As of the 2010 census, the United States Commonwealth of Kentucky had an estimated population of 4,339,367, which is an increase of 297,174, or 7.4%, since the year 2000. Approximately 4.4% of Kentucky's population was foreign-born as of 2010. The population density of the state is 107.4 people per square mile.[3]
Kentucky's total population has grown during every decade since records began. However, during most decades of the 20th century there was also net out-migration from Kentucky. Since 1900, rural Kentucky counties have experienced a net loss of over 1 million people from migration, while urban areas have experienced a slight net gain.[4]
The Commonwealth of Kentucky has an overwhelmingly Anglo-Celtic ancestral origin, according to the US Census Bureau official statistics the largest ancestry is American totalling 20.2%, an ancestral identification used by Old Stock English and Scots-Irish Americans in the Upland South whose families have been in the United States for hundreds of years. The other main ancestries were: German (14,5%), Irish (12,2%), English (10,1%) and Scottish (1.9%).[6] In Christian County and Fulton County, African American is the largest reported ancestry.[7] As of the 1980s the only counties in the United States where over half of the population cited "English" as their only ancestry group were all in the hills of eastern Kentucky (and made up virtually every county in this region).[8]
In 1790, historians estimate Kentucky's population was English (52%), Scots-Irish or Scots (25%), Irish (9%), Welsh, (7%), German (5%), French (2%), Dutch (1%), and Swedish (0.2%) in ethnicity.[9]
In the 1980 census 1,267,079 Kentuckians out of a total population of 3,660,777 cited that they were of English ancestry making them 31 percent of the state at that time.[10]
African Americans, who made up one-fourth of Kentucky's population prior to the Civil War, declined in number as many moved to the industrial North in the Great Migration. Today 44.2% of Kentucky's African American population is in Jefferson County and 52% are in the Louisville Metro Area. Other areas with high concentrations, besides Christian and Fulton Counties, are the city of Paducah, the Bluegrass, and the city of Lexington.
Since 2016, data for births of White Hispanic origin are not collected, but included in one Hispanic group; persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race.
Religion
In 2000, The Association of Religion Data Archives reported[22] that of Kentucky's 4,041,769 residents:
Religious movements were important in the early history of Kentucky. Perhaps the most famous event was the interdenominational revival in August 1801 at the Cane Ridge Meeting House in Bourbon County. As part of what is now known as the "Western Revival", thousands began meeting around a Presbyteriancommunion service on August 6, 1801, and ended six days later on August 12, 1801, when both humans and horses ran out of food.[24] Some claim that the Cane Ridge Revival was propagated from an earlier camp meeting at Red River Meeting House in Logan County.[25]
^"Data"(PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved July 9, 2019.
^"Data"(PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved July 9, 2019.
^"Data"(PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved July 9, 2019.
^"Data"(PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved July 9, 2019.
^"Data"(PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved July 9, 2019.
^"Data"(PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved December 2, 2019.
^"Data"(PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved March 29, 2021.
^"Data"(PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved February 20, 2022.
^"Data"(PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
^"Data"(PDF). www.cdc.gov. Retrieved April 5, 2024.
^"State Membership Report". The Assocpoopiation of Religion Data Archives. 2000. Archived from the original on August 4, 2008. Retrieved December 27, 2006.