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Demographics of Washington, D.C.

The District of Columbia is a federal district with an ethnically diverse population. In 2020, the District had a population of 689,545 people, with a resident density of 11,515 people per square mile.

The District of Columbia had relatively few residents until the Civil War. The presence of the U.S. federal government in Washington has been instrumental in the city's later growth and development. Its role as the capital leads people to forget that approximately one-third of the District of Columbia's population was born in the city.[1][2][3][4]

In 2011, the District of Columbia's black population slipped below 50 percent for the first time in over 50 years.[5] The District was a majority-black district from the late 1950s through 2011. The District of Columbia has had a significant African-American population since the District's creation; several neighborhoods are noted for their contributions to black history and culture. Like numerous other border and northern cities in the first half of the 20th century, the District of Columbia received many black migrants from the South in the Great Migration. African Americans moved north for better education and job opportunities, as well as to escape legal segregation and lynchings. Government growth during World War II provided economic opportunities for African Americans, too.

In the postwar era, the percentage of African Americans in the District steadily increased as its total population declined as a result of suburbanization, supported by federal highway construction, and white flight. The black population included a strong middle and upper class.

Since the 2000 U.S. Census, the District has added more than 120,000 residents and reversed some of the population losses seen in previous decades. The growth is speeding up; the population has increased more than 100,000 since the 2010 Census. The proportion of white, Asian, and Hispanic residents has increased, and the proportion of black residents has stagnated, with the latter mostly moving to the suburbs.

History

 
LeDroit Park, a neighborhood listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The District of Columbia was established to host the new United States capital, the City of Washington. However, there were already many settlements within the federal territory when it was created in 1790. Most important of these settlements were the cities of Georgetown, founded in 1751, and Alexandria, Virginia (then included in the District), founded in 1749. Together these two cities had most of the District's early residents. The populations of each place were counted separately from that of the City of Washington until Alexandria was returned to Virginia in 1846, and until the District of Columbia was formed into a single entity in 1871. In 1790, Alexandria had a population of 2,748.[6] By 1800, the City of Washington had a population of 3,210, Georgetown had 2,993, and Alexandria had 4,971.[7]

The District's population remained small in comparison to other major U.S. cities. In 1860, directly before the Civil War, the District had about 75,000 residents,[8] far smaller than such major historical port cities as New York at 800,000 or Philadelphia at more than 500,000.[9] It is notable that the District of Columbia had a large African-American population even before the Civil War, and most were free people of color, not slaves. Due to slaveholders' manumission of slaves in the Upper South after the American Revolutionary War, the free black population in those states climbed markedly from an estimated 1% before the war to 10% by 1810.[10] Since many states did not permit free blacks to stay after gaining freedom, they often relocated to the District; in 1860, about 80% of the District's African-American residents were free blacks.[11]

 
The "Friendship Arch" is at the center of Chinatown.

Following the Civil War, the District's population jumped 75% to more than 130,000.[8] The District of Columbia's population continued to grow throughout the late nineteenth century as Irish-American, German-American, and Jewish-American immigrant communities formed in downtown areas. Many immigrants escaping severe poverty and antisemitism moved to the US and found refuge in the District. By 1900, the District's growth had spread to the more residential sections beyond the old Florida Avenue boundary line following the development of the District's streetcar lines along major arteries such as Pennsylvania Avenue, SE, Connecticut Avenue, Wisconsin Avenue, Georgia Avenue, 14th Street, and 16th Street. By 1930, development within the District's boundaries was largely complete, except for a few outlying areas in far Northeast and Southeast. The District's population totaled just under 500,000. In response to the Great Depression in the 1930s, President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal legislation expanded the bureaucracy in the District of Columbia. World War II further increased government activity and defense contracting, adding to the number of federal employees in the capital. People came from across the country to work in wartime in the District of Columbia.[12] By 1950, the District's population reached a peak of 802,178 residents.[13]

Shortly after that, in a pattern repeated across the country, the District began losing residents attracted to newer housing in the suburbs, with commutes made easier by an expanded highway network outside the District. Following social unrest and riots in the 1960s, plus increasing crime, by 1980, the District of Columbia had lost one-quarter of its population.[8] After the achievements of civil rights, more of the District's middle-class black population also moved to the suburbs. The District's population continued to decline until the late 1990s. Gentrification efforts started to transform the demographics of distressed neighborhoods.[14] Recently, a trend of growth since the 2000 U.S. Census provided the first rise in the District's population in 50 years.[15]

Statistics

2020 census

Racial Plurality by Ward
 
Race by ward in DC, per the 2010 US Census
 
Race by ward in DC, per the 2020 ACS. Overall the city has become more White and less Black since 2010.
Legend
Washington city, District of Columbia - Demographic Profile
(NH = Non-Hispanic)
Race / Ethnicity Pop 2010[16] Pop 2020[17] % 2010 % 2020
White alone (NH) 209,464 261,771 34.81% 37.96%
Black or African American alone (NH) 301,053 282,066 50.03% 40.91%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH) 1,322 1,277 0.22% 0.19%
Asian alone (NH) 20,818 33,192 3.46% 4.81%
Pacific Islander alone (NH) 216 349 0.04% 0.05%
Some Other Race alone (NH) 1,451 3,753 0.24% 0.54%
Mixed Race/Multi-Racial (NH) 12,650 29,485 2.10% 4.28%
Hispanic or Latino (any race) 54,759 77,652 9.10% 11.26%
Total 601,723 689,545 100.00% 100.00%

Note: the US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos can be of any race.

Population

Per the 2020 Census, the District's population was 689,545 residents,[18] continuing a trend of population growth in the District since the 2000 Census, which recorded 572,059 residents.[19] During the workweek, the number of commuters from the suburbs into the city swells the District's population by an estimated 71.8%, to a daytime population of over one million people.[20] The Washington Metropolitan Area, which includes the surrounding counties in Maryland and Virginia, is the eighth-largest in the United States, with more than five million residents. When combined with Baltimore and its suburbs, the Baltimore-Washington Metropolitan Area has a population exceeding eight million residents, the fourth-largest in the country.[21]

There were 281,475 households within the District in 2017. About 45% of those were householders living alone. There were also 119,357 family households; about 20% of homes had children under 18. Of those families with children, 56% were those headed by a married couple. The average household size was 2.32, and the average family size was 3.40.[22]

Ethnic composition

DC is also home to people of more than 170 nationalities and ethnic groups, making it one of the most diverse cities in the United States.[23]

In 2007, an estimated 74,000 immigrants lived in the District of Columbia.[24] Major sources of immigration have included El Salvador, Ethiopia, Guatemala, China, Jamaica, India, the U.K., the Dominican Republic, and the Philippines.[25] A concentration of Salvadorans have settled in the Mount Pleasant neighborhood.[26] Wards 1 and 4 have the highest percentages of immigrants in the city, and the Brightwood neighborhood in Ward 4 has the highest percentage of immigrants of any neighborhood in D.C.,[27] with only 46 percent of residents being born in the United States.

African Americans

D.C. has long been noted for its large, though slightly declining African-American population who form a plurality of the city's population. Notable African American neighborhoods include, Shaw, LeDroit Park, Sixteenth Street Heights and Anacostia, among others. In general, African Americans show a strong concentration in areas east of Rock Creek park, notably so in the city's Northeast and Southeast quadrants.[28] In recent decades, as traditional black neighborhoods are affected by gentrification, many middle-class and professional African Americans have moved to the suburbs, mostly to Maryland (Prince George's County, Charles County, Montgomery County, and to a lesser extent Howard County and Frederick, Maryland) and Northern Virginia, aggravated by the rising cost of living in the area.[29]

Black Americans have officially been the District's largest racial group since the 1960 Census. In 1970, 71.1% of the population identified as Black.[30] But in recent years the number of European Americans in the District has increased.[14] Since 2000 there has been a 7.3% decrease in the African-American population and a 17.8% increase in the Caucasian population.[19] Many African Americans have moved out of the District to the suburbs. In addition, a minority of African Americans are migrating to parts of the South, notably North Carolina, Georgia and Florida in a New Great Migration because of family ties, retirement, and lower cost of living.

Despite decline in the District, regional black population growth continues due to robust migration from the Caribbean, Africa, and other parts of the United States. Notable contributory states are New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Michigan. [31]

African immigrants

 
A section of Little Ethiopia in the Shaw neighborhood.

The metro DC area is the second-most popular destination for African immigrants, after New York City. More than 192,000 African-born people live in DC and nearby suburbs as of 2019, just shy of the 194,000 African-born in New York.[32] This includes Nigerians with 19,600 residents and Ghanaians with 18,400.[33] By far, the largest concentration of Ethiopians in the United States are found in D.C. and the local metro area. Some conservative estimates put the number at around 75,000 residents. In contrast, other estimates are as high as 250,000 Ethiopians in DC and surrounding neighborhoods. So heavy is the concentration of Ethiopian restaurants and shops in central Washington, that a part of the Shaw neighborhood is known as "Little Ethiopia". Other notable groups include those from Egypt, Morocco, South Africa, Cameroon and Kenya, who tend to congregate in the regions suburban areas, in contrast to the Ethiopian and Somalian communities, which show a decided urban concentration in areas such as Shaw, the U Street Corridor and Adams Morgan. In general, African migrants display higher education, labor participation and English usage rates than other migrants to the US.[32]

Caribbean immigrants

According to a study by George Mason University, there are an estimated 83,400 Caribbean born people living in the greater Washington, DC area. The largest numbers are from Jamaica (29,034),Trinidad and Tobago (16,154), the Dominican Republic (13,814), Haiti (8,114), and Cuba (6,599).[34]

Within the District itself there are 8,415 Caribbean born as of 2019, with much larger numbers found in Prince George's County, MD (22,965) and Montgomery County, MD (16,797). The West Indian population is largely concentrated in Petworth, Manor Park, Brightwood Park, Edgewood, Bloomingdale, Shaw, U Street/ Cardozo, Adams Morgan, and Brightwood with smaller numbers in the Northeast, Northwest and Southeast quadrants.[35] Though, the number of West Indians balloons when considering those of West Indian ancestry, many of whom have mixed with mostly African American or other Hispanic communities, depending upon the time they arrived in the US. The DC area has one of the largest Jamaican and anglophone Caribbean populations in the country, though many West Indians are facing the same effects of gentrification as African Americans, leading to a slow migration to the suburbs, especially to Prince George's County.[36]

Though, Jamaicans, Cubans and anglophone Caribbeans represent the majority of West Indians in Washington, there has been a significant growth in the number of Haitians and Dominicans in recent decades, who are more thus more evenly distributed throughout the city and region, and have lower citizenship and education rates than longer settled groups.[36]

European immigration

While the White population of DC represents 43.6% of the total, part of this grouping includes a number of European-born residents, who range from expats to dual citizens. There are 18,359 foreign-born European DC residents.[37] The largest groups include 2,407 from the United Kingdom, 2,271 from Germany, 2,103 from France, and 899 from Italy. There are also many diaspora groups in DC including from the Irish community,[38] the Italian community,[39] the Syrian community,[40] to name a few. Another significant Caucasian community from the Caucasus region in the District includes Armenian-Americans, with about 8,000 residents estimated in 2003.[41][circular reference] There are also an estimated 2,700 D.C. residents of Lebanese descent.[42]

Historically, European immigrant neighborhoods in DC have included the Irish neighborhoods of Swampoodle, currently known as NOMA (North of Massachusetts Ave), Brookland, German and Irish in Foggy Bottom and the West End during the latter part of the 19th century and the Italian neighborhood of Judiciary Square, that have since ceased to be primarily populated with residents from these ethnic groups. German-Jewish immigrants settled in the neighborhoods of Cleveland Park and Forest Hills and neighborhoods east of Rock Creek Park such as Petworth, Brightwood, and Crestwood at the beginning of the 20th century.[43] Greek immigrants settled in the downtown area of the District at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries and established the parish of Saint Sophia Greek Orthodox Church on 8th and L Streets NW.[44]

Hispanics and Latinos

Per the 2017 American Community Survey, the Hispanic population in DC is 76,526 (11% of the population).[45][46] The Hispanic population in the neighboring states of Maryland and Virginia is 742,000; 512,000 live in Virginia (9% of Virginia population)[47] and 230,000 living in Maryland (9.5 of Maryland population).[48] The largest Hispanic groups are Salvadoran (19,674 or 25.7% of District of Columbia's 76,526 Hispanics) and Mexicans (16,912 or 22.1%).[45] In 1976 Walter Washington, Mayor of the District of Columbia, created the Office of Latino Affairs of the District of Columbia. A near majority of DC Hispanics are from Northern Central America and Mexico, with Salvadorans making up the largest group in the city and the metropolitan area as a whole. There are also large numbers of Guatemalans, Hondurans, Dominicans, Puerto Ricans, Bolivians and Colombians.

The city's Caribbean Hispanic population, largely composed of Puerto Ricans and Dominicans, has grown significantly since 2000, increasingly mirroring major cities further north up the East Coast, though Salvadorans remain a plurality of the city's Hispanic residents. Indeed, there has been a significant in-migration of Puerto Ricans and Dominicans from those respective islands and nearby regions, since the early 2000's particularly from New York City, New Jersey, Philadelphia and Baltimore, due to the area's strong job market. The city's Puerto Rican population has notably surged since Hurricane Maria struck Puerto Rico, though it remains smaller than nearby Philadelphia and New York City.[49]

In general, Puerto Ricans tend to have higher English language proficiency and interethnic marriage rates, than other Hispanic groups. Indeed, many Caribbean Hispanics also have African ancestry and may choose to identify as African American or Afro-Latino such as Cuban American, D.C. native, Laz Alonso, in contrast to other cities such as Miami.[50] Many Hispanics live in the majority-Hispanic Mount Pleasant neighborhood and nearby Columbia Heights; however, a significant number live in majority-white or black neighborhoods or immigrant heavy areas such as Brightwood and Takoma. The DC Hispanic/Latino community is very diverse and somewhat scattered in some areas.

Asian immigration

Asian-American residents make up 3% of the total population of DC. This includes 16,788 foreign-born residents. Traditionally, Chinese immigrants congregated in what is now Penn Quarter, but most Chinese-Americans have relocated to nearby Rockville, Maryland, leaving mostly older residents in what is left of DC's Chinatown. The largest groups include Chinese at 0.9% of the population, followed by Indians at 0.9%, Filipinos at 0.5%, Koreans at 0.4%, and Vietnamese at 0.3%. Other smaller Asian groups include Japanese and Pakistanis.[51]

Languages

Language spoken at home by those aged 5+ (2021)[52]

  English (82.6%)
  Spanish (8.8%)
  Other Indo-European (4.0%)
  Asian & P.I. langs. (2.2%)
  Amharic, Arabic, other African, and others (2.5%)

The language most widely spoken at home in DC by those 5 years and older in 2021 was English (82.6%) followed by Spanish at 8.8%;[52] the District is 11.5% Hispanic,[53] of diverse origins including (as of 2019) Salvadoran (2.8%) Dominican (1.3%), Mexican (1.3%), and Puerto Rican (1.2%).[54]

4.0% speak other Indo-European languages at home including French (1.5%), Italian (0.3%), Russian (0.3%), Persian (0.2%), and Hindi (0.2%).[55]

2.2% speak an Asian or Pacific Island language at home including Chinese (0.8%), Tagalog (0.3%), Korean (0.2%), Japanese (0.1%), and Vietnamese (0.1%).[55]

2.5% speak a language of another origin at home including Amharic (1.2%), West African languages (0.4%), Arabic (0.3%), and Bantu languages (0.1%).[55]

2019 United States Census estimates

Racial Makeup of the District of Columbia (2019)[56]

  White alone (42.52%)
  Black alone (45.44%)
  Native American alone (0.27%)
  Asian alone (4.07%)
  Pacific Islander alone (0.03%)
  Some other race alone (4.37%)
  Two or more races (3.30%)

Racial Makeup of the District of Columbia excluding Hispanics from racial categories (2019)[56]
NH=Non-Hispanic

  White NH (37.29%)
  Black NH (44.15%)
  Native American NH (0.24%)
  Asian NH (4.02%)
  Pacific Islander NH (0.01%)
  Other race NH (0.34%)
  Two or more races NH (2.69%)
  Hispanic Any Race (11.26%)

According to 2019 US Census Bureau estimates, DC's population was 45.4% Black or African American, 42.5% White (37.3% Non-Hispanic White and 5.2% Hispanic White), 4.1% Asian, 4.4% Some Other Race, 0.3% Native American and Alaskan Native, 0.1% Pacific Islander and 3.3% from two or more races.[56]

The Black population remains the most prominent racial category in DC and includes 11.5% of Hispanics who self-identify as Black. The remainder of Hispanics self-identify as White (46.4%), Some Other Race (35.8%), Multiracial (5.4%), American Indian and Alaskan Native (0.3%), Asian (0.5%), and Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (0.1%).[56]

If Hispanics are treated as a separate category from race, DC's population was 44.2% Black or African American, 37.3% White Non-Hispanic, 11.3% Hispanic-Latino, 4.0% Asian, 0.3% Some Other Race, 0.2% Native American and Alaskan Native, 0.1% Pacific Islander and 2.7% from two or more races.[56]

White Americans remain the largest minority group at either 42.5% (including White Hispanics) or 37.3% (excluding White Hispanics).[56]

By ethnicity, 11.3% of the total population is Hispanic-Latino (of any race), and 88.7% is Non-Hispanic (of any race). If treated as a category separate from race, Hispanics are the third-largest minority group in DC.[56]

DC has a very diverse Hispanic population. The largest ancestry group of Hispanics in DC are of Salvadoran descent (24.4% of Hispanics) followed by Mexican descent (15.4%), Puerto Rican descent (7.7%), Dominican descent (7.4%), Cuban descent (6.0%), Colombian descent (5.9%), Guatemalan descent (4.7%), Honduran descent (3.7%), Nicaraguan descent (3.7%), Peruvian descent (3.2%), Venezuelan descent (2.7%), Panamanian descent (1.6%), Argentinian descent (1.5%), Costa Rican descent (1.2%), Uruguayan descent (1.1%), and those of other Hispanic ethnicity or of mixed Hispanic ethnicity (9.8%).[57]

Birth data

Note: Births in table do not correlate as Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race, giving a higher overall number.

Live Births by Single Race/Ethnicity of Mother
Race 2013[58] 2014[59] 2015[60] 2016[61] 2017[62] 2018[63] 2019[64] 2020[65]
Black 5,117 (55.1%) 5,026 (52.9%) 5,002 (52.2%) 4,804 (48.7%) 4,573 (47.8%) 4,252 (46.2%) 4,131 (45.5%) 3,992 (45.0%)
White: 3,629 (39.1%) 3,985 (41.9%) 4,061 (43.4%) ... ... ... ... ...
> non-Hispanic White 2,781 (29.9%) 2,966 (31.2%) 2,976 (31.1%) 3,071 (31.2%) 3,042 (31.8%) 3,040 (33.0%) 2,985 (32.9%) 2,947 (33.2%)
Asian 493 (5.3%) 482 (5.1%) 499 (5.2%) 436 (4.4%) 396 (4.1%) 444 (4.8%) 392 (4.3%) 393 (4.4%)
Native American 49 (0.5%) 16 (0.2%) 16 (0.2%) 8 (0.1%) 11 (0.1%) 15 (0.2%) 15 (0.2%) 8 (0.1%)
Hispanic (of any race) 1,247 (13.4%) 1,282 (13.5%) 1,327 (13.9%) 1,348 (13.7%) 1,336 (14.0%) 1,296 (14.1%) 1,354 (14.9%) 1,349 (15.2%)
Total District of Columbia 9,288 (100%) 9,509 (100%) 9,578 (100%) 9,858 (100%) 9,560 (100%) 9,212 (100%) 9,079 (100%) 8,874 (100%)
  • Since 2016, data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected, but included in one Hispanic group; persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race.

Literacy rate

A 2007 report found that about one-third of the District of Columbia residents are functionally illiterate, compared to a national rate of about one in five. This is attributed in part to immigrants who are not proficient in English.[66] A 2005 study showed that 85.16% of the District of Columbia residents age five and older speak only English at home and 8.78% speak Spanish. French is the third-most-spoken language at 1.35%.[67]

In contrast to the high rate of functional illiteracy, nearly 46% of D.C. residents 25 and older have at least a four-year college degree, and 25% have a graduate or professional degree.[22] In 2006, the District of Columbia residents had a median family income of $58,526. This has not changed much during the past five years.[24]

LGBT+ population

A 2012 Gallup Daily tracking poll found 10% of the residents in the District of Columbia were most likely to identify as LGBT+, the highest in the nation.[68]

A 2005 Williams Institute on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Law and Public Policy study estimated that 8.1% of the population of DC identified as LGB, the highest in the United States.[69]

The 2000 census revealed that an estimated 33,000 adults in the District of Columbia identify as gay, lesbian, or bisexual, about 8.1% of the District's adult population.[70]

Religious affiliation

Pew Research Center 2014 Religious Landscape Study on religion in the District of Columbia[71]
Affiliation % of the District of Columbia adult population
100 100
 
Christian 65 65
 
Historically Black Protestant 23 23
 
Catholic 20 20
 
Mainline Protestant 10 10
 
Evangelical Protestant 8 8
 
Mormon 2 2
 
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 1 1
 
Other Mormon 1 1
 
Orthodox Christian 1 1
 
Greek Orthodox 1 1
 
Unaffiliated/Religious "Nones" 25 25
 
Agnostic 6 6
 
Atheist 4 4
 
Nothing in particular 14 14
 
Nothing in particular (religion not important) 9 9
 
Nothing in particular (religion important) 6 6
 
Non-Christian faiths 9 9
 
Jewish 5 5
 
Muslim 2 2
 
Hindu 1 1
 
Other non-Christian faiths 1 1
 
Don't know 1 1
 

The Pew Research Center 2014 Religious Landscape Study found that between 17% to 25% of the adult population of the District of Columbia are non-theistic.[71]

Rather than surveying individuals, the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies surveys congregations as to their adherents. According to data from 2010, just under 50% of District of Columbia residents adhered to a Christian congregation (49.9%). Of all DC residents, 12.6% adhere to the Catholic Church, 6.2% to American Baptist, 4.4% to Southern Baptist, 3.1% to Episcopal, 2.2% to Eastern or Oriental, and 1.8% to Methodist.[72] Problematically, the "2010 reports contain incomplete counts of congregations and adherents belonging to the eight largest historically African-American denominations"; the ASARB data records 8.3% of residents adhering to a historically African-American denomination. However, as the population of the District of Columbia was 50.7% African-American in 2010, there may be a significant data gap.[73] Residents who follow Judaism composed 2.9% of the population, while those who practice Islam made up .6%. As survey respondents are congregations, the survey excludes the unchurched, atheists, and agnostics, as well as those who consider themselves religious but do not adhere.

Historic racial and ethnic makeup

Ethnic Makeup of the District of Columbia[8][74]
Year White
(includes
White Hispanics)
Non-Hispanic White Black Asian Native
Americans
Other Hispanic or Latino
(any race)
1800 69.6% - 30.4% - - - -
1810 66.9% - 33.1% - - - -
1820 68.8% - 31.2% - - - -
1830 69.9% - 30.1% - - - -
1840 70.9% - 29.1% - - - -
1850 73.4% - 26.6% - - - -
1860 80.9% - 19.1% - - - -
1870 67.0% - 33.0% - - - -
1880 66.4% - 33.6% - - - -
1890 67.1% - 32.8% - - - -
1900 68.7% - 31.1% 0.2% - - -
1910 71.3% - 28.5% 0.1% - - -
1920 74.7% - 25.1% 0.2% - - -
1930 72.7% - 27.1% 0.2% - - -
1940 71.5% 71.4% 28.2% 0.2% - - 0.1%
1950 64.6% - 35.0% 0.4% - - -
1960 45.2% - 53.9% 0.6% 0.1% 0.2% -
1970 27.7% 26.5% 71.1% 0.7% 0.1% 0.4% 2.1%
1980 26.9% 25.7% 70.3% 1.0% 0.2% 1.6% 2.8%
1990 29.6% 27.4% 65.8% 1.8% 0.2% 2.5% 5.4%
2000[75] 30.8% 27.8% 60.0% 2.7% 0.4% 3.8% 7.9%
2010[76] 40.2% 34.8% 50.7% 3.5% 0.3% 4.1% 9.1%
2017[46] 45.1% 36.8% 47.1% 4.3% 0.7% 2.7% 11.1%

Historical population

Historical Populations[b] [c]
Year Population Change
1800 8,144
1810 15,471 90.0%
1820 23,336 50.8%
1830 30,261 69.7%
1840 33,745 11.5%
1850 51,687 53.2%
1860 75,080 45.3%
1870 131,700 75.4%
1880 177,624 34.9%
1890 230,392 29.7%
1900 278,718 21.0%
1910 331,069 18.8%
1920 437,571 32.2%
1930 486,869 11.3%
1940 663,091 36.2%
1950 802,178 21.0%
1960 763,956 −4.8%
1970 756,510 −1.0%
1980 638,333 −15.6%
1990 606,900 −4.9%
2000 572,059 −5.7%
2010 601,723 5.2%
2020 689,545 14.6%
2021 Est. 670,050 −2.9%
Historical Population of each D.C. Jurisdiction[77][7]
Year Total[78] Washington
City
Georgetown Washington
County
Alexandria
County
[a]
1800 8,144 3,210 2,993 1,941 5,949
1810 15,471 8,208 4,948 2,315 8,552
1820 23,336 13,247 7,360 2,729 9,703
1830 30,261 18,826 8,441 2,994 9,573
1840 33,745 23,364 7,312 3,069 9,967
1850 51,687 40,001 8,366 3,320
1860 75,080 61,122 8,733 5,225
1870 131,700 109,199 11,384 11,117
1880 177,624 147,293 12,578 17,753
1890 230,392 188,932 14,040 27,414

See also

Notes

^[a] Alexandria was returned to the state of Virginia in 1846. See: District of Columbia retrocession
^[b] Data provided by (PDF). United States Census Bureau. 2002-09-13. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-07-26. Retrieved 2008-07-29. Until 1890, the U.S. Census Bureau counted the City of Washington, Georgetown, and unincorporated Washington County as three separate areas. The data provided in this article from before 1890 is calculated as if the District of Columbia were a single entity as it is today. To view the population data for each specific area before 1890 see: Gibson, Campbell (June 1998). "Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places in the United States: 1790 to 1990". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 2008-07-29.
^[c] Data provided by "New Vintage 2021 Population Estimates Available for the Nation, States and Puerto Rico". 2021-12-21.

References

  1. ^ Tara Lerman (July 26, 2017). "Let's stop saying nobody is actually from DC". GreaterGreaterWashington.org. Retrieved June 24, 2021.
  2. ^ Mike Maciag (December 13, 2018). "Made in D.C.: Which areas have the highest share of D.C.-born residents". DC Policy Center. Retrieved June 24, 2021.
  3. ^ Ally Schweitzer (October 19, 2017). "Who Says 'No One's From D.C.'? Not Black Washingtonians". WAMU. Retrieved June 24, 2021.
  4. ^ Richards, Mark David (November 2002). (PDF). DC Vote. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-01-17. Retrieved 2008-12-13.
  5. ^ Tavernise, Sabrina (2011-07-17). "Washington, D.C., Loses Black Majority". The New York Times.
  6. ^ "Population of the 24 Urban Places: 1790". United States Census Bureau. 1998-06-15. Retrieved 2008-12-13.
  7. ^ a b "Population of the 33 Urban Places: 1800". United States Census Bureau. 1998-06-15. Retrieved 2008-12-13.
  8. ^ a b c d (PDF). United States Census Bureau. 2002-09-13. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-07-26. Retrieved 2008-07-29.
  9. ^ "Population of the 100 Largest Urban Places: 1860". United States Census Bureau. 1998-06-15. Retrieved 2008-12-16.
  10. ^ Kolchin, Peter (1994). American Slavery: 1619-1877. New York: Hill and Wang. p. 81.
  11. ^ "Today in History: September 20". Library of Congress. 2007-09-18. Retrieved 2008-07-12.
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  41. ^ Armenian Americans
  42. ^ "Arab American community in Washington D.C."
  43. ^ https://www.jhsgw.org/exhibitions/online/jewishwashington/exhibition/neighborhoods
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demographics, washington, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, ava. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The District of Columbia is a federal district with an ethnically diverse population In 2020 the District had a population of 689 545 people with a resident density of 11 515 people per square mile The District of Columbia had relatively few residents until the Civil War The presence of the U S federal government in Washington has been instrumental in the city s later growth and development Its role as the capital leads people to forget that approximately one third of the District of Columbia s population was born in the city 1 2 3 4 In 2011 the District of Columbia s black population slipped below 50 percent for the first time in over 50 years 5 The District was a majority black district from the late 1950s through 2011 The District of Columbia has had a significant African American population since the District s creation several neighborhoods are noted for their contributions to black history and culture Like numerous other border and northern cities in the first half of the 20th century the District of Columbia received many black migrants from the South in the Great Migration African Americans moved north for better education and job opportunities as well as to escape legal segregation and lynchings Government growth during World War II provided economic opportunities for African Americans too In the postwar era the percentage of African Americans in the District steadily increased as its total population declined as a result of suburbanization supported by federal highway construction and white flight The black population included a strong middle and upper class Since the 2000 U S Census the District has added more than 120 000 residents and reversed some of the population losses seen in previous decades The growth is speeding up the population has increased more than 100 000 since the 2010 Census The proportion of white Asian and Hispanic residents has increased and the proportion of black residents has stagnated with the latter mostly moving to the suburbs Contents 1 History 2 Statistics 2 1 2020 census 2 2 Population 3 Ethnic composition 3 1 African Americans 3 2 African immigrants 3 3 Caribbean immigrants 3 4 European immigration 3 5 Hispanics and Latinos 3 6 Asian immigration 3 7 Languages 3 8 2019 United States Census estimates 3 8 1 Birth data 3 9 Literacy rate 3 10 LGBT population 4 Religious affiliation 5 Historic racial and ethnic makeup 6 Historical population 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesHistory EditSee also History of Washington D C LeDroit Park a neighborhood listed on the National Register of Historic Places The District of Columbia was established to host the new United States capital the City of Washington However there were already many settlements within the federal territory when it was created in 1790 Most important of these settlements were the cities of Georgetown founded in 1751 and Alexandria Virginia then included in the District founded in 1749 Together these two cities had most of the District s early residents The populations of each place were counted separately from that of the City of Washington until Alexandria was returned to Virginia in 1846 and until the District of Columbia was formed into a single entity in 1871 In 1790 Alexandria had a population of 2 748 6 By 1800 the City of Washington had a population of 3 210 Georgetown had 2 993 and Alexandria had 4 971 7 The District s population remained small in comparison to other major U S cities In 1860 directly before the Civil War the District had about 75 000 residents 8 far smaller than such major historical port cities as New York at 800 000 or Philadelphia at more than 500 000 9 It is notable that the District of Columbia had a large African American population even before the Civil War and most were free people of color not slaves Due to slaveholders manumission of slaves in the Upper South after the American Revolutionary War the free black population in those states climbed markedly from an estimated 1 before the war to 10 by 1810 10 Since many states did not permit free blacks to stay after gaining freedom they often relocated to the District in 1860 about 80 of the District s African American residents were free blacks 11 The Friendship Arch is at the center of Chinatown Following the Civil War the District s population jumped 75 to more than 130 000 8 The District of Columbia s population continued to grow throughout the late nineteenth century as Irish American German American and Jewish American immigrant communities formed in downtown areas Many immigrants escaping severe poverty and antisemitism moved to the US and found refuge in the District By 1900 the District s growth had spread to the more residential sections beyond the old Florida Avenue boundary line following the development of the District s streetcar lines along major arteries such as Pennsylvania Avenue SE Connecticut Avenue Wisconsin Avenue Georgia Avenue 14th Street and 16th Street By 1930 development within the District s boundaries was largely complete except for a few outlying areas in far Northeast and Southeast The District s population totaled just under 500 000 In response to the Great Depression in the 1930s President Franklin D Roosevelt s New Deal legislation expanded the bureaucracy in the District of Columbia World War II further increased government activity and defense contracting adding to the number of federal employees in the capital People came from across the country to work in wartime in the District of Columbia 12 By 1950 the District s population reached a peak of 802 178 residents 13 Shortly after that in a pattern repeated across the country the District began losing residents attracted to newer housing in the suburbs with commutes made easier by an expanded highway network outside the District Following social unrest and riots in the 1960s plus increasing crime by 1980 the District of Columbia had lost one quarter of its population 8 After the achievements of civil rights more of the District s middle class black population also moved to the suburbs The District s population continued to decline until the late 1990s Gentrification efforts started to transform the demographics of distressed neighborhoods 14 Recently a trend of growth since the 2000 U S Census provided the first rise in the District s population in 50 years 15 Statistics Edit2020 census Edit Racial Plurality by Ward Race by ward in DC per the 2010 US Census Race by ward in DC per the 2020 ACS Overall the city has become more White and less Black since 2010 Legend Non Hispanic White 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 Black or African American 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 Washington city District of Columbia Demographic Profile NH Non Hispanic Race Ethnicity Pop 2010 16 Pop 2020 17 2010 2020White alone NH 209 464 261 771 34 81 37 96 Black or African American alone NH 301 053 282 066 50 03 40 91 Native American or Alaska Native alone NH 1 322 1 277 0 22 0 19 Asian alone NH 20 818 33 192 3 46 4 81 Pacific Islander alone NH 216 349 0 04 0 05 Some Other Race alone NH 1 451 3 753 0 24 0 54 Mixed Race Multi Racial NH 12 650 29 485 2 10 4 28 Hispanic or Latino any race 54 759 77 652 9 10 11 26 Total 601 723 689 545 100 00 100 00 Note the US Census treats Hispanic Latino as an ethnic category This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category Hispanics Latinos can be of any race Population Edit Per the 2020 Census the District s population was 689 545 residents 18 continuing a trend of population growth in the District since the 2000 Census which recorded 572 059 residents 19 During the workweek the number of commuters from the suburbs into the city swells the District s population by an estimated 71 8 to a daytime population of over one million people 20 The Washington Metropolitan Area which includes the surrounding counties in Maryland and Virginia is the eighth largest in the United States with more than five million residents When combined with Baltimore and its suburbs the Baltimore Washington Metropolitan Area has a population exceeding eight million residents the fourth largest in the country 21 There were 281 475 households within the District in 2017 About 45 of those were householders living alone There were also 119 357 family households about 20 of homes had children under 18 Of those families with children 56 were those headed by a married couple The average household size was 2 32 and the average family size was 3 40 22 Ethnic composition EditDC is also home to people of more than 170 nationalities and ethnic groups making it one of the most diverse cities in the United States 23 In 2007 an estimated 74 000 immigrants lived in the District of Columbia 24 Major sources of immigration have included El Salvador Ethiopia Guatemala China Jamaica India the U K the Dominican Republic and the Philippines 25 A concentration of Salvadorans have settled in the Mount Pleasant neighborhood 26 Wards 1 and 4 have the highest percentages of immigrants in the city and the Brightwood neighborhood in Ward 4 has the highest percentage of immigrants of any neighborhood in D C 27 with only 46 percent of residents being born in the United States African Americans Edit D C has long been noted for its large though slightly declining African American population who form a plurality of the city s population Notable African American neighborhoods include Shaw LeDroit Park Sixteenth Street Heights and Anacostia among others In general African Americans show a strong concentration in areas east of Rock Creek park notably so in the city s Northeast and Southeast quadrants 28 In recent decades as traditional black neighborhoods are affected by gentrification many middle class and professional African Americans have moved to the suburbs mostly to Maryland Prince George s County Charles County Montgomery County and to a lesser extent Howard County and Frederick Maryland and Northern Virginia aggravated by the rising cost of living in the area 29 Black Americans have officially been the District s largest racial group since the 1960 Census In 1970 71 1 of the population identified as Black 30 But in recent years the number of European Americans in the District has increased 14 Since 2000 there has been a 7 3 decrease in the African American population and a 17 8 increase in the Caucasian population 19 Many African Americans have moved out of the District to the suburbs In addition a minority of African Americans are migrating to parts of the South notably North Carolina Georgia and Florida in a New Great Migration because of family ties retirement and lower cost of living Despite decline in the District regional black population growth continues due to robust migration from the Caribbean Africa and other parts of the United States Notable contributory states are New York New Jersey Pennsylvania and Michigan 31 African immigrants Edit Further information Ethiopians in Washington D C A section of Little Ethiopia in the Shaw neighborhood The metro DC area is the second most popular destination for African immigrants after New York City More than 192 000 African born people live in DC and nearby suburbs as of 2019 just shy of the 194 000 African born in New York 32 This includes Nigerians with 19 600 residents and Ghanaians with 18 400 33 By far the largest concentration of Ethiopians in the United States are found in D C and the local metro area Some conservative estimates put the number at around 75 000 residents In contrast other estimates are as high as 250 000 Ethiopians in DC and surrounding neighborhoods So heavy is the concentration of Ethiopian restaurants and shops in central Washington that a part of the Shaw neighborhood is known as Little Ethiopia Other notable groups include those from Egypt Morocco South Africa Cameroon and Kenya who tend to congregate in the regions suburban areas in contrast to the Ethiopian and Somalian communities which show a decided urban concentration in areas such as Shaw the U Street Corridor and Adams Morgan In general African migrants display higher education labor participation and English usage rates than other migrants to the US 32 Caribbean immigrants Edit According to a study by George Mason University there are an estimated 83 400 Caribbean born people living in the greater Washington DC area The largest numbers are from Jamaica 29 034 Trinidad and Tobago 16 154 the Dominican Republic 13 814 Haiti 8 114 and Cuba 6 599 34 Within the District itself there are 8 415 Caribbean born as of 2019 with much larger numbers found in Prince George s County MD 22 965 and Montgomery County MD 16 797 The West Indian population is largely concentrated in Petworth Manor Park Brightwood Park Edgewood Bloomingdale Shaw U Street Cardozo Adams Morgan and Brightwood with smaller numbers in the Northeast Northwest and Southeast quadrants 35 Though the number of West Indians balloons when considering those of West Indian ancestry many of whom have mixed with mostly African American or other Hispanic communities depending upon the time they arrived in the US The DC area has one of the largest Jamaican and anglophone Caribbean populations in the country though many West Indians are facing the same effects of gentrification as African Americans leading to a slow migration to the suburbs especially to Prince George s County 36 Though Jamaicans Cubans and anglophone Caribbeans represent the majority of West Indians in Washington there has been a significant growth in the number of Haitians and Dominicans in recent decades who are more thus more evenly distributed throughout the city and region and have lower citizenship and education rates than longer settled groups 36 European immigration Edit While the White population of DC represents 43 6 of the total part of this grouping includes a number of European born residents who range from expats to dual citizens There are 18 359 foreign born European DC residents 37 The largest groups include 2 407 from the United Kingdom 2 271 from Germany 2 103 from France and 899 from Italy There are also many diaspora groups in DC including from the Irish community 38 the Italian community 39 the Syrian community 40 to name a few Another significant Caucasian community from the Caucasus region in the District includes Armenian Americans with about 8 000 residents estimated in 2003 41 circular reference There are also an estimated 2 700 D C residents of Lebanese descent 42 Historically European immigrant neighborhoods in DC have included the Irish neighborhoods of Swampoodle currently known as NOMA North of Massachusetts Ave Brookland German and Irish in Foggy Bottom and the West End during the latter part of the 19th century and the Italian neighborhood of Judiciary Square that have since ceased to be primarily populated with residents from these ethnic groups German Jewish immigrants settled in the neighborhoods of Cleveland Park and Forest Hills and neighborhoods east of Rock Creek Park such as Petworth Brightwood and Crestwood at the beginning of the 20th century 43 Greek immigrants settled in the downtown area of the District at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries and established the parish of Saint Sophia Greek Orthodox Church on 8th and L Streets NW 44 Hispanics and Latinos Edit See also Hispanics and Latinos in Washington D C Per the 2017 American Community Survey the Hispanic population in DC is 76 526 11 of the population 45 46 The Hispanic population in the neighboring states of Maryland and Virginia is 742 000 512 000 live in Virginia 9 of Virginia population 47 and 230 000 living in Maryland 9 5 of Maryland population 48 The largest Hispanic groups are Salvadoran 19 674 or 25 7 of District of Columbia s 76 526 Hispanics and Mexicans 16 912 or 22 1 45 In 1976 Walter Washington Mayor of the District of Columbia created the Office of Latino Affairs of the District of Columbia A near majority of DC Hispanics are from Northern Central America and Mexico with Salvadorans making up the largest group in the city and the metropolitan area as a whole There are also large numbers of Guatemalans Hondurans Dominicans Puerto Ricans Bolivians and Colombians The city s Caribbean Hispanic population largely composed of Puerto Ricans and Dominicans has grown significantly since 2000 increasingly mirroring major cities further north up the East Coast though Salvadorans remain a plurality of the city s Hispanic residents Indeed there has been a significant in migration of Puerto Ricans and Dominicans from those respective islands and nearby regions since the early 2000 s particularly from New York City New Jersey Philadelphia and Baltimore due to the area s strong job market The city s Puerto Rican population has notably surged since Hurricane Maria struck Puerto Rico though it remains smaller than nearby Philadelphia and New York City 49 In general Puerto Ricans tend to have higher English language proficiency and interethnic marriage rates than other Hispanic groups Indeed many Caribbean Hispanics also have African ancestry and may choose to identify as African American or Afro Latino such as Cuban American D C native Laz Alonso in contrast to other cities such as Miami 50 Many Hispanics live in the majority Hispanic Mount Pleasant neighborhood and nearby Columbia Heights however a significant number live in majority white or black neighborhoods or immigrant heavy areas such as Brightwood and Takoma The DC Hispanic Latino community is very diverse and somewhat scattered in some areas Asian immigration Edit Asian American residents make up 3 of the total population of DC This includes 16 788 foreign born residents Traditionally Chinese immigrants congregated in what is now Penn Quarter but most Chinese Americans have relocated to nearby Rockville Maryland leaving mostly older residents in what is left of DC s Chinatown The largest groups include Chinese at 0 9 of the population followed by Indians at 0 9 Filipinos at 0 5 Koreans at 0 4 and Vietnamese at 0 3 Other smaller Asian groups include Japanese and Pakistanis 51 Languages Edit Language spoken at home by those aged 5 2021 52 English 82 6 Spanish 8 8 Other Indo European 4 0 Asian amp P I langs 2 2 Amharic Arabic other African and others 2 5 The language most widely spoken at home in DC by those 5 years and older in 2021 was English 82 6 followed by Spanish at 8 8 52 the District is 11 5 Hispanic 53 of diverse origins including as of 2019 Salvadoran 2 8 Dominican 1 3 Mexican 1 3 and Puerto Rican 1 2 54 4 0 speak other Indo European languages at home including French 1 5 Italian 0 3 Russian 0 3 Persian 0 2 and Hindi 0 2 55 2 2 speak an Asian or Pacific Island language at home including Chinese 0 8 Tagalog 0 3 Korean 0 2 Japanese 0 1 and Vietnamese 0 1 55 2 5 speak a language of another origin at home including Amharic 1 2 West African languages 0 4 Arabic 0 3 and Bantu languages 0 1 55 2019 United States Census estimates Edit Racial Makeup of the District of Columbia 2019 56 White alone 42 52 Black alone 45 44 Native American alone 0 27 Asian alone 4 07 Pacific Islander alone 0 03 Some other race alone 4 37 Two or more races 3 30 Racial Makeup of the District of Columbia excluding Hispanics from racial categories 2019 56 NH Non Hispanic White NH 37 29 Black NH 44 15 Native American NH 0 24 Asian NH 4 02 Pacific Islander NH 0 01 Other race NH 0 34 Two or more races NH 2 69 Hispanic Any Race 11 26 According to 2019 US Census Bureau estimates DC s population was 45 4 Black or African American 42 5 White 37 3 Non Hispanic White and 5 2 Hispanic White 4 1 Asian 4 4 Some Other Race 0 3 Native American and Alaskan Native 0 1 Pacific Islander and 3 3 from two or more races 56 The Black population remains the most prominent racial category in DC and includes 11 5 of Hispanics who self identify as Black The remainder of Hispanics self identify as White 46 4 Some Other Race 35 8 Multiracial 5 4 American Indian and Alaskan Native 0 3 Asian 0 5 and Hawaiian and Pacific Islander 0 1 56 If Hispanics are treated as a separate category from race DC s population was 44 2 Black or African American 37 3 White Non Hispanic 11 3 Hispanic Latino 4 0 Asian 0 3 Some Other Race 0 2 Native American and Alaskan Native 0 1 Pacific Islander and 2 7 from two or more races 56 White Americans remain the largest minority group at either 42 5 including White Hispanics or 37 3 excluding White Hispanics 56 By ethnicity 11 3 of the total population is Hispanic Latino of any race and 88 7 is Non Hispanic of any race If treated as a category separate from race Hispanics are the third largest minority group in DC 56 DC has a very diverse Hispanic population The largest ancestry group of Hispanics in DC are of Salvadoran descent 24 4 of Hispanics followed by Mexican descent 15 4 Puerto Rican descent 7 7 Dominican descent 7 4 Cuban descent 6 0 Colombian descent 5 9 Guatemalan descent 4 7 Honduran descent 3 7 Nicaraguan descent 3 7 Peruvian descent 3 2 Venezuelan descent 2 7 Panamanian descent 1 6 Argentinian descent 1 5 Costa Rican descent 1 2 Uruguayan descent 1 1 and those of other Hispanic ethnicity or of mixed Hispanic ethnicity 9 8 57 Birth data Edit Note Births in table do not correlate as Hispanics are counted both by their ethnicity and by their race giving a higher overall number Live Births by Single Race Ethnicity of Mother Race 2013 58 2014 59 2015 60 2016 61 2017 62 2018 63 2019 64 2020 65 Black 5 117 55 1 5 026 52 9 5 002 52 2 4 804 48 7 4 573 47 8 4 252 46 2 4 131 45 5 3 992 45 0 White 3 629 39 1 3 985 41 9 4 061 43 4 gt non Hispanic White 2 781 29 9 2 966 31 2 2 976 31 1 3 071 31 2 3 042 31 8 3 040 33 0 2 985 32 9 2 947 33 2 Asian 493 5 3 482 5 1 499 5 2 436 4 4 396 4 1 444 4 8 392 4 3 393 4 4 Native American 49 0 5 16 0 2 16 0 2 8 0 1 11 0 1 15 0 2 15 0 2 8 0 1 Hispanic of any race 1 247 13 4 1 282 13 5 1 327 13 9 1 348 13 7 1 336 14 0 1 296 14 1 1 354 14 9 1 349 15 2 Total District of Columbia 9 288 100 9 509 100 9 578 100 9 858 100 9 560 100 9 212 100 9 079 100 8 874 100 Since 2016 data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected but included in one Hispanic group persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race Literacy rate Edit A 2007 report found that about one third of the District of Columbia residents are functionally illiterate compared to a national rate of about one in five This is attributed in part to immigrants who are not proficient in English 66 A 2005 study showed that 85 16 of the District of Columbia residents age five and older speak only English at home and 8 78 speak Spanish French is the third most spoken language at 1 35 67 In contrast to the high rate of functional illiteracy nearly 46 of D C residents 25 and older have at least a four year college degree and 25 have a graduate or professional degree 22 In 2006 the District of Columbia residents had a median family income of 58 526 This has not changed much during the past five years 24 LGBT population Edit A 2012 Gallup Daily tracking poll found 10 of the residents in the District of Columbia were most likely to identify as LGBT the highest in the nation 68 A 2005 Williams Institute on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Law and Public Policy study estimated that 8 1 of the population of DC identified as LGB the highest in the United States 69 The 2000 census revealed that an estimated 33 000 adults in the District of Columbia identify as gay lesbian or bisexual about 8 1 of the District s adult population 70 Religious affiliation EditPew Research Center 2014 Religious Landscape Study on religion in the District of Columbia 71 Affiliation of the District of Columbia adult population100 100 Christian 65 65 Historically Black Protestant 23 23 Catholic 20 20 Mainline Protestant 10 10 Evangelical Protestant 8 8 Mormon 2 2 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints 1 1 Other Mormon 1 1 Orthodox Christian 1 1 Greek Orthodox 1 1 Unaffiliated Religious Nones 25 25 Agnostic 6 6 Atheist 4 4 Nothing in particular 14 14 Nothing in particular religion not important 9 9 Nothing in particular religion important 6 6 Non Christian faiths 9 9 Jewish 5 5 Muslim 2 2 Hindu 1 1 Other non Christian faiths 1 1 Don t know 1 1 The Pew Research Center 2014 Religious Landscape Study found that between 17 to 25 of the adult population of the District of Columbia are non theistic 71 Rather than surveying individuals the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies surveys congregations as to their adherents According to data from 2010 just under 50 of District of Columbia residents adhered to a Christian congregation 49 9 Of all DC residents 12 6 adhere to the Catholic Church 6 2 to American Baptist 4 4 to Southern Baptist 3 1 to Episcopal 2 2 to Eastern or Oriental and 1 8 to Methodist 72 Problematically the 2010 reports contain incomplete counts of congregations and adherents belonging to the eight largest historically African American denominations the ASARB data records 8 3 of residents adhering to a historically African American denomination However as the population of the District of Columbia was 50 7 African American in 2010 there may be a significant data gap 73 Residents who follow Judaism composed 2 9 of the population while those who practice Islam made up 6 As survey respondents are congregations the survey excludes the unchurched atheists and agnostics as well as those who consider themselves religious but do not adhere Historic racial and ethnic makeup EditThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information June 2022 Ethnic Makeup of the District of Columbia 8 74 Year White includesWhite Hispanics Non Hispanic White Black Asian NativeAmericans Other Hispanic or Latino any race 1800 69 6 30 4 1810 66 9 33 1 1820 68 8 31 2 1830 69 9 30 1 1840 70 9 29 1 1850 73 4 26 6 1860 80 9 19 1 1870 67 0 33 0 1880 66 4 33 6 1890 67 1 32 8 1900 68 7 31 1 0 2 1910 71 3 28 5 0 1 1920 74 7 25 1 0 2 1930 72 7 27 1 0 2 1940 71 5 71 4 28 2 0 2 0 1 1950 64 6 35 0 0 4 1960 45 2 53 9 0 6 0 1 0 2 1970 27 7 26 5 71 1 0 7 0 1 0 4 2 1 1980 26 9 25 7 70 3 1 0 0 2 1 6 2 8 1990 29 6 27 4 65 8 1 8 0 2 2 5 5 4 2000 75 30 8 27 8 60 0 2 7 0 4 3 8 7 9 2010 76 40 2 34 8 50 7 3 5 0 3 4 1 9 1 2017 46 45 1 36 8 47 1 4 3 0 7 2 7 11 1 Historical population EditHistorical Populations b c Year Population Change1800 8 144 1810 15 471 90 0 1820 23 336 50 8 1830 30 261 69 7 1840 33 745 11 5 1850 51 687 53 2 1860 75 080 45 3 1870 131 700 75 4 1880 177 624 34 9 1890 230 392 29 7 1900 278 718 21 0 1910 331 069 18 8 1920 437 571 32 2 1930 486 869 11 3 1940 663 091 36 2 1950 802 178 21 0 1960 763 956 4 8 1970 756 510 1 0 1980 638 333 15 6 1990 606 900 4 9 2000 572 059 5 7 2010 601 723 5 2 2020 689 545 14 6 2021 Est 670 050 2 9 Historical Population of each D C Jurisdiction 77 7 Year Total 78 WashingtonCity Georgetown WashingtonCounty AlexandriaCounty a 1800 8 144 3 210 2 993 1 941 5 9491810 15 471 8 208 4 948 2 315 8 5521820 23 336 13 247 7 360 2 729 9 7031830 30 261 18 826 8 441 2 994 9 5731840 33 745 23 364 7 312 3 069 9 9671850 51 687 40 001 8 366 3 320 1860 75 080 61 122 8 733 5 2251870 131 700 109 199 11 384 11 1171880 177 624 147 293 12 578 17 7531890 230 392 188 932 14 040 27 414See also EditArts and culture of Washington D C Miss District of Columbia USA Go go Washington D C hardcore Crime in Washington D C Notes Edit a Alexandria was returned to the state of Virginia in 1846 See District of Columbia retrocession b Data provided by District of Columbia Race and Hispanic Origin 1800 to 1990 PDF United States Census Bureau 2002 09 13 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 07 26 Retrieved 2008 07 29 Until 1890 the U S Census Bureau counted the City of Washington Georgetown and unincorporated Washington County as three separate areas The data provided in this article from before 1890 is calculated as if the District of Columbia were a single entity as it is today To view the population data for each specific area before 1890 see Gibson Campbell June 1998 Population of the 100 Largest Cities and Other Urban Places in the United States 1790 to 1990 United States Census Bureau Retrieved 2008 07 29 c Data provided by New Vintage 2021 Population Estimates Available for the Nation States and Puerto Rico 2021 12 21 References Edit Tara Lerman July 26 2017 Let s stop saying nobody is actually from DC GreaterGreaterWashington org Retrieved June 24 2021 Mike Maciag December 13 2018 Made in D C Which areas have the highest share of D C born residents DC Policy Center Retrieved June 24 2021 Ally Schweitzer October 19 2017 Who Says No One s From D C Not Black Washingtonians WAMU Retrieved June 24 2021 Richards Mark David November 2002 10 Myths About Washington DC PDF DC Vote Archived from the original PDF on 2006 01 17 Retrieved 2008 12 13 Tavernise Sabrina 2011 07 17 Washington D C Loses Black Majority The New York Times Population of the 24 Urban Places 1790 United States Census Bureau 1998 06 15 Retrieved 2008 12 13 a b Population of the 33 Urban Places 1800 United States Census Bureau 1998 06 15 Retrieved 2008 12 13 a b c d District of Columbia Race and Hispanic Origin 1800 to 1990 PDF United States Census Bureau 2002 09 13 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 07 26 Retrieved 2008 07 29 Population of the 100 Largest Urban Places 1860 United States Census Bureau 1998 06 15 Retrieved 2008 12 16 Kolchin Peter 1994 American Slavery 1619 1877 New York Hill and Wang p 81 Today in History September 20 Library of Congress 2007 09 18 Retrieved 2008 07 12 WWII Changes WETA Public Broadcasting 2001 Archived from the original on 2005 02 14 Retrieved 2008 09 25 Anniversary of Washington D C as Nation s Capital United States Census Bureau 2003 12 01 Archived from the original on 2008 02 07 Retrieved 2008 07 09 a b Washington s Black Majority Is Shrinking Associated Press 2007 09 16 Retrieved 2008 07 12 District of Columbia United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on 2020 02 12 Retrieved 2008 02 12 P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE 2010 DEC Redistricting Data PL 94 171 Washington city District of Columbia United States Census Bureau P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE 2020 DEC Redistricting Data PL 94 171 Washington city District of Columbia United States Census Bureau Washington city District of Columbia United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 30 2022 a b Census 2000 Demographic Profile Highlights United States Census Bureau 2001 Retrieved 2008 11 02 dead link Christie Les 2005 10 21 Biggest commuter cities CNNMoney com Retrieved 2008 06 03 Annual Estimates of the Population of Combined Statistical Areas United States Census Bureau 2008 03 27 Archived from the original XLS on 2009 07 09 Retrieved 2008 05 25 a b American Fact Finder United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on 2013 06 11 Retrieved 2019 11 23 DC Cultural Plan PDF a b District of Columbia Fact Sheet 2007 United States Census Bureau 2008 Archived from the original on 2020 02 11 Retrieved 2008 11 02 The Demographic Statistical Atlas of the United States Statistical Atlas statisticalatlas com Retrieved 2021 07 27 Singer Audrey et al 2001 The World in a Zip Code Greater Washington D C as a New Region of Immigration PDF The Brookings Institution The Demographic Statistical Atlas of the United States Statistical Atlas statisticalatlas com Retrieved 2021 07 27 Washington Was an Icon of Black Political Power Then Came Gentrification Politico Muhammad Nisa Islam D C exodus sparks district renewal efforts for Whites The Final Call June 21 2007 Accessed June 25 2007 Campbell Gibson and Kay Jung HISTORICAL CENSUS STATISTICS ON POPULATION TOTALS BY RACE 1790 TO 1990 AND BY HISPANIC ORIGIN 1970 TO 1990 FOR THE UNITED STATES REGIONS DIVISIONS AND STATES PDF United States Census Bureau William H Frey The New Great Migration Black Americans Return to the South 1965 2000 May 2004 pp 1 4 Archived April 28 2008 at the Wayback Machine accessed 19 Mar 2008 The Brookings Institution a b Sub Saharan African Immigrants in the United States 10 May 2022 Washington Post 10 1 14 The Caribbean Caribbean Immigrant Population in the Washington DC and Baltimore MD Metro Areas The Demographic Statistical Atlas of the United States Statistical Atlas a b https www immigrationresearch org system files Caribbean fact sheet pdf bare URL PDF Migration Policy Institute State Immigration Data Profiles 2014 Home irishnetwork dc com Home italianculturalsociety org Home washingtonsac org Armenian Americans Arab American community in Washington D C https www jhsgw org exhibitions online jewishwashington exhibition neighborhoods http www saintsophiadc com about history a b HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN BY SPECIFIC ORIGIN Universe District of Columbia U S Census Bureau July 1 2017 Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved October 11 2018 a b QuickFacts District of Columbia U S Census Bureau July 1 2017 Retrieved October 11 2018 https www census gov quickfacts table PST045215 51 accessible dead link MD Demographic Statistics Infoplease https public tableau com app profile centropr viz Socio DemographicDataofPuertoRicansintheUnitedStatesandPuertoRico2010 2021 PopSTY Puerto Rican Food Options Grow Alongside the Puerto Rican Diaspora in D C 21 December 2020 The Demographic Statistical Atlas of the United States Statistical Atlas statisticalatlas com Retrieved 2021 07 27 a b S1601 Language Spoken at Home 2021 ACS 1 year Estimates Subject Tables U S Census Bureau Retrieved January 24 2023 2021 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau Explore Census Data a b c The Demographic Statistical Atlas of the United States Statistical Atlas statisticalatlas com Retrieved 2021 02 22 a b c d e f g B03002 HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN BY RACE District of Columbia 2019 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau July 1 2019 Retrieved November 11 2020 B03001 HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN BY SPECIFIC ORIGIN District of Columbia 2018 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau July 1 2018 Retrieved January 28 2020 https www cdc gov nchs data nvsr nvsr64 nvsr64 01 pdf bare URL PDF https www cdc gov nchs data nvsr nvsr64 nvsr64 12 pdf bare URL PDF https www cdc gov nchs data nvsr nvsr66 nvsr66 01 pdf bare URL PDF https www cdc gov nchs data nvsr nvsr67 nvsr67 01 pdf bare URL PDF https www cdc gov nchs data nvsr nvsr67 nvsr67 08 508 pdf bare URL PDF Data PDF www cdc gov Retrieved 2019 12 02 Data PDF www cdc gov Retrieved 2021 03 27 Data PDF www cdc gov Retrieved 2022 02 20 Study Finds One Third in D C Illiterate Associated Press March 19 2007 Data Center Results District of Columbia Modern Language Association Archived from the original on 2009 07 22 Retrieved 2008 07 03 LGBT Percentage Highest in D C Lowest in North Dakota Gary J Gates PhD October 2006 Same sex Couples and the Gay Lesbian Bisexual Population New Estimates from the American Community Survey PDF The Williams Institute The Williams Institute Retrieved 30 June 2013 Romero Adam P Amanda Baumle M V Lee Badgett Gary J Gates December 2007 Census Snapshot Washington D C PDF The Williams Institute Archived from the original PDF on 2011 08 19 Retrieved 2008 05 27 a b Adults in the District of Columbia The Association of Religion Data Archives Maps amp Reports The Association of Religion Data Archives Maps and Reports Data Sources https www census gov population www documentation twps0076 DCtab pdf bare URL PDF Census 2000 Demographic Profile Highlights U S Census Bureau 2000 Archived from the original on 2020 02 10 Retrieved 2008 12 13 District of Columbia 2010 Census United States Census Bureau 2011 Archived from the original on 2011 03 24 Retrieved 2011 05 22 The District of Columbia was consolidated under a single government in 1871 For Data 1800 1870 before D C consolidation 1870 Census Information PDF United States Census Bureau p 12 Archived from the original on 27 March 2010 Retrieved 30 January 2022 Data 1880 1890 after D C consolidation 1890 Census Information United States Census Bureau Retrieved 2 June 2012 Excludes population of Alexandria County Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Demographics of Washington D C amp oldid 1135430876, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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