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2010 United States census

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
23rd United States national census

Twenty-third census
of the United States

← 2000April 1, 20102020 →

Seal of the U.S. Census Bureau
2010 U.S. census logo
General information
CountryUnited States
Results
Total population308,745,538 (Increase 9.7%)
Most populous stateCalifornia (37,253,956)
Least populous stateWyoming (563,826)

The2010 United States census was the 23rdUnited States census. National Census Day, the reference day used for thecensus, was April 1, 2010.[1] The census was taken via mail-in citizen self-reporting, with enumerators serving to spot-check randomly selected neighborhoods and communities. As part of a drive to increase the count's accuracy, 635,000 temporary enumerators were hired.[2][3] The population of the United States was counted as 308,745,538,[4] a 9.7% increase from the2000 United States census. This was the first census in which all states recorded a population of over 500,000 people as well as the first in which all 100 largest cities recorded populations of over 200,000.

It was the first census since 1930 thatCalifornia did not record the largest population growth in absolute number.Texas surpassed California's growth by 4.3 million to 3.4 million.

Introduction

[edit]

As required by theUnited States Constitution, the U.S. Census has been conducted every 10 years since 1790. The2000 U.S. census was the previous census completed. Participation in the U.S. Census is required by law of people living in the United States inTitle 13 of the United States Code.[5]

On January 25, 2010,Census Bureau DirectorRobert Groves personally inaugurated the 2010 census enumeration by countingWorld War II veteran Clifton Jackson, a resident ofNoorvik, Alaska.[6] More than 120 million census forms were delivered by theU.S. Post Office beginning March 15, 2010.[7] The number of forms mailed out or hand-delivered by the Census Bureau was approximately 134 million on April 1, 2010.[8] Although the questionnaire used April 1, 2010, as the reference date as to where a person was living, an insert dated March 15, 2010, included the following printed in bold type: "Please complete and mail back the enclosed census form today."

The 2010 census national mail participation rate was 74%.[9] From April through July 2010, census takers visited households that didn't return a form, an operation called "non-response follow-up" (NRFU).

In December 2010, theU.S. Census Bureau delivered population information to theU.S. president forapportionment, and later in March 2011, completeredistricting data was delivered to states.[1]

Personally identifiable information will be available in 2082.[10]

Major changes

[edit]

The Census Bureau did not use a long form for the 2010 census.[11] In several previous censuses, one in six households received this long form, which asked for detailed social and economic information. The 2010 census used only a short form asking ten basic questions:[11]

  1. How many people were living or staying in this house, apartment, or mobile home on April 1, 2010?
  2. Were there any additional people staying here on April 1, 2010, that you did not include in Question 1? Mark all that apply: (checkboxes for: children; relatives; non-relatives; people staying temporarily; none)
  3. Is this house, apartment, or mobile home – [Checkboxes for owned with a mortgage, owned free and clear, rented, occupied without rent.]
  4. What is your telephone number?
  5. What is Person 1's name? (last, first)
  6. What is Person 1's sex? (male, female)
  7. What is Person 1's age and Person 1's date of birth?
  8. Is Person 1 of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin? (checkboxes for: "No", and several for "Yes" which specify groups of countries)
  9. What is Person 1's race? (checkboxes for 14 including "other". One possibility was "Black, African Am., or Negro")
  10. Does Person 1 sometimes live or stay somewhere else? (checkboxes for "No", and several locations for "Yes")

The form included space to repeat some or all of these questions for up to twelve residents total.

In contrast to the 2000 census, an Internet response option was not offered, nor was the form available for download.[11][12]

Detailed socioeconomic information collected during past censuses will continue to be collected through theAmerican Community Survey.[12] The survey provides data about communities in the United States on a 1-year or 3-year cycle, depending on the size of the community, rather than once every 10 years. A small percentage of the population on a rotating basis will receive the survey each year, and no household will receive it more than once every five years.[13]

In June 2009, the U.S. Census Bureau announced that it would countsame-sex married couples. However, the final form did not contain a separate "same-sex married couple" option. When noting the relationship between household members, same-sex couples who are married could mark their spouses as being "Husband or wife", the same response given by opposite-sex married couples. An "unmarried partner" option was available for couples (whether same-sex or opposite-sex) who were not married.[14]

The Census 2010 Language Program was significantly expanded. Language assistance in 49 languages in the 2000 Census was increased to 59 languages in Census 2000. In addition to English, Census questionnaire was available in five non-English languages: Spanish, Chinese (simplified), Korean, Vietnamese, and Russian.[15][16]

Cost

[edit]

The 2010 census cost $13 billion, approximately $42 per capita; by comparison, the 2010 census per-capita cost for China was about US$1 and for India was US$0.40.[17] Operational costs were $5.4 billion, significantly under the $7 billion budget.[18] In December 2010 theGovernment Accountability Office (GAO) noted that the cost of conducting the census has approximately doubled each decade since 1970.[17] In a detailed 2004 report toCongress, the GAO called on the Census Bureau to address cost and design issues, and at that time, had estimated the 2010 census cost to be $11 billion.[19]

In August 2010, Commerce SecretaryGary Locke announced that the censusoperational costs came in significantly under budget; of an almost $7 billion operational budget:[18]

  • $650 million was saved in the budget for the door-to-door questioning (NRFU) phase because 72% of households returned mailed questionnaires;
  • $150 million was saved because of lower-than-planned costs in areas including Alaska and tribal lands; and
  • the $800 million emergency fund was not needed.

Locke credited the management practices of Census Bureau directorRobert Groves, citing in particular the decision to buy additional advertising in locations where responses lagged, which improved the overall response rate. The agency also has begun to rely more on questioning neighbors or other reliable third parties when a person could not be immediately reached at home, which reduced the cost of follow-up visits. Census data for about 22% of U.S. households that did not reply by mail were based on such outside interviews, Groves said.[18]

Technology

[edit]

In 2005,Lockheed Martin won a six-year, $500 million contract to capture and standardize data for the census. The contract included systems, facilities, and staffing.[20] The final value of that contract was in excess of one billion dollars.[21] Information technology was about a quarter of the projected $11.3 billion cost of the decennial census.[22] The use of high-speed document scanning technology, such as ImageTrac scanners developed byIBML, helped Lockheed Martin complete the project on schedule and under budget.[23]

Due to the rise in social media and cell-phone usage in the U.S., the Census Bureau used research gathered through a cell-phone study in order to target media and adds to populations that were nonrespondents and promote census participation. This study also helped gauge the mindset of those who fail to respond, trying to figure out why.[24]

This was the first census to usehand-held computing devices withGPS capability, although they were only used for the address canvassing operation. Enumerators (information gatherers) that had operational problems with the device understandably made negative reports. During the 2009 Senate confirmation hearings forRobert Groves, President Obama's Census Director appointee, there was much mention of contracting problems but very little criticism of the units themselves.[25] The Census Bureau chose to conduct the primary operation, Non-Response Follow Up (NRFU), without using the handheld computing devices.[26][27]

Marketing and undercounts

[edit]

Due to allegations surrounding previous censuses that poor people and non-whites are routinely undercounted, for the 2010 census, the Census Bureau tried to avoid that bias by enlisting tens of thousands of intermediaries, such as churches, charities and firms, to explain to people the importance of being counted.[8]

There was a penalty of $100 for not completing some or all of the 2010 U.S. Census. Census Bureau director Robert Grove, however, wrote "the Census Bureau has rarely prosecuted failure to respond. While the rationale for the mandatory nature of the census still applies today, our message for the 2010 Census is about the common good benefits of participation".[28] The fine for non-participation is much lower than that for reporting false information. In 2010, that penalty was $500.[29]

TheAssociation of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) was given a contract to help publicize the importance of the census count and to encourage individuals to fill out their forms. In September 2009, aftercontroversial undercover videos showing four ACORN staffers giving tax advice to a man and a woman posing as a prostitute, the bureau canceled ACORN's contract.[30] Various American celebrities, includingDemi Lovato andEva Longoria,[31] were used inpublic service announcements targeting younger people to fill out census forms.Wilmer Valderrama andRosario Dawson have helped spread census awareness among young Hispanics, a historically low participating ethnicity in the U.S. census.[32] RapperLudacris also participated in efforts to spread awareness of the 2010 census.[33]

The Census Bureau hired about 635,000 people to find those U.S. residents who had not returned their forms by mail; as of May 28, 2010, 113 census workers had been victims of crime while conducting the census.[3][needs update] As of June 29, there were 436 incidents involving assaults or threats against enumerators, more than double the 181 incidents in2000; one enumerator, attempting to hand-deliver the census forms to aHawaii County police officer, was arrested for trespassing – the officer's fellow policemen made the arrest.[2]

Some political conservatives and libertarians questioned the validity of the questions and even encouraged people to refuse to answer questions for privacy and constitutional reasons.[34]Michele Bachmann, a former conservativeRepublicanRepresentative fromMinnesota, stated that she would not fill out her census form other than to indicate the number of people living in her household because "the Constitution doesn't require any information beyond that."[35] Former Republican representative andLibertarian presidential candidateBob Barr stated that the census has become too intrusive, going beyond the mere enumeration (i.e., count) intended by the framers of the U.S. Constitution.[36] According to political commentatorJuan Williams, "Census participation rates have been declining since 1970, and if conservatives don't participate, doubts about its accuracy and credibility may become fatal."[34]

As a result, the Census Bureau undertook an unprecedented advertising campaign targeted at encouraging white political conservatives to fill out their forms, in the hope of avoiding an undercount of this group. The 2010 U.S. census was the primary sponsor at NASCAR races in Atlanta, Bristol, and Martinsville, and sponsored the No. 16Ford Fusion driven byGreg Biffle for part of the season, because of a marketing survey that indicated most NASCAR fans lean politically conservative.[34] It also ran an advertisement during the2010 Super Bowl, and hired singerMarie Osmond, who is thought to have many conservative fans, to publicize the census.[34]

Reapportionment

[edit]
Allocation ofU.S. congressional districts following the 2010 census
The 435 seats of theHouse grouped by state, as apportioned after the 2010 census

The results of the 2010 census determined the number of seats that each state received in theUnited States House of Representatives starting with the2012 elections. Consequently, this affected the number of votes each state had in theElectoral College for the2012 presidential election.

Because of population changes, eighteen states had changes in their number of seats. Eight states gained at least one seat, and ten states lost at least one seat. The final result involved 12 seats being switched.[37]

Gained four seatsGained two seatsGained one seatLost one seatLost two seats
TexasFloridaArizona
Georgia
Nevada
South Carolina
Utah
Washington
Illinois
Iowa
Louisiana
Massachusetts
Michigan
Missouri
New Jersey
Pennsylvania
New York
Ohio

Controversies

[edit]

Some objected to the counting of persons who are in the United States illegally.[38][39] SenatorsDavid Vitter (R-LA) andBob Bennett (R-UT) tried unsuccessfully to add questions on immigration status to the census form.[8]

Organizations such as thePrison Policy Initiative argued that the census counts of incarcerated men and women as residents of prisons, rather than of their pre-incarceration addresses, skewed political clout and resulted in misleading demographic and population data.[40] Many residents of prisons counted on the 2010 census were those who identify as Black and Hispanic. This could lead to the loss of resources for underserved minority communities.[41]

The term "Negro" was used in the questionnaire as one of the options forAfrican Americans (Question 9. What is Person (number)'s race? ...Black, African Am., or Negro) as a choice to describe one's race. Census Bureau spokesman Jack Martin explained that "many older African-Americans identified themselves that way, and many still do. Those who identify themselves as Negroes need to be included."[42][43] The word was also used in the 2000 census, with over 56,000 people identifying themselves as "Negro".[44] In response to complaints over the word's inclusion on the 2010 census, the Census Bureau announced in 2013 that it would stop using "Negro" going forward, with the 2014American Community Survey census form being the first without the word.[45]

The 2010 census contained ten questions about age, gender, ethnicity, home ownership, and household relationships. Six of the ten questions were to be answered for each individual in the household. Federal law has provisions for fining those who refuse to complete the census form.[46]

Detroit MayorDave Bing held a press conference on March 22, 2011, to announce that the city would challenge its census results.[47] The challenge, being led by the city's planning department, cited an inconsistency as an example showing a downtown census tract which lost only 60 housing units, but 1,400 people, implying that a downtown jail or dormitory was missed in canvassing.[48]

NYC MayorMichael Bloomberg held a conference on March 27, 2011, to announce that the city would also challenge his city's census results, specifically the apparent undercounting in the boroughs ofQueens andBrooklyn.[49] Bloomberg said that the numbers for Queens and Brooklyn, the two most populous boroughs, are implausible.[50] According to the census, they grew by only 0.1% and 1.6%, respectively, while the other boroughs grew by between 3% and 5%. He also stated that the census showed improbably high numbers of vacant housing in vital neighborhoods such asJackson Heights, Queens.

TheDistrict of Columbia announced in August 2011 that it would also challenge its census results. The Mayor's Office claimed that the detailed information provided for 549 census blocks is "nonsensical", listing examples of census data that show housing units located in the middle of a street that does not actually exist. However, officials do not believe the city's total population will drastically change as a result of the challenge.[51]

State rankings

[edit]
See also:List of U.S. states and territories by population

The state with the highest percentage rate of growth wasNevada, while the state with the largest population increase wasTexas.[52]Michigan, the 8th largest by population, was the only state to lose population (althoughPuerto Rico, aU.S. territory, lost population as well), and theDistrict of Columbia saw its first gain since the 1950s.[53] The resident populations listed below do not include people living overseas. For Congressional apportionment, the sum of a state's resident population and its population of military personnel and federal contractors living overseas (but not other citizens overseas, such as missionaries or expatriate workers) is used.[54]

A map showing the population change of each US State by percentage.
Population and population change in the United States by state
RankStatePopulation as of
2010 census
Population as of
2000 census[55]
ChangePercent
change
1 California37,253,95633,871,6483,382,308Increase10.0%Increase
2 Texas25,145,56120,851,8204,293,741Increase20.6%Increase
3 New York19,378,10218,976,457401,645Increase2.1%Increase
4 Florida18,801,31015,982,3782,818,932Increase17.6%Increase
5 Illinois12,830,63212,419,293411,339Increase3.3%Increase
6 Pennsylvania12,702,37912,281,054421,325Increase3.4%Increase
7 Ohio11,536,50411,353,140183,364Increase1.6%Increase
8 Michigan9,883,6409,938,444−54,804Decrease−0.6%Decrease
9 Georgia9,687,6538,186,4531,501,200Increase18.3%Increase
10 North Carolina9,535,4838,049,3131,486,170Increase18.5%Increase
11 New Jersey8,791,8948,414,350377,544Increase4.5%Increase
12 Virginia8,001,0247,078,515922,509Increase13.0%Increase
13 Washington6,724,5405,894,121830,419Increase14.1%Increase
14 Massachusetts6,547,6296,349,097198,532Increase3.1%Increase
15 Indiana6,483,8026,080,485403,317Increase6.6%Increase
16 Arizona6,392,0175,130,6321,261,385Increase24.6%Increase
17 Tennessee6,346,1055,689,283656,822Increase11.5%Increase
18 Missouri5,988,9275,595,211393,716Increase7.0%Increase
19 Maryland5,773,5525,296,486477,066Increase9.0%Increase
20 Wisconsin5,686,9865,363,675323,311Increase6.0%Increase
21MinnesotaMinnesota5,303,9254,919,479384,446Increase7.8%Increase
22 Colorado5,029,1964,301,261727,935Increase16.9%Increase
23 Alabama4,779,7364,447,100332,636Increase7.5%Increase
24 South Carolina4,625,3644,012,012613,352Increase15.3%Increase
25 Louisiana4,533,3724,468,97664,396Increase1.4%Increase
26 Kentucky4,339,3674,041,769297,598Increase7.4%Increase
27 Oregon3,831,0743,421,399409,675Increase12.0%Increase
28 Oklahoma3,751,3513,450,654300,697Increase8.7%Increase
29 Connecticut3,574,0973,405,565168,532Increase4.9%Increase
30 Iowa3,046,3552,926,324120,031Increase4.1%Increase
31 Mississippi2,967,2972,844,658122,639Increase4.3%Increase
32 Arkansas2,915,9182,673,400242,518Increase9.1%Increase
33 Kansas2,853,1182,688,418164,700Increase6.1%Increase
34 Utah2,763,8852,233,169530,716Increase23.8%Increase
35 Nevada2,700,5511,998,257702,294Increase35.1%Increase
36 New Mexico2,059,1791,819,046240,133Increase13.2%Increase
37 West Virginia1,852,9941,808,34444,650Increase2.5%Increase
38 Nebraska1,826,3411,711,263115,078Increase6.7%Increase
39 Idaho1,567,5821,293,953273,629Increase21.1%Increase
40 Hawaii1,360,3011,211,537148,764Increase12.3%Increase
41 Maine1,328,3611,274,92353,438Increase4.2%Increase
42 New Hampshire1,316,4701,235,78680,684Increase6.5%Increase
43 Rhode Island1,052,5671,048,3194,248Increase0.4%Increase
44 Montana989,415902,19587,220Increase9.7%Increase
45 Delaware897,934783,600114,334Increase14.6%Increase
46 South Dakota814,180754,84459,336Increase7.9%Increase
47 Alaska710,231626,93283,299Increase13.3%Increase
48 North Dakota672,591642,20030,391Increase4.7%Increase
49 Vermont625,741608,82716,914Increase2.8%Increase
 District of Columbia601,723572,05929,664Increase5.2%Increase
50 Wyoming563,626493,78269,844Increase14.1%Increase
  United States308,745,538281,421,90627,323,632Increase9.7%Increase

Metropolitan rankings

[edit]
See also:List of metropolitan statistical areas

These are core metropolitan rankings versus combined statistical areas. For full list with current data, go tometropolitan statistics.

The top 25 metropolitan statistical areas of the United States of America

RankMetropolitan statistical area2010 censusEncompassing combined statistical area
1New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ-PA Metropolitan Statistical Area19,567,410New York-Newark, NY-NJ-CT-PA Combined Statistical Area
2Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA Metropolitan Statistical Area12,828,837Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA Combined Statistical Area
3Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN-WI Metropolitan Statistical Area9,461,105Chicago-Naperville, IL-IN-WI Combined Statistical Area
4Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX Metropolitan Statistical Area6,426,214Dallas-Fort Worth, TX-OK Combined Statistical Area
5Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD Metropolitan Statistical Area5,965,343Philadelphia-Reading-Camden, PA-NJ-DE-MD Combined Statistical Area
6Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, TX Metropolitan Statistical Area5,920,416Houston-The Woodlands, TX Combined Statistical Area
7Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV Metropolitan Statistical Area5,636,232Washington-Baltimore-Arlington, DC-MD-VA-WV-PA Combined Statistical Area
8Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL Metropolitan Statistical Area5,564,635Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Port St. Lucie, FL Combined Statistical Area
9Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell, GA Metropolitan Statistical Area5,286,728Atlanta–Athens-Clarke County–Sandy Springs, GA Combined Statistical Area
10Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH Metropolitan Statistical Area4,552,402Boston-Worcester-Providence, MA-RI-NH-CT Combined Statistical Area
11San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont, CA Metropolitan Statistical Area4,335,391San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland, CA Combined Statistical Area
12Detroit-Warren-Dearborn, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area4,296,250Detroit-Warren-Ann Arbor, MI Combined Statistical Area
13Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA Metropolitan Statistical Area4,224,851Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA Combined Statistical Area
14Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, AZ Metropolitan Statistical Area4,192,887
15Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA Metropolitan Statistical Area3,439,809Seattle-Tacoma, WA Combined Statistical Area
16Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI Metropolitan Statistical Area3,348,859Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN-WI Combined Statistical Area
17San Diego-Carlsbad, CA Metropolitan Statistical Area3,095,313
18St. Louis, MO-IL Metropolitan Statistical Area2,787,701St. Louis-St. Charles-Farmington, MO-IL Combined Statistical Area
19Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL Metropolitan Statistical Area2,783,243
20Baltimore-Columbia-Towson, MD Metropolitan Statistical Area2,710,489Washington-Baltimore-Arlington, DC-MD-VA-WV-PA Combined Statistical Area
21Denver-Aurora-Lakewood, CO Metropolitan Statistical Area2,543,482Denver-Aurora, CO Combined Statistical Area
22Pittsburgh, PA Metropolitan Statistical Area2,356,285Pittsburgh-New Castle-Weirton, PA-OH-WV Combined Statistical Area
23Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, OR-WA Metropolitan Statistical Area2,226,009Portland-Vancouver-Salem, OR-WA Combined Statistical Area
24Charlotte-Concord-Gastonia, NC-SC Metropolitan Statistical Area2,217,012Charlotte-Concord, NC-SC Combined Statistical Area
25San Antonio-New Braunfels, TX Metropolitan Statistical Area2,142,508

City rankings

[edit]
See also:List of United States cities by population
The 10 most populouscities of the United States (2010 census)
1. New York
2. Los Angeles
3. Chicago
4. Houston
5. Philadelphia
6. Phoenix
7. San Antonio
8. San Diego
9. Dallas
10. San Jose
RankCityStatePopulationLand area
(square miles)
Population density
(per square mile)
Region
1New YorkNew York8,175,133302.627,016.3Northeast
2Los AngelesCalifornia3,792,621468.78,091.8West
3ChicagoIllinois2,695,598227.611,843.6Midwest
4HoustonTexas2,099,451599.63,502.8Southwest
5PhiladelphiaPennsylvania1,526,006134.111,379.6Northeast
6PhoenixArizona1,445,632516.72,797.8Southwest
7San AntonioTexas1,327,407460.92,880.0Southwest
8San DiegoCalifornia1,307,402325.24,020.3West
9DallasTexas1,197,816340.53,517.8Southwest
10San JoseCalifornia945,942176.55,359.4West
11JacksonvilleFlorida821,784747.01,100.1Southeast
12IndianapolisIndiana820,445361.42,270.2Midwest
13San FranciscoCalifornia805,23546.917,169.2West
14AustinTexas790,390297.92,653.2Southwest
15ColumbusOhio787,033217.23,623.5Midwest
16Fort WorthTexas741,206339.82,181.3Southwest
17CharlotteNorth Carolina731,424297.72,456.9Southeast
18DetroitMichigan713,777138.85,142.5Midwest
19El PasoTexas649,121255.22,543.6Southwest
20MemphisTennessee646,889315.12,053.0Southeast
21BaltimoreMaryland620,96180.97,675.7Northeast
22BostonMassachusetts617,59448.312,786.6Northeast
23SeattleWashington608,66083.97,254.6West
24WashingtonDistrict of Columbia601,72361.09,864.3Northeast
25NashvilleTennessee601,222475.11,265.5Southeast
26DenverColorado600,158153.03,922.6West
27LouisvilleKentucky597,337385.091,551.2Southeast
28MilwaukeeWisconsin594,83396.16,189.7Midwest
29PortlandOregon583,776134.34,346.8West
30Las VegasNevada583,756135.84,298.6West
31Oklahoma CityOklahoma579,999606.4956.5Southwest
32AlbuquerqueNew Mexico545,852187.72,908.1Southwest
33TucsonArizona520,116226.72,294.3Southwest
34FresnoCalifornia494,665112.04,416.7West
35SacramentoCalifornia466,48897.94,764.9West
36Long BeachCalifornia462,25750.39,190.0West
37Kansas CityMissouri459,787315.01,459.6Midwest
38MesaArizona439,041136.53,216.4Southwest
39Virginia BeachVirginia437,994249.01,759.0Southeast
40AtlantaGeorgia420,003133.23,153.2Southeast
41Colorado SpringsColorado416,427194.52,141.0West
42OmahaNebraska408,958127.13,217.6Midwest
43RaleighNorth Carolina403,892142.92,826.4Southeast
44MiamiFlorida399,45735.911,126.9Southeast
45ClevelandOhio396,81577.75,107.0Midwest
46San JuanPuerto Rico395,32647.98,253.1Territories
47TulsaOklahoma391,906196.81,991.4Southwest
48OaklandCalifornia390,72455.87,002.2West
49MinneapolisMinnesota382,57854.07,084.8Midwest
50WichitaKansas382,368159.32,400.3Midwest
51ArlingtonTexas365,43895.93,810.6Southwest
52BakersfieldCalifornia347,483142.22,443.6West
53New OrleansLouisiana343,829169.42,029.7Southeast
54HonoluluHawaii337,25660.55,574.5West
55AnaheimCalifornia336,26549.86,752.3West
56TampaFlorida335,709113.42,960.4Southeast
57AuroraColorado325,078154.72,101.3West
58Santa AnaCalifornia324,52827.311,887.5West
59Saint LouisMissouri319,29461.95,158.2Midwest
60PittsburghPennsylvania305,70455.45,518.1Northeast
61Corpus ChristiTexas305,215160.61,900.5Southwest
62RiversideCalifornia303,87181.13,746.9West
63CincinnatiOhio296,94377.93,811.8Midwest
64LexingtonKentucky295,803283.61,043.0Southeast
65AnchorageAlaska291,8261,704.7171.2West
66StocktonCalifornia291,70761.74,727.8West
67ToledoOhio287,20880.73,559.0Midwest
68Saint PaulMinnesota285,06852.05,482.1Midwest
69NewarkNew Jersey277,14024.211,452.1Northeast
70GreensboroNorth Carolina269,666126.52,131.7Southeast
71BuffaloNew York261,31040.46,468.1Northeast
72PlanoTexas259,84171.63,629.1Southwest
73LincolnNebraska258,37989.12,899.9Midwest
74HendersonNevada257,729107.72,393.0West
75Fort WayneIndiana253,691110.62,293.8Midwest
76Jersey CityNew Jersey247,59714.816,729.5Northeast
77Saint PetersburgFlorida244,76961.73,967.1Southeast
78Chula VistaCalifornia243,91649.64,917.7West
79NorfolkVirginia242,80354.14,488.0Southeast
80OrlandoFlorida238,300102.42,327.1Southeast
81ChandlerArizona236,12364.43,666.5Southwest
82LaredoTexas236,09188.92,655.7Southwest
83MadisonWisconsin233,20976.83,036.6Midwest
84Winston-SalemNorth Carolina229,617132.41,734.3Southeast
85LubbockTexas229,573122.41,875.6Southwest
86Baton RougeLouisiana229,49376.92,984.3Southeast
87DurhamNorth Carolina228,330107.42,126.0Southeast
88GarlandTexas226,87657.13,973.3Southwest
89GlendaleArizona226,72160.03,778.7Southwest
90RenoNevada225,221103.02,186.6West
91HialeahFlorida224,66921.510,449.7Southeast
92ChesapeakeVirginia222,209340.8652.0Southeast
93ScottsdaleArizona217,385183.91,182.1Southwest
94North Las VegasNevada216,961101.32,141.8West
95IrvingTexas216,29067.03,228.2Southwest
96FremontCalifornia214,08977.52,762.4West
97IrvineCalifornia212,37566.13,212.9West
98BirminghamAlabama212,237146.11,452.7Southeast
99RochesterNew York210,56535.85,881.7Northeast
100San BernardinoCalifornia209,92459.23,546.0West

Locations of 50 most populous cities

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See also

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References

[edit]
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