U.S. Census Bureau
U.S. Department of Commerce News

                       FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
                       MONDAY, APRIL 2, 2001

                                                                 
Decennial Media Relations                                    CB01-CN.66
301-457-3691/301-457-3620 (fax)
301-457-1037 (TDD)
e-mail: 2000usa@census.gov

Frederick Broome
301-457-1056

          2000 U.S. Population Centered in Phelps County, Mo. 
                                
   The area around Edgar Springs, Mo., now shares an honor known only to
21 other U.S. communities, Census Bureau officials announced today. The
Edgar Springs area is the new U.S. population center.

    The center is in Phelps County [pdf], approximately 2.8 miles east of 
Edgar Springs, a rural community whose population totaled 190, according to 
Census 2000. This point is approximately 12.1 miles south and 32.5 miles 
west of the 1990 center of population, which was 9.7 miles southeast of 
Steelville, Mo.

   Each decade, after it tabulates the decennial census, the Census Bureau
calculates the center of population. The center is determined as the place
where an imaginary, flat, weightless and rigid map of the United States
would balance perfectly if all 281,421,906 residents were of identical
weight.

   For Census 2000, the center of population is at 37.696987 latitude and
91.809567 longitude.

   Historically, the center of population has followed a trail that
reflects the sweep of the nation's brush stroke across America's
population canvas. The sweep reflects the settling of the frontier, waves
of immigration and the migration west and south. Since 1790, the location
has moved in a westerly, then a more southerly pattern. The new center of
population is now more than 1,000 miles from the first center in 1790,
which was located near Chestertown, Md.

   In 1980, the center of population was near DeSoto, Mo., 39.5 miles
northeast of the 1990 location.

   Following the 1950, 1960 and 1970 censuses, the center of population
was situated in Illinois: Mascoutah in 1970, Centralia in 1960 and Olney
in 1950.

   Indiana had the distinction for the previous six decades, from 1890 to
1940. The cities or towns included: Carlisle (1940), Linton (1930),
Spencer (1920), Bloomington (1910), Columbus (1900) and Greensburg (1890).

   Covington, Ky., was the population center in 1880.

   Portsmouth and Hillsboro, Ohio, were the centerpieces in 1870 and 1860,
respectively.

   In what is now West Virginia, the fulcrum for the nation's balance from
1830 to 1850 was centered at Parkersburg, Clarksburg and Petersburg, 
respectively. West Virginia became a separate state in 1863.  Until then
it was part of Virginia.

   Moorefield (1820) and Leesburg (1810), Va., provided the balance during
the previous two censuses.

   Following the second decennial census in 1800, Baltimore, Md., was
determined to be the center of population.

   Each state's center of population                                
                               -X-


Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
301-763-3030

Last Revised: October 16, 2002 at 03:36:33 PM

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