In 1790,
94.9 of the US population worked in farming, raising crops and animals or
providing services to rural areas. The US economy was based primarily on
agriculture and resource extraction until 1840 and 90-95% of the population
lived and worked in Rural areas. Cities began to open more factories from 1840
to 1900 and Rural populations shrank to 40%. By 2010 Rural populations were
20%.
Census US
Population %Urban %Rural
1790 3,929,214 5.1 94.9
1800 5,308,483 6.1 93.9
1810 7,239,881 15.4 92.7
1820 9,638,453 7.2 92.8
1830 12,860,702 8.8 91.2
1840 17,063,353 10.8 89.2
1850 23,191,876 15.4 84.6
1860 31,443,321 19.8 80.2
1870 38,558,371 25.7 74.3
1880 50,189,209 28.2 71.8
1890 62,979,766 35.1 64.9
1900 76,212,168 39.6 60.4
1910 92,228,496 45.6 54.4
1920 106,021,537 51.2 48.8
1930 123,202,624 56.1 43.9
1940 142,164,569 56.5 43.5
1950 161,325,798 64.0 36.0
1960 189,323,175 69.9 30.1
1970 213,302,031 73.6 26.3
1980 236,542,199 73.7 26.3
1990 258,709,873 75.2 24.8
2000 291,421,906 81.0 19.0
2010 308,745,538 80.0 20.0
2020 334,500,000 80.0 20.0 est
Urban
areas are overcrowded and unsustainable. The return of manufacturing to rural
cities will offer opportunities to big city-dwellers.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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