
The nation's African American population totaled an estimated
53.5 million as of Jan 2008, including the 5% undercount at each adult age level. It comprised 12.98 percent of the total
population. Since Jan. 1, 1998, the African American population has increased 14.65 percent while the total U.S. population
grew 8.49 percent (15.12% if you include the undocumented hispanic population). The nation's African American population
is young, with an estimated median age of 31.20 years as of Jan. 1, 2008 nearly six years younger than the median for the
U.S. population as a whole. In 2008, 57 percent of African Americans lived in the South, comprising one-fifth of that region's
population. Nationwide, 61 percent resided in the central cities of metro areas. Black men are being sent to prisons
at an unheard of rate: 1 in 8 prisoners in the world is a Black man in the United States.
As of Jan 1, 2008, according to population estimates:
The 7 states with the largest African American populations were New York (4.1 million), California (2.3 million),
Texas (2.7 million), Florida (2.8 million), Georgia (2.5 million), Illinois (2.3 million), North Carolina (1.9 million).
The District of Columbia (Washington, D.C.) led all states
or state equivalents with the largest percentage (61 percent) of African Americans in its total population. Four Southern
states rounded out the top five in this category: Mississippi (38 percent), Louisiana (35 percent), South Carolina (34 percent)
and Georgia (31 percent). Cook County (Chicago), Ill., maintained its position as the county in the United States with the
largest number of African Americans (1.76 million). Los Angeles County, Calif., was second (1.24 million), followed by Kings
County (Brooklyn), N.Y. (1.12), Wayne County (Detroit), Mich. (1.03), and Philadelphia County, Pa. (813,748).
In 2008, regarding African Americans as a percentage of a county's total population,
Jefferson County, Miss., ranked No. 1, with 89 percent of its population made up of African Americans. Macon County, Ala.,
was a close second in this category (88 percent). Between Jan 1, 1997, and Jan 1, 2008, according to population estimates:
Texas and Florida registered the biggest increases (1.3 million) and (835,000) in African American population among states---mostly
due to Katrina.
Income and Poverty
African American households experienced decrease of 9.6 percent in real median income
between 1997 and 2007, from $25,050 to 22,458. In the past three years (2004-2007), median-income levels of African American
households fell by nearly 29%. The number of poor African Americans increased from 9.7 million in 1996 to An estimated 12.1
million in 2008, while their poverty rate increased from 28.4 percent to 32.9%.
For African American families, the number and percent in poverty increased from 2.24 million to an estimated
3.1 million and from 26.2 percent to 32.1 percent, respectively, from 1996 to 2007. African Americans accounted for 41 percent
of the increase in the number of poor persons in the United States between 1996 and 2008 although they make up only 12.9%
of the national population. Similarly, about 360,000 more African American families are now poor in 2008 than in 2006 and
more than 3/4 of them were African American families headed by women.
Families
In 2007, there were 9.8 million
African American families, nearly 42% of whom were married-couple families. Nearly 7 in 10 African American families included
their own children under 18.
In 2007, 2.1 million African American children
(15.7 percent) lived in a grandparent's home (with or without their parents present). More than 4.7 million (33 percent)
resided with both their parents. In 2007, the typical African American
family consisted of 3.37 members, larger than the average of 2.98 members for non-Hispanic White families but smaller than
the average of 4.02 members for Hispanic families. Among African American men ages 18 and over in 2007, 44 percent had never
been married, 39 percent were currently married, 3 percent were widowed and 14 percent were divorced. Among women, the corresponding
percentages were 39 percent, 37 percent, 12 percent and 12 percent. Education
Eighty-four percent of African
Americans, ages 25 to 29, were high-school graduates in 2007, continuing an upward trend in the educational attainment of
African Americans that began in 1940.
Over 3.1 million or 14 percent of
African Americans, ages 25 and over, held a bachelor's degree or higher in 2008; of these degree-holders, more than 867,000
had an advanced degree (e.g., master's, Ph.D., M.D. or J.D.). The number
of African Americans under 35 who were enrolled in college in 2007 (1.7 million) was nearly 15 percent higher than the number
enrolled a decade earlier. Similarly, African American nursery-school enrollment increase almost two-fold over the same period,
to 745,000. Jobs
In 2008, nearly 33
percent of the African Americn population ages 16 and over which could work did not have employment.
Health, Living Standard, Crime
As of 2008: A Black baby is born to an unmarried mother in 7 out of 10 births). Every 3 minutes, a Black child
is born into poverty. Every hour, a Black infant dies and Blacks have infant mortality rates among the highest in the world
in all developed nations. This is our responsibility. Black men and women should take care of their children; put the children
first---if you have to overturn the world and all of its rotten oppressive systems, put your children first.
§ Every 3 hours and 45 minutes, a Black child or youth under 20 dies from an accident.
Every, 4 hours and 50 minutes, a Black youth is a homicide victim usually killed in 93% of the cases by another Black person.
Every second, a Black child is arrested.
§ Every 23 hours, a Black
child or youth under 21 commits suicide. Black children are labeled mentally retarded nearly 400 percent more than White children.
Start your own schools; stop letting degenerate people send your children to the gas chambers. § Black males by 32 are almost three times as likely to have prison/probation records (31 percent) than bachelor's
degrees (12 percent). Why be ignorant, degenerate and disgraceful. Get an education; build character and integrity by facing
your oppressors and their oppression. Plan, prepare, fight and win. Do not just lay down for these degenerates whose foreparents
put you in this miserable condition by enslaving 28 generations of Black people, and jim crow cheating 8 more generations
after they said they ended direct slavery. § A Black male born in
2008 has a 41 percent chance of spending time in jail and/or prison at some point in his life. The figure for Hispanic males
is 18 percent, and for White males is 5 percent. Black men, though only 6.2% of the national population make up 53% of the
national prison population. The national high school graduation rate for whites (within 4 years) is 75%, Hispanics is 58%,
and for Blacks 52%. Hispanic graduate at a higher rate than Black children even though English is a second language for them
and many of them are undocumented. Asians graduate in the United States at the highest rate of over 84% while Black students
are even lower than Native Americans who are still largely confined to reservations (concentration camps). This is the pitiful
situation the future of Black civilization (African American youth) is in today. This can change if we change it. § Every 4 hours and 33 minutes a Black woman or child is raped, sexually assaulted, or
molested. Almost 91% of the sorry rapist/molesters are Black. Every day, a Black youth under 27 dies from AIDS. § Every 4 seconds during the school day, a Black public school student is suspended. Every
47 seconds during the school day, a Black high school student drops out. Over 73% of the Black felon prison population are
high school drop outs. Over 86% of the Blacks convicted of property crimes were either high school dropouts or have less than
one year of college education.
How to Study African
History in America
Defining the Research Problem and Question
Considerations: 1. What is the purpose of
the research? a. To describe a relation or other phenomena? b. To explore or gain familiarity with a new area of
research? c. To meet requirements of a funding agency, course, or degree program requirements? 2. Toward what end
is the research being conducted? a. What are the practical applications of the findings? b. Will this serve as a
basis for continued research? c. Will the research be published? In what media outlets? d. Will the findings be
used to initiate change at any level? 3. Toward whose end is the research being conducted (for whose benefit)? a.
To fulfill Individual research? b. To fulfill course or degree requirements? c. To fulfill requirements for a funding
agency or employer? d. To seek or maintain tenure? 4. Through what lens is the researcher viewing the world? a. Race? b. Class? c. Sex/Gender? d. Ethnicity/Culture? e. Generation Note: recognition and awareness
of the degree to which race, class, gender, culture, and generation shape the lens through which one views the world.
How do these forces shape the research process?
How to Organize
Your Study
General overview of African American history. Overview of development of matter,
the universe, galaxy, solar system, planetary units, earth, life formations, hominid formations in Africa, stages of human
development, genotype, labor, phenotype (external reflection of geographical and climatic environment), peopling of the world,
social, economic, and political adaptations. | African development from communalism to forms of class societies; the rise and fall of indigenous
African societies (Qustal, TaSeti, Nubia, KMT, Cartage, Ghana, Mall, Songhey). | Massive invasions in to northeast Africa, North Africa, East Africa, West Africa
and South Africa; destruction, dispersion, forced migrations; Critique and correction of racist history based on scientifically
verified historical facts (4236bc-1492ad). | 1492 and the Seizing of the Western Hemisphere; Caribbean Islands, South America, Central America,
and North America---Extermination/Transplantation; Global Enslavement; The Planting and Birth of European Societies in the
Western Hemisphere; Holocaust of African Enslavement, Middle Passage, Europe's Ascendancy and Africa's Devastation.
| African Enslavement
and the Accelerated Development of the United States' Capitalist Economic Political, Social, and Cultural System; the
special suffering of African children, women, and men; capture of land/expansion westward; political conflict over land, labor,
and capital. | "American
Revolutionary War"-Intercontinental War; formation of constitution, ruling class, governmental system, nation, and republic;
rationalizing the Holocaust of African enslavement: Not Human/Not Christians/Cursed. | Formation of one federal government, two economic systems
(slave and capitalist), and one white nation; democracy while owning enslaved African women, men, and children on seized Native
American land; slavery is at a high point; systematic attempts of Africans to resist enslavement, denigration, and brutality,
shining examples of resistance. | Mass African enslavement and the acceleration of the Industrial Revolution; economic expansion; geographical
conflict, political crisis, military resolution: Civil War period; Underground Railroad; Abolitionist Movement, North/South
War; end of African enslavement; beginning of segregation. Imperialism becomes the modernized form of systematic oppression. | Period of reconstruction of entire United
States along capitalist lines; herding of Indigenous populations into concentration camps (reservations); black reconstruction
relegation of Africans in America to wage peonage, and serfdom; no forty acres/no mule--the usual broken promise; demographic
expansion westward; completion of reconstruction. | Jim Crow and the suppression of the ancient model of history, fraudulent development of the aryan
model of history as an ideological basis of white supremacy; intellectual pretexts, justifications for genocide, justifications
for racial domination; embryonic development of African American leadership; Pan Africanism, Nationalism, and forms of separationism
in a time of accommodation an integrationism. | Segregation, American apartheid and initial migrations of African Americans to the North; maturation
and early adulthood of the United States; growing pangs of the mature capitalist form of society: The Great Depression; The
Great Depression for African Americans 15 years earlier; the Harlem Renaissance and the call to African tradition. | Mechanization of capitalist industrial production
and the period of African forced massed migrations to the North; large-scale machine production, and industrial expansion;
world wars over markets, raw materials, and mineral resources and the demand for African American labor in northern factories;
civil rights movement; ending segregation in order to integrate African Americans into the lowest levels of capitalist mechanical
production; mass African American organizations of the 1950's, 1960, 1970's; mass movements. | The 1970's and the 1980's: What did
these decades mean? 1990's and the African American condition within the United States and the world. What is the significance
of this in 2008? Take home final exams are distributed. | The Evolution and expression of African morality, ethics, and virtue in the United States; on the
question of right and wrong, good and bad; deteriorating moral standards as economy and society deteriorates; on the question
of redemption, resurrection and rebirth of African civilization within this lifetime; findings and conclusions; present conditions
of African Americans . |
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What This Means Today The wage-labor system is becoming obsolete. Today, American workers are being relegated from (1) producing
consumers to (2) producing nonconsumers to (3) nonproducing consumers and finally to (4) nonconsuming nonproducers.
The last category makes human labor useless, thus the human being's life becomes worthless. The forcing of permanently unemployable workers to the street is a gradual process for most. It may include:
part-time labor, low paying service jobs, temporary jobs, layoffs, concessions, overtime of the remaining workforce, freezing
of wages and salaries, intensification of labor, breaking of unions, cut health care benefits, cut AFDC, cut education, cut
entitlements, cut set asides, and cut housing subsidies. People end up destitute
in the streets with no future legal means of putting shoes on their feet, clothes on their backs, food in their mouths, and
a roof over their heads. Lose Job, Lose Living, and Life Chances Africans in America are at the bottom of this white capitalist economic system, first as enslaved plantation
workers, then as segregated sharecroppers, and finally as unskilled or semi-skilled factory workers and service workers.
Africans, brutally discriminated against on the basis of slave history and color, have throughout the 20th and
21st centuries been the last hired, the lowest paid, and first to be fired. Africans historically have been
first to be rendered jobless by advances in technology. Africans suffer the worst
because white capitalists have systematically concentrated African men, and women in the most expendable jobs. With
the introduction of computer automated machine production into agriculture, manufacturing, mining, construction, and service
industries, Africans who are concentrated in the most expendable jobs by whites have been made useless to the economic
system and are today being prepared for extermination. If the demand for African workers increases, the price
of African workers also rises; if it falls, their wage prices fall. As their wage price fall, their purchasing power
falls, then their standard of living falls, nutrition falls, health deteriorates, hunger sets in, homelessness increases,
education is cut out, schools are closed, family life deteriorates, divorces increase, domestic crises explode, separations
and abandonments increase, alcohol abuse increases, drug abuse increases, sexual abuses increase, child and female abuses
increase, suicides increases, racial attacks increase, etc. As a direct result the entire African community rots
into a ghetto similar to Nazi ghettos in Germany. In the 2008+ layer after layer of the
African working class and middle class are being wiped off of the employment rolls and into homeless shelter, soup lines,
and destitution. Their schools are being closed so their children have no future either. Even the schools
being built are built at 4 times their necessary cost for the Black middle class children, when 4 schools could have been
built for thousands more working class children. Foreclosures in Black communities are at unprecedented levels.
Hospitals in Black communities are being closed, forcing emergency victims to lose precious life saving minutes driving to
white hospitals. In their thirties, forties, and fifties, many of whom are single parents with mortgages, children in high
school or college, car payments, and food and clothing to purchase, these unemployed Africans are desperately looking for
any type of job to keep their families together. Africans who only a few years ago were taking home wages in the range
of $25,000 to $40,000 are today fortunate to be hired for $6.75 per hour. If human labor value falls so greatly that
workers become unsellable, they are left to idly rot on the streets of urban cities---homeless and hungry. These, now jobless, past workers, then join millions of others who had gone before them in some form of
underground capitalist economy---hustling/slinging/peddling/selling their behinds or some other type of vice that "illegally"
allows them to provide the necessities of life. Through accepting this fate without organizing in a revolutionary way
to end it, they are reduced to brutes, hanging around churches hat-in-hand, maneuvered into begging, stealing, car window
cleaning, peddling, drug dealing, gambling, and prostitution in order to regenerate the life necessities of food, clothing,
shelter, culture, and self-worth. As time passes, most of these end up being statistics
for state and federal crime reports, and propaganda cases for Nazi organizations. Others end up imprisoned by the immoral
personal crimes committed against their own bodies and souls. Crimes committed by Africans in America increased markedly
simultaneously and in direct proportion to Africans becoming expendable to the American economy. As African opportunities
for income, employment, education, businesses, housing, transportation, recreation, and cultural expression decrease throughout
the United States, African criminal activities continue to increase. Over 93 percent
of the violent crimes committed by Africans are committed against other Africans by African men. Today, Black men make
up 45 to 60 percent of state and federal penal total populations. At the same time, over 36 percent of America's
young African male population is either in jail, on parole, on probation, awaiting trial, or being sought by police
authorities. Africans are responsible and must be held accountable for preying on other innocent Africans in the African
community. By not organizing, not cleaning selves up morally, and not fighting the enemy who caused the misery,
Africans are today helping to accelerate their own genocidal destruction. When human beings find no self-dignifying
labor with survivable wages, and will not rebel in an organized manner against the society which destroys their lives, the
only thing that remains for them is to beg, steal, prostitute, peddle---rot. Systematic
Obsolescence Millions of Africans are, thus, being severed from any opportunity
to purchase the basic necessities of life, i.e., food, housing, health care, education, clothing, etc, and they are not organizing
themselves to prepare for the solution to this crisis. Lacking in strong moral roots, increasing numbers of African
youth have taken white-sponsored, organized and financed illegal, underground economies which allow them to earn money selling
themselves, drugs, and stolen goods which they then use to purchase life's necessities. Many of these white-sponsored underground economies lead to pathological and murderous behavior patterns the part
of African men, women, and children. This criminalizing process has destroyed the entire moral fabric of many African communities,
leaving men, women, and children broken in its wake. Look at these degenerates running around "down low" placing
millions of innocent Black women in harms way of AIDs and certain death. Look at the domestic violence of brutes.
Look at the child abandonment, the molestation, the pimping---the social degeneration. Increasing criminal convictions
increase the necessity for prison facilities, holding centers, supplies and staff. In a short time, the entire American
society has begun to be organized around a national network of prisons which are built to "concentrate" expendable
Africans who had earlier lost all legal means of providing the necessities of life for themselves and their children and thus
were caught participating in illegal means of income appropriation such as drug deal. The
drugs that are dealt by ignorant African peddlers are initially distributed to drug dealers in African communities by whites;
the white man is in charge of all drugs coming ito this country. The Black stool-pigons who sell the drugs are the lowest
rung of this criminal enterprise which directly enriches the white capitalist. The money that African street peddlers accumulated
is ultimately filtered back to rich whites via their international bank laundering systems. Finally, the ignorant
African petty drug dealer ends up in prison, usually with his pants down and on his knees down low. In place of
a school, a prison cell. In place of a house, a prison cell. In place of a hospital, a prison ward. In place
of community recreation, a prison yard. In place of a job, a prison workfarm. In place of freedom, slavery.
In place of a healthy male/female family relationship, and unhealthy degenerate relationship with another man. When
they get out, many are low down and low down. In place of life, death. Concentration
of expendable African workers in prisons is a mounting tax burden of federal, state, and local governments thus the solution
of prison work farms is rapidly being implemented. In 2008, the number of prisoners in state and federal prisons
reached a record 2.650,000 at any given time during the past five years. This number equals the population of two
and one half Detroit, Michigans. This figure did not include the additional 7,567,000 locked down in city and county
jails during any given year. More Africans are in jail in the United States
than in South Africa when it was under apartheid. In fact, every 1 in 8 prisoners in the world is a Black man from the
United States. Boot camps, chain gangs, labor camps, increased arrests, reinstating of the death penalty, rise
in executions, and work farms open a new stage in the history of degenerating social relations in the United States because
they establish a legal social scaffold for the "final solution" to permanently unemployed African laborers who have
been made superfluous to capitalist profits. With curfews, increased police brutality,
public housing sweeps, the daily use of deadly force against Africans, computerized finger printing of people on welfare,
the placing of over 150,000 more police in urban areas martial law in the United States is immanent. The leading cause of death among young African males is now murder by another young African male.
AIDS, heart disease, hypertension, stroke, diabetes are next. Even suicide, a new racial phenomena, is skyrocketing
among Blacks in America. Most, after been indoctrinated in sub-standard educational institutions with immorality
and self-hate training were concentrated in the most expendable jobs and they now see themselves and their own lives as being
expendable---cheap. Since 2005, African men were 2.5 percent of all college enrollments but as much as 65 percent of
the prison population. Over one million African American men are in prison at any given time during the year.
In the time period between 1978 and 2008, the average real earnings for African males age 20-26 fell by 78 percent.
In some inner cities, unemployment for Black men is at 45%. Since 1978, the number of African
households headed by women increased 216 percent to 8 out of 10. Between 1975-2007, the number of African men 18-26
employed year-round, full-time fell from 42 percent to 23 percent. One in four Black youth will go to jail, be
on probation, parole, or in prison during the year. Between 1987-2007, college enrollment rates for African males 18-23 declined
from 33 percent to 15 percent. In 1973, nearly 28 percent of all African families were headed by African women.
In 2008, over 77 percent of African families---3 out of every 4--- are headed by single black women. In many cases these
Black men have literally abandoned their spouse, their children, and their race. Single parent families head by women
have been trapped in a decadent cycle of welfare dependency that is self perpetuating generation after generation. School drop out rates, teenage pregnancy, out of wedlock birth, morally debilitating abortions, spouse
abandonment---all of these are the results of pressures forced upon courageous African women who are attempting to single
handedly raise families because African men have run out. These condition will worsen because whites have systematically
concentrated Africans in the most expendable jobs and as jobs are eliminated, Africans are eliminated from any legal means
of caring for themselves and their families. From 1987-2008, as much as 64 percent of those
who died of drug abuse were African men. Forty-three percent of all 13 to 28-year-old AIDS cases are African males,
and the fastest growing population of persons with AIDS are African women and children. All of these numbers will increase.
All of these conditions will worsen. Inner city African women can expect to live nearly seven years less than whites
women Indeed, an African man in America living in New York's Harlem is less likely to reach 65 than is a resident
of Bangladesh.
In major cities, African women have a 28 times greater chance of dying of AIDS than
white women. Prison have become the primary sewer for the proliferation of AIDS and sex vice, as Black men lay around
with Black men and Black women lay around with women. When they get out, the Black men begin the "down-low", low
down degenerate life-style of lying and cheating while sleeping with men and women---and spreading AIDS. From 1998-2008, nearly 77.5 percent of African babies were born outside of wedlock; the majority of African
children live with only their mother, and in over half of these households, she has never been married.
Joblessness, Property Crimes, Vice, and Prison As the U.S. economy teeters on the threshold of the beginning stages of its collapse in 2008+, millions
are going unfed, unhoused, unmedicated, uneducated, unemployed, over-jailed, and brutalized by white police and state organizations.
Those who will be savagely attacked by whites are those who are the most defenseless, and who have historically borne the
brunt of white scapegoating, namely Africans. The actual collapse, resulting from the complete erosion of both domestic
and international markets, will accelerate from a slow to a rapid mass murdering of Africans in America if Africans women
and men do not prepare to protect themselves and their families. The 1% of the U.S. population
that possesses more wealth than the bottom 93% will neither be identified as the source of the economic problem nor will the
members of this tiny ruling stratum be forced to give up their wealth. There are no solid allies in the white
working class. White workers have historically defended white capitalists around the world. The majority of them
have fought in every single war of enslavement, colonization, and imperialism that their white ruling class has called
on them to give their lives in. They will continue to support their race and the white ruling class even as their class
privileges and society as a whole fall apart. Africans in America, on the other hand,
who constitute 13.3% of the population are being identified as the problem's source and will become the victim of the
final solution. As the white capitalist system collapses, Africans will be put to death by whites for no crime
other than being a member of a negatively stigmatized racial group that has no economic use within this white society. After having been, in turn, sold by the pound by Europeans and Arabs, Africans now in the 2008+ face a
modern holocaust at the hands of these same whites whose murderous ancestors brought us into the Western Hemisphere in the
first place. An African that has lost a job today will not get another job paying a subsistence wage. She or he
is at an age level, education level, skill level, and part of a race that has no place in this collapsing white American society.
Those Africans in America that become permanently unemployable will continue to be forced out into the streets, homeless,
hungry, without proper medical care, without legal assistance, without education---without a future. Voting will not
solve Africans problem. Whites are the overwhelming majority group at 72% of the population in the United States (85%
if you count Hispanic whites). In the past, the Klan and other Nazi groups, including
the federal, and state governments murdered, mutilated, burned, butchered, and lynched us as a means of terrorizing
us into continuing to serve as slaves, and second class citizens. Today the formula has been changed. They do
not need Africans. Today, attacks by white supremacists objectively are geared toward extermination of any nonwhite
labeled as a source of the decomposition of capitalism, and the vanishing of jobs. They do not need slaves, except,
temporarily on prison work farms. They do not need manual laborers. Computer
Automated Machine Production has ended the need for unskilled and semi-skilled wage labor. Today, any such organized social
attacks on Africans are made toward total elimination. ORGANIZATIONAL
TEMPLATE POPULATION CHARACTERISTICS, AFRICAN AMERICANS 2008GENERAL NATIONAL POPULATION
CHARACTERISTICS | STATE TOTAL | CITY TOTAL
| Total Population |
|
| Black Total
Population 2008 Black Total population 1998 %
Change 1998 to 2008
| | | Total Households |
|
| Black Total Households 2008 Black Total Households 1998 %Change 1998 to 2008 Avg. Households Size 2008 Avg. Households Size 1998 %Change 1998 to 2008 | | | Total Families |
|
| Black Total
Families 2008 Black Total Families 1998 %Change
1998 to 2008 Avg. Family Size 2008 Avg.
Family Size 1998 %Change 1998 to 2008 | | | Group Quarters Population | | | Total Institutionalized
persons In nursing homes Other persons
in group quarters | | | Race/Hispanic Origin Population | | | White Black American Indian, Eskimo or Aleut Asian or Pacific Islander Other Race | | | Persons of Hispanic Origin | | | Not of Hispanic Origin White
Black All Other Races | | | % Black 2008 % Black 1998 | | | % Hispanic 2008 % Hispanic 1998 | | | Age &
Sex | | | Total Population | | | | | | Under 5 years 5 year olds 6 to 13 years 14 to 17 years 18
to 20 years | | | 21 to 24 years 25 to 34 years 35 to 44 years 45 to 54 years 55
to 59 years | | | 60 to 62 years 62 to 64 years 65 to 74 years 75 to 84 years | | |
(continue) | | | 85 years
and over % 17 and younger % 65 and
older | | | Male | | | Total | | | Under 5 years 5 years olds 6 to 13 years 14 to 17 years 18
to 20 years | | | 21 to 24 years 25 to 34 years 35 to 44 years 45 to 54 years 55
to 59 years | | | 60 to 61 years 62 to 64 years 65 to 74 years 75 to 84 years 85
to years and over % 17 and younger %
65 and older | | | Female | | | Total | | | Under 5 years 5 year olds 6 to 13 years 14 to 17 years 18
to 20 years | | | 21 to 24 years 25 to 34 years 35 to 44 years 45 to 54 years | | | 55 to 59 years 60 to
61 years 62 to 64 years 65 to 74 years 75 to 84 years 85 years and over % 17 and younger % 65 and older | | | Marital
Status (persons 15+) | | | Male | | | Never married Now married, except separated Separated Widowed Divorced | | | Female | | | Never married Now married, except separated Separated Widowed Divorced | | | Household Type & Relationship | | | Family,
Married Couple | | | With related children No related children Family, Other | | | (continue)
| | | Female Householder, no husband With
related children No related children | | | Male Householder, no husband With
related children No related children | | | Own Children in One Parent Hhlds | | | Nonfamily One person housholds Male Female | | | Households with Householder 65+Family Household Nonfamily Household Living Alone | | | Living Arrangements
of Persons 65+In family households In
nonfamily households Living Alone Institutionalized In other group quarters | | | Household Size | | | Family Households 2 persons 3 persons 4
persons 5 persons 6 persons 7 or more persons | | | Nonfamily Housholds1 persons 2 persons 3 persons 4
persons 5 persons 6 persons 7 or more persons | | |
 |