Demographics : Missouri
The French traders were the first settlers of Missouri. The ethnic
character of the state changed after the Civil War and the the
Homestead Act (1862). Germans poured in large numbers in the state
followed by Czechs and Italians. The foreign-born numbered 151,196 in
2000, up from 83,633 in 1990.
Black Americans have witnessed a
continuous rise in the population in the recent decades. In 1960 it was
9% which shot up to 10.7% in 1990, and 11.2% in 2000. Kansas City's
black community supported a flourishing jazz and urban blues culture
between the two world wars. On the other hand St. Louis was the home of
Scott Joplin and W. C. Handy in the early years of the century. Of the
629,391 black residents of Missouri in 2000, 178,266 lived in St.
Louis, which was 51.2% black. In 2000 Missouri also had 118,592
Hispanics and Latinos. The total Asian population as of 2000 was
61,595.
Only a few American Indians remained in Missouri after 1836. The 2000 census showed an Indian population of 25,076.
The
French missionaries brought Roman Catholicism to Missouri in the late
17th century. The first permanent Roman Catholic Church was built about
1755 at St. Genevieve in Missouri. The Catholic population increased
with the influx of migrants from Germany, Ireland, Italy, and Eastern
Europe during the 19th century. Today, Roman Catholicism remains the
largest single denomination. However, the Evangelical Protestants
collectively outnumber Catholics. The state's first Methodist church
was organized around 1806.
In 2000, Missouri had 856,964 Roman
Catholics while Protestants numbered about 797,732. The estimated
number of Jews was 62,315 in 2000 and Muslims numbered about 19,359 in
the same year.