Washington's population: historically Black majority, with strong African and Latin American immigration
DC was known for decades as Chocolate City. Today the divide is more balanced between Black, white, and Latino residents, with notable Ethiopian, Salvadoran, and Ghanaian communities.
Washington has one of the largest Black populations among Western capitals. For a long time it was called Chocolate City, with a clear African American majority. Gentrification over the past 20 years has shifted that balance: today white and Black residents make up similar proportions, with strong growth in the Latino population, particularly Salvadoran, in Columbia Heights, Mount Pleasant, and Adams Morgan.
English is dominant, but Spanish, Amharic (Ethiopia), Tigrinya (Eritrea), French, and Arabic are common. DC's Ethiopian community is the second largest outside Ethiopia, with restaurants along U Street and 9th Street NW. There is also a Ghanaian, Nigerian, and Cameroonian presence in Maryland suburbs, especially Hyattsville and Silver Spring.
The Brazilian community is small within DC proper but is more concentrated in Virginia (Falls Church, Arlington) and Maryland (Wheaton). There are grocery stores, occasional samba schools, evangelical churches, and Portuguese-language courses at Hispanic Outreach. International students at Georgetown, GW, and American University form another significant segment.
- English
- Spanish (strong in Columbia Heights)
- Amharic (Ethiopian)
- French
- Arabic
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- Christian (Protestant and Catholic)
- Non-religious
- Muslim
- Jewish
- Ethiopian Orthodox
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