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The Washington Post reports that the 1970 Bureau of the Census indicates that very little racial integration of American suburbs happened during the 1960s.
1971 (Jan 16)
Preliminary studies of the 1970 Bureau of the Census indicated very little racial integration of American suburbs during the 1960s, according to a Washington Post report. Specialists at the Census Bureau predicted early trends showing little suburban integration would hold true even as more detailed analyses were completed. Meyer Zitter, Assistant Chief of the bureau's population division, estimated that about 15 percent of the nation's Blacks lived within metropolitan areas and outside the central cities. The figure for whites was nearly 40 percent. Census officials said that if the preliminary reports were sustained, it would again illustrate that whites were fleeing the inner cities to the suburbs. During the 1960s, there was a reported net loss of about 2.5 million whites from the inner city areas and an increase of about three million Blacks. Two-thirds of the rise in the number of Black inner-city dwellers was attributable to births. These preliminary reports came at a time when the Nixon administration was still shaping its policies regarding suburban integration.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.