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The Danish American community in the Baltimore metropolitan area numbered 5,503 in 2000, making up 0.2% of the area's population. [13] In the same year Baltimore city's Danish population was 488, 0.1% of the city's population. [27] In 2011, immigrants from Denmark were the one hundred and seventeenth largest foreign-born population in Baltimore ...
In the 1790 census, the first census in the history of the United States, African American constituted 11.7% of Baltimore's population. 1,578 lived in Baltimore in that year. [4] From 1800 until 1840, African Americans were between a fifth and a quarter of Baltimore's population. The African-American population decreased in the 1850s to around 17%.
In the 1960 United States Census, Baltimore was home to 429 people born in Puerto Rico and 214 people born in Mexico. [3] As of the 2000 Census, the Spanish language was spoken at home by 17,805 people in Baltimore. [4] In the same year, 10,193 Latin American-born immigrants lived in Baltimore, comprising 34.4% of all foreign-born residents of ...
In the 2010 United States census, 29.6% of the population of Baltimore was white, a total population of 183,830 people. [9] In 2018, 30.3% of Baltimore was white and 27.6% was non-Hispanic white. [10] Baltimore's white population has been increasing in numbers since the 2010s. This is largely due to gentrification and an influx of white ...
As of the year 2019, Hispanics and Latinos of any race were 10.4% of the state's population. [1] The largest concentration of Hispanics/Latinos is in the National Capital Area, where Hispanics and Latinos constitute 16.04% of the total population (17.02% of Montgomery County and 14.94% of Prince George's County). [2]
Maryland's population increased by almost 5% from 2010 to 2019 to a little more than 6 million residents, according to newly released data from last year's Census. Baltimore City officials have ...
In 2009, more than one out of every ten immigrants in the Baltimore-Towson, MD metro area (14.5 percent) were immigrants from Africa. [3] As of 2010, there were 28,834 immigrants from Sub-Saharan Africa in Baltimore. [4] In February 2011, the Sudanese community of Baltimore numbered only 185 people.
In 2000, Jamaicans were the largest West Indian group in Baltimore making up 1% of the city's population. [5] In 2010, Puerto Ricans were 0.6% of Baltimore's population with 3,137 people. 0.2% were Dominican at 1,111 people, while 0.1% were Cuban at 824 people. In 1994, there were 30,000 West Indians in the Greater Baltimore area. [6]