In 1833, Chicago had a population of about 200. By 1900, it was the 5th largest city on earth. That’s one of the most explosive growth rates of any city anywhere at anytime.
@@dougclendening5896 - Supposedly, it was, for a period of about 30 years, the richest city in the world, as I've been told. Not so hard to believe, with the explosive growth of the automobile and the post-war baby boom, the demand for cars was high and Detroit produced.
@@StephenKershaw1 From Wikipedia: Brooklyn was an independent incorporated city (and previously an authorized village and town within the provisions of the New York State Constitution) until January 1, 1898, when, after a long political campaign and public relations battle during the 1890s, according to the new Municipal Charter of "Greater New York", Brooklyn was consolidated with other cities, towns, and counties, to form the modern City of New York, surrounding the Upper New York Bay with five constituent boroughs.
New York City and Brooklyn had a combined population of 1 million by 1860. Brooklyn wasn’t officially part of New York City until it was consolidated with the other boroughs in 1898.
This would be a bit better if you made it clear when cities combined: Northern Liberties, Southward, and Spring Garden are now part of Philadelphia. And of course Brooklyn is now part of New York.
@@vivalabamremastered4127 Assuming it's based on the once-every-ten-year census, then the Civil War wouldn't really show up in the data. Besides, the number of deaths from the Civil War was ~1 million over the 4 years (i.e. 250,000 per year). US population was growing by ~700,000 per year that decade. This means the Civil War only slowed the growth but did not cause a decline. Without the Civil War, I suppose the US population would have been growing by ~950,000 per year.
I’m from St. Louis, we just fell under 300,000 people and it was over 800,000 in the 50’s. Now the entire northern half of the city is a wasteland and we have the highest per capita murder rate in the country. So basically just like Detroit
@@nathanielthomas2502 they need to stop giving cities that nickname, Beirut used to be called the Paris of the Middle East and it’s not faring too well these days either
You can see the first westward wave in the 19th century (Chicago, St. Louis), the decline of the rust belt (Detroit), then the enormous growth of the sun belt. Cars and air conditioning were helpful.
1954 being the first year with more than one sun belt city makes so much sense. Also, it between 1953 and 1955 that rock and roll had it's big breakthrough.
It's going to be something how cities deep in the desert like Phoenix will go on with climate change wrecking havoc on the waterways that stream out from the Rockies.
I think it's funny that most of the older cities: NYC, Philadelphia, Chicago, etc. are shown to be shrinking until the current year and then they start growing again. Kinda shows the imprecision of future predictions
Great observation. It makes no sense. San Antonio should have passed Philly and left it in the dust and Houston should have caught and passed Chicago before 2030.
@Luke Shaw's Daddy Yeah I agree I think by 2035 everyone will move out of New York City and either Miami or Houston will be the new number 1 because everyone from New York is either moving to Florida or Texas!
*The only thing I don't like about the way this is depicted here is when Brooklyn (Kings) merged with New York (Manhattan) and also the Bronx, Queens, and Staten Island (Richmond) in 1898. They made it seem like everyone was leaving Brooklyn like it was on fire with the numbers dwindling down on the chart. The people didn't go anywhere. Brooklyn just lost its autonomy as an independent city.*
its just straight lines from each census. It not a live count would have just squashed to zero instantly but the bar has to go from its population from one census to zero by the next census so it does a slope.
6:04 You can see that New York's numbers were decreasing during the 70s, that's because of the Fiscal crisis. US economic stagnation hit the city particularly hard, amplified by a large movement of middle-class residents to the suburbs, which drained the city of tax revenue. In February 1975, New York entered a serious fiscal crisis and was $10 billion in debt.
@@emeraldfrmnyc Trump's lawyer (Giuliani) was mayor in 1994-2001 and he got the city back on track. There was a decrease of homicides from 4000 a year to 10 under his leaderhsip and Times Square in the 70's was the sleaziest place until Guliani banned sex for money and sleazy motels were disbanned. The city was doing much better until the pandemic. I suspect that the population and its finances have taken a hit, more people working from home means that they don't have to live in such a crowded and overpriced city and they can go live somewhere else, taking away with them their tax money. Crime is also going up again due to more poverty, I suspect the people living in poverty have increased by a lot and those people don't have the priviledge of working from home as they may be the delivery truck drivers or they work in factories etc.
@@jrr6947 commiefornia and new reich are going to plummet in population once they realize what really is going on, or if they ever do understand anyway
@@blacker5826 new reich?? You do realize the Nazis were fascists right? not communists... complete opposites. Extreme far left is communist. Extreme far right is Fascist. So if yr saying NY is a reich, yr calling it an extremely right wing conservative place. Basically, yr a flippin idiot.
Well it was 1 of the original places in the US. So it would only seem natural and the "business" capital of the world. But thanks to 2020, people leaving just like crooked California
Yes, it was the first U.S. city to host an Olympic games and at the beginning of the 20th century it was like Seattle is now, the popular up and coming city. Somewhere along the way it just fizzled out.
Not to nitpick, but technically, at this time ( 0:01 - 0:12 ) it was not even part of the U.S. (and the same goes for Minneapolis) We did not purchase the western part of the Mississippi until 1803.
I was surprised at this too. It made sense thst it grew so steadily all through the 19th century, but looks like it started shrinking beginning with great Depression, got a second wind after the war, then dropped off a cliff since the 1950s.
Brooklyn didn't lose population slowly like it shows in the video. It merged with New York in 1898. It should have shown Brooklyn falling of the chart and New York gaining about 800,000 people in 1898, not a slow loss for one and a slow increase for the other.
Chicago and Minneapolis are top 7 in 1776? That's pretty surprising, seeing as how they weren't founded until 1833 and 1850 respectively. Also surprising since the British would not allow Americans to settle west of the Appalachians. I'm thinking your beautiful data is off.
My wife and I went to Chicago a couple years ago, probably the coolest city I’ve ever been too. Beautiful city. Amazing food. Very clean. And so so so much to do. All the time. I honestly wish I could go back.
@@davidfreesefan23 In reality Houston will probably overtake it long before then. If you look at Chicago they had mostly declined population throughout the 2010s but suddenly after 2021 it only grows from there; that optimism simply has no basis in reality.
Detroit used to be enormous, and is an example here where the city is smaller than it used to be in terms of population. In fact, I think it's somewhere close to half of it's former peak in the 1950s, where it was over 1.8M, now it's somewhere around 700k I believe as of the most recent census. People actually left Detroit in droves because it became so corrupt, overrun with crime and poverty all because the big automotive manufacturers moved their operations elsewhere so they could save some money, and the city of Detroit and State of Michigan were run by the auto companies so this was all allowed with basically nothing to compensate the families that were devastated. Absolute cruelty, and one of the most diabolical things that's really happened and nobody really ever talks about it. People talk about how bad Detroit is, but it's pretty rare to hear people who actually understand how it got that way and how prosperous it used to be.
The latest statistics show that Detroit has shrunk to just 1/3 of it's peak population as its current residents clock in around 624k and steadily lose about 8k a year.
No, complacency against what the public wanted in regards to quality and MPGs. The UAW would have cared about building one car over another. If GM had been more forward thinking, they could have owned the batter technology patents.
Meanwhile, metro Detroit still has 3.5 million people there, they just don’t live in Detroit proper anymore. It still feel likes a huge city when you’re there.
Cincinnati was once known as the Queen City of the West. In the early half of the 19th century it was a major migration center. People like my ancestors would land from Europe in Baltimore and then cross the Appalachians via the National Road (now U.S 40) then get on barges and sail down the Ohio River. They stopped in Cincinnati and made new lives there because the year-round climate was great, farming was excellent and new industries were multiplying in the area, including nearby Hamilton, Middletown and Dayton. For the rest of the 19th century it was a major political and cultural center. Four U.S. presidents, the two Harrisons, Grant and W.H. Taft, had ties to Cincinnati. Henry Clay was from nearby Lexington, KY. It was a center of the abolition movement, and the first professional baseball team, the Reds, started playing there in 1870.
I was shocked too! But it's by a major river and ships passed through there. Same reason why Cleveland was a major city. That and it's between NYC and Chicago and they passed/layover in Cleveland. I guess they were busy planting seeds and shipments too! 😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣
Crazy how san jose is irrelevant to us Californians since there really isnt much theres. Yet you guys are happy austin is comparable to san jose . Lmao this is so weird to me I dont get it I really dont
Northern Liberties is a neighborhood in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Prior to its incorporation into Philadelphia in 1854, it was among the top 10 largest cities in the U.S. in every census from 1790 to 1850.
Understanding that the steep decline of Midwestern cities in the 1960's, planted the seeds of the current national political voting trends of the people of those areas of the country.
Those areas were raped of their resources in the late 1800s then setup as singularly focused industrial zones. Not great foresight on the leader's behalf.
Only becuase we don't want the 49% in New York and California to destroy our way of life. There's a reason we have the electoral college. Half the country would be controlled by one state and one city leading to a civil war that would split the country into pieces.
It's interesting to consider potential consequences of climate-change, with growth in booming southern cities possibly redirecting to more-temperate climates in Rust Belt cities like Detroit, Cleveland, Buffalo, etc. You can never be too sure about the future.
@@jacobbernard1393 Climate change will not have the affect most of the alarmist are claiming. For decades they have been saying sea levels will rise in just a few years and it never happens. That's ignoring the fact these same alarmist where screaming ice age in the 80s.
It's an extremely attractive spot if you hate the snow, but aren't looking for a coastal-ish town. I know that if Canada would become a US state, Phoenix is in my top 3 spots I would move to... The 2 others from the top 3 are Savannah, GA and somewhere in Texas (I don't know what I could afford, but Galveston or thereabouts is interesting). The only problem with Phoenix are it's torrid summers, but everything else I like. My parents would move to San Diego and my sister to Florida. Yeah we're all tired from the northern cold/snow ;-)
Buffulo use to be considered a major city all they way into the 90's that's crazy because the other 24 cities stayed major and Buffulo got replaced with Phoenix and I think Buffulo downtown skyline is bigger that Phoenix downtown skyline.
From 5:27 to 5:57 there was a constant battle for who would be the 10th largest, also it was sad watching Detroit go from being the 4th largest in the country to off the chart in the 2000’s
Domestic auto manufqcturing moved to South. the unions made it hard for Detroit to compete. less money was available to make good product and foreign auto gained market share. The tax thing is screwed up. I believe its like a 100% tax on us made vehicles sold in europe.
Detroit, Cleveland, and Pittsburgh, were rust belt cities. Meaning they produced a lot of steel, and were the highest in factory production, mostly due to making war machines for WWII and because that was where technologywas going. But after the war, and heading into the 1960's other cities were becoming more advanced, so cities like Detroit, Cleveland, and Pittsburgh, stopped being as important and cool, thus losing residents. However these cities are on the rise again. I think the Browns are actually a large reason Cleveland has not completely collapsed.
This illustrates pretty vividly how neither meteoric growth nor steep decline last forever; there are alternating periods of prosperity and struggle, but long-term trends prove perennially difficult to accurately-predict. Washington, DC was once the nation's most-dangerous city, with residents spilling-out into the suburbs, but today, it's growing rapidly, with great wealth creation. The same could be said for other cities that were once down on their luck, and likewise, cities with booming populations today may slow in growth as living expenses rise and competition for housing and jobs increases. I'm very interested to think of which cities will grow the most between now and later this century, perhaps ending-up on the top 10 list; Austin, Jacksonville, Columbus, Indianapolis, Seattle, and Denver could all have over 1 million people in the near-future.
I think eventually a lot of people will end up moving to cities in the rust belt due to higher costs of living and those cities already having the infrastructure to support future industries.
@@AllDay3004 I think younger generation prefers living in dense cities than suburbs. I for one, hate suburbs and the car and Walmart centric southern cities.
Detroit has slid to #30 and currently only houses 1/3 of it's peak population (624,000 is the 2022 estimate) having steadily lost around 7k every year.
It’s a garbage place to live. Detroit sucks. Metro Detroit on the other hand is a very underrated area in the country. Very affordable and a lot of good jobs.
@@saberswordsmen1 "People just moved to the suburbs" A gross over-simplification... no other American city has 60% of it's structures destroyed/razed and square miles of empty fields anywhere near their city centers. Detroit is singular in it's devastation and the metro area's decline reflects that people are leaving the entire region (30k people left in the past year according to this year's census numbers).
It's easy to think of cities as being as big (relatively speaking) and important in the past as they are now. That's pretty much true for New York, but you can see how a lot of other small-ish (nowadays) cities were leading cities in the past. Baltimore, Charleston, Cincinnati. And then you have some that are really big now, and were really big throughout the 20th century, that were nothing until the latter 1800's. Chicago, for example. Then cities that started booming even more recently, like L.A. or Detroit. It's crazy to think how Detroit didn't start booming until the early 1900's, and 50 years later it was already transforming into a hollowed out slum.
Never knew Buffalo was that big , like this chart gives us a little history of this country. As if Buffalo is the last stop before going into Canada. 🤔
iCost buffalo was a huge port due to the canals and hydroelectricity generated from the niagara River. There was a lot of factories and production. Back in the mid 1800s buffalo was the richest city in America. I recommend a visit if you like architecture, you can really see the former wealth in the old mansions and buildings
Interesting dynamic of the changing composition of the top 10 US cities. I was surprised that Austin didn't overtake San Jose during between 2023 and 2035. You assumed a linear growth in population for each city between each census and this works well for most decades. However, for the great industrial centers and cities like Boston and Washington, DC had there been a census in 1945, those population figures might have been considerably larger those recorded in the 1950 census. It would be interesting to go back to the early colonial period, but there were likely few data points. Carl Bridenbaugh provides some info. Boston was the leading city up until the 1730s and the enterprising young Ben Franklin left Boston around this time for Philadelphia, one of the fastest growing US cities in the late colonial era. You have used the rankings as they were listed at the time of each census and this makes sense. An alternative might use present city boundaries and go in back in time. This is nearly impossible to accomplish, but one could approximate this by combining smaller cities among the top 100 at each census with the larger city into which they eventually were merged, So Spring Garden, Northern Liberties and Southwalk would be added to Philadelphia; Allegheny would be combined with Pittsburgh, and in the case of New York City, each of the five boroughs was listed, I believe, in each census. If not, a simple approximation would be to combine Brooklyn with New York. When people think of those cities that have lost a great deal of population since their peak, usually Detroit comes immediately to mind as it down nearly one a quarter million people from its 1.85 million in 1950. One must go back to 1910 to find a lower population figure for that city. However, in the case of St. Louis, one would have to go back to the 1860 census to find a lower figure than its present level.
If this was a graph of metro area growth vs. population within city limits, Atlanta would explode onto the scene in the 90s through now. While the actual city population is "only" over 500,000 the entire metro area has now passed 6 Million people. In terms of metro area, Atlanta is now Top 8 in the country after having "only" 2 million in the region in 1988.
It’s crazy how the city I live right next to, Philadelphia (and visit every month or two) had a population of 22,000 when the country gained independence, but today it has over one million people! It’s crazy how much it grew. And, in 2035, It’ll have 1.7M people!
Milwaukee is a pretty big city.To consider it a US major city yeah it definitely qualifies.It dont surprise me that is was there in 61-63.I bet it is bad ass there in that city.I will visit one day.
Looks like it's meant to represent the region: blue for the Northeast, pink for the South, orange for the Midwest, yellow for Washington DC and the West.
Houston and LA population has grown so much because they keep expanding the city limits by annexing neighboring towns. Chicago and New York would be even larger in this case they just can’t expand to do it.
New York was originally just Manhattan until it annexed the other four boroughs though. So its population would technically be 1.7M if the boroughs remained separate cities.
Horrible, ain't it? But an extremely telling lesson of what greed, corruption, and the wickedness of man can do to undo blessing, hard work, ingenuity, and success.
I honestly curious about some of these growth spurs. Why was Philadelphia stagnant for a while and then got a big jump in the 1850s. And what happened in Chicago that made it grow so fast?
Some of it you chalk it up to industrialization and ramping up to civil war (and relating factors). But likely the biggest reason it jumps so much on this chart is that it goes by census data which is every 10 years and creates a slope between census. In 1854 Philadelphia basically redistricted to include a lot of surrounding area and lumped it all into Philly. Naturally representing a big population growth.
That would be interesting yeah! I'm curious for one thing, if you can help me understand, I recently saw a map that showed that Oulu and the region near it (sorry, don't know the region names of finland) had some of the younger population in the country. Would you say that a lot of younger people are moving north of your country? I expected it'd be like most countries, and that younger people would move to the coast, helsinki etc. or just out of the country really. Is Oulu a growing city or something like that?
@@RenegadeShepard69 Yes Oulu region (North ostrobothnia) has youngest people in finland, For example in Town called Liminka 40% of the people are under 18 years old. One reason for the young population is Laestadianism. Laestadians make lot of children. Because they think child is a present from god. Almost all laestadians in Finland live in Central and North Ostrobothnia
@@Valesokkeli106 Wow thank you for that explanation. I didn't even know about this religion movement. It's an interesting fact I suppose about the Sámi cultures in there? But also Finnic peoples can adhere to that religion I suppose. Well, I'll try to read more about it, I would've never know how to find about it without this comment. Thanks from Brasil, I enjoy reading about your country a lot!
As a lifelong Dallas Texan I was shocked to see San Antonio was more populated than Dallas. I knew Houston was but had no clue about San Antonio. Learn something new every day 🤔
We've been bigger than ya'll for a long time. It's just when you put Dallas and Fort worth together that ya'll are bigger. I think our not even close to as impressive skyline makes people think we're not as big as we are.
Its probably because its a rust belt city but ive hurd that cities like Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Columbus, and even Detroit were recovering or about to in 2019. The pandemic delayed it but with things opening up in the states im sure i will resume its recovery in 2022.
Phillys population has been rising of late...I recommend a visit, it’s a very cool city. Lot of fun bars, museums and history. Also had a cool hip vibe
It is a shame this didn't take into account census bureau estimates in between census years, for if you did you would have noted that the Census estimated Detroit briefly hit the 2 million mark in the early 1950s before the rise of the post-war suburbs began to draw away in earnest people the new homes being built there. The decline to the 1960s census number didn't happen to around 1954, not 1950 as this chart says.
One thing I noticed is clearly by 1906 the San Francisco earthquake took away the city's dominance from being the top city of the west. 10 years later Los Angeles is the new leader showing where trade was changed. Cool to watch how an earthquake can change the Dynamics in history.
It would be interesting to see an overlay of technologies onto this graph. Specifically skyscraper/elevator, automobile, Air Conditioning and internet boom.
Thanks for the video. I'll bet there's already a video of how many people have left the big cities since the covid pandemic began. Many of those who can seem to be moving out to work from home in suburbs or rural spaces.
San Franciso is actually a very prosperous city today. Reason it hasn't goten any more people is because its a very small area surrounded on all sides by water. It has ran out of room to expand.
It's crazy to think that New York is the champion when you consider that Manhattan and Staten Island are islands with no additional land for growth unlike, for example, Los Angeles. Manhattan can only grow upwards in the form of skyscrapers. The most significant population growth spikes must have occurred in Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx. Although technically Brooklyn and Queens are on an island also, just a much larger island, Long Island.
Manhattan is on an island because the Indians thought it was worthless land, since game animals like deer never go onto Hudson River islands and the Indians wanted the mainland. There are many islands in the Hudson, they are all worthless for hunting. Check out Constitution Island and Schodack Island, they are uninhabited by humans and there are no animals
It was fun watching Chicago hit the afterburners (oops no pun intended :) 😀 . That was around 1890 right after the flow of the Chicago River was reversed (one of the great engineering feats of the 19th century) to flow AWAY from Lake Michigan and towards the Mississippi River cause ya' know. So then with better water and better waist disposal Chicago could support millions of people.
This channel actually inspired me to make my own youtube videos haha! I figured making bar chart race videos would be a good way to learn. I've moved on to other types of videos now, but I'll always remember where I started!
Austin and Fort Worth will surpass San Jose for the 10th and 11th spot. Both will reach 1 million citizens as well as Charlotte, Jacksonville and Columbus.
Chicago was the first to develop with the great engineering feat of the River and the first skyscraper the world ever had. Chicago will forever be world class.
Kinda funny how they included Brooklyn and New York on the same graph as the population is all the same. My city, DC, was on the list for a hot minute and then faded. I'm surprised that Atlanta and Miami, New Orleans, etc. were not on the list after 2022.
Brooklyn was once a separate city from New York, and was annexed into NYC in 1898. Atlanta and Miami both only have about 500,000 people in the city proper, though each has a metropolitan area close to 6 million. New Orleans peaked in population around 1960, with a huge drop-off after Hurricane Katrina, but has started to recover in growth since.
Cleveland (my home town!) was once bigger than LA?!?!?!?!? Wowsers! I knew how the race would "end", but I loved it when LA smoked Chicago! That music was perfect!
I think Los Angeles can grow to 5 million or more by 2035. 2010 to 2020 saw a lot of mid rise to high rise apartment or condo construction. Most people see LA as single family homes, but thats changing. Some SFH lots adding multiple homes. Major commercial streets are adding residential housing like midrise and high rises especially near Metro stations. Its happening all over American cities. LA is just slower at building taller. Honolulu, NYC, Chicago, Miami, Seattle are building so many tall buildings compared to big LA city. But LA will catch up. Most will be 5 to 7 floor apartment buildings not 20 floor apartments. Since its cheaper to build concrete and wood apartments than steel and glass towers.
Doubtful, citizens are leaving CA in droves, but it does have an increasing illegal immigrants population, not sure how much of that is included in this data though, technically no one really knows exact numbers when you account for that.
Wait, it's 2035? How long have we been in quarantine?
I thought it was just months passing me by...
*We have been in quarantine for 15 years*
😆hahaha
@@a2zstats604 yep
About 20 yrs.
In 1833, Chicago had a population of about 200. By 1900, it was the 5th largest city on earth. That’s one of the most explosive growth rates of any city anywhere at anytime.
I believe Detroit's was the biggest explosion in the least amount of time. And of course the biggest drop too.
@@dougclendening5896 - Supposedly, it was, for a period of about 30 years, the richest city in the world, as I've been told. Not so hard to believe, with the explosive growth of the automobile and the post-war baby boom, the demand for cars was high and Detroit produced.
Especially impressive considering it was near entirely burnt down in the 1870s
@@dougclendening5896 Live by the car, die by the car
@@dougclendening5896 Cleveland has.
When Brooklyn merged with the rest of New York it was game over.
You right about that.
@@StephenKershaw1
From Wikipedia:
Brooklyn was an independent incorporated city (and previously an authorized village and town within the provisions of the New York State Constitution) until January 1, 1898, when, after a long political campaign and public relations battle during the 1890s, according to the new Municipal Charter of "Greater New York", Brooklyn was consolidated with other cities, towns, and counties, to form the modern City of New York, surrounding the Upper New York Bay with five constituent boroughs.
I still remember at the start of Welcome Back Kotter, they would always show that sign, "welcome to Brooklyn, 4th largest city in America."
A few years before it was game over
@@micatxpaca44 no shit
It’s pretty crazy to think that New York already had one million residents in 1872
Brooklyn had a million in 1898, now it has 2.7 million
And 2 million by 1892 and 3 million by 1897
@@hyzercreek Brooklyn is NYC
New York City and Brooklyn had a combined population of 1 million by 1860. Brooklyn wasn’t officially part of New York City until it was consolidated with the other boroughs in 1898.
@@MCO18 Good to know!
This would be a bit better if you made it clear when cities combined:
Northern Liberties, Southward, and Spring Garden are now part of Philadelphia.
And of course Brooklyn is now part of New York.
Thank you. I am a geography buff and I didn't know what Northern Liberties were!
Yes. It looks like the gains and losses were smoothed out. They should have disappeared and grown abruptly.
Definitely smoothed over.
Chicago should have shot up in 1889 when they annexed several towns
Yup, and all are neighborhoods now in Philly so their tradition was kept alive. Pretty cool.
dreadpirateread northern liberties is a really cool neighborhood in philly. Lot of young people moving in
As a retired stats analyst, I find your data and graphs fascinating. Well done.
The music was well chosen also.
Judging by your profile picture you've really let yourself go
@@matthewviramontes3131 desk jobs will do that to a person haha
This is a random number generator.. Not based on any data... No decline in population for civil war.. etc.. Lol Tom.
@@vivalabamremastered4127 Assuming it's based on the once-every-ten-year census, then the Civil War wouldn't really show up in the data. Besides, the number of deaths from the Civil War was ~1 million over the 4 years (i.e. 250,000 per year). US population was growing by ~700,000 per year that decade. This means the Civil War only slowed the growth but did not cause a decline. Without the Civil War, I suppose the US population would have been growing by ~950,000 per year.
I shed a tear for Detroit. My grandparents lived here in the 50’s and 60’s when it was one of the best cities in the US.
I’m from St. Louis, we just fell under 300,000 people and it was over 800,000 in the 50’s. Now the entire northern half of the city is a wasteland and we have the highest per capita murder rate in the country. So basically just like Detroit
Yes Detroit now became the old grumpy poor city of united states, when nobody had jobs left there anymore.
Paris of the Midwest it was once called.
@@nathanielthomas2502 they need to stop giving cities that nickname, Beirut used to be called the Paris of the Middle East and it’s not faring too well these days either
Me too. It's my hometown. I love my city. I hate things are the way they are now. I hope to see its renaissance before I leave this Earth
You can see the first westward wave in the 19th century (Chicago, St. Louis), the decline of the rust belt (Detroit), then the enormous growth of the sun belt. Cars and air conditioning were helpful.
Buffalo, Cleveland, Toledo, Pittsburgh ect.
1954 being the first year with more than one sun belt city makes so much sense. Also, it between 1953 and 1955 that rock and roll had it's big breakthrough.
It's going to be something how cities deep in the desert like Phoenix will go on with climate change wrecking havoc on the waterways that stream out from the Rockies.
UAW degenerou Detroit.
@@thepaintingbanjo8894 Climate change is a hoax led by left-wing groups pushing their agendas.
I think it's funny that most of the older cities: NYC, Philadelphia, Chicago, etc. are shown to be shrinking until the current year and then they start growing again. Kinda shows the imprecision of future predictions
Great observation. It makes no sense. San Antonio should have passed Philly and left it in the dust and Houston should have caught and passed Chicago before 2030.
Yeah I thought it was a bit odd how Chicago was shrinking until it hit 2020
@Luke Shaw's Daddy Yeah I agree I think by 2035 everyone will move out of New York City and either Miami or Houston will be the new number 1 because everyone from New York is either moving to Florida or Texas!
For sure. Chicago is a shit show and people are fleeing in droves.
Agree. Also I think cities like Atlanta, Miami, and Las Vegas will be in this list......in place of cities like Dallas, and San Jose.
Is it just a coincidence that Philly ended up with a projected 1.776 million? 🤔😉
That’s the spirit!
Oh hehw
Also they were the largest until 1784
@@EliasRoy And Boston was largest before Philly was
WAIT THATS WILD
*The only thing I don't like about the way this is depicted here is when Brooklyn (Kings) merged with New York (Manhattan) and also the Bronx, Queens, and Staten Island (Richmond) in 1898. They made it seem like everyone was leaving Brooklyn like it was on fire with the numbers dwindling down on the chart. The people didn't go anywhere. Brooklyn just lost its autonomy as an independent city.*
I was confused by this too
its just straight lines from each census. It not a live count would have just squashed to zero instantly but the bar has to go from its population from one census to zero by the next census so it does a slope.
this is true for some of the other places as well northern liberties and spring garden are now both part of philedlphia
@Vizier de Alhambra *Yeah it was like everyone suddenly decided run to Coney Island and then jump into the ocean.*
@@guppy719 *Nah they just jumped into the Delaware River and swam out to sea.*
Wow, Baltimore was once bigger than Chicago and LA.
So was Marblehead
Charleston too
LA didn't even exist
Yes amazing how it was in 1843...
Now its a shithole they defunded the police so its an anarchy city!
6:04 You can see that New York's numbers were decreasing during the 70s, that's because of the Fiscal crisis. US economic stagnation hit the city particularly hard, amplified by a large movement of middle-class residents to the suburbs, which drained the city of tax revenue. In February 1975, New York entered a serious fiscal crisis and was $10 billion in debt.
Yikes are anything much better now?
@@emeraldfrmnyc Trump's lawyer (Giuliani) was mayor in 1994-2001 and he got the city back on track. There was a decrease of homicides from 4000 a year to 10 under his leaderhsip and Times Square in the 70's was the sleaziest place until Guliani banned sex for money and sleazy motels were disbanned. The city was doing much better until the pandemic. I suspect that the population and its finances have taken a hit, more people working from home means that they don't have to live in such a crowded and overpriced city and they can go live somewhere else, taking away with them their tax money. Crime is also going up again due to more poverty, I suspect the people living in poverty have increased by a lot and those people don't have the priviledge of working from home as they may be the delivery truck drivers or they work in factories etc.
@@jrr6947 commiefornia and new reich are going to plummet in population once they realize what really is going on, or if they ever do understand anyway
@@blacker5826 new reich?? You do realize the Nazis were fascists right? not communists... complete opposites. Extreme far left is communist. Extreme far right is Fascist. So if yr saying NY is a reich, yr calling it an extremely right wing conservative place. Basically, yr a flippin idiot.
Too bad they did not burn down the city
So how long do you want to stay on top for?
New York: Yes
Well it was 1 of the original places in the US. So it would only seem natural and the "business" capital of the world. But thanks to 2020, people leaving just like crooked California
Nashville’s gonna be up there by 2035… mark my words
NYC will always big the top dog in the fight for 1#! 😂🤣😂🤣
Pretty much!
It's unofficially called the state of NYC!
It's like New York is the Ric Flair of American cities. World champ for life.
It’s crazy to me St. Louis was once the 4th largest city and at one point had 850k people. I think it’s probably in the 200ks now.
Yes, it was the first U.S. city to host an Olympic games and at the beginning of the 20th century it was like Seattle is now, the popular up and coming city. Somewhere along the way it just fizzled out.
Not too far off 308k.
Not to nitpick, but technically, at this time ( 0:01 - 0:12 ) it was not even part of the U.S.
(and the same goes for Minneapolis)
We did not purchase the western part of the Mississippi until 1803.
When you look at the most populated metro areas STL is top 25. Nobody lives in the city
I was surprised at this too. It made sense thst it grew so steadily all through the 19th century, but looks like it started shrinking beginning with great Depression, got a second wind after the war, then dropped off a cliff since the 1950s.
Brooklyn didn't lose population slowly like it shows in the video. It merged with New York in 1898. It should have shown Brooklyn falling of the chart and New York gaining about 800,000 people in 1898, not a slow loss for one and a slow increase for the other.
It should have shown the Brooklyn bar actually go up and merge with New York.
@@johnboehmer6683 It should have shown New york grow lips and teeth, and brooklyn jump into its mouth
...and then hurl it back out...then it would be a barf graph...🥁🤨
@@johnboehmer6683 LOL
almost all big cities in the 1900s went to hell except nyc and philidelphia
I would say people were moving into the countryside
@@LInkinPark4life No, they moved to different cities, especially in the south and west
@@LInkinPark4life Nope they were moving into more prominent urban areas for job opportunities.
What about LA
st.louis has lost nearly 500,000 people
Chicago and Minneapolis are top 7 in 1776? That's pretty surprising, seeing as how they weren't founded until 1833 and 1850 respectively. Also surprising since the British would not allow Americans to settle west of the Appalachians. I'm thinking your beautiful data is off.
I'm assuming he's using estimates of Native Americans living in the area that is today known as those cities.
@@BS-vx8dg nah Jason is right, the graph is bs.
@@BS-vx8dg yea the graph is off. 2035 hasn't even happened yet
@@2legit2quit70 2035 hasn't happened yet? Oh! So that must be why he wrote: " *The years after 2020 are estimations* .
Duh.
Yeah this is WACK as hell
Phoenix has grown so much and so fast. I imagine the water shortage will begin to impact the growth of LA/Phoenix/Vegas
Water desalination and conservation projects are thankfully becoming a bigger focus in Arizona Universities. Let’s hope this dirty bubble doesn’t pop.
My wife and I went to Chicago a couple years ago, probably the coolest city I’ve ever been too. Beautiful city. Amazing food. Very clean. And so so so much to do. All the time. I honestly wish I could go back.
It's a wonderful place as long as you don't look too closely
Ever been to NYC?
@@duckmercy11Chicago is a mini NYC. So yes anyone who likes NYC will like Chicago. I loved my visit to Chicago
I've lived in the Chicagoland area for over 10 years. Loved it! It has alot of crime, but there's still way more good there than bad.
So, New York is the undisputed US population champion since 1785
That was just the rat count...
@@505rox They didn't count the cockroaches?
Sad that 1950's Detroit would still be the 5th largest city today!
Not sad at all...
it was once projected to be the biggest, really sad that it fell
@@pacevoez1929 Neighborhoods are in a state of decay. Fix those. Second, blue color jobs need to be much closer.
Chicago in 1890: "Your days are numbered, New York! Just a few more years and that top spot is mine!"
New York: "This isn't even my final form."
I like how once the predictions start, the bars no longer switch any places.
I thought that was odd too, but in reality San Antonio surpasses Philadelphia by 2023 and Austin joins the Top 10 in 2024 replacing San Jose at #10.
If it had gone to 2040, it seems like Houston would have overtaken Chicago for third place.
@@davidfreesefan23 In reality Houston will probably overtake it long before then. If you look at Chicago they had mostly declined population throughout the 2010s but suddenly after 2021 it only grows from there; that optimism simply has no basis in reality.
Detroit used to be enormous, and is an example here where the city is smaller than it used to be in terms of population. In fact, I think it's somewhere close to half of it's former peak in the 1950s, where it was over 1.8M, now it's somewhere around 700k I believe as of the most recent census. People actually left Detroit in droves because it became so corrupt, overrun with crime and poverty all because the big automotive manufacturers moved their operations elsewhere so they could save some money, and the city of Detroit and State of Michigan were run by the auto companies so this was all allowed with basically nothing to compensate the families that were devastated. Absolute cruelty, and one of the most diabolical things that's really happened and nobody really ever talks about it. People talk about how bad Detroit is, but it's pretty rare to hear people who actually understand how it got that way and how prosperous it used to be.
The latest statistics show that Detroit has shrunk to just 1/3 of it's peak population as its current residents clock in around 624k and steadily lose about 8k a year.
The unions ruined Detroit
Detroit metropolitan area population has risen slightly i think.
No, complacency against what the public wanted in regards to quality and MPGs. The UAW would have cared about building one car over another. If GM had been more forward thinking, they could have owned the batter technology patents.
Meanwhile, metro Detroit still has 3.5 million people there, they just don’t live in Detroit proper anymore. It still feel likes a huge city when you’re there.
Lol a lot of the big cities at the start were just neighborhoods of Philly before they unified
And neighborhoods of NYC.
Also, most of the top towns in the 1780s are just New England tourist villages today.
@@blllllllllllllllllllrlrlrl7059 like salem and plymouth
The Phoenix Metro Area is ridiculously large compared to when I moved here in 1987.
Yeah unfortunately we have these sorry ass three-strikers that move here from Cali, breed with some nasty-ass hoochie, and bear mini thugs.
Loved it there in the nineties! But started to get too big
@@leventahmed82 The Californiacation is out of control.
Urban sprawl is a horrible thing. I hate how more modern American cities have been built. Purely around cars and nothing else.
@@FactorySettings_ I hate how more modern American cities have been b̶u̶i̶l̶t̶ destroyed for cars
I love how after all the swings, changes in lead, and contractions, the projection stage is just super safe. It's like watching two different charts.
It was sad seeing Detroit going down...
same with st. louis we were the biggest city in the midwest at one point
@@zwebackshyper same here in Indianapolis, we came from such a small start to a big Growth in the mid 2000s
@@zwebackshyper I remember st louis for harley race
Detroit breaks my heart.
@Snake Plisken you're commenting again after 16 hours
Hard to believe pokey little Cincinnati was a top 10 city for most of the 19th century.
Cincinnati was once known as the Queen City of the West. In the early half of the 19th century it was a major migration center. People like my ancestors would land from Europe in Baltimore and then cross the Appalachians via the National Road (now U.S 40) then get on barges and sail down the Ohio River. They stopped in Cincinnati and made new lives there because the year-round climate was great, farming was excellent and new industries were multiplying in the area, including nearby Hamilton, Middletown and Dayton. For the rest of the 19th century it was a major political and cultural center. Four U.S. presidents, the two Harrisons, Grant and W.H. Taft, had ties to Cincinnati. Henry Clay was from nearby Lexington, KY. It was a center of the abolition movement, and the first professional baseball team, the Reds, started playing there in 1870.
I was shocked too!
But it's by a major river and ships passed through there.
Same reason why Cleveland was a major city. That and it's between NYC and Chicago and they passed/layover in Cleveland.
I guess they were busy planting seeds and shipments too! 😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣
@@chrisburnett9905 dope info for someone new to Cincy! Thanks!
Can you make a new video of the same thing but take into account metropolitan populations, too?
I think this would be cool too
The Metro Video will show the same top 5
@@Redridge07 Dallas metro is larger than Houstons.
@@Redridge07 DFW instantly jumps into that top 5. Largest mass of people in the US that is landlocked.
@@Flipdodge392 no its not. Houston is much bigger than Dallas. The only way that is remotely true is if you combine Dallas-Fort worth area.
Austin’s supposed to pass San Jose THIS YEAR 😂😭
It already has.
Dallas, TX 9th
Austin, TX 10th
San Jose, CA 11th
Fort Worth, TX 12th
Until California gets some sanity about it again, Texas cities and elsewhere are going to be passing Cali cities.
Crazy how san jose is irrelevant to us Californians since there really isnt much theres. Yet you guys are happy austin is comparable to san jose . Lmao this is so weird to me I dont get it I really dont
@@jeovannijuarez9518 there is over a million ppl so wdym lol
Northern Liberties is a neighborhood in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Prior to its incorporation into Philadelphia in 1854, it was among the top 10 largest cities in the U.S. in every census from 1790 to 1850.
Crazy to think that New York over a hundred years ago had a bigger population than my entire country today
The city of Rome two thousand years ago had around a million as well.
@@christophershell7564 The city of Mexico had 500,000 when the Spanish discovered it in 1521
I knew that NY was biggest but didn't realize it was by that much.
You are amazing clueless.
D.C., the city built from a swamp to be the capital of the U.S.A. managed to crack the top 10 from 1941 to 1972.
DC grew really fast in the last decade so it could once again pop into the top 10 again
We need to rethink how we define "cities" and think of population centers as DMAs. This would change a lot.
the future is now XD
🤣🤣🤣🤣
hahaha
Now
Yeah and now is 2035?!
@@andrewdog-gonewaylon5915 I'm in 2096
Understanding that the steep decline of Midwestern cities in the 1960's, planted the seeds of the current national political voting trends of the people of those areas of the country.
Those areas were raped of their resources in the late 1800s then setup as singularly focused industrial zones.
Not great foresight on the leader's behalf.
Only becuase we don't want the 49% in New York and California to destroy our way of life. There's a reason we have the electoral college. Half the country would be controlled by one state and one city leading to a civil war that would split the country into pieces.
It's interesting to consider potential consequences of climate-change, with growth in booming southern cities possibly redirecting to more-temperate climates in Rust Belt cities like Detroit, Cleveland, Buffalo, etc. You can never be too sure about the future.
@@jacobbernard1393 Climate change will not have the affect most of the alarmist are claiming. For decades they have been saying sea levels will rise in just a few years and it never happens. That's ignoring the fact these same alarmist where screaming ice age in the 80s.
As a Phoenix resident I have definitely known it to be a huge rise in population in the recent 6 years.
It's an extremely attractive spot if you hate the snow, but aren't looking for a coastal-ish town.
I know that if Canada would become a US state, Phoenix is in my top 3 spots I would move to... The 2 others from the top 3 are Savannah, GA and somewhere in Texas (I don't know what I could afford, but Galveston or thereabouts is interesting). The only problem with Phoenix are it's torrid summers, but everything else I like. My parents would move to San Diego and my sister to Florida. Yeah we're all tired from the northern cold/snow ;-)
The suburbs are expanding like crazy
@@Francois424 I am a savannah local. Whatever you do do not move to pooler. Yes the housing is affordable but traffic is hell and its a tourist spot.
@@Francois424 Cannot go wrong with San Diego!
It's hard to believe that Buffalo was the 8th largest city in the U.S. at one time. Even harder to believe is that Salem was in the top 10.
I think I saw that Buffalo actually experienced it’s first population growth in 70 years!
Buffulo use to be considered a major city all they way into the 90's that's crazy because the other 24 cities stayed major and Buffulo got replaced with Phoenix and I think Buffulo downtown skyline is bigger that Phoenix downtown skyline.
From 5:27 to 5:57 there was a constant battle for who would be the 10th largest, also it was sad watching Detroit go from being the 4th largest in the country to off the chart in the 2000’s
New Orleans almost being 2nd largest be like
Off the charts and bankrupt, tragically sad history.
Domestic auto manufqcturing moved to South. the unions made it hard for Detroit to compete. less money was available to make good product and foreign auto gained market share. The tax thing is screwed up. I believe its like a 100% tax on us made vehicles sold in europe.
Detroit, Cleveland, and Pittsburgh, were rust belt cities. Meaning they produced a lot of steel, and were the highest in factory production, mostly due to making war machines for WWII and because that was where technologywas going. But after the war, and heading into the 1960's other cities were becoming more advanced, so cities like Detroit, Cleveland, and Pittsburgh, stopped being as important and cool, thus losing residents. However these cities are on the rise again. I think the Browns are actually a large reason Cleveland has not completely collapsed.
This illustrates pretty vividly how neither meteoric growth nor steep decline last forever; there are alternating periods of prosperity and struggle, but long-term trends prove perennially difficult to accurately-predict.
Washington, DC was once the nation's most-dangerous city, with residents spilling-out into the suburbs, but today, it's growing rapidly, with great wealth creation. The same could be said for other cities that were once down on their luck, and likewise, cities with booming populations today may slow in growth as living expenses rise and competition for housing and jobs increases.
I'm very interested to think of which cities will grow the most between now and later this century, perhaps ending-up on the top 10 list; Austin, Jacksonville, Columbus, Indianapolis, Seattle, and Denver could all have over 1 million people in the near-future.
I think eventually a lot of people will end up moving to cities in the rust belt due to higher costs of living and those cities already having the infrastructure to support future industries.
@@AllDay3004 and possibly even for better weather as global warming heats up the globe.
@@AllDay3004 I think younger generation prefers living in dense cities than suburbs. I for one, hate suburbs and the car and Walmart centric southern cities.
great video !!!! as usual. it was you who made me want to get started on youtube. I love doing this kind of ranking. you have a new competitor lol.
Industrial Revolution starts:
American city population: *It's free real estate*
Detroit has slid to #30 and currently only houses 1/3 of it's peak population (624,000 is the 2022 estimate) having steadily lost around 7k every year.
What a lesson to be learned.
It’s a garbage place to live. Detroit sucks. Metro Detroit on the other hand is a very underrated area in the country. Very affordable and a lot of good jobs.
@@saberswordsmen1 "People just moved to the suburbs" A gross over-simplification... no other American city has 60% of it's structures destroyed/razed and square miles of empty fields anywhere near their city centers. Detroit is singular in it's devastation and the metro area's decline reflects that people are leaving the entire region (30k people left in the past year according to this year's census numbers).
It's easy to think of cities as being as big (relatively speaking) and important in the past as they are now. That's pretty much true for New York, but you can see how a lot of other small-ish (nowadays) cities were leading cities in the past. Baltimore, Charleston, Cincinnati. And then you have some that are really big now, and were really big throughout the 20th century, that were nothing until the latter 1800's. Chicago, for example. Then cities that started booming even more recently, like L.A. or Detroit. It's crazy to think how Detroit didn't start booming until the early 1900's, and 50 years later it was already transforming into a hollowed out slum.
2035 and Buffalo still hasn’t made its comeback - “what don’t stop yet. Just A few more years and it will be back in the top 10!”
Wrong everyone up north is moving to Texas lol.
Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo who buffaloed their way to Texas 😁
Buffalo is an underrated city. Have had a lot of fun up there
Never knew Buffalo was that big , like this chart gives us a little history of this country.
As if Buffalo is the last stop before going into Canada. 🤔
iCost buffalo was a huge port due to the canals and hydroelectricity generated from the niagara River. There was a lot of factories and production. Back in the mid 1800s buffalo was the richest city in America. I recommend a visit if you like architecture, you can really see the former wealth in the old mansions and buildings
You can now visibly see the effects of manufacturing outsourcing
And illegal immigration.
New York and Philadelphia: We've been here the whole time. You know you love us.
I like pretzels with mustard in Pilly.
Interesting dynamic of the changing composition of the top 10 US cities. I was surprised that Austin didn't overtake San Jose during between 2023 and 2035. You assumed a linear growth in population for each city between each census and this works well for most decades. However, for the great industrial centers and cities like Boston and Washington, DC had there been a census in 1945, those population figures might have been considerably larger those recorded in the 1950 census.
It would be interesting to go back to the early colonial period, but there were likely few data points. Carl Bridenbaugh provides some info. Boston was the leading city up until the 1730s and the enterprising young Ben Franklin left Boston around this time for Philadelphia, one of the fastest growing US cities in the late colonial era.
You have used the rankings as they were listed at the time of each census and this makes sense. An alternative might use present city boundaries and go in back in time. This is nearly impossible to accomplish, but one could approximate this by combining smaller cities among the top 100 at each census with the larger city into which they eventually were merged, So Spring Garden, Northern Liberties and Southwalk would be added to Philadelphia; Allegheny would be combined with Pittsburgh, and in the case of New York City, each of the five boroughs was listed, I believe, in each census. If not, a simple approximation would be to combine Brooklyn with New York.
When people think of those cities that have lost a great deal of population since their peak, usually Detroit comes immediately to mind as it down nearly one a quarter million people from its 1.85 million in 1950. One must go back to 1910 to find a lower population figure for that city. However, in the case of St. Louis, one would have to go back to the 1860 census to find a lower figure than its present level.
2:54-4:54 what the music?
angel lover - the rising
the very satisfying 2035 Philadelphia population of *1776*000
Underrated comment
**Waiting impatiently for Los Angeles to make the list**
**1916**
Thar she blows!
And blew, she did! 🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂
So happy that Baltimore was there in the list for 2+ centuries! 💯
Also not to forget it topped the charts for many decades..
Love my city. Although a shadow of its former self, it still has much to offer, and I'm glad I came here from Los Angeles.
@@jacobbernard1393 so true! It still has much to offer…
I live in the area but when I'm older imma move there cuz those housing prices are so good, idc if I live in the hood 😂
Why are these so satisfying to watch?
Cuz they are!
And the music adds the spice! 😁
Didn't Houston already surpass Chicago? Or it's about to but in this video it shows 2035 and Houston hasn't even surpassed Chicago yet
No, crime rates didn’t scare enough people out of Chicago yet
Yeah, when the census data comes out, I fully expect Houston to be #3 and Phoenix with more than 2 million people.
@@MirzaAhmed89 2019 statistics show that those cities are not even close
Not quite yet city proper - but just a matter of time ( probably in the next couple of years - very close ) definitely won’t be like in this video
@@MirzaAhmed89 yea it’s not even gonna happen Chicago is wayyyyy to big for Houston garbage weak ass😭😂🤣💁🏽♂️🤷🏾♂️💯
If this was a graph of metro area growth vs. population within city limits, Atlanta would explode onto the scene in the 90s through now. While the actual city population is "only" over 500,000 the entire metro area has now passed 6 Million people. In terms of metro area, Atlanta is now Top 8 in the country after having "only" 2 million in the region in 1988.
Exactly, by sheer demographics metro Atlanta has far more people than Phoenix or San Diego which this video wants to make you believe are "bigger".
New York City: I don't wanna come back down from this cloud.
Cloud of smog?
It’s crazy how the city I live right next to, Philadelphia (and visit every month or two) had a population of 22,000 when the country gained independence, but today it has over one million people! It’s crazy how much it grew. And, in 2035, It’ll have 1.7M people!
It had over 2 million at one point
My city Milwaukee made it on here 1961-63 🙌
It shows when you visit. A city lost in time.
Milwaukee is a pretty big city.To consider it a US major city yeah it definitely qualifies.It dont surprise me that is was there in 61-63.I bet it is bad ass there in that city.I will visit one day.
"The future ain't what it use to be."
Yogi Berra
Rest In Peace a Yankee legend
I love Yogi Bear and Boo Boo
What do the colors of the bars represent?
Looks like it's meant to represent the region: blue for the Northeast, pink for the South, orange for the Midwest, yellow for Washington DC and the West.
@@rfresa Yup, basically.
But Baltimore is in Maryland and that's pink?
Yes, that is correct. According to the United States Census Bureau, Maryland is in the South.
@@rfresa Or they just got Washington DC wrong (Washington *state* is in the West, not Washington DC)
How is Atlanta not up there... the traffic is so bad 😔
Because they're going by the population within city limits. Most of Atlanta's population is suburban
Bad traffic doesnt mean you have a large city.
Austin has terrible traffic and Austin has only 2million ppl by metro and 900k by city
Houston and LA population has grown so much because they keep expanding the city limits by annexing neighboring towns. Chicago and New York would be even larger in this case they just can’t expand to do it.
Houston has only annexed 2 tiny pieces of land in the last 20 years. All of it's physical growth happened in the 20th century.
New York was originally just Manhattan until it annexed the other four boroughs though. So its population would technically be 1.7M if the boroughs remained separate cities.
I never knew Detroit had that large of a population 😮 1M+
Look at the rise and fall of Detroit...
Horrible, ain't it? But an extremely telling lesson of what greed, corruption, and the wickedness of man can do to undo blessing, hard work, ingenuity, and success.
That’s what greed, corruption and an undiversified economy get you!
Shipping jobs overseas ruined Detroit.
I honestly curious about some of these growth spurs. Why was Philadelphia stagnant for a while and then got a big jump in the 1850s. And what happened in Chicago that made it grow so fast?
Some of it you chalk it up to industrialization and ramping up to civil war (and relating factors). But likely the biggest reason it jumps so much on this chart is that it goes by census data which is every 10 years and creates a slope between census. In 1854 Philadelphia basically redistricted to include a lot of surrounding area and lumped it all into Philly. Naturally representing a big population growth.
Cubs, Media Outlets, Oprah.
Can you also make a video about biggest Finnish cities? :D
That would be interesting yeah! I'm curious for one thing, if you can help me understand, I recently saw a map that showed that Oulu and the region near it (sorry, don't know the region names of finland) had some of the younger population in the country. Would you say that a lot of younger people are moving north of your country? I expected it'd be like most countries, and that younger people would move to the coast, helsinki etc. or just out of the country really. Is Oulu a growing city or something like that?
@@RenegadeShepard69 Yes Oulu region (North ostrobothnia) has youngest people in finland, For example in Town called Liminka 40% of the people are under 18 years old. One reason for the young population is Laestadianism. Laestadians make lot of children. Because they think child is a present from god. Almost all laestadians in Finland live in Central and North Ostrobothnia
@@Valesokkeli106 Wow thank you for that explanation. I didn't even know about this religion movement. It's an interesting fact I suppose about the Sámi cultures in there? But also Finnic peoples can adhere to that religion I suppose. Well, I'll try to read more about it, I would've never know how to find about it without this comment. Thanks from Brasil, I enjoy reading about your country a lot!
Both of them?
Houston almost about become the 3rd largest city in the U.S.
Why does it show Chicago as having a population of 5100 in 1776 when the city wasn't founded until 1833!!!!!
1833 was its date of formal incorporation, it had originally been settled around 1780, but the dates aren't very concrete.
As a lifelong Dallas Texan I was shocked to see San Antonio was more populated than Dallas. I knew Houston was but had no clue about San Antonio. Learn something new every day 🤔
We've been bigger than ya'll for a long time. It's just when you put Dallas and Fort worth together that ya'll are bigger. I think our not even close to as impressive skyline makes people think we're not as big as we are.
It’s sad to see Philadelphia’s downfall
How did it die?
Did you notice it went from 2 million to 1.5 million
Its probably because its a rust belt city but ive hurd that cities like Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Columbus, and even Detroit were recovering or about to in 2019. The pandemic delayed it but with things opening up in the states im sure i will resume its recovery in 2022.
Phillys population has been rising of late...I recommend a visit, it’s a very cool city. Lot of fun bars, museums and history. Also had a cool hip vibe
Detroit much worse.
Please do most famous greek celebrities
(2008-2020) Please please please.
I ❤ your videos.
It is a shame this didn't take into account census bureau estimates in between census years, for if you did you would have noted that the Census estimated Detroit briefly hit the 2 million mark in the early 1950s before the rise of the post-war suburbs began to draw away in earnest people the new homes being built there. The decline to the 1960s census number didn't happen to around 1954, not 1950 as this chart says.
Detroit had 1.9 million people in 1955. I work at a University. They have all the stats including centers of employment.
One thing I noticed is clearly by 1906 the San Francisco earthquake took away the city's dominance from being the top city of the west. 10 years later Los Angeles is the new leader showing where trade was changed. Cool to watch how an earthquake can change the Dynamics in history.
Sad to see the midwest’s industrial decline and ultimate depopulation of what were once thriving metropolises in the riverine heartland of the US.
There is still a lot of people out there, just not super large cities
It would be interesting to see an overlay of technologies onto this graph. Specifically skyscraper/elevator, automobile, Air Conditioning and internet boom.
Love from Chicago guys
Thanks for the video. I'll bet there's already a video of how many people have left the big cities since the covid pandemic began. Many of those who can seem to be moving out to work from home in suburbs or rural spaces.
We think of San Francisco as a major metropolis, but after the 1906 earthquake it dropped off the top 10 (10th spot) and never returned.
San Franciso is actually a very prosperous city today. Reason it hasn't goten any more people is because its a very small area surrounded on all sides by water. It has ran out of room to expand.
@@Psyclone500TV no water on it's southern border with Daly city etc etc
Well it stagnated but rebuilt pretty fast. Just that it's a small footprint.....it has no cemeteries in it's city limits
It's crazy to think that New York is the champion when you consider that Manhattan and Staten Island are islands with no additional land for growth unlike, for example, Los Angeles. Manhattan can only grow upwards in the form of skyscrapers. The most significant population growth spikes must have occurred in Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx. Although technically Brooklyn and Queens are on an island also, just a much larger island, Long Island.
Manhattan is on an island because the Indians thought it was worthless land, since game animals like deer never go onto Hudson River islands and the Indians wanted the mainland. There are many islands in the Hudson, they are all worthless for hunting. Check out Constitution Island and Schodack Island, they are uninhabited by humans and there are no animals
Dallas is smaller than San Antonio, Priceless! And I'm from Houston.
They probably arent accounting for all of DFW + Arlington.
Crazy how Los Angeles didn't even register in the list until like 1917.
Wow nothing really changes next 15 years
It will
I think this is my fav so far.
Thanks.
☮
It was fun watching Chicago hit the afterburners (oops no pun intended :) 😀 . That was around 1890 right after the flow of the Chicago River was reversed (one of the great engineering feats of the 19th century) to flow AWAY from Lake Michigan and towards the Mississippi River cause ya' know.
So then with better water and better waist disposal Chicago could support millions of people.
The fact Cincinnati was in the top 10 largest cities for so long is very fascinating
Back when the Ohio River was the only way to get stuff west.
A minor point, but Brooklyn should have just disappeared in 1896 when it was incorporated into Greater New York.
These videos are so satisfying to watch. More please. :)
This channel actually inspired me to make my own youtube videos haha! I figured making bar chart race videos would be a good way to learn. I've moved on to other types of videos now, but I'll always remember where I started!
It’s crazy how New York reminds to be the biggest city in America for 250 years!
Austin and Fort Worth will surpass San Jose for the 10th and 11th spot. Both will reach 1 million citizens as well as Charlotte, Jacksonville and Columbus.
Yup. Dallas will bypass San Diego for the 8th spot
Chicago was the first to develop with the great engineering feat of the River and the first skyscraper the world ever had. Chicago will forever be world class.
Chicago never had Coney Island.
California has so many large cities it’s insane
So does Texas.
It's the weather. People don't like winter.
@@rubenpena4984 california has a lot more than Texas
@@lukas4112nah Texas took the cake
Kinda funny how they included Brooklyn and New York on the same graph as the population is all the same. My city, DC, was on the list for a hot minute and then faded. I'm surprised that Atlanta and Miami, New Orleans, etc. were not on the list after 2022.
Brooklyn was once a separate city from New York, and was annexed into NYC in 1898.
Atlanta and Miami both only have about 500,000 people in the city proper, though each has a metropolitan area close to 6 million.
New Orleans peaked in population around 1960, with a huge drop-off after Hurricane Katrina, but has started to recover in growth since.
Cleveland (my home town!) was once bigger than LA?!?!?!?!? Wowsers!
I knew how the race would "end", but I loved it when LA smoked Chicago! That music was perfect!
New York : I'm number one and none beat me.
Philadelphia : am I Joke to you, I was number one before.
Chicago and Los Angeles : At least we tired.
I think Los Angeles can grow to 5 million or more by 2035. 2010 to 2020 saw a lot of mid rise to high rise apartment or condo construction. Most people see LA as single family homes, but thats changing. Some SFH lots adding multiple homes. Major commercial streets are adding residential housing like midrise and high rises especially near Metro stations. Its happening all over American cities. LA is just slower at building taller. Honolulu, NYC, Chicago, Miami, Seattle are building so many tall buildings compared to big LA city. But LA will catch up. Most will be 5 to 7 floor apartment buildings not 20 floor apartments. Since its cheaper to build concrete and wood apartments than steel and glass towers.
LA is going to take a hit if things keep going south for them.
Doubtful, citizens are leaving CA in droves, but it does have an increasing illegal immigrants population, not sure how much of that is included in this data though, technically no one really knows exact numbers when you account for that.
Never been to LA but I have always heard the possibility of earthquakes prevent LA from building really tall buildings
How did you get the future data??