Provided are three tables with the first one comparing total population in New York City in the year 1800, 1900, and 2000, and the second and third one each showing Manhattan district’s population and the other districts respectively in same period of time with percentage of total population.
Overall, it is easy to notice from the first table that New York city had experienced a dramatic rise in number of citizens during the whole period. Additionally, the percentage of people living in Manhattan had fallen while large numbers of people moved into other districts, eventually taking a complete lead in percentage of citizens in their area.
According to the first table, New York city has an increasing trend in numbers of total population, with an initial number of 79,216 people in the beginning, and 8,009,185 in the end. New York City experienced an approximately same number of increases in population in both centuries.
Looking at the other two table, it is also noticeable that Manhattan experienced a slight decrease in percentage of people living in it (with a fall from 76% to 54%) while its number still rose by a surprising number (from 60,515 to 1,850,093) in the first 100 years. Its percentage keep falling to only 19% of total population in year 2000. For other areas of New York City in total, both its number of citizens and proportion of total population increase by a significant amount, from 18,701 to 6,471,089 in number and from 24% to 81% in rate in 200 years.
