Mean center of U.S. population
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The mean center of U.S. population is determined by the United States Census Bureau after tabulating the results of each census. The Bureau defines it to be:
- the point at which an imaginary, flat, weightless, and rigid map of the United States would balance perfectly if weights of identical value were placed on it so that each weight represented the location of one person on the date of the census.
The following counties included the mean center of U.S. population since 1790:
- 1790: Kent County, Maryland
- 1800: Howard County, Maryland
- 1810: Loudoun County, Virginia
- 1820: Hardy County, West Virginia
- 1830: Grant County, West Virginia
- 1840: Upshur County, West Virginia
- 1850: Wirt County, West Virginia
- 1860: Pike County, Ohio
- 1870: Highland County, Ohio
- 1880: Boone County, Kentucky
- 1890: Decatur County, Indiana
- 1900: Bartholomew County, Indiana
- 1910: Monroe County, Indiana
- 1920: Owen County, Indiana
- 1930: Greene County, Indiana
- 1940: Sullivan County, Indiana
- 1950: Clay County, Illinois
- 1960: Clinton County, Illinois
- 1970: St. Clair County, Illinois
- 1980: Jefferson County, Missouri
- 1990: Crawford County, Missouri
- 2000: Phelps County, Missouri
In the first census, 1790, the mean population center was located a little under 8 miles (13 km) west, and slightly north, of Chestertown, Maryland, a few feet from a small branch of the Chesapeake Bay called Stavely Pond. Oddly enough, the spot is on the "Great Oak Mannour" property patented to Josiah Ffendall in the mid-1600s, one of Kent County's oldest and largest land grants. The patent was for 2000 acres (8 km²). Fendall was an early governor of the colony.
In 1800, the mean population center leaped across the Bay to a spot just east of today's Glenelg, Maryland.
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