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US Census Bureau News Release

EMBARGOED UNTIL: 12:01 A.M. EDT, AUGUST 13, 2001 (MONDAY)


Public Information Office                               CB01-CN.176
301-457-3691\457-3620 (fax)
301-457-1037 (TDD)

Jesse McKinnon
301-457-2402

Radio Soundbites

         Majority of African Americans Live in 10 States; New York City
             and Chicago Are Cities With Largest Black Populations
                                
                                
   About 6 in 10 people reporting as Black or African American, alone or
in combination with other races, resided in 10 states where nearly half
the U.S. population lived last year, according to new Census 2000 analysis
released today by the Commerce Department's Census Bureau.

   The Black Population: 2000 [pdf], one in a series of Census 2000 briefs,
shows that 36.4 million people, or 12.9 percent of the total population,
reported as Black or African American. This number includes 34.7 million,
or 12.3 percent, who reported as Black alone, in addition to 1.8 million,
or 0.6 percent, who reported as Black in combination with one or more
other races.
                                 
   The 10 states where 60 percent of African Americans resided were: New
York, California, Texas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, North Carolina,
Maryland, Michigan and Louisiana. Five of these had more than 2 million
Blacks each: New York, California, Texas, Florida and Georgia.

   Other highlights of the brief:

Regions

     Of all the people who reported as Black in Census 2000, 54 percent
     lived in the South, 19 percent lived in the Midwest, 18 percent lived
     in the Northeast and 10 percent lived in the West. *
                                 
     The region with the highest proportion of people reporting Black as a
     percentage of its total population was the South (20 percent), followed 
     by the Northeast (12 percent), the Midwest (11 percent), and the West
     (6 percent).

States

     In each of 10 southern states Texas, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, 
     Maryland, Louisiana, Virginia, South Carolina, Alabama and Mississippi   
     more than 1 million people reported as Black. 
 
     New York was the state with the largest number of people reporting as
     Black in 2000 (3,014,385).

Counties

     There were 96 counties where people reporting as Black comprised at
     least 50 percent the total population, and 95 were in the South.
                                 
     In the Northeast, people reporting as Black were concentrated in a
     band of counties extending from Philadelphia to Providence, R.I. and
     along the Hudson Valley northward from New York city.
                                 
     Although people reporting as Black were not concentrated in
     Midwestern counties, in some metropolitan counties, around cities
     such as Chicago, Gary, Ind., and Detroit, Blacks comprised a sizeable
     proportion of the population.

     Western counties with large concentrations of people reporting as
     Black were located in Southern California, the San Francisco and
     Sacramento areas, Denver and Colorado Springs, and Seattle and Tacoma
     in Washington state.

Cities

     New York city had the largest number of people reporting as Black
     with about 2.3 million, followed by Chicago, 1.1 million, and Detroit, 
     Philadelphia and Houston, which had between 500,000 and 1 million
     each. 
 
     Among places with 100,000 or more population, Gary had the highest
     percentage of people reporting as Black, 85 percent, followed by
     Detroit, with 83 percent.

   Census 2000 data on race are not directly comparable with data from the
1990 census or earlier censuses because in 2000, for the first time, respondents 
could report one or more races.

   Additional Census 2000 briefs will be released over the next several
months on other races and on topics such as age, sex and housing. A
listing of Census 2000 briefs can be found on the Census Bureau's Web site
at www.census.gov/population/www/cen2000/briefs.html.

* These percentages may not add to 100 percent due to rounding.
 
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Source: U.S. Census Bureau | Public Information Office |  Last Revised: August 09, 2007