The given table demonstrates the population trend of New York City and five districts of the city between 1800 and 2000.
Overall, one can easily deduce that only Manhattan witnessed the downward tendency in the proportion of total residents while other districts and New York city experienced the reverse trend.
Regarding the Manhattan table, it is considerable that while the percentage of total inhabitants decreased as the time went by, the number of people live there was fluctuated. The first century witnessed a population explosion, from more than 60 thousand to nearly 1.9 million while the proportion of total inhabitants significantly reduced from more than three quarters to nearly a half. Subsequently, in the next century, while the number of residents moderately decreased to more than 1.5 million, the rate of total inhabitants plummeted to less than one-fifth.
Concerning the other tables, there is a growth tendency in both population and the rate of citizens. In the four districts except Manhattan, the number of citizens rocketed each 100 years, from 18.7 thousand to approximately 1.6 million before reached nearly 6.5 million at the end of the period, followed by the percentage of total inhabitants from 24 percent at the beginning of the period to 46 percent in 1900, prior to surpassed four-fifths in 2000. Moreover, the overall citizens of New York city rose dramatically, from nearly 80 thousand in 1800 to less than 3.5 thousand after a century, before scored its peak at approximately 8 thousand at the end of the timetable.
