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.
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.
For an example, see footnote 4 in Sheskin and Dashefsky (2008).
- 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Only the Westport, Weston, Wilton, Norwalk areas of the Eastern Fairfield community were included in the survey in 2000.
- 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.
References
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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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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.
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.
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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