Ancestry by Neighborhood in Ferry Pass There are 4 neighborhoods that are fully or partially contained within Ferry Pass (0 fully and 4 partially). This section compares all 4 of those to each other, Ferry Pass, and other entities that contain or substantially overlap with Ferry Pass. About HomeSnacks. HomeSnacks is based in Raleigh, NC. We aim to deliver bite-sized pieces of infotainment about where you live. We use data, analytics, and a sense of humor to determine quality of life for places across the nation.
- Ferry Pass African American Dating Websites
- Ferry Pass African American Dating Sites
- Ferry Pass African American Dating Site
Ferry Pass's best FREE dating site! 100% Free Online Dating for Ferry Pass Singles at Mingle2.com. Our free personal ads are full of single women and men in Ferry Pass looking for serious relationships, a little online flirtation, or new friends to go out with. Start meeting singles in Ferry Pass today with our free online personals and free Ferry Pass chat! Ferry Pass is full of single men. Residents of Ferry Pass are less likely than the typical American to be married. Of all local residents aged 15 and older, 37.2% are currently married, compared to 48.1% of Americans nationwide in. Ferry Pass, FL Florida Ancestries, Foreign-born residents, place of birth detailed statistics.
Contents: Population
The population development of Pensacola - Ferry Pass - Brent as well as related information and services (Wikipedia, Google, images).
Name | Status | State(s) | Population Census 1990-04-01 | Population Census 2000-04-01 | Population Census 2010-04-01 | Population Estimate 2019-07-01 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pensacola - Ferry Pass - Brent | Metropolitan Statistical Area | FL | 344,406 | 412,167 | 448,991 | 502,629 |
Source: U.S. Census Bureau (web).
Explanation: Metropolitan and micropolitan statistical areas as defined in March 2020 by the OMB Bulletin No. 20-01.
Further information about the population structure:
Gender (E 2019) | |
---|---|
Males | 251,161 |
Females | 251,468 |
Age Groups (E 2019) | |
---|---|
0-14 years | 89,013 |
15-64 years | 328,924 |
65+ years | 84,692 |
Age Distribution (E 2019) | |
---|---|
0-9 years | 58,830 |
10-19 years | 62,373 |
20-29 years | 73,144 |
30-39 years | 66,532 |
40-49 years | 57,545 |
50-59 years | 66,242 |
60-69 years | 61,059 |
70-79 years | 38,298 |
80+ years | 18,606 |
»Race« (E 2019) | |
---|---|
White | 379,387 |
Black/African American | 86,058 |
Indigenous | 4,473 |
Asian | 14,580 |
Pacific Islander | 947 |
2 or more | 17,184 |
Ethnicity (E 2019) | |
---|---|
Hispanic or Latino | 29,752 |
Other | 472,877 |
Comprises:
Ferry Pass African American Dating Websites
Located in:
The earliest known portrait of radical abolitionist John Brown, this daguerreotype may also be the earliest surviving product of Washington's Hartford studio. Dating from 1846 or 1847, it depicts Brown during his brief tenure as a wool broker in Springfield, Massachusetts.
Brown was already an abolitionist by 1846, but once in Springfield his activism increased. He avidly read abolitionist literature emanating from Boston, frequented antislavery meetings, and became well acquainted with many free blacks residing nearby. At this time, more than a decade before his ill-fated raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Brown began formulating plans for his 'Subterranean Pass Way.' This unrealized scheme called for establishing clandestine bases in the Allegheny Mountains from which armed parties could attack slaveholders' property and provide cover to fugitive slaves as they traveled north. In this portrait, Brown stands with one hand raised, as if repeating the pledge he had made several years earlier to dedicate his life to the destruction of slavery. With his other hand, he grasps what is thought to be the standard of his 'Subterranean Pass Way.' It is not known how Washington came to daguerreotype Brown, but given the proximity between Hartford and Springfield, it is not surprising that these two abolitionists made a connection.
Augustus Washington
Quarter-plate daguerreotype, circa 1846/1847
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.; purchased with major acquisition funds and with funds donated by Betty Adler Schermer in honor of her great-grandfather, August M. Bondi