![]() Proportion of African Americans in each U.S. state, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico as of the 2020 United States Census | |
Total population | |
---|---|
46,936,733 (2020)[1] 14.2% of the total U.S. population (2020)[1] 41,104,200 (2020) (one race)[1] 12.4% of the total U.S. population (2020)[1] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Texas | 3,552,997[2] |
Georgia | 3,320,513 |
Florida | 3,246,381 |
New York | 2,986,172 |
North Carolina | 2,140,217 |
Maryland | 1,820,472 |
Illinois | 1,808,271 |
Virginia | 1,607,581 |
Ohio | 1,478,781 |
Louisiana | 1,464,023 |
Pennsylvania | 1,423,169 |
Michigan | 1,376,579 |
Alabama | 1,296,162 |
Languages | |
English (American English dialects, African-American English) Louisiana Creole Gullah Creole English African languages | |
Religion | |
Predominantly Protestant (71 %) including Historically Black Protestant (53%), Evangelical Protestant (14%), and Mainline Protestant (4%); significant[nb 1] others include Catholic (5%), Jehovah's Witnesses (2%), Muslim (2%), and unaffiliated (18%)[3] |
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African Americans |
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An African American is a person who lives in the United States whose ancestors were from Africa. It could also mean a first generation African immigrant who has citizenship in the United States. Some African Americans are also of Caribbean or Afro-Latino ancestry.[4][5]
The term is usually associated with black people. This is because of many African Americans' dark skin due to having Sub-Saharan African ancestors. Many Africans were brought to the United States in the Atlantic slave trade. Many of the U.S. population (especially in many urban or city areas) are African American. Many others live in rural areas in the Southern United States. Detroit has the highest percent of blacks in the nation, and many live in other big cities. Cities with the highest percent of African Americans are Jackson, Mississippi; New Orleans; Memphis; Miami Gardens; and Savannah, Georgia.[6] New York City and Chicago have the largest population of African Americans. Other cities with a high African American population are Baltimore, Houston, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Baton Rouge, Washington, D.C. and Dallas. States with the highest percentage of African Americans are Mississippi, Louisiana, Georgia, Maryland, South Carolina, Alabama, Delaware, North Carolina, Virginia and Tennessee. African Americans are third largest ethnic group in the United States after White Americans and Hispanic and Latino Americans. African Americans are the second largest ancestral group in the United States after Germans.[7] Many African Americans have European and Native American ancestry.[8] The first African slaves were brought on a Dutch boat from Angola in 1619 to the British colony of Jamestown in Virginia.[9][10] New York City has the largest African American population by city.[11]
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