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Census Analysis Tracks 100 Years of Change |
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| At the start of
the 20th century, most of the U.S. population was male, under 23 years old,
lived outside metropolitan areas and rented their homes. Nearly half lived
in a household with five or more other persons. One hundred years later, most of the population was female, at least 35 years old, lived in metro areas and owned their homes. Most lived alone or in a household with one or two other people. These are some of the broad-scale changes included in a Census Bureau special report released today. The report analyzes data gathered in 11 censuses stretching from 1900 to 2000. The subjects covered are from the Census 2000 short-form questionnaire. Titled Demographic Trends in the 20th Century[PDF] and released during the bureau’s 100th anniversary year, the report tracks trends in population, housing and household data for the nation, regions and states. “Our goal was to produce a publication that appeals to people interested in the demographic changes that shaped our nation in the 20th century and to those interested in the numbers underlying those trends,” said Frank Hobbs, who co-authored the report with Nicole Stoops. “We hope it will serve as a valuable reference work for years to come.” Some highlights of the report: Population size and geographic distribution • The U.S. population grew by more than 205
million people during the century, more
than tripling from 76 million in 1900 to 281 million in 2000. • In every decade of the century, the West’s
population grew faster than the populations
of the other three regions. • Children under 5 years old represented the
largest five-year age group in 1990 and again
in 1950; but in 2000 the largest groups were 35 to 39 and 40 to 44. • From 1900 to 1960, the South had the highest
proportion of children under 15 and the
lowest proportion of people 65 and over, making it the country’s
“youngest” region. The West grabbed that title in the latter part of the century. • At the beginning of the century, 1-in-8 U.S.
residents was of a race other than white;
at the end of the century, the ratio was 1-in-4. • In 1950, for the first time, more than half of all occupied housing units were owned instead of rented. The homeownership rate increased until 1980, decreased slightly in the 1980s and then rose again to its highest level of the century in 2000 – 66 percent. • The 1930s was the only decade when the proportion of owner-occupied housing units declined in every region. The largest increase in homeownership rates for each region then occurred in the next decade when the economy recovered from the Depression and experienced post-World War II prosperity. • Between 1950 and 2000, married-couple households declined from more than three-fourths of all households to just over one-half. • The proportional share of one-person households
increased more than households of any other
size. In 1950, one-person households represented 1-in-10 households;
by 2000, they comprised 1-in-4. -X- |
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