Who lives in Norwalk: a suburban mix with a strong Latino presence
Around 91,000 residents make Norwalk one of Connecticut's most diverse cities, with large Latino communities and established Haitian, South Asian, and European populations.
Norwalk is one of Connecticut's most diverse cities. The population is close to 91,000 and combines long-established white middle-class families with one of the largest Latino communities in the state, concentrated mainly in South Norwalk and East Norwalk. Hispanics represent approximately one-third of the city, with a strong presence of Guatemalan, Peruvian, Ecuadorian, Mexican, and Colombian backgrounds.
Beyond the Latino population, there are established Haitian, Jamaican, Indian, and Pakistani communities, along with descendants of Italians, Irish, Poles, and Portuguese who arrived in the 19th and 20th centuries. Roughly one-fifth of residents were born outside the United States, a high rate by Connecticut standards.
In everyday life, English and Spanish coexist. In SoNo and along Connecticut Avenue, it is common to walk into a bakery, market, or phone store where service begins in Spanish. Most of the population is Christian, divided between Catholics and Protestants, with active synagogues, small mosques, and Hindu temples in the metropolitan area.
- English
- Spanish
- Haitian Creole
- Portuguese
- Polish
- Catholic Christianity
- Protestant Christianity
- Judaism
- Islam
- Hinduism
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