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Crime in America and the Police

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Excerpt from Crime in America and the Police

But this is not the whole contrast. The forebears of London's present population for generations back were Englishmen, bred to English customs and traditions, just as the forefathers of modern Parisians were Frenchmen, born to French institutions and ideals. In New York, Chicago and other large cities of the United States there are hundreds of thousands of residents whose mothers or fathers or both were born abroad. If we add this class to the foreign-born population, of which we have been speaking, to form what may be called the foreign stock element, we find that it comprises 80% of New York's population, and that of the total number, amount ing to nearly three-fourths came of non-eng lish speaking people.1 Similarly, this foreign-stock ele ment constitutes the majority of the population in the nineteen largest cities of the United States. In other words, the native white population of native parentage amounts to less than one-fifth the total population of New York and less than one-fourth of the populations of Chicago, Boston, Cleveland, Detroit and Milwaukee; while in cities like Fall River, Massachusetts, it consti tutes little more than In only fourteen of the fifty largest cities of America does the native parentage population equal fifty per cent of the total.

65 pages, Paperback

First published September 27, 2015

4 people want to read

About the author

Raymond Blaine Fosdick

63 books2 followers
Graduated Princeton University 1905, LLB from New York Law School 1908

President of Rockefeller Foundation 1936-1948

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