Who lives in Plymouth: a family profile and growing diversity
The population is predominantly white with Irish, Italian, and Portuguese roots, alongside growing numbers of Latinos, Cape Verdeans, and Asians attracted by proximity to Boston.
Plymouth has roughly 62,000 residents and a predominantly residential, family-oriented profile. Most of the population is white, with strong ties to earlier European immigration, particularly Irish, Italian, and Portuguese. Portuguese surnames appear frequently in schools, businesses, and local clubs, reflecting migration waves from the early twentieth century.
Over the past two decades the city has grown more diverse. There has been a rise in Hispanic families, primarily Puerto Rican and Dominican, along with Cape Verdean immigrants from the Brockton and New Bedford areas. Neighborhoods closer to the downtown and commercial corridors concentrate a portion of these communities.
Like much of Massachusetts, Plymouth is an aging city: many retirees stay for the quality of life and proximity to the ocean. At the same time, there is a steady flow of younger families seeking larger homes outside Boston. The public schools are well regarded and draw much of this internal migration.
- English
- Portuguese
- Spanish
- Cape Verdean Creole
- Roman Catholic
- Protestant (Congregational, Episcopal, Baptist)
- Unaffiliated
- Judaism
