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Ethnic groups of the United States

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Most common ancestries in each U.S. state, according to the 2010 U.S. Census.
  German
  Irish
This map shows the most common ethnic groups in each county of the United States
Top ancestries in the United States

There are many different and diverse ethnic groups in the United States. Most people in the United States have ancestors who came from somewhere else, often from multiple places. Some people say their ancestry is "American"; often these are people from the Southern United States whose families have been living in America since before the American Revolution, however their ancestry most likely originated from Europe.

There are several races expanded into many ethnic groups in the United States:

(the idea of race is obsolete and pseudo and should not be conformed too and contradicts the use of ethnicity. Race is another way to divide people which creates problems.)

The race is not the same as ethnicity, however. Here are the top three ethnic groups in the United States. Since many Asian and Hispanic people are classified differently, most of the groups listed are white.[1]

  • The most common is German-American, which 42.8 million Americans identify with. Many people came to the U.S. from Germany in the 19th and early 20th centuries. German American is the most common ethnic group in over half the states. The largest number of Germans are found in the Midwest, West, and Pennsylvania.
  • Irish-American is the second-largest ethnic group found in the United States, with 30.5 million people.
  • The third-largest ethnic group is African-American, at 24.8 million people. The largest number of African-Americans are found in the South.

References

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Other websites

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Media related to Ethnic groups of the United States at Wikimedia Commons