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  1. Of Black America was a series of seven one-hour documentaries presented by CBS News in the summer of 1968, at the end of the Civil Rights Movement and during a time of racial unrest ( Martin Luther King had been assassinated that spring and riots in many cities had followed).

    Number
    Title
    Producers
    1
    "Black History: Lost, Stolen, Strayed"
    Andy Rooney, Vern Diamond, Lloyd Weaver
    2
    "The Black Soldier"
    Peter Wolff, Lloyd Weaver
    3
    "Black World"
    Lloyd Weaver
    4
    "Body and Soul"
    Andy Rooney, Martin Carr, Lloyd Weaver
    • One-In-Four Black People Are Members of Gen Z
    • Over Half of The Black Population Lives in The South
    • A Growing Share of Black Adults Have A College Degree
    • The Black Immigrant Population Has Grown in Number and Share
    • Black Household Incomes Since 2000

    The age structure of the Black population has also changed since 2000. As of 2019, the median age of single-race, non-Hispanic Black people is 35, compared with 30 in 2000. This makes the nation’s Black population younger than the nation’s single-race, non-Hispanic White population (with a median age of 43) and the single-race, non-Hispanic Asian p...

    In 2019, the South was the region with the highest share of the country’s Black population, with 56% of this population living there. The Midwest and Northeast each held 17% of this population, while the West was home to one-tenth of the Black population. Regionally, the share of the national Black population living in the South has grown. In 2000,...

    The number of Black adults with a college degree or more education has more than doubled since 2000. That year, roughly 3 million Black adults ages 25 and older, or 15%, had earned at least a bachelor’s degree. That number grew to 6.7 million (23%) in 2019. Notably, the share of the Black population with at least a college degree has risen at a sim...

    Immigrants are a part of the nation’s Black population that has grown over time. The foreign-born Black population has nearly doubled since 2000, rising from 7% then to 10% in 2019. In numbers, 2.4 million Black people were born in another country in 2000, and by 2019, that had risen to 4.6 million. Black immigrants are mostly from just two regions...

    Since 2000, the U.S. Black population has not seen significant increases in median household income. The median income for households headed by a Black person was $44,000 in 2019 (before the COVID-19pandemic-induced recession). But household income of Black households varies. Roughly three-in-ten Black households (29%) made less than $25,000 in 201...

    • Shannon Greenwood
  2. Há 15 horas · African Americans are largely the descendants of enslaved people who were brought from their African homelands by force to work in the New World. Their rights were severely limited, and they were long denied a rightful share in the economic, social, and political progress of the United States.

    • Hollis Lynch
  3. 18 de jan. de 2024 · In this analysis, the Black population is made up of three main groups: single-race, non-Hispanic Black people; non-Hispanic, multiracial Black people; and Black Hispanics. You can also read our newly updated fact sheet about Black Americans in 2022 .

  4. 18 de jan. de 2024 · The Black population has grown by more than 10 million since 2000, when 36.2 million of the U.S. population identified as Black, marking a 32% increase over roughly two decades. In 2022, there were 5.1 million foreign-born Black Americans, about 11% of the U.S. Black population.

    • Shannon Greenwood
    • Of Black America1
    • Of Black America2
    • Of Black America3
    • Of Black America4
    • Of Black America5
  5. 25 de fev. de 2021 · Black History Month has been celebrated in the United States for close to 100 years. But what is it, exactly, and how did it begin? In the years after Reconstruction, campaigning for the...

  6. African-American history - Wikipedia. Contents. hide. (Top) Enslavement. Colonial era. American Revolution and early United States. Religion. Antebellum period. American Civil War and emancipation. Reconstruction. Nadir of American race relations. Early civil rights movement. Great Migration and the Harlem Renaissance. Black-owned businesses.