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Polish-American refers to American citizens of Polish descent. The most notable of the Polish-American communities are in Chicago, Illinois and its surrounding suburbs, the Almanac of American Politics 2004 says that "Even today, in Archer Heights [a neighborhood of Chicago], you can scarcely go a block without hearing someone speaking Polish".
Polish Americans by state totals
According to the census 2000, American states with the largest numbers of Poles and Americans of Polish ancestry are:
- 01 New York (986,141)
- 02 Illinois (932,996)
- 03 Michigan (854,844)
- 04 Pennsylvania (824,146)
- 05 New Jersey (576,473)
- 06 Wisconsin (497,726)
- 07 California (491,325)
- 08 Ohio (433,016)
- 09 Florida (429,691)
- 10 Massachusetts (323,210)
- 11 Connecticut (284,272)
- 12 Minnesota (240,405)
- 13 Texas (228,309)
- 14 Maryland (184,364)
- 15 Indiana (183,989)
- 16 Arizona (126,665)
- 17 Virginia (124,647)
- 18 Colorado (101,190)
- 19 Missouri (90,448)
- 20 Georgia (82,765)
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Polish Americans by percentage of the total population
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Polish communities as part of Urban America
The city with the highest amount of Poles is Chicago (over 700 thousands people are of Polish descent), thus it is sometimes said that Chicago is the second largest "Polish" city in the world, as Warsaw, Polish capital, is the only city with more Polish residents. Chicago has three major Polish neigborhoods. New York is second with over 600,000 Polish American in its metropolitan area. Most of the Poles are concentrated in the Greenwich Village neigborhood. Finally, the Detroit Metropolitan Area is third with about a half of million. Detroit is the third city in the states to have a well distinguished Polish Neighborhood.
Other cities with major Polish communities include Buffalo, a city that once had a vibrant Polish neighborhood but it's now completely integrated, Cleveland, Philadelphia,
Columbus, Boston, Baltimore, Portland, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Pittsburgh. Despite the lack of new Polish immigration, some cities are emerging with strong Polish American communities, Milwaukee (which already had a major Polish population) and Denver where richer Polish-Americans tend to move from Chicago had a major increase in the Polish population in the last 10 years. There is also a tendency to move to Florida among Poles from Chicago and New York.
Famous Polish-Americans
See: List of Polish Americans
See also
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