African American Migration Patterns
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African American Migration Patterns
Based on Top Ranked States of Birth
These interactive maps provide a glimpse into the overall patterns of black migration in the United States between 1920 and 2010. One charts the movement of blacks from their states of origin to key destination cities in the North, the other follows the more recent movement in reverse to the South.
Between 1910 and 1970, more than 5 million blacks left the South for major cities in the North and West, including Pittsburgh, New York, Detroit, Chicago, St. Louis, and Los Angeles. Their departures were fueled in part by the availability of low skilled jobs in the burgeoning manufacturing industry after both World Wars. Other contributing factors included the drying up of southern agriculture jobs due to farm mechanization as well as the increasingly repressive social environment. In 1910 the nation’s largest black populations were in Georgia, Mississippi, and Alabama; in 1970 the largest black populations were in New York, Illinois, and California.
The last 45 years has seen a “reverse migration” of blacks, with large gains in “new south” metropolitan areas like Atlanta, Baltimore, Houston, and Charlotte. The slowdown in manufacturing employment and deteriorating race relations in the North, coupled with the postwar economic renaissance in southern cities, have brought new generations of blacks to a region that their grandparents and great grandparents sought to leave. Between 2000 and 2010, Atlanta led the nation in black population gains at the same time that New York, Chicago, Detroit, and Los Angeles registered declines.
—William H. Frey, PhD, demographer, sociologist, and author of Diversity Explosion: How New Racial Demographics are Remaking America (2015)
Migration Data
US Census Year | Born in Arkansas | Born in Mississippi |
---|---|---|
1920 | 3,788 | 16,470 |
1940 | 12,379 | 31,649 |
1970 | 47,800 | 110,000 |
Note: These figures show the number of black residents recorded during census years listed, as ranked by their southern state of birth.
US Census Year | Born in Mississippi | Born in Tennessee |
---|---|---|
1920 | 12,342 | 13,242 |
1940 | 48,168 | 28,117 |
1970 | 372,100 | 85,900 |
Note: These figures show the number of black residents recorded during census years listed, as ranked by their southern state of birth.
US Census Year | Born in Texas | Born in Louisiana |
---|---|---|
1920 | 3,634 | 2,019 |
1940 | 13,570 | 10,096 |
1970 | 161,500 | 147,000 |
Note: These figures show the number of black residents recorded during census years listed, as ranked by their southern state of birth.
US Census Year | Born in Alabama | Born in Georgia |
---|---|---|
1920 | 6,734 | 3,196 |
1940 | 10,805 | 10,244 |
1970 | 18,000 | 13,700 |
Note: These figures show the number of black residents recorded during census years listed, as ranked by their southern state of birth.
US Census Year | Born in North Carolina | Born in Georgia |
---|---|---|
1920 | 21,802 | 14,498 |
1940 | 57,270 | 50,875 |
1970 | 298,600 | 167,200 |
Note: These figures show the number of black residents recorded during census years listed, as ranked by their southern state of birth.
US Census Year | Born in Georgia | Born in Alabama |
---|---|---|
1920 | 12,121 | 8,514 |
1940 | 28,989 | 19,678 |
1970 | 92,500 | 135,500 |
Note: These figures show the number of black residents recorded during census years listed, as ranked by their southern state of birth.
Reverse Migration Data
US Census Year | Born in New York | Born in Michigan |
---|---|---|
1980 | 6,820 | 2,560 |
1990 | 17,876 | 8,577 |
2000 | 50,584 | 15,611 |
2010 | 69,940 | 21,721 |
Note: These figures show the number of black residents recorded during census years listed, as ranked by their non-southern state of birth.
US Census Year | Born in Pennsylvania | Born in New York |
---|---|---|
1980 | 740 | 2,540 |
1990 | 1,338 | 6,081 |
2000 | 3,320 | 13,059 |
2010 | 4,915 | 23,813 |
Note: These figures show the number of black residents recorded during census years listed, as ranked by their non-southern state of birth.
US Census Year | Born in California | Born in Illinois |
---|---|---|
1980 | 4,600 | 1,360 |
1990 | 5,891 | 3,527 |
2000 | 8,655 | 6,096 |
2010 | 14,388 | 6,774 |
Note: These figures show the number of black residents recorded during census years listed, as ranked by their non-southern state of birth.
US Census Year | Born in New York | Born in Pennsylvania |
---|---|---|
1980 | 6,960 | 6,100 |
1990 | 11,431 | 7,434 |
2000 | 17,079 | 9,029 |
2010 | 19,472 | 9,586 |
Note: These figures show the number of black residents recorded during census years listed, as ranked by their non-southern state of birth.
US Census Year | Born in Illinois | Born in Michigan |
---|---|---|
1980 | 3,760 | 680 |
1990 | 5,163 | 2,013 |
2000 | 7,860 | 2,425 |
2010 | 10,363 | 3,984 |
Note: These figures show the number of black residents recorded during census years listed, as ranked by their non-southern state of birth.
US Census Year | Born in New York | Born in Illinois |
---|---|---|
1980 | 1,860 | 420 |
1990 | 6,122 | 925 |
2000 | 13,025 | 1,918 |
2010 | 15,223 | 3,085 |
Note: These figures show the number of black residents recorded during census years listed, as ranked by their non-southern state of birth.
Source: William H. Frey, Brookings Institution, analysis of US Census Bureau’s Decennial Censuses, 1920-2000, and 2008-2012 American Community Survey, drawn from IPUMS-USA, University of Minnesota, www.ipums.org and American Community Survey Public Use Microfiles.