
Brooklyn Backs Brooklyn: Launching Our Campaign To Care For Our Neighbors
Zoom
12:00 PM–1:00 PM EDT
Zoom
12:00 PM–1:00 PM EDT
Brooklyn is the 3rd Largest "City" in America — Larger than Boston, Atlanta, Washington DC & Minneapolis Combined
Over 1/3 of Residents were Born in Another Country
Brooklyn Claims New York City’s First Designated Historic District
An old legend claims that as many as one in seven Americans can trace their roots through Brooklyn. And while that may not be a provable fact, we have gathered some real stats that both impress and implore us all to do more for the borough we love:
With over 2,736,074 residents living across 70 neighborhoods, Brooklyn is New York City’s most populous and fastest growing borough. Brooklyn had the largest population gain of all NYC boroughs from Census 2010 to 2020 (9.2%), and is just short of its record population reached in 1950.
Nearly 730,000 Black people live in Brooklyn—second only to Chicago—and larger than Atlanta and Detroit’s Black population combined. However, Brooklyn’s Black population decreased by 8.7% from 2010 to 2020.
Only 7.6% of NYC's Philanthropic Dollars Goes to Brooklyn
While Brooklyn is home to the second-greatest number of nonprofits in New York City (over 13,000), organizations in Brooklyn only receive 7.6% of all philanthropic giving in the five boroughs. In comparison, Manhattan-based organizations receive a staggering 10 times that figure, 76% of giving across New York City.
Brooklyn is home to speakers of over 200 languages, and nearly 50% of all households speak a language other than English at home.
Brooklyn ranks first in New York City in total number of children living in poverty.
There are 79 NYCHA developments with over 102,000 residents in Brooklyn. Brownsville has the highest concentration of public housing in the nation.
Brooklyn is home to the highest number of New Yorkers experiencing food insecurity.
43.5% of residents over 25 have a Bachelor’s degree or higher.
Brooklynites make up the 2nd highest percentage of individuals in the shelter system, second to individuals from The Bronx.
Bedford-Stuyvesant’s Shirley Chisholm was elected to the House of Representatives in 1968.
Home to 59 libraries, The Brooklyn Public Library system was founded in 1892, before The New York Public Library (1895) and The Queens Public Library (1896).
Weeksville — located in the present-day neighborhoods of Crown Heights and Bedford-Stuyvesant — was an independent free Black community established by James Weeks in 1838.
The Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) was founded in 1861.
Born in Weeksville, Dr. Susan Smith McKinney-Steward became the first Black woman to ever earn a medical degree in New York State — and the third in the entire nation — when she graduated in 1870.
The Brooklyn Children’s Museum was established in 1899.
The Brooklyn Heights neighborhood was landmarked by the City in 1965.
Credit Cards, Air Conditioners, Teddy Bears, and Roller Coasters are just a few of the notable inventions to come out of the borough and spread worldwide.