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Jewish Population in the United States, 2015

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American Jewish Year Book 2015

Part of the book series: American Jewish Year Book ((AJYB,volume 115))

Abstract

This chapter examines the size, geographic distribution, and selected characteristics of the Jewish population of the US. Section 5.1 addresses the procedures employed to estimate the Jewish population of more than 900 local Jewish communities and parts thereof. Section 5.2 presents the major changes in local Jewish population estimates since last year’s Year Book. Section 5.3 examines population estimates for the country as a whole, each state, the four US Census Regions, the nine US Census Divisions, the 20 largest US Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs), the 20 largest US Combined Statistical Areas (CSAs) and the 51 Jewish Federation service areas with 20,000 or more Jews. Section 5.4 examines changes in the size and geographic distribution of the Jewish population at national, state, and regional scales from 1971 to 2015. Section 5.5 presents a description of local Jewish community studies and vignettes on recently completed local Jewish community studies (Columbus, Miami, and St. Louis). Section 5.6 relates to chapters in the current volume, specifically Chap. 1 on immigrant groups, by presenting comparisons of Jewish communities on the percentage of adults who are foreign born, and to Chap. 2 on Jewish life on campus, by presenting comparisons of Jewish communities on levels of secular education. Section 5.7 presents an atlas of local American Jewish communities, including a national map of Jews by county and 14 regional and state maps of Jewish communities.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    See Sheskin (1998). The fact that about 8–12 % of American Jews, despite rising intermarriage, continue to have one of 36 Distinctive Jewish Names (Berman, Caplan, Cohen, Epstein, Feldman, Freedman, Friedman, Goldberg, Goldman, Goldstein, Goodman, Greenberg, Gross, Grossman, Jacobs, Jaffe, Kahn, Kaplan, Katz, Kohn, Levin, Levine, Levinson, Levy, Lieberman, Rosen, Rosenberg, Rosenthal, Rubin, Schwartz, Shapiro, Siegel, Silverman, Stern, Weinstein, and Weiss) facilitates making reasonable estimates of the Jewish population. See also Mateos (2014) on the uses of ethnic names in general.

  2. 2.

    For an example, see footnote 4 in Sheskin and Dashefsky (2008).

  3. 3.

    Note that while we have classified DJN and “different methodology” methods as Scientific, the level of accuracy of such methods is well below that of the RDD methodology. Most studies using a “different methodology” have made concerted efforts to enumerate the known Jewish population via merging membership lists and surveying known Jewish households. An estimate of the unaffiliated Jewish population is then added to the affiliated population.

  4. 4.

    Due to a variety of issues with the 2011 Milwaukee study, a new analysis by the Berman Jewish DataBank of that study produced estimates that became available in Spring 2015. The American Jewish Year Book maintained the 1996 estimate from 2012 to 2014 while waiting for new analysis of the 2011 study.

  5. 5.

    The number of Jews in Florida in 2015 excludes Jews in part-year households (“snowbirds”). The historical record does not indicate the portion of the population that was part year in 1971.

  6. 6.

    The reason for the very low percentage in Broward (35 %) is that, in 1997, 56 % of persons in Jewish households age 25 and over in Broward were age 65 and over (60 % of whom were female) and did not have the opportunity for a college education.

  7. 7.

    The Pearson correlation coefficient (R) varies from −1 to +1. A value of R = 0 indicates that no relationship exists between two variables. A value of R = +1 indicates that a perfect positive relationship exists between two variables. A value of R = −1 indicates that a perfect negative relationship exists between two variables. In a positive relationship, as the values of one variable increase, the values of the other variable also increase. In a negative relationship, as the values of one variable increase, the values of the other variable decrease.

    The alpha value tests whether a particular value of R is statistically significantly different from 0, in which case we can conclude that a relationship exists between two variables. Alpha gives the exact probability of being wrong in concluding that a relationship exists.

  8. 8.

    Only the Westport, Weston, Wilton, Norwalk areas of the Eastern Fairfield community were included in the survey in 2000.

  9. 9.

    Palm Beach County consists of two Jewish communities: The South Palm Beach community includes Greater Boca Raton and Greater Delray Beach. The West Palm Beach community includes all other areas of Palm Beach County from Boynton Beach north to the Martin County line.

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Acknowledgment

The authors thank the following individuals and organizations:

1. The Jewish Federations of North America (JFNA) and former staff members at its predecessor organizations (United Jewish Communities and Council of Jewish Federations), Jim Schwartz, Jeffrey Scheckner, and Barry Kosmin, who authored the AJYB US Jewish population chapters from 1986 to 2003. Some population estimates in this report are still based on their efforts;

2. Laurence Kotler-Berkowitz, Senior Director of Research and Analysis and Director of the Berman Jewish DataBank at The Jewish Federations of North America;

3. Rae Asselin, Program Assistant, and Pamela Weathers, Research Assistant, at the Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life at the University of Connecticut, for their excellent assistance;

4. Chris Hanson and the University of Miami Department of Geography’s Geographic Information Systems Laboratory for assistance with the maps;

5. Mandell L. (Bill) Berman for his strong support of this effort;

6. Alan Cooperman, Director of Religion Research, at the Pew Research Center, Washington, DC, for his very helpful suggestions on the implications of the various Pew findings.

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Correspondence to Ira Sheskin .

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Appendix

Appendix

This Appendix presents detailed data on the US Jewish population in four columns:

  • Date Column. This column provides the date of the latest Scientific Estimate or Informant/Internet Estimate for each geographic area. This chapter’s former authors provided only a range of years (pre-1997 or 1997-2001) for the last informant contact. For estimates after 2001, exact dates are shown. For communities for which the date is more recent than the date of the latest scientific study shown in boldface type in the Geographic Area column, the study estimate has been confirmed or updated by an Informant/Internet Estimate subsequent to the scientific study.

  • Geographic Area Column. This column provides estimates for about 900 Jewish communities (of 100 Jews or more) and geographic subareas thereof. Many estimates are for Jewish Federation service areas. Where possible, these service areas are disaggregated into smaller geographic subareas. For example, separate estimates are provided for such places as West Bloomfield, Michigan (part of the service area of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit) and Boynton Beach (Florida) (part of the service area of the Jewish Federation of Palm Beach County). This column also indicates whether each estimate is a Scientific Estimate:

  1. 1.

    Scientific Estimates. Estimates in boldface type are based on scientific studies, which, unless otherwise indicated, are Random Digit Dial (RDD) studies. The boldface date in the Geographic Area column indicates the year in which the field work was conducted. Superscripts are used to indicate the type of Scientific Estimate when it is not RDD:

    • aindicates a Distinctive Jewish Name (DJN) study

    • bindicates a DJN study used to update a previous RDD study (first date is for the RDD study, second date is for the DJN-based update)

    • cindicates the use of US Census data

    • dindicates a scientific study using a different methodology (neither RDD nor DJN)

    • e indicates a scientific study using a different methodology (neither RDD nor DJN) that is used to update a previous RDD study (first date is for the RDD study, second date is for the other scientific study)

  2. 2.

    Informant/Internet Estimates. Estimates for communities not shown in boldface type are generally based on Informant/Internet Estimates.

  • Number of Jews. This column shows estimates of the number of Jews for each area or subarea, exclusive of part-year Jews.

  • Part-Year. For communities for which the information is available, this column presents estimates of the number of Jews in part-year households. Part-year households are defined as households who live in a community for 3–7 months of the year. Note that part-year households are probably important components of many additional communities.

Jews in part-year households form an essential component of some Jewish communities, as many join synagogues and donate to Jewish Federations in the communities in which they live part time. This is particularly true in Florida, and, to a lesser extent, in other states with many retirees. Presenting the information in this way allows the reader to gain a better perspective on the size of Jewish communities with significant part-year populations, without double-counting the part-year Jewish population in the totals. Note that Jews in part-year households are reported as such in the community that is most likely their “second home.”

  • Excel Spreadsheet. The Excel spreadsheet used to create this Appendix and the other tables in this chapter is available at www.jewishdatabank.org. This spreadsheet also includes information on about 250 Other Places with Jewish populations of less than 100 which are aggregated and shown as the last entry for many of the states in this Appendix. The spreadsheet also contains Excel versions of the other tables in this chapter as well as a table showing some of the major changes since last year’s Year Book and a table showing the calculations for the indices of dissimilarity referenced above.

Communities with Jewish population of 100 or more, 2015

Date

Geographic area

Number of Jews

Part-Year

 

Alabama

  

2011

Birmingham (Jefferson County)

5200

 

2014

Dothan

200

 

1997–2001

Huntsville

750

 

2014

Mobile (Baldwin & Mobile Counties)

1100

 

2014

Montgomery

1100

 

2008

Tuscaloosa

200

 
 

Other Places

250

 
 

Total Alabama

8800

 
 

Alaska

  

2008

Anchorage (Anchorage Borough)

5000

 

2008

Fairbanks (Fairbanks North Star Borough)

600

 

2008

Juneau

300

 

1997–2001

Kenai Peninsula

200

 

1997–2001

Other Places

75

 
 

Total Alaska

6175

 
 

Arizona

  

2002

Cochise County (2002) a

450

 

1997–2001

Flagstaff (Coconino County)

500

 

1997–2001

Lake Havasu City

200

 

2009

Northwest Valley (Glendale-Peoria-Sun City) (2002)

10,900

 

2009

Phoenix (2002)

23,600

 

2009

Northeast Valley (Scottsdale) (2002)

34,500

 

2009

Tri Cities Valley (Ahwatukee-Chandler-Gilbert-Mesa-Tempe) (2002)

13,900

 

2009

Greater Phoenix Total (2002)

82,900

 

2008

Prescott

300

 

2002

Santa Cruz County (2002) a

100

 

2008

Sedona

300

50

2005

West-Northwest (2002)

3450

 

2005

Northeast (2002)

7850

 

2005

Central (2002)

7150

 

2005

Southeast (2002)

2500

 

2005

Green Valley (2002)

450

 

2005

Tucson (Pima County) Total (2002)

21,400

1000

1997–2001

Yuma

150

 
 

Total Arizona

106,300

1050

 

Arkansas

  

2008

Bentonville

100

 

2008

Fayetteville

175

 

2001

Hot Springs

150

 

2001

Little Rock

1100

 

2007

Other Places

200

 
 

Total Arkansas

1725

 
 

California

  

1997–2001

Antelope Valley (Lancaster-Palmdale in LA County)

3000

 

1997–2001

Bakersfield (Kern County)

1600

 

1997–2001

Chico-Oroville-Paradise (Butte County)

750

 

1997–2001

Eureka (Humboldt County)

1000

 

2011

Fresno (Fresno County) (2011) a

3500

 

2015

Long Beach (Cerritos-Hawaiian Gardens-Lakewood-Signal Hill in Los Angeles County & Buena Park-Cypress-La Palma-Los Alamitos-Rossmoor-Seal Beach in Orange County)

23,750

 

2009

Airport Marina (1997)

22,140

 

2009

Beach Cities (1997)

17,270

 

2009

Beverly Hills (1997)

20,500

 

2009

Burbank-Glendale (1997)

19,840

 

2009

Central (1997)

11,600

 

2009

Central City (1997)

4710

 

2009

Central Valley (1997)

27,740

 

2009

Cheviot-Beverlywood (1997)

29,310

 

2009

Culver City (1997)

9110

 

2009

Eastern Belt (1997)

3900

 

2009

Encino-Tarzana (1997)

50,290

 

2009

Fairfax (1997)

54,850

 

2009

High Desert (1997)

10,920

 

2009

Hollywood (1997)

10,390

 

2009

Malibu-Palisades (1997)

27,190

 

2009

North Valley (1997)

36,760

 

2009

Palos Verdes Peninsula (1997)

6780

 

2009

San Pedro (1997)

5310

 

2009

Santa Monica-Venice (1997)

23,140

 

2009

Simi-Conejo (1997)

38,470

 

2009

Southeast Valley (1997)

28,150

 

2009

West Valley (1997)

40,160

 

2009

Westwood (1997)

20,670

 

2009

Los Angeles (Los Angeles County, excluding parts included in Long Beach, & southern Ventura County) Total (1997)

519,200

 

1997–2001

Mendocino County (Redwood Valley-Ukiah)

600

 

1997–2001

Merced County

190

 

1997–2001

Modesto (Stanislaus County)

500

 

2011

Monterey Peninsula (2011) a

4500

 

1997–2001

Murrieta Hot Springs

550

 

2009

Orange County (excluding parts included in Long Beach)

80,000

 

2015

Palm Springs (1998)

2500

900

2015

Cathedral City-Rancho Mirage (1998)

3300

5900

2015

Palm Desert-Sun City (1998)

3700

1900

2015

East Valley (Bermuda-Dunes-Indian Wells-Indio-La Quinta) (1998)

1200

250

2015

North Valley (Desert Hot Springs-North Palm Springs-Thousand Palms) (1998)

300

50

2015

Palm Springs (Coachella Valley) Total (1998)

11,000

9000

1997–2001

Redding (Shasta County)

150

 

1997–2001

Riverside-Corona-Moreno Valley

2000

 

1997–2001

Sacramento (El Dorado, Placer, Sacramento, & Yolo Counties) (1993) d

21,300

 

1997–2001

Salinas

1000

 

1997–2001

San Bernardino-Fontana

3000

 

2014

North County Coastal (2003)

27,000

 

2014

North County Inland (2003)

20,300

 

2014

Greater East San Diego (2003)

21,200

 

2014

La Jolla-Mid-Coastal (2003)

16,200

 

2014

Central San Diego (2003)

13,700

 

2014

South County (2003)

1600

 

2014

San Diego (San Diego County) Total (2003)

100,000

 

2015

Hayward (2011)

5350

 

2015

Oakland-Berkeley Corridor (2011)

43,500

 

2015

Tri-Valley Tri-Cities (2011)

10,200

 

2015

Alameda County Subtotal (2011)

59,050

 

2015

680 Corridor (2011)

4400

 

2015

Central Contra Costa (2011)

13,100

 

2015

East Contra Costa (2011)

5250

 

2015

Lafayette-Morega-Orinda (2011)

3150

 

2015

Western Contra Costa (2011)

6200

 

2015

Contra Costa County Subtotal (2011)

32,100

 

2015

Napa County (2011)

4600

 

2015

Solano County (Vallejo) (2011)

5000

 

2015

Jewish Federation of The East Bay Total (2011)

100,750

 

2007

Marin County (2004)

26,100

 

2007

North Peninsula (2004)

40,300

 

2007

San Francisco County (2004)

65,800

 

2007

Sonoma County (Petaluma-Santa Rosa) (2004)

23,100

 

2007

South Peninsula (Palo Alto) (2004)

72,500

 

2007

San Francisco Subtotal (2004)

227,800

 

2014

San Jose (Silicon Valley) (1986)

63,000

 
 

San Francisco Bay Area Total

391,550

 

1997–2001

San Gabriel & Pomona Valleys (Alta Loma-Chino-Claremont-Cucamonga-La Verne-Montclair- Ontario-Pomona-San Dimas-Upland)

30,000

 

1997–2001

San Luis Obispo-Paso Robles (San Luis Obispo County)

2000

 

2015

Santa Barbara (Santa Barbara County)

8500

 

2011

Santa Cruz-Aptos (Santa Cruz County) (2011) a

6000

 

1997–2001

Santa Maria

500

 

1997–2001

South Lake Tahoe (El Dorado County)

150

 

1997–2001

Stockton

850

 

1997–2001

Tulare & Kings Counties (Visalia)

350

 

1997–2001

Ventura County (excluding Simi-Conejo of Los Angeles)

15,000

 

1997–2001

Other Places

200

 
 

Total California

1,232,690

9000

 

Colorado

  

1997–2001

Aspen

750

 

2010

Colorado Springs (2010) a

2500

 

2015

Denver (2007)

32,500

 

2015

South Metro (2007)

22,400

 

2015

Boulder (2007)

14,600

 

2015

North & West Metro (2007)

12,900

 

2015

Aurora (2007)

7500

 

2015

North & East Metro (2007)

5100

 

2015

Greater Denver (Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Broomfield, Denver, Douglas, & Jefferson Counties) Total (2007)

95,000

 

2010

Fort Collins-Greeley-Loveland

2000

 

1997–2001

Grand Junction (Mesa County)

320

 

1997–2001

Pueblo-Lamar-Trinidad

425

 

1997–2001

Steamboat Springs

250

 

pre-1997

Telluride

125

 

2011

Vail-Breckenridge-Eagle (Eagle & Summit Counties) (2011) a

1500

 

1997–2001

Other Places

150

 
 

Total Colorado

103,020

 
 

Connecticut

  

pre-1997

Colchester-Lebanon

300

 

2014

Danbury (Bethel-Brookfield-New Fairfield-New Milford-Newtown-Redding-Ridgefield-Sherman)

5000

 

2008

Greenwich

7000

 

2009

Core Area (Bloomfield-Hartford-West Hartford) (2000)

15,800

 

2009

Farmington Valley (Avon-Burlington-Canton-East Granby-Farmington-Granby- New Hartford-Simsbury) (2000)

6400

 

2009

East of the River (East Hartford-East Windsor-Enfield-Glastonbury-Manchester- South Windsor in Hartford County & Andover-Bolton-Coventry-Ellington-Hebron- Somers-Tolland-Vernon in Tolland County) (2000)

4800

 

2009

South of Hartford (Berlin-Bristol-New Britain-Newington-Plainville-Rocky Hill-Southington- Wethersfield in Hartford County, Plymouth in Litchfield County, Cromwell-Durham-Haddam- Middlefield-Middletown in Middlesex County, & Meriden in New Haven County) (2000)

5000

 

2009

Suffield-Windsor-Windsor Locks (2000)

800

 

2009

Jewish Federation of Greater Hartford Total (2000)

32,800

 

2010

The East (Centerbrook-Chester-Clinton-Deep River-Ivoryton-Killingworth-Old Saybrook- Westbrook in Middlesex County & Branford-East Haven-Essex-Guilford-Madison- North Branford-Northford in New Haven County) (2010)

4900

 

2010

The West (Ansonia-Derby-Milford-Seymour-West Haven in New Haven County & Shelton in Fairfield County) (2010)

3200

 

2010

The Central Area (Bethany-New Haven-Orange-Woodbridge) (2010)

8800

 

2010

Hamden (2010)

3200

 

2010

The North (Cheshire-North Haven-Wallingford) (2010)

2900

 

2010

Jewish Federation of Greater New Haven Total (2010)

23,000

 

1997–2001

New London-Norwich (central & southern New London County)

3800

 

2010

Southbury (Beacon Falls-Middlebury-Naugatuck-Oxford-Prospect-Waterbury-Wolcott in New Haven County & Washington-Watertown in Litchfield County) (2010) a

4500

 

2010

Southern Litchfield County (Bethlehem-Litchfield-Morris-Roxbury-Thomaston-Woodbury) (2010) a

3500

 

2010

Jewish Federation of Western Connecticut Total (2010) a

8000

 

2009

Stamford (Darien-New Canaan)

12,000

 

2006

Storrs-Columbia & parts of Tolland County

500

 

1997–2001

Torrington

600

 

2000

Westport (2000)

5000

 

2000

Weston (2000)

1850

 

2000

Wilton (2000)

1550

 

2000

Norwalk (2000)

3050

 

2014

Bridgeport (Easton-Fairfield-Monroe-Stratford-Trumbull)

13,000

 

2000

Federation for Jewish Philanthropy in Upper Fairfield County Total (2000)

24,450

 

2006

Windham-Willimantic & parts of Windham County

400

 
 

Total Connecticut

117,850

 
 

Delaware

  

2009

Kent & Sussex Counties (Dover) (1995, 2006) b

3200

 

2009

Newark (1995, 2006) b

4300

 

2009

Wilmington (1995, 2006) b

7600

 
 

Total Delaware (1995, 2006) b

15,100

 
 

Washington, D.C.

  

2015

Total District of Columbia (2003)

28,000

 

2015

Lower Montgomery County (Maryland) (2003)

88,600

 

2015

Upper Montgomery County (Maryland) (2003)

24,400

 

2015

Prince George’s County (Maryland) (2003)

7200

 

2015

Arlington-Alexandria-Falls Church (Virginia) (2003)

27,900

 

2015

South Fairfax-Prince William County (Virginia) (2003)

25,000

 

2015

West Fairfax-Loudoun County (Virginia) (2003)

14,500

 

2015

Jewish Federation of Greater Washington Total (2003)

215,600

 
 

Florida

  

1997–2001

Brevard & Indian River Counties (Melbourne-Vero Beach)

5000

 

pre-1997

Crystal River (Citrus County)

100

 

1997–2001

Fort Myers-Arcadia-Port Charlotte-Punta Gorda (Charlotte, De Soto, & Lee Counties)

8000

 

1997–2001

Fort Pierce (northern St. Lucie County)

1060

 

2008

Gainesville

2500

 

2015

Jacksonville Core area (2002, 2015) e

8800

 

2015

The Beaches (Atlantic Beach-Jacksonville Beach-Neptune Beach-Ponte Vedra Beach) (2002, 2015) e

1900

 

2015

Other Places in Clay, Duval, Nassau, & St. Johns Counties (including St. Augustine) (2002, 2015) e

2200

 

2015

Jacksonville Total (2002, 2015) e

12,900

100

1997–2001

Key West

650

 

pre-1997

Lakeland (Polk County)

1000

 

2010

Naples (Collier County) (2010) a

8000

2000

1997–2001

Ocala (Marion County)

500

 

2010

North Orlando (Seminole County & southern Volusia County) (1993, 2010) b

11,900

300

2010

Central Orlando (Maitland-parts of Orlando-Winter Park) (1993, 2010) b

10,600

100

2010

South Orlando (parts of Orlando & northern Osceola County) (1993, 2010) b

8100

100

2010

Orlando Total (1993, 2010) b

30,600

500

2015

Pensacola (Escambia & Santa Rosa Counties)

800

 

2010

North Pinellas (Clearwater) (1994, 2010) b

10,300

600

2010

Central Pinellas (Largo) (1994, 2010) b

4700

200

2010

South Pinellas (St. Petersburg) (1994, 2010) b

10,000

800

2010

Pinellas County (St. Petersburg) Subtotal (1994, 2010) b

25,000

1600

2010

Pasco County (New Port Richey) (2010) a

8400

 

2010

Jewish Federation of Pinellas & Pasco Counties Total (2010)

33,400

1600

2015

Sarasota (2001)

8600

1500

2015

Longboat Key (2001)

1000

1500

2015

Bradenton (Manatee County) (2001)

1750

200

2015

Venice (2001)

850

100

2015

Sarasota-Manatee Total (2001)

12,200

3300

2005

East Boca (2005)

8900

2400

2005

Central Boca (2005)

33,800

8900

2005

West Boca (2005)

17,000

1700

2005

Boca Raton Subtotal (2005)

59,700

13,000

2005

Delray Beach (2005)

47,800

10,800

2005

South Palm Beach Subtotal (2005)

107,500

23,800

2015

Boynton Beach (2005)

45,600

10,700

2015

Lake Worth (2005)

21,600

3300

2015

Town of Palm Beach (2005)

2000

2000

2015

West Palm Beach (2005)

8300

2000

2015

Wellington-Royal Palm Beach (2005)

9900

1400

2015

North Palm Beach-Palm Beach Gardens-Jupiter (2005)

13,950

3500

2015

West Palm Beach Subtotal (2005)

101,350

22,900

2005

Palm Beach County Total (2005)

208,850

46,700

2014

North Dade Core East (Aventura-Golden Beach-parts of North Miami Beach) (2014)

36,000

2200

2014

North Dade Core West (parts of North Miami Beach-Ojus) (2014)

18,500

200

2014

Other North Dade (parts of City of Miami) (north of Flagler Street) (2014)

9500

100

2014

North Dade Subtotal (2014)

64,000

2500

2014

West Kendall (2014)

17,500

200

2014

East Kendall (parts of Coral Gables-Pinecrest-South Miami) (2014)

6800

100

2014

Northeast South Dade (Key Biscayne-parts of City of Miami) (2014)

11,900

400

2014

South Dade Subtotal (2014)

36,200

700

2014

North Beach (Bal Harbour-Bay Harbor Islands-Indian Creek Village-Surfside) (2014)

4300

400

2014

Middle Beach (parts of City of Miami Beach) (2014)

9800

500

2014

South Beach (parts of City of Miami Beach) (2014)

4800

100

2014

The Beaches Subtotal (2014)

18,900

1000

2014

Miami-Dade County Total (2014)

119,000

4200

2015

East (Fort Lauderdale) (1997, 2008) b

12,400

2450

2015

North Central (Century Village-Coconut Creek-Margate-Palm Aire-Wynmoor) (1997, 2008) b

23,900

5225

2015

Northwest (Coral Springs-Parkland) (1997, 2008) b

23,600

 

2015

Southeast (Hallandale-Hollywood) (1997, 2008) b

25,100

2500

2015

Southwest (Cooper City-Davie-Pembroke Pines-Weston) (1997, 2008) b

37,500

1600

2015

West Central (Lauderdale Lakes-North Lauderdale-Plantation-Sunrise-Tamarac) (1997, 2008) b

48,200

3800

2015

Broward County Total (1997, 2008) b

170,700

15,575

 

Southeast Florida (Broward, Miami-Dade, & Palm Beach Counties) Total

498,550

66,475

2012

Spring Hill

350

 

2004

Stuart (Martin County) (1999, 2004) b

2900

 

2004

Southern St. Lucie County (Port St. Lucie) (1999, 2004) b

2900

 

2004

Stuart-Port St. Lucie (Martin-St. Lucie) Total (1999, 2004) b

5800

900

2015

Tallahassee (2010) a

2800

 

2010

Tampa (Hillsborough County) (2010) a

23,000

 

2007

Volusia (Daytona Beach) (excluding southern parts included in North Orlando) & Flagler Counties

4000

 

Pre-1997

Winter Haven

300

 
 

Total Florida

651,510

74,875

 

Georgia

  

2009

Albany

200

 

2012

Athens

750

 

2012

Intown (2006)

28,900

 

2012

North Metro Atlanta (2006)

28,300

 

2012

East Cobb Expanded (2006)

18,400

 

2012

Sandy Springs-Dunwoody (2006)

15,700

 

2012

Gwinnett-East Perimeter (2006)

14,000

 

2012

North & West Perimeter (2006)

9000

 

2012

South (2006)

5500

 

2012

Atlanta Total (2006)

119,800

 

2015

Augusta (Burke, Columbia, & Richmond Counties)

1300

 

2009

Brunswick

120

 

2015

Columbus

600

 

2009

Dahlonega

150

 

2015

Macon

750

 

2009

Rome

100

 

2015

Savannah (Chatham County)

4300

 

2009

Valdosta

100

 

2009

Other Places

250

 
 

Total Georgia

128,420

 
 

Hawaii

  

1997–2001

Hawaii (Hilo)

280

 

2011

Kauai

300

 

2008

Maui

1500

1000

2010

Oahu (Honolulu) (2010) a

5200

 
 

Total Hawaii

7280

1000

 

Idaho

  

2015

Boise (Ada & Boise Counties)

1500

 

2009

Idaho Falls

125

 

2009

Ketchum

350

 

1997–2001

Moscow-Lewiston

100

 

2009

Pocatello

150

 
 

Total Idaho

2225

 
 

Illinois

  

1997–2001

Bloomington-Normal

500

 

2015

Champaign-Urbana (Champaign County)

1400

 

2014

City North (The Loop to Rogers Park, including North Lakefront) (2010)

70,150

 

2014

Rest of Chicago (parts of City of Chicago not included in City North) (2010)

19,100

 

2014

Near North Suburbs (Suburbs contiguous to City of Chicago from Evanston to Park Ridge) (2010)

64,600

 

2014

North/Far North (Wilmette to Wisconsin, west to include Northbrook, Glenview, Deerfield, etc.) (2010)

56,300

 

2014

Northwest Suburbs (includes northwest Cook County, parts of Lake County, & McHenry County) (2010)

51,950

 

2014

Western Suburbs (DuPage & Kane Counties & Oak Park-River Forest in Cook County) (2010)

23,300

 

2014

Southern Suburbs (south & southwest Cook County beyond the City to Indiana & Will County) (2010)

6400

 

2014

Chicago (Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, & Will Counties) Total (2010)

291,800

 

1997–2001

DeKalb

180

 

1997–2001

Kankakee

100

 

2015

Peoria

800

 

2005

Quad Cities-Illinois portion (Moline-Rock Island) (1990) d

300

 

2005

Quad Cities-Iowa portion (Davenport & surrounding Scott County) (1990) d

450

 

2005

Quad Cities Total (1990) d

750

 

1997–2001

Quincy

100

 

2015

Rockford-Freeport (Boone, Stephenson, & Winnebago Counties)

650

 

2015

Southern Illinois (Alton-Belleville-Benton-Carbondale-Centralia-Collinsville-East St. Louis-Herrin)

500

 

2015

Springfield-Decatur (Macon, Morgan, & Sangamon Counties)

930

 
 

Other Places

175

 

2015

Jewish Federation of Southern Illinois, Southeast Missouri and Western Kentucky (Alton-Belleville-Benton-Carbondale-Centralia-Collinsville-East St. Louis-Herrin in Southern Illinois, Cape Girardeau-Farmington-Sikeston in Southeast Missouri, & Paducah in Western Kentucky) Total

650

 
 

Total Illinois

297,435

 
 

Indiana

  

1997–2001

Bloomington

1000

 

2015

Evansville

300

 

1997–2001

Fort Wayne

900

 

1997–2001

Gary-Northwest Indiana (Lake & Porter Counties)

2000

 

2006

Indianapolis

10,000

 

2014

Lafayette

400

 

2015

Michigan City (La Porte County)

300

 

1997–2001

Muncie

120

 

2015

South Bend-Elkhart (Elkhart & St. Joseph Counties)

1850

 

1997–2001

Terre Haute (Vigo County)

100

 

1997–2001

Other Places

250

 
 

Total Indiana

17,220

 
 

Iowa

  

1997–2001

Cedar Rapids

420

 

1997–2001

Council Bluffs

150

 

1997–2001

Des Moines-Ames (1956) d

2800

 

1997–2001

Iowa City (Johnson County)

1300

 

2009

Postville

250

 

2005

Quad Cities-Illinois portion (Moline-Rock Island) (1990) d

300

 

2005

Quad Cities-Iowa portion (Davenport & surrounding Scott County) (1990) d

450

 

2005

Quad Cities Total (1990) d

750

 

1997–2001

Sioux City (Plymouth & Woodbury Counties)

400

 

2014

Waterloo (Black Hawk County)

100

 

1997–2001

Other Places

300

 
 

Total Iowa

6170

 
 

Kansas

  

2015

Kansas City-Kansas portion (Johnson & Wyandotte Counties) (1985) d

16,000

 

2015

Kansas City-Missouri portion (1985) d

2000

 

2015

Kansas City Total (1985) d

18,000

 

1997–2001

Lawrence

200

 

2014

Manhattan

175

 

2015

Mid-Kansas (Dodge City-Great Bend-Hays-Liberal-Russell-Salina-Wichita)

750

 

2014

Topeka (Shawnee County)

300

 
 

Total Kansas

17,425

 
 

Kentucky

  

2008

Covington-Newport (2008)

300

 

2015

Lexington (Bourbon, Clark, Fayette, Jessamine, Madison, Pulaski, Scott, & Woodford Counties)

2500

 

2015

Louisville (Jefferson County) (2006) d

8300

 

2015

Paducah

100

 

2013

Other Places

100

 

2015

Jewish Federation of Southern Illinois, Southeast Missouri and Western Kentucky (Alton-Belleville-Benton-Carbondale-Centralia-Collinsville-East St. Louis-Herrin in Southern Illinois, Cape Girardeau-Farmington-Sikeston in Southeast Missouri, & Paducah in Western Kentucky) Total

650

 
 

Total Kentucky

11,300

 
 

Louisiana

  

2009

Alexandria (Allen, Grant, Rapides, Vernon, & Winn Parishes)

175

 

1997–2001

Baton Rouge (Ascension, East Baton Rouge, Iberville, Livingston, Pointe Coupee, St. Landry, & West Baton Rouge Parishes)

1600

 

2008

Lafayette

200

 

2008

Lake Charles

200

 

2009

New Orleans (Jefferson & Orleans Parishes) (1984, 2009) e

7800

 

2007

Monroe-Ruston

150

 

2007

Shreveport-Bossier

450

 

2007

North Louisiana (Bossier & Caddo Parishes) Total

600

 

2007

Other Places

100

 
 

Total Louisiana

10,675

 
 

Maine

  

2007

Androscoggin County (Lewiston-Auburn) (2007) a

600

 

Pre-1997

Augusta

140

 

1997–2001

Bangor

3000

 

2007

Oxford County (South Paris) (2007) a

750

 

Pre-1997

Rockland

300

 

2007

Sagadahoc County (Bath) (2007) a

400

 

2007

Portland (2007)

4425

 

2007

Other Cumberland County (2007)

2350

 

2007

York County (2007)

1575

 

2007

Southern Maine Total (2007)

8350

 

2014

Waterville

225

 

1997–2001

Other Places

125

 
 

Total Maine

13,890

 
 

Maryland

  

2010

Annapolis (2010) a

3500

 

2010

Pikesville (2010)

31,100

 

2010

Park Heights-Cheswolde (2010)

13,000

 

2010

Owings Mills (2010)

12,100

 

2010

Reisterstown (2010)

7000

 

2010

Mount Washington (2010)

6600

 

2010

Towson-Lutherville-Timonium-Interstate 83 (2010)

5600

 

2010

Downtown (2010)

4500

 

2010

Guilford-Roland Park (2010)

4100

 

2010

Randallstown-Liberty Road (2010)

2900

 

2010

Other Baltimore County (2010)

3700

 

2010

Carroll County (2010)

2800

 

2010

Baltimore Total (2010)

93,400

 

1997–2001

Cumberland

275

 

1997–2001

Easton (Talbot County)

100

 

1997–2001

Frederick (Frederick County)

1200

 

1997–2001

Hagerstown (Washington County)

325

 

1997–2001

Harford County

1200

 

2010

Howard County (Columbia) (2010)

17,200

 

2015

Lower Montgomery County (2003)

88,600

 

2015

Upper Montgomery County (2003)

24,400

 

2015

Prince George’s County (2003)

7200

 

2015

Jewish Federation of Greater Washington Total in Maryland (2003)

120,200

 

1997–2001

Ocean City

200

 

2012

Prince Frederick (Calvert County)

100

 

1997–2001

Salisbury

400

 

2012

South Gate

100

 
 

Total Maryland

238,200

 
 

Massachusetts

  

2002

Attleboro (2002) a

800

 

2008

Northern Berkshires (North Adams) (2008) d

600

80

2008

Central Berkshires (Pittsfield) (2008) d

1600

415

2008

Southern Berkshires (Lenox) (2008) d

2100

2255

2008

Berkshires Total (2008) d

4300

2750

2014

Brighton-Brookline-Newton & Contiguous Areas (2005)

61,500

 

2014

Central Boston-Cambridge & Contiguous Areas (2005)

43,400

 

2014

Greater Framingham (2005)

18,700

 

2014

Northwestern Suburbs (2005)

24,600

 

2014

Greater Sharon (2005)

21,000

 

2014

North Shore (1995)

18,600

 

2014

Other Towns (2005)

41,300

 

2014

Boston Total

229,100

 

1997–2001

Cape Cod (Barnstable County)

3250

 

1997–2001

Fall River

1100

 

2008

Martha’s Vineyard (Dukes County)

375

200

2005

Andover-Boxford-Dracut-Lawrence-Methuen-North Andover-Tewksbury

3000

 

2005

Haverhill

900

 

2005

Lowell

2100

 

2005

Merrimack Valley Jewish Federation Total

6000

 

2014

Nantucket

100

400

2008

New Bedford (Dartmouth-Fairhaven-Mattapoisett)

3000

 

1997–2001

Newburyport

280

 

2014

Plymouth

1200

 

2012

Springfield (Hampden County) (1967) d

6600

 

2012

Franklin County (Greenfield)

1100

 

2012

Hampshire County (Amherst-Northampton)

6500

 

2012

Jewish Federation of Western Massachusetts Total

14,200

 

2014

Taunton

400

 

2015

Worcester (central Worcester County) (1986)

9000

 

2015

South Worcester County (Southbridge-Webster)

500

 

2015

North Worcester County (Fitchburg-Gardner-Leominster)

1000

 

2015

Jewish Federation of Central Massachusetts (Worcester County) Total

10,500

 

1997–2001

Other Places

75

 
 

Total Massachusetts

274,680

3350

 

Michigan

  

2014

Ann Arbor (Washtenaw County) (2010) a

8000

 

2012

Bay City

150

 

2007

Benton Harbor-St. Joseph

150

 

2015

West Bloomfield (2005, 2010) e

17,700

 

2015

Bloomfield Hills-Birmingham-Franklin (2005, 2010) e

6000

 

2015

Farmington (2005, 2010) e

11,700

 

2015

Oak Park-Huntington Woods (2005, 2010) e

11,700

 

2015

Southfield (2005, 2010) e

6500

 

2015

East Oakland County (2005, 2010) e

1800

 

2015

North Oakland County (2005, 2010) e

3600

 

2015

West Oakland County (2005, 2010) e

2200

 

2015

Wayne County (2005, 2010) e

5300

 

2015

Macomb County (2005, 2010) e

500

 

2015

Detroit (Macomb, Oakland, & Wayne Counties) Total (2005, 2010) e

67,000

 

2009

Flint (1956) d

1300

 

2007

Grand Rapids (Kent County)

2000

 

2007

Jackson

200

 

2012

Kalamazoo (Kalamazoo County)

1500

 

2015

Lansing

1800

 

2015

Lenawee & Monroe Counties

200

 

2007

Midland

120

 

2007

Muskegon (Muskegon County)

210

 

2015

Saginaw

100

 

2007

Traverse City

150

 

2007

Other Places

275

 

2015

Jewish Federation of Greater Toledo (Fulton, Lucas, & Wood Counties in Ohio & Lenawee & Monroe Counties in Michigan) Total

2300

 
 

Total Michigan

83,155

 
 

Minnesota

  

2015

Duluth (Carlton & St. Louis Counties)

600

 

1997–2001

Rochester

550

 

2015

City of Minneapolis (2004)

5200

 

2015

Inner Ring (2004)

16,100

 

2015

Outer Ring (2004)

8000

 

2015

Minneapolis (Hennepin County) Subtotal (2004)

29,300

 

2010

City of St. Paul (2004, 2010) b

4000

 

2010

Southern Suburbs (2004, 2010) b

5300

 

2010

Northern Suburbs (2004, 2010) b

600

 

2010

St. Paul (Dakota & Ramsey Counties) Subtotal (2004, 2010) b

9900

 
 

Twin Cities Total

39,200

 

2004

Twin Cities Surrounding Counties (Anoka, Carver, Goodhue, Rice, Scott, Sherburne, Washington, & Wright Counties) (2004) a

5300

 

1997–2001

Other Places

100

 
 

Total Minnesota

45,750

 
 

Mississippi

  

1997–2001

Biloxi-Gulfport

250

 

2008

Greenville

120

 

2008

Hattiesburg (Forrest & Lamar Counties)

130

 

2008

Jackson (Hinds, Madison, & Rankin Counties)

650

 
 

Other Places

425

 
 

Total Mississippi

1575

 
 

Missouri

  

2014

Columbia

400

 

2009

Jefferson City

100

 

2009

Joplin

100

 

2015

Kansas City-Kansas portion (Johnson & Wyandotte Counties) (1985) d

16,000

 

2015

Kansas City-Missouri portion (1985) d

2000

 

2015

Kansas City Total (1985) d

18,000

 

2009

St. Joseph (Buchanan County)

200

 

2014

Creve Coeur Area (2014)

13,550

 

2014

Chesterfield (2014)

12,150

 

2014

University City/Clayton (2014)

9100

 

2014

Olivette/Ladue (2014)

6200

 

2014

St. Charles County (2014)

5900

 

2014

St. Louis City (2014)

5150

 

2014

Des Peres/Kirkwood/Webster (2014)

2750

 

2014

Other North County (2014)

4400

 

2014

Other South County (2014)

1900

 

2014

St. Louis Total (2014)

61,100

 

2009

Springfield

300

 

1997–2001

Other Places

75

 

2015

Jewish Federation of Southern Illinois, Southeast Missouri and Western Kentucky (Alton-Belleville-Benton-Carbondale-Centralia-Collinsville-East St. Louis-Herrin in Southern Illinois, Cape Girardeau-Farmington-Sikeston in Southeast Missouri, & Paducah in Western Kentucky) Total

650

 
 

Total Missouri

64,275

 
 

Montana

  

1997–2001

Billings (Yellowstone County)

300

 

2009

Bozeman

500

 

2011

Butte-Helena

150

 

1997–2001

Kalispell-Whitefish (Flathead County)

150

 

1997–2001

Missoula

200

 

1997–2001

Other Places

50

 
 

Total Montana

1350

 
 

Nebraska

  

2014

Lincoln-Grand Island-Hastings

700

 

2010

Omaha (2010) a

5400

 

2012

Other Places

50

 
 

Total Nebraska

6150

 
 

Nevada

  

2015

Northwest (2005)

24,500

 

2015

Southwest (2005)

16,000

 

2015

Central (2005)

6000

 

2015

Southeast (2005)

18,000

 

2015

Northeast (2005)

7800

 

2015

Las Vegas Total (2005)

72,300

 

2011

Reno-Carston City (Carson City & Washoe Counties) (2011) a

4000

 
 

Total Nevada

76,300

 
 

New Hampshire

  

1997–2001

Concord

500

 

1997–2001

Franklin-Laconia-Meredith-Plymouth

270

 

Pre-1997

Hanover-Lebanon

600

 

2001

Keene

300

 

1997–2001

Littleton-Bethlehem

200

70

1997–2001

Manchester (1983) d

4000

 

1997–2001

Nashua

2000

 

2008

North Conway-Mount Washington Valley

100

 

2014

Portsmouth-Exeter (Rockingham County)

1250

 

1997–2001

Salem

150

70

2014

Strafford (Dover-Rochester) (2007) a

700

 

1997–2001

Other Places

50

 
 

Total New Hampshire

10,120

140

 

New Jersey

  

2004

The Island (Atlantic City) (2004)

5450

6700

2004

The Mainland (2004)

6250

600

2004

Atlantic County Subtotal (2004)

11,700

7300

2004

Cape May County-Wildwood (2004)

500

900

2004

Jewish Federation of Atlantic & Cape May Counties Total (2004)

12,200

8200

2015

Pascack-Northern Valley (2001)

11,900

 

2015

North Palisades (2001)

18,600

 

2015

Central Bergen (2001)

22,200

 

2015

West Bergen (2001)

14,300

 

2015

South Bergen (2001)

10,000

 

2015

Other Bergen

23,000

 

2015

Bergen County Subtotal

100,000

 

2015

Northern Hudson County (2001)

2000

 

2015

Northern Passaic County

8000

 

2015

Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey (Bergen, northern Hudson, & northern Passaic Counties) Total

110,000

 

2015

Camden County (1991, 2013) e

34,600

 

2015

Burlington County (1991, 2013) e

15,900

 

2015

Northern Gloucester County (1991, 2013) e

6200

 

2015

Jewish Federation of Southern New Jersey Total (1991, 2013) e

56,700

 

2015

South Essex (Newark) (1998, 2012) b

12,200

 

2015

Livingston (1998, 2012) b

10,500

 

2015

North Essex (1998, 2012) b

13,000

 

2015

West Orange-Orange (1998, 2012) b

9000

 

2015

East Essex (1998, 2012) b

3500

 

2015

Essex County Subtotal (1998, 2012) b

48,200

 

2015

West Morris (1998, 2012) b

13,700

 

2015

North Morris (1998, 2012) b

13,400

 

2015

South Morris (1998, 2012) b

3200

 

2015

Morris County Subtotal (1998, 2012) b

30,300

 

2015

Northern Somerset County (2012) a

7400

 

2015

Sussex County (1998, 2012) b

4700

 

2015

Union County (2012) a

24,400

 

2015

Jewish Federation of Greater MetroWest NJ (Essex, Morris, northern Somerset, Sussex, & Union Counties) Total (2012)

115,000

 

1997–2001

Bayonne

1600

 

2006

Hoboken

1800

 

1997–2001

Jersey City

6000

 
 

Southern Hudson County Total

9400

 

2008

North Middlesex (Edison-Piscataway-Woodbridge) (2008)

3600

 

2008

Highland Park-South Edison (2008)

5700

 

2008

Central Middlesex (East Brunswick-New Brunswick) (2008)

24,800

 

2008

South Middlesex (Monroe Township) (2008)

17,900

 

2008

Jewish Federation of Greater Middlesex County Total (2008)

52,000

 

2006

Western Monmouth (Freehold-Howell-Manalapan-Marlboro) (1997)

37,800

 

2006

Eastern Monmouth (Asbury Park-Deal-Long Branch) (1997)

17,300

 

2006

Northern Monmouth (Hazlet-Highlands-Middletown-Union Beach) (1997)

8900

 

2006

Jewish Federation of Greater Monmouth County Total (1997)

64,000

6000

2009

Lakewood

54,500

 

2009

Other Ocean County

7000

 

2009

Ocean County Total

61,500

 

2009

Southern Passaic County (Clifton-Passaic)

12,000

 

1997–2001

Princeton

3000

 

2012

Hunterdon County (2012) a

6000

 

2012

Southern Somerset County (2012) a

11,600

 

2012

Warren County (2012) a

2400

 

2012

Jewish Federation of Somerset, Hunterdon & Warren Counties Total (2012) a

20,000

 

1997–2001

Trenton (most of Mercer County) (1975) d

6000

 

2015

Vineland area (including southern Gloucester & eastern Salem Counties) (Jewish Federation of Cumberland, Gloucester and Salem Counties)

2000

 

1997–2001

Other Places

150

 
 

Total New Jersey

523,950

14,200

 

New Mexico

  

2011

Albuquerque (Bernalillo County) (2011) a

7500

 

1997–2001

Las Cruces

600

 

2009

Los Alamos

250

 

2011

Santa Fe-Las Vegas

4000

 

Pre-1997

Taos

300

 

1997–2001

Other Places

75

 
 

Total New Mexico

12,725

 
 

New York

  

1997–2001

Albany (Albany County)

12,000

 

1997–2001

Amsterdam

100

 

1997–2001

Auburn (Cayuga County)

115

 

1997–2001

Binghamton (Broome County)

2400

 

2013

Erie County (2013)

11,750

 

2013

Other Western New York (parts of Cattaraugus, Chautauqua, Genesee, Niagara, & Wyoming Counties) (2013) d

300

 

2013

Jewish Federation of Greater Buffalo Total (2013)

12,050

 

1997–2001

Canandaigua-Geneva-Newark-Seneca Falls

300

 

1997–2001

Catskill

200

 

1997–2001

Cortland (Cortland County)

150

 

2009

Dutchess County (Amenia-Beacon-Fishkill-Freedom Plains-Hyde Park-Poughkeepsie-Red Hook-Rhinebeck)

10,000

 

2009

Elmira-Corning (Chemung, Schuyler, southeastern Steuben, & Tioga Counties)

700

 

1997–2001

Fleischmanns

100

 

1997–2001

Glens Falls-Lake George (southern Essex, northern Saratoga, Warren, & Washington Counties)

800

 

1997–2001

Gloversville (Fulton County)

300

 

1997–2001

Herkimer (Herkimer County)

130

 

1997–2001

Hudson (Columbia County)

500

 

1997–2001

Ithaca (Tompkins County)

2000

 

1997–2001

Jamestown

100

 

2015

Northeast Bronx (2011)

18,300

 

2015

Riverdale-Kingsbridge (2011)

20,100

 

2015

Other Bronx (2011)

15,500

 

2015

Bronx Subtotal (2011)

53,900

 

2015

Bensonhurst-Gravesend-Bay Ridge (2011)

47,000

 

2015

Borough Park (2011)

131,100

 

2015

Brownstone Brooklyn (2011)

19,700

 

2015

Canarsie-Mill Basin (2011)

24,500

 

2015

Coney Island-Brighton Beach-Sheepshead Bay (2011)

56,200

 

2015

Crown Heights (2011)

23,800

 

2015

Flatbush-Midwood-Kensington (2011)

108,500

 

2015

Kings Bay-Madison (2011)

29,400

 

2015

Williamsburg (2011)

74,500

 

2015

Other Brooklyn (2011)

46,400

 

2015

Brooklyn Subtotal (2011)

561,100

 

2015

Lower Manhattan East (2011)

39,500

 

2015

Lower Manhattan West (2011)

33,200

 

2015

Upper East Side (2011)

57,400

 

2015

Upper West Side (2011)

70,500

 

2015

Washington Heights-Inwood (2011)

21,400

 

2015

Other Manhattan (2011)

17,700

 

2015

Manhattan Subtotal (2011)

239,700

 

2015

Flushing-Bay Terrace-Little Neck Area (2011)

26,800

 

2015

Forest Hills-Rego Park-Kew Gardens Area (2011)

60,900

 

2015

Kew Gardens Hills-Jamaica-Fresh Meadows Area (2011)

41,600

 

2015

Long Island City-Astoria-Elmhurst Area (2011)

12,100

 

2015

The Rockaways (2011)

22,500

 

2015

Other Queens (2011)

33,900

 

2015

Queens Subtotal (2011)

197,800

 

2015

Mid-Staten Island (2011)

18,800

 

2015

Southern Staten Island (2011)

8800

 

2015

Other Staten Island (2011)

6300

 

2015

Staten Island Subtotal (2011)

33,900

 

2015

New York City Subtotal (2011)

1,086,400

 

2015

Five Towns (2011)

25,000

 

2015

Great Neck (2011)

28,700

 

2015

Merrick-Bellmore-East Meadow-Massapequa Area (2011)

38,500

 

2015

Oceanside-Long Beach-West Hempstead-Valley Stream Area (2011)

45,900

 

2015

Plainview-Syosset-Jericho Area (2011)

35,800

 

2015

Roslyn-Port Washington-Glen Cove-Old Westbury-Oyster Bay Area (2011)

34,800

 

2015

Other Nassau (2011)

21,200

 

2015

Nassau County Subtotal (2011)

229,900

 

2015

Commack-East Northport-Huntington Area (2011)

19,300

 

2015

Dix Hills-Huntington Station-Melville (2011)

16,500

 

2015

Smithtown-Port Jefferson-Stony Brook Area (2011)

16,500

 

2015

Other Suffolk (2011)

33,400

 

2015

Suffolk County Subtotal (2011)

85,700

 

2015

South-Central Westchester (2011)

46,200

 

2015

Sound Shore Communities (2011)

18,900

 

2015

River Towns (2011)

30,800

 

2015

North-Central & Northwestern Westchester (2011)

25,300

 

2015

Other Westchester (2011)

15,000

 

2015

Westchester County Subtotal (2011)

136,200

 

2015

New York Metro Area (New York City & Nassau, Suffolk, & Westchester Counties) Total (2011)

1,538,000

 

1997–2001

Niagara Falls

150

 

2009

Olean

100

 

1997−2001

Oneonta (Delaware & Otsego Counties)

300

 

2014

Kiryas Joel (2014) c

22,000

 

1997−2001

Other Orange County (Middletown-Monroe-Newburgh-Port Jervis)

12,000

 
 

Orange County Total

34,000

 

1997–2001

Plattsburgh

250

 

1997–2001

Potsdam

200

 

2010

Putnam County (2010) d

3900

 

2010

Brighton (1999, 2010) e

10,100

 

2010

Pittsford (1999, 2010) e

3800

 

2010

Other Places in Monroe County & Victor in Ontario County (1999, 2010) e

6000

 

2010

Rochester Total (1999, 2010) e

19,900

 

2014

Kaser Village (2014) c

5000

 

2013

Monsey (2013) c

12,000

 

2014

New Square (2014) c

7500

 

1997–2001

Other Rockland County

66,600

 
 

Rockland County Total

91,100

 

1997–2001

Rome

100

 

1997–2001

Saratoga Springs

600

 

1997–2001

Schenectady

5200

 

Pre-1997

Sullivan County (Liberty-Monticello)

7425

 

1997–2001

Syracuse (western Madison, Onondaga, & most of Oswego Counties)

9000

 

1997–2001

Troy

800

 

2014

Ulster County (Kingston-New Paltz-Woodstock & eastern Ulster County)

5000

 

2007

Utica (southeastern Oneida County) (Jewish Community Federation of the Mohawk Valley)

1100

 

1997–2001

Watertown

100

 

1997–2001

Other Places

400

 
 

Total New York

1,759,570

 
 

North Carolina

  

2011

Buncombe County (Asheville) (2011) d

2530

415

2011

Hendersonville County (Henderson) (2011) d

510

100

2011

Transylvania County (Brevard) (2011) d

80

130

2011

Macon County (2011) d

60

30

2011

Other Western North Carolina (2011) d

220

160

2011

WNC Jewish Federation (Western North Carolina) Total (2011) d

3400

835

2009

Boone

60

225

2015

Charlotte (Mecklenburg County) (1997)

12,000

 

2007

Durham-Chapel Hill (Durham & Orange Counties)

6000

 

2012

Fayetteville (Cumberland County)

300

 

2009

Gastonia (Cleveland, Gaston, & Lincoln Counties)

250

 

2009

Greensboro

3000

 

2015

Greenville

300

 

2011

Hickory

250

 

2009

High Point

150

 

2009

Mooresville

150

 

2009

New Bern

150

 

2009

Pinehurst

250

 

1997–2001

Raleigh (Wake County)

6000

 

2014

Southeastern North Carolina (Elizabethtown-Whiteville-Wilmington)

1600

 

2011

Statesville

150

 

2015

Winston-Salem (2011) a

1200

 

2010

Other Places

225

 
 

Total North Carolina

35,435

1060

 

North Dakota

  

2008

Fargo

150

 

2011

Grand Forks

150

 

1997–2001

Other Places

100

 
 

Total North Dakota

400

 
 

Ohio

  

2014

Akron-Kent (parts of Portage & Summit Counties) (1999) d

3000

 

Pre-1997

Athens

100

 

2006

Canton-New Philadelphia (Stark & Tuscarawas Counties) (1955) d

1000

 

2008

Downtown Cincinnati (2008)

700

 

2008

Hyde Park-Mount Lookout-Oakley (2008)

3100

 

2008

Amberley Village-Golf Manor-Roselawn (2008)

5100

 

2008

Blue Ash-Kenwood-Montgomery (2008)

9000

 

2008

Loveland-Mason-Middletown (2008)

5500

 

2008

Wyoming-Finneytown-Reading (2008)

2000

 

2008

Other Places in Cincinnati (2008)

1300

 

2008

Covington-Newport (Kentucky) (2008)

300

 

2008

Jewish Federation of Cincinnati Total (2008)

27,000

 

2014

The Heights (2011)

22,200

 

2014

East Side Suburbs (2011)

5300

 

2014

Beachwood (2011)

10,700

 

2014

Solon & Southeast Suburbs (2011)

15,300

 

2014

Northern Heights (2011)

10,400

 

2014

West Side/Central Area (2011)

11,900

 

2014

Northeast (2011)

5000

 
 

Cleveland (Cuyahoga & parts of Geauga, Lake, Portage, & Summit Counties) Total (2011)

80,800

 

2015

Perimeter North (2013)

4700

 

2015

Bexley area (2013)

5400

 

2015

East (2013)

6400

 

2015

Downtown/University (2013)

9000

 

2015

Columbus Total (2013)

25,500

 

2015

Dayton (Greene & Montgomery Counties) (1986) d

4000

 

1997–2001

Elyria-Oberlin

155

 

1997–2001

Hamilton-Middletown-Oxford

900

 

1997–2001

Lima (Allen County)

180

 

pre-1997

Lorain

600

 

1997–2001

Mansfield

150

 

1997–2001

Marion

125

 

1997–2001

Sandusky-Fremont-Norwalk (Huron & Sandusky Counties)

105

 

1997–2001

Springfield

200

 

2015

Toledo-Bowling Green (Fulton, Lucas, & Wood Counties) (1994) d

2100

 

1997–2001

Wooster

175

 

2015

Youngstown-Warren (Mahoning & Trumbull Counties) (2002) d

1400

 

1997–2001

Zanesville (Muskingum County)

100

 

1997–2001

Other Places

425

 

2015

Youngstown Area Jewish Federation (including Mahoning & Trumbull Counties in Ohio & Mercer County in Pennsylvania) Total

1700

 

2015

Jewish Federation of Greater Toledo (Fulton, Lucas, & Wood Counties in Ohio & Lenawee & Monroe Counties in Michigan) Total

2300

 
 

Total Ohio

147,715

 
 

Oklahoma

  

2010

Oklahoma City-Norman (Cleveland & Oklahoma Counties) (2010) a

2500

 

2012

Tulsa

2000

 

2012

Other Places

125

 
 

Total Oklahoma

4625

 
 

Oregon

  

2010

Bend (2010) a

1000

 

1997–2001

Corvallis

500

 

1997–2001

Eugene

3250

 

1997–2001

Medford-Ashland-Grants Pass (Jackson & Josephine Counties)

1000

 

2011

Portland (Clackamas, Multnomah, & Washington Counties) (2011) d

33,800

 

2011

Clark County (Vancouver, WA) (2011) d

2600

 

2011

Greater Portland Total (2011) d

36,400

 

1997–2001

Salem (Marion & Polk Counties)

1000

 

1997–2001

Other Places

100

 
 

Total Oregon

40,650

 
 

Pennsylvania

  

2014

Altoona (Blair County)

450

 

1997–2001

Beaver Falls (northern Beaver County)

180

 

1997–2001

Butler (Butler County)

250

 

2007

Carbon County (2007) a

600

 

1997–2001

Chambersburg

150

 

2014

Erie (Erie County)

500

 

1994

East Shore (1994)

5300

 

1994

West Shore (1994)

1800

 

1994

Harrisburg Total (1994)

7100

 

1997–2001

Hazelton-Tamaqua

300

 

2014

Johnstown (Cambria & Somerset Counties)

150

 

2014

Lancaster

3000

 

2014

Lebanon (Lebanon County)

165

 

2015

Allentown (2007)

5950

 

2015

Bethlehem (2007)

1050

 

2015

Easton (2007)

1050

 

2015

Lehigh Valley Total (2007)

8050

 

2015

Mercer County (Sharon-Farrell)

300

 

2007

Monroe County (2007) a

2300

 

1997–2001

New Castle

200

 

2009

Bucks County (2009)

41,400

 

2009

Chester County (Oxford-Kennett Square-Phoenixville-West Chester) (2009)

20,900

 

2009

Delaware County (Chester-Coatesville) (2009)

21,000

 

2009

Montgomery County (Norristown) (2009)

64,500

 

2009

Philadelphia (2009)

66,800

 

2009

Greater Philadelphia Total (2009)

214,600

 

2008

Pike County

300

 

2015

Squirrel Hill (2002)

13,900

 

2015

Squirrel Hill Adjacent Neighborhoods (2002)

5700

 

2015

South Hills (2002)

6400

 

2015

East Suburbs (2002)

5500

 

2015

Fox Chapel-North Hills (2002)

5000

 

2015

Western Suburbs (2002)

1600

 

2015

East End (2002)

1700

 

2015

Mon Valley (2002)

800

 

2015

Other Places in Greater Pittsburgh (2002)

1600

 

2015

Greater Pittsburgh (Allegheny & parts of Beaver, Washington, & Westmoreland Counties) Total (2002)

42,200

 

1997–2001

Pottstown

650

 

1997–2001

Pottsville

120

 

1997–2001

Reading (Berks County)

2200

 

2008

Scranton (Lackawanna County)

3100

 

2009

State College-Bellefonte-Philipsburg

900

 

1997–2001

Sunbury-Lewisburg-Milton-Selinsgrove-Shamokin

200

 

1997–2001

Uniontown

150

 

2008

Wayne County (Honesdale)

500

 

2015

Wilkes-Barre (Luzerne County, excluding Hazelton-Tamaqua) (2005) d

1800

 

2014

Williamsport-Lock Haven (Clinton & Lycoming Counties)

150

 

2009

York (1999)

1800

 

1997–2001

Other Places

875

 

2015

Youngstown Area Jewish Federation (including Mahoning & Trumbull Counties in Ohio & Mercer County in Pennsylvania) Total

1700

 
 

Total Pennsylvania

293,240

 
 

Rhode Island

  

2007

Providence-Pawtucket (2002)

7500

 

2007

West Bay (2002)

6350

 

2007

East Bay (2002)

1100

 

2007

South County (Washington County) (2002)

1800

 

2007

Northern Rhode Island (2002)

1000

 

2007

Newport County (2002)

1000

 
 

Total Rhode Island (2002)

18,750

 
 

South Carolina

  

2009

Aiken

100

 

2009

Anderson

100

 

2009

Beaufort

100

 

2011

Charleston

6000

 

2015

Columbia (Lexington & Richland Counties)

3000

 

2009

Florence

220

 

2009

Georgetown

100

 

2010

Greenville (2010) a

2000

 

2012

Myrtle Beach (Horry County)

1500

 

1997–2001

Spartanburg (Spartanburg County)

500

 

2009

Sumter (Clarendon & Sumter Counties)

100

 

2009

Other Places

100

 
 

Total South Carolina

13,820

 
 

South Dakota

  

2009

Rapid City

100

 

2014

Sioux Falls

100

 

1997–2001

Other Places

50

 
 

Total South Dakota

250

 
 

Tennessee

  

2013

Bristol-Johnson City-Kingsport

125

 

2011

Chattanooga (2011) a

1400

 

2015

Knoxville (2010) a

2000

 

2014

Memphis (2006) d

8000

 

2009

Nashville (2002) d

7800

 

2010

Oak Ridge (2010) a

150

 

2009

Other Places

125

 
 

Total Tennessee

19,600

 
 

Texas

  

2012

Amarillo (Carson, Childress, Deaf Smith, Gray, Hall, Hutchinson, Moore, Potter, & Randall Counties)

200

 

2015

Austin (Travis, Williamson, Hays, Bastrop, & Caldwell Counties)

18,000

 

2014

Beaumont

300

 

2011

Brownsville

200

 

2011

Bryan-College Station

400

 

2011

Columbus-Hallettsville-La Grange-Schulenburg (Colorado, Fayette, & Lavaca Counties)

100

 

2015

Corpus Christi (Nueces County)

1000

 

2015

North Dallas (1988, 2013) e

12,500

 

2015

Plano-Frisco-Richardson-Allen-McKinney (1988, 2013) e

14,700

 

2015

Central Dallas-Downtown-Uptown (1988, 2013) e

23,500

 

2015

East Dallas (1988, 2013) e

1300

 

2015

Denton-Flowermound-Lewisville (1988, 2013) e

900

 

2015

South Dallas-Duncanville-Cedar Hill (1988, 2013) e

200

 

2015

Addison-Carrolton-Farmers Branch (1988, 2013) e

2700

 

2015

Other Places in Dallas (1988, 2013) e

14,200

 

2015

Dallas (southern Collin, Dallas, & southeastern Denton Counties) Total (1988, 2013) e

70,000

 

2012

El Paso

5000

 

2009

Fort Worth (Tarrant County)

5000

 

2011

Galveston

600

 

2011

Harlingen-Mercedes

150

 

2015

Braeswood (1986)

16,000

 

2015

Bellaire-Southwest (1986)

5100

 

2015

West Memorial (1986)

5000

 

2015

Memorial Villages (1986)

2500

 

2015

Rice-West University (1986)

3300

 

2015

University Park-South Main (1986)

450

 

2015

Near Northwest (1986)

2700

 

2015

Northwest-Cypress Creek (1986)

3000

 

2015

Addicks-West Houston (1986)

2100

 

2015

Clear Lake (1986)

1350

 

2015

Other Places in Harris County (1986)

3500

 

2015

Houston (Fort Bend, Harris, & Montgomery Counties & parts of Brazoria & Galveston Counties) Total (1986)

45,000

 

2011

Kilgore-Longview

100

 

2011

Laredo

150

 

2012

Lubbock (Lubbock County)

230

 

2011

McAllen (Hidalgo & Starr Counties)

300

 

2012

Midland-Odessa

200

 

2011

Port Arthur

100

 

2007

Inside Loop 410 (2007)

2000

 

2007

Between the Loops (2007)

5600

 

2007

Outside Loop 1604 (2007)

1600

 

2007

San Antonio Total (2007)

9200

 

2007

San Antonio Surrounding Counties (Atascosa, Bandera, Comal, Guadalupe, Kendall, Medina, & Wilson Counties) (2007) a

1000

 

2014

Tyler

250

 

2014

Waco (Bell, Coryell, Falls, Hamilton, Hill, & McLennan Counties)

400

 

2012

Wichita Falls

150

 

2011

Other Places

475

 
 

Total Texas

158,505

 
 

Utah

  

1997–2001

Ogden

150

 

2009

Park City

600

400

2010

Salt Lake City (Salt Lake County) (2010) a

4800

 

1997–2001

Other Places

100

 
 

Total Utah

5650

400

 

Vermont

  

1997–2001

Bennington

500

 

2008

Brattleboro

350

 

2014

Burlington

3200

 

1997–2001

Manchester

325

 

2008

Middlebury

200

 

2008

Montpelier-Barre

550

 

2008

Rutland

300

 

1997–2001

St. Johnsbury-Newport (Caledonia & Orleans Counties)

140

 

1997–2001

Stowe

150

 

Pre-1997

Woodstock

270

 
 

Total Vermont

5985

 
 

Virginia

  

2013

Blacksburg-Christiansburg-Floyd-Radford

250

 

2015

Charlottesville

2000

 

2012

Fauquier County (Warrenton)

100

 

2013

Fredericksburg (parts of King George, Orange, Spotsylvania, & Stafford Counties)

500

 

2013

Harrisonburg

300

 

2013

Lynchburg

350

 

2013

Martinsville

100

 

2015

Newport News-Hampton

1500

 

2015

Williamsburg

500

 

2015

United Jewish Community of the Virginia Peninsula Total

2000

 

2008

Norfolk (2001)

3550

 

2008

Virginia Beach (2001)

6000

 

2008

Chesapeake-Portsmouth-Suffolk (2001)

1400

 

2008

United Jewish Federation of Tidewater Total (2001)

10,950

 

2015

Arlington-Alexandria-Falls Church (2003)

27,900

 

2015

South Fairfax-Prince William County (2003)

25,000

 

2015

West Fairfax-Loudoun County (2003)

14,500

 

2015

Jewish Federation of Greater Washington Total in Northern Virginia (2003)

67,400

 

2013

Petersburg-Colonial Heights-Hopewell

300

 

2011

Central (1994, 2011) b

1300

 

2011

West End (1994, 2011) b

1200

 

2011

Far West End (1994, 2011) b

4100

 

2011

Northeast (1994, 2011) b

1200

 

2011

Southside (1994, 2011) b

2200

 

2011

Richmond (City of Richmond & Chesterfield, Goochland, Hanover, Henrico, & Powhatan Counties) Total (1994, 2011) b

10,000

 

2013

Roanoke

1000

 

2013

Staunton-Lexington

100

 

2013

Winchester (Clarke, Frederick, & Warren Counties)

270

 

2013

Other Places

75

 
 

Total Virginia

95,695

 
 

Washington

  

1997–2001

Bellingham

525

 

2011

Clark County (Vancouver) (2011) d

2600

 

1997–2001

Kennewick-Pasco-Richland

300

 

2011

Longview-Kelso

100

 

1997–2001

Olympia (Thurston County)

560

 

Pre-1997

Port Angeles

100

 

2009

Port Townsend

200

 

2014

South Seattle (Southeast Seattle-Southwest Seattle-Downtown) (2014)

16,200

 

2014

North Seattle (Northeast & Northwest Seattle) (2014)

16,100

 

2014

Bellevue (2014)

6200

 

2014

Mercer Island (2014)

6300

 

2014

Redmond (2014)

2900

 

2014

Rest of King County (2014)

9200

 

2014

Island, Kitsap, Pierce, & Snohomish Counties (2014)

6500

 

2014

Seattle Total (2014)

63,400

 

1997–2001

Spokane

1500

 

2009

Tacoma (Pierce County)

2500

 

1997–2001

Yakima-Ellensburg (Kittitas & Yakima Counties)

150

 

1997–2001

Other Places

150

 
 

Total Washington

72,085

 
 

West Virginia

  

2011

Bluefield-Princeton

100

 

2007

Charleston (Kanawha County)

975

 

1997–2001

Clarksburg

110

 

1997–2001

Huntington

250

 

1997–2001

Morgantown

200

 

Pre-1997

Parkersburg

110

 

1997–2001

Wheeling

290

 

1997–2001

Other Places

275

 
 

Total West Virginia

2310

 
 

Wisconsin

  

2015

Appleton & other Fox Cities (Outagamie, Calumet, & northern Winnebago Counties)

200

 

1997–2001

Beloit-Janesville

120

 

1997–2001

Green Bay

500

 

1997–2001

Kenosha (Kenosha County)

300

 

1997–2001

La Crosse

100

 

2015

Madison (Dane County)

5000

 

2015

City of Milwaukee (2011)

4900

 

2015

North Shore (2011)

13,400

 

2015

Waukesha (2011)

3200

 

2015

Milwaukee County Ring (2011)

4300

 

2015

Milwaukee (Milwaukee, southern Ozaukee, & eastern Waukesha Counties) Total (2011)

25,800

 

1997–2001

Oshkosh-Fond du Lac

170

 

1997–2001

Racine (Racine County)

200

 

1997–2001

Sheboygan

140

 

2015

Wausau-Antigo-Marshfield-Stevens Point

300

 

1997–2001

Other Pplaces

225

 
 

Total Wisconsin

33,055

 
 

Wyoming

  

1997–2001

Casper

150

 

2012

Cheyenne

500

 

2008

Jackson Hole

300

 

2008

Laramie

200

 
 

Total Wyoming

1150

 

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Sheskin, I., Dashefsky, A. (2016). Jewish Population in the United States, 2015. In: Dashefsky, A., Sheskin, I. (eds) American Jewish Year Book 2015. American Jewish Year Book, vol 115. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-24505-8_5

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