Quote:
Originally Posted by alphachapmtl
There's less people in Chicago now then in 1920.
It's unbelievable!!!
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That VERY much depends on what you mean by "Chicago."
If you mean the contiguously populated, gi-normous region of people and economic activity occupying high-rises, townhomes, and single-family houses around a cultural hub on the shores of Lake Michigan, it's actually -- and obviously -- grown dramatically since 1920 (from about 4 million people to nearly 10 million people).
If you mean one arbitrarily drawn city-limit boundary approximately in the middle of that region, then yes, it's seen many of its residents move around to other arbitrarily drawn city-limits in the region as their tastes for various types of domiciles (and school districts) change over time.
It's a shame we reify signifiers the way we do when we talk about "cities" in the US. Central-city population boundaries are sometimes a decent proxy for metropolitan regions (which is what we usually mean when we use words like "Seattle," "Atlanta," "Dallas," "St. Louis," etc.), but usually they fail utterly to tell believable, honest truths about demographic and economic trends across those regions. This case being so prominently one of them, it is in fact -- and should be -- un "believe" able.