Page:Popular Science Monthly Volume 40.djvu/481

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URBAN POPULATION.
463
Population. Gain.
1870 to 1890.
Percentage
of gain.
1870 to 1890.
1870. 1880. 1890.
New York.
Total all wards 942,292 1,206,299 1,515,301 573,009 60·81
Total congested wards[1] 545,633 593,314 596,831 51,178 9·38
Total remaining wards 396,639 612,385 918,470 521,831 131·56
Philadelphia.
Total all wards 674,022 847,170 1,046,964 372,942 55·33
Total congested wards[2] 436,272 401,795 407,631 [3]28,641 6·56
Total remaining wards 237,750 445,375 639,333 401,593 168·91
Boston. 1880 to 1890.
Total all wards . . . . . . 362,839 448,477 85,638 23·60
Total congested wards[4] . . . . . . 98,074 99,094 1,020 1·04
Total remaining wards . . . . . . 264,765 349,383 84,618 31·96
Boston.
Total 250,526 362,839 448,477 197,921 79+
Boston proper 138,781 147,075 161,330 22,549 16+
Annexations 111,745 215,764 287,147 175,402 156+

A study of this last table throws great light upon the supposed concentration of population in the slums of the cities named. In New York the increase in the congested wards (and I have taken for this purpose all the wards south of Fourteenth Street) was in the twenty years from 1870 to 1890 but 51,178, or 9·38 per cent; while the increase for the whole city for the twenty years was 573,009, or 60·81 per cent. The remaining wards, or those north of Fourteenth Street, were the territory where nearly all this last-named gain took place. It was 531,831, or a gain from 1870 to 1890 of 131·56 per cent. Certainly during the twenty years there has been no perceptible increase of population in the congested territory described.

Turning to Philadelphia, and taking the compact wards, we find there has been a loss in the twenty years of 28,611, or 6·56 per cent, the wards other than the congested wards showing a gain of 101,583, or 168·91 per cent, while the total gain for the whole city was 372,912, or 55·33 per cent.

Similar conditions are shown for Boston. In the first section of the preceding table relating to Boston the population for 1880 and 1890 only is given, as explained. This shows that in the ten years named the congested wards, which include all the slum population of the city, the gain was only 1,020, or 1·04 per cent; while in the remaining wards there was a gain of 84,618, or 31·96 per cent. The second section of the table relating to Boston shows the population for 1870, 1880, and 1890 for the whole city—for Boston proper, that is, the old city territory prior to any of its

  1. First to seventeenth inclusive, except the twelfth, which is an outlying ward.
  2. Second to twentieth inclusive, except the fifteenth.
  3. Loss
  4. The sixth, seventh, eighth, tenth, twelfth, sixteenth, and seventeenth.