















  • 5





    If you search this site (originally linked in a comment on the question) for "near-quintipoint", you'll find it claims this Texas situation is not an actual quintipoint. Can you address this?

    – Angew
    May 7 at 7:56






  • 4





    Relevant image from the web site linked by the previous comment.

    – ikegami
    May 7 at 8:28






  • 4





    Texas DOT map (pdf) showing the "near-quintipoint" hook at the eastern end of Delta county, albeit not as exaggerated as with the Wolfram-generated maps.

    – user4556274
    May 7 at 9:34






  • 3





    @Angew, if you ever visit there, you will find the point where the five counties meet, and if you ever go fishing there, you will have game wardens from the five different counties checking your fishing license.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 12:57






  • 3





    I don’t understand why this answer hasn’t been deleted; it’s quite clearly, blatantly wrong. This is exactly the issue with the HNQ; an incorrect answer to an off topic question, both with absurd numbers of votes.

    – Tim
    May 8 at 11:40
















13














In Texas, there is a point where five counties meet:



enter image description here



The (roughly) triangle shaped county is Delta County. The county to the north is Lamar County. The county to the south is Hopkins county. The two counties to the east are Red River County (NE) and Franklin County (SE).



A better picture:



enter image description here






share|improve this answer





















  • 5





    If you search this site (originally linked in a comment on the question) for "near-quintipoint", you'll find it claims this Texas situation is not an actual quintipoint. Can you address this?

    – Angew
    May 7 at 7:56






  • 4





    Relevant image from the web site linked by the previous comment.

    – ikegami
    May 7 at 8:28






  • 4





    Texas DOT map (pdf) showing the "near-quintipoint" hook at the eastern end of Delta county, albeit not as exaggerated as with the Wolfram-generated maps.

    – user4556274
    May 7 at 9:34






  • 3





    @Angew, if you ever visit there, you will find the point where the five counties meet, and if you ever go fishing there, you will have game wardens from the five different counties checking your fishing license.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 12:57






  • 3





    I don’t understand why this answer hasn’t been deleted; it’s quite clearly, blatantly wrong. This is exactly the issue with the HNQ; an incorrect answer to an off topic question, both with absurd numbers of votes.

    – Tim
    May 8 at 11:40














13












13








13







In Texas, there is a point where five counties meet:



enter image description here



The (roughly) triangle shaped county is Delta County. The county to the north is Lamar County. The county to the south is Hopkins county. The two counties to the east are Red River County (NE) and Franklin County (SE).



A better picture:



enter image description here






share|improve this answer















In Texas, there is a point where five counties meet:



enter image description here



The (roughly) triangle shaped county is Delta County. The county to the north is Lamar County. The county to the south is Hopkins county. The two counties to the east are Red River County (NE) and Franklin County (SE).



A better picture:



enter image description here







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited May 7 at 4:54

























answered May 7 at 4:18









Ron MaupinRon Maupin

2634




2634








  • 5





    If you search this site (originally linked in a comment on the question) for "near-quintipoint", you'll find it claims this Texas situation is not an actual quintipoint. Can you address this?

    – Angew
    May 7 at 7:56






  • 4





    Relevant image from the web site linked by the previous comment.

    – ikegami
    May 7 at 8:28






  • 4





    Texas DOT map (pdf) showing the "near-quintipoint" hook at the eastern end of Delta county, albeit not as exaggerated as with the Wolfram-generated maps.

    – user4556274
    May 7 at 9:34






  • 3





    @Angew, if you ever visit there, you will find the point where the five counties meet, and if you ever go fishing there, you will have game wardens from the five different counties checking your fishing license.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 12:57






  • 3





    I don’t understand why this answer hasn’t been deleted; it’s quite clearly, blatantly wrong. This is exactly the issue with the HNQ; an incorrect answer to an off topic question, both with absurd numbers of votes.

    – Tim
    May 8 at 11:40














  • 5





    If you search this site (originally linked in a comment on the question) for "near-quintipoint", you'll find it claims this Texas situation is not an actual quintipoint. Can you address this?

    – Angew
    May 7 at 7:56






  • 4





    Relevant image from the web site linked by the previous comment.

    – ikegami
    May 7 at 8:28






  • 4





    Texas DOT map (pdf) showing the "near-quintipoint" hook at the eastern end of Delta county, albeit not as exaggerated as with the Wolfram-generated maps.

    – user4556274
    May 7 at 9:34






  • 3





    @Angew, if you ever visit there, you will find the point where the five counties meet, and if you ever go fishing there, you will have game wardens from the five different counties checking your fishing license.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 12:57






  • 3





    I don’t understand why this answer hasn’t been deleted; it’s quite clearly, blatantly wrong. This is exactly the issue with the HNQ; an incorrect answer to an off topic question, both with absurd numbers of votes.

    – Tim
    May 8 at 11:40








5




5





If you search this site (originally linked in a comment on the question) for "near-quintipoint", you'll find it claims this Texas situation is not an actual quintipoint. Can you address this?

– Angew
May 7 at 7:56





If you search this site (originally linked in a comment on the question) for "near-quintipoint", you'll find it claims this Texas situation is not an actual quintipoint. Can you address this?

– Angew
May 7 at 7:56




4




4





Relevant image from the web site linked by the previous comment.

– ikegami
May 7 at 8:28





Relevant image from the web site linked by the previous comment.

– ikegami
May 7 at 8:28




4




4





Texas DOT map (pdf) showing the "near-quintipoint" hook at the eastern end of Delta county, albeit not as exaggerated as with the Wolfram-generated maps.

– user4556274
May 7 at 9:34





Texas DOT map (pdf) showing the "near-quintipoint" hook at the eastern end of Delta county, albeit not as exaggerated as with the Wolfram-generated maps.

– user4556274
May 7 at 9:34




3




3





@Angew, if you ever visit there, you will find the point where the five counties meet, and if you ever go fishing there, you will have game wardens from the five different counties checking your fishing license.

– Ron Maupin
May 7 at 12:57





@Angew, if you ever visit there, you will find the point where the five counties meet, and if you ever go fishing there, you will have game wardens from the five different counties checking your fishing license.

– Ron Maupin
May 7 at 12:57




3




3





I don’t understand why this answer hasn’t been deleted; it’s quite clearly, blatantly wrong. This is exactly the issue with the HNQ; an incorrect answer to an off topic question, both with absurd numbers of votes.

– Tim
May 8 at 11:40





I don’t understand why this answer hasn’t been deleted; it’s quite clearly, blatantly wrong. This is exactly the issue with the HNQ; an incorrect answer to an off topic question, both with absurd numbers of votes.

– Tim
May 8 at 11:40











12














There are five counties in Florida that meet in the middle of Lake Okeechobee.



I haven't been able to find more, but the Wikipedia article implies that there may be more.



Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadripoint#Multipoints_of_greater_numerical_complexity






share|improve this answer



















  • 5





    This article from Condé Nast states that the Florida "quintipoint" is the only one in the United States. (Note that the Wikipedia article only implies that there are others elsewhere in the world, not necessarily in the USA.)

    – Michael Seifert
    May 6 at 15:26













  • @MichaelSeifert, that is not true. See my answer.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 4:20
















12














There are five counties in Florida that meet in the middle of Lake Okeechobee.



I haven't been able to find more, but the Wikipedia article implies that there may be more.



Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadripoint#Multipoints_of_greater_numerical_complexity






share|improve this answer



















  • 5





    This article from Condé Nast states that the Florida "quintipoint" is the only one in the United States. (Note that the Wikipedia article only implies that there are others elsewhere in the world, not necessarily in the USA.)

    – Michael Seifert
    May 6 at 15:26













  • @MichaelSeifert, that is not true. See my answer.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 4:20














12












12








12







There are five counties in Florida that meet in the middle of Lake Okeechobee.



I haven't been able to find more, but the Wikipedia article implies that there may be more.



Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadripoint#Multipoints_of_greater_numerical_complexity






share|improve this answer













There are five counties in Florida that meet in the middle of Lake Okeechobee.



I haven't been able to find more, but the Wikipedia article implies that there may be more.



Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadripoint#Multipoints_of_greater_numerical_complexity







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered May 6 at 15:21









JakeDotJakeDot

3298




3298








  • 5





    This article from Condé Nast states that the Florida "quintipoint" is the only one in the United States. (Note that the Wikipedia article only implies that there are others elsewhere in the world, not necessarily in the USA.)

    – Michael Seifert
    May 6 at 15:26













  • @MichaelSeifert, that is not true. See my answer.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 4:20














  • 5





    This article from Condé Nast states that the Florida "quintipoint" is the only one in the United States. (Note that the Wikipedia article only implies that there are others elsewhere in the world, not necessarily in the USA.)

    – Michael Seifert
    May 6 at 15:26













  • @MichaelSeifert, that is not true. See my answer.

    – Ron Maupin
    May 7 at 4:20








5




5





This article from Condé Nast states that the Florida "quintipoint" is the only one in the United States. (Note that the Wikipedia article only implies that there are others elsewhere in the world, not necessarily in the USA.)

– Michael Seifert
May 6 at 15:26







This article from Condé Nast states that the Florida "quintipoint" is the only one in the United States. (Note that the Wikipedia article only implies that there are others elsewhere in the world, not necessarily in the USA.)

– Michael Seifert
May 6 at 15:26















@MichaelSeifert, that is not true. See my answer.

– Ron Maupin
May 7 at 4:20





@MichaelSeifert, that is not true. See my answer.

– Ron Maupin
May 7 at 4:20


















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