Roxbury Crossing, Massachusetts Statistic: Population, Charts, Map, Steets and More

If you're wondering how many people live in Roxbury Crossing City, then you've come to the right place. There are some interesting facts about this neighborhood. The population of Roxbury is quite diverse, with African American and Hispanic families, young professionals, and families from other cultures. As of 2016, Roxbury was home to 59,626 people - 21,116 males and 24,713 females - of various races and ethnicities. In fact, approximately seventy-two percent of Roxbury's population does not identify as Hispanic or Latino. There are also ten and twenty-six-and-six-and-a-half-million residents, mainly white, and Asian, although those numbers are likely to increase.

In the early 20th century, a large community of German immigrants moved to Roxbury, settling in Mission Hill. These immigrants helped build a thriving Jewish community in the area. They also helped build a Jewish community that would survive the city's economic problems. Roxbury was incorporated as a city in 1846 and annexed to Boston in 1868. This neighborhood was also the center of the African-American community in Boston. Previously, African-American communities were located in the South End and Beacon Hill.

In 1880, approximately twenty percent of all Maritimers lived in Boston. During the early twentieth century, many Maritimers made their homes in the burgeoning'streetcar suburbs' of the city. They also settled in nearby cities, including Roxbury, Cambridge, and Lynn. The Maritimers tended to live with neighbors of similar ethnicity. For instance, Irish Catholics from New Brunswick identified more closely with South Boston Irish and Nova Scotian Presbyterians.